At a campaign event for Vice President Kamala Harris in Pittsburgh on Wednesday, Pennsylvania Democratic state representatives and a local physician challenged former President Donald Trump’s comment during the Sept.
Voters in Pennsylvania are not yet able to cast ballots, despite confusion over a state law concerning applications for mail ballots
The Wednesday rally in the key swing state is part of the Democratic campaign's “Fighting for Reproductive Freedom” bus tour.
Despite claims from some pundits and politicians, experts say noncitizens do not appear to be illegally voting in U.S. elections in large numbers.
Former President Donald Trump is scheduled to hold a rally on the campus of Indiana University of Pennsylvania on Sept. 23.
Energy businesses and farmers in western Pennsylvania are struggling because of prices, an issue that has not figured prominently in the campaigns of Donald J. Trump and Kamala Harris.
Pennsylvania’s Supreme Court has upheld a lower ruling that rejected a bid to get independent presidential candidate Cornel West on the battleground state's ballot for the November election.
Voters in the key battleground of Pennsylvania may notice their ballots look different this year, as the state prepares to deploy a new design in the general election for the first time this year that aims to reduce the number of rejected votes.
On Friday, the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania vacated a case surrounding undated or misdated ballots. The majority ruled that the legal battle should involve all 67 boards of elections, not just Philadelphia and Allegheny counties. The Pennsylvania ALCU brought that case.
Pennsylvania: Harris leads by six points, 51% to 45%, in a Quinnipiac poll of likely voters (margin of error 2.7), after a CBS/YouGov poll released earlier this month showed them tied in the state—Trump led President Joe Biden 50%-49% in an April CBS poll, and was up four points over Harris in a July Bloomberg News/Morning Consult survey.