An independent candidate in Nebraska's Senate race has managed to make the election more competitive, with millions of outside money being poured into the state on his behalf.
Nebraskans will vote on a whopping six ballot measures this fall, including medical marijuana, abortion access, school choice and paid sick leave.
Osborn has also rejected the kind of less-is-more, kumbaya-style centrism commonly espoused by independents taking on Republicans, in favor of an anti-corruption, pox-on-both-their-houses populism — albeit one delivered in a soft voice with little audible emotion.
Nebraska voters will have a chance to learn more about this year's six ballot initiatives at a series of public hearings announced Friday.
A seemingly non-competitive Senate race in deeply Republican Nebraska is no longer a safe bet for two-term incumbent Sen. Deb Fischer.
It allows counties to draft workers. Omaha's Douglas County is the only one to regularly use it. Here’s how the jury duty-like system works.
If Ms. Harris were to win the “blue wall” and lose the Sun Belt swing states, the single electoral vote in Greater Omaha could determine the winner of the presidential election.
Nebraska and the nation's capital began early voting on Monday as the majority of the country has now started gearing up for the 2024 election.
Democrats see a rare opportunity in Nebraska's U.S. Senate race, where independent candidate Dan Osborn is mounting an unexpectedly competitive challenge against Republican incumbent Deb Fischer.Nebraska has backed Republicans in every presidential election since 1964.
The Nebraska Secretary of State’s Office has scheduled a series of hearings across the state to let the public weigh in on six ballot measures ahead of the November election. State law requires the office to host public hearings in each of Nebraska’s three congressional districts on all ballot initiatives or referendums on the
A last-minute Republican effort to award Nebraska's five Electoral College votes on a winner-take-all basis - a change that would help Donald Trump's odds of winning the White House - appeared doomed on Monday,
Nebraska State Sen. Mike McDonnell told ABC News Prime anchor Linsey Davis that the push to change the state’s electoral college allocation “did not seem fair.”