Four Indiana nonpartisan voting rights organizations filed a lawsuit against the state Tuesday for two new Indiana election proof of citizenship laws arguing that recently naturalized Hoosiers
Republican leaders in the Indiana Senate say they don’t currently have the votes needed to pursue a mid-decade redraw of the state’s congressional map — a setback for Gov. Mike Braun and national Republicans who have been pushing for new lines ahead of the 2026 midterm election cycle.
The lawsuit was filed in the U.S. District Court for Indiana’s Southern District. It names Secretary of State Diego Morales as a defendant, along with Indiana Election Division Co-Directors Bradley King and Angela Nussmeyer.
Allies of President Donald Trump are pressuring Indiana state lawmakers to vote on a redistricting proposal after a key state leader predicted the measure would fail. A spokesperson for Rodric Bray, the Indiana Senate’s president pro tempore,
A new federal lawsuit is challenging Indiana’s new election laws centered around proof of citizenship documentation. According to court documents filed on Tuesday in Indianapolis federal court, a group of nonpartisan voting rights organizations filed the lawsuit against Diego Morales,
Indiana Secretary of State Diego Morales has spent the past several months traveling across the state, connecting directly with Hoosier voters to discuss important election-related issues.
Gov. Mike Braun says Indiana lawmakers have about a month left to call a special session on redistricting. Opponents have collected 20,000 petition signatures against the idea.
Indiana leaders on Friday met with Vice President JD Vance for the third time as they work to secure support for mid-cycle, partisan redistricting. They remained tight-lipped about the meeting’s
One of the first critiques of secretary of state candidate Beau Bayh is that he's hardly lived here -- a similar attack his Senator father fielded.
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