Trump voters look set to decide the Senate majority. The main fight in Montana is all about how many of them longtime Democratic Sen. Jon Tester can entice to split their tickets.
Republicans appear poised to take control of the U.S. Senate thanks to the retirement of Sen. Joe Manchin, I-W.V., and a GOP surge in Montana.
Absentee ballots are on the way to Montana’s active, registered absentee voters, said Montana Secretary of State Christi Jacobsen in a news release Friday. “Montana’s 56 county election offices are mailing absentee ballot packets to registered absentee voters today as the 2024 General Election is well underway,
Absentee ballots are now in the mail in several Montana counties, including nearly 65,000 for voters in Missoula County.Registered absentee voters can expect to
The New York Times/Siena College poll of 656 voters in Montana was conducted in English on cellular and landline telephones from Oct. 5 to 8. The margin of sampling error among the likely electorate is plus or minus 4.3 percentage points.
Montana’s attorney general testified before a state commission during a hearing that could lead to action against his law license
Republicans are heavily favored to take control of the Senate next year, with GOP candidate Tim Sheehy leading by eight percentage points in his bid to flip one of Montana’s two seats, according to a new poll.
Jon Tester, running for his fourth term in deep-red Montana, has plenty of billionaire backers—but his single biggest funder can’t be traced.
Businessman and former Navy SEAL Tim Sheehy has collected plenty of wealthy backers as he tries to unseat Sen. Jon Tester, the most vulnerable member of the Democratic caucus.
This year, Montana voters will consider whether to approve a pair of ballot measures that would make the biggest changes in decades to how the state elects its leaders.
Both Montana candidates for U.S. Senate recently answered specific questions regarding the state's affordable housing crisis.
At an event sponsored by the League of Women Voters, supporters of Constitutional Initiative 126 and 127 said that both measures are meant to work together, but because of the state’s rule about one subject per amendment, the two appear on the ballot separately. And, both could stand alone, if passed by the voters.