Michigan voters have been casting absentee ballots for close to a month. And Saturday marks the start of nine days of early, in-person voting.
A decision by the elections clerk in Michigan’s third-largest city is raising concerns of a slowdown in reporting election night results in a county that is being targeted by both presidential campaigns and includes a competitive congressional race.
A video showing a long line of people outside the venue where Democratic presidential candidate Kamala Harris held a campaign rally in Grand Rapids, Michigan, has been misdescribed online as showing early voters.
A Democratic data expert says Michigan stands out among the battleground states when it comes to early, in-person voting and absentee ballots.
Those who vote straight ticket should keep in mind that making that choice will not complete all voting options on the Nov. 5 Michigan ballot.
The Michigan Supreme Court races appear on the nonpartisan section of voters' ballots. A straight party ticket does not cover the court's elections.
Michigan may play a decisive role in a presidential election for the third consecutive time as its voters decide competitive races that could tip the balance of power in both chambers of Congress as well as the state House of Representatives.
As head of the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee, Sen. Gary Peters (D-Mich.) is tasked with defending the Democratic majority in the Senate. On Monday, Oct. 28 at 3:00 p.m. ET, Peters joins The Post’s Leigh Ann Caldwell to discuss the Senate electoral map,
More than a million Michigan voters have returned their absentee ballots, Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson's office said Tuesday.
Posts circulating on social media claim that Michigan has 500,000 more registered voters than it has people eligible to vote, an indication of possible fraud.
Republican's anti-EV messaging is flooding Michigan, putting Democrats on the defensive.