For more information on the 2024 election, readers can visit the Secretary of State Michigan Voter Information Center online at mvic.sos.state.mi.us. Election Day is Tuesday, Nov. 5. Absentee ballot voting has begun.
Michigan Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson unveiled a new tool that will allow voters to see more information about absentee and early voting totals.
The public can now see how many ballots have been cast each day across Michigan ahead of the presidential election. Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson unveiled the new dashboard Wednesday, Oct. 16, that can be accessed by going to Michigan.gov/votingdashboard.
Vice President Kamala Harris’ campaign, anticipating losses among some corners of the party’s coalition in Michigan, is zeroing in on a strategy that they think will help overcome those losses by locking in reliably Democratic voters and growing their numbers among others.
Early voting in Michigan will start statewide Oct. 26 and end Nov. 3, but some communities, such as Detroit, will start sooner. Here's your guide.
Compared with the previous general election in 2020, the ratio of returned absentee ballots is slightly down for this time period. At the three-week horizon before the 2020 election, 977,694 voters had returned an absentee ballot.
Mary Waters, the at-large councilwoman for Detroit, warned that Harris was at risk of running an “elitist” campaign that overlooks Democrats who, though they are not currently part of Harris’s political network, can and want to be useful in electing her in November.
Michigan Republican Mike Rogers raised just $4.5 million in the third quarter compared to $18.2 million for Elissa Slotkin in the Senate race.
Michigan GOP Chair Pete Hoekstra told Fox News Digital that he is optimistic about the Republican operation in the swing state of Michigan, arguing the ground game in the state is better than he has seen in years.
Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Donald Trump are appealing to middle-class workers in very different ways.
A group of Michigan community leaders sounded the alarm during an interview with CBS News on Vice President Kamala Harris' support among Black men in the state.