Voters Are Left in the Dark By Alabama’s Election System
As the nation anxiously awaits the outcome of the Moore-Jones Senate race, a lawsuit says Alabama election procedures violate federal law and public record requirements.
As the nation anxiously awaits the outcome of the Moore-Jones Senate race, a lawsuit says Alabama election procedures violate federal law and public record requirements.
Voter information in Spanish, which is required in many jurisdictions, is often poorly translated, partially missing, or completely unavailable.
The largest electronic voting machine vendor in the US is threatening an election transparency group with legal action for publishing the company’s manuals. The transparency group says it has every right to share them.
Passage of Amendment 4 restored voting rights to more than a million Floridians, but advocates of election integrity want to see more accountability from election administrators in the Sunshine State before 2020.
In her new book, journalist Alden Wicker examines the public health impact of an under-regulated industry.
Powerful lobbyists represent both oil and gas interests and environmental groups.
Tech has been hijacked by a select few, abandoning the common good for “Technocapitalism.”
A veteran Los Angeles crime reporter takes a gimlet-eyed look at the curious accident that killed muckraker Michael Hastings. New video evidence from a security camera near the scene offers a glimpse at the last moments of the journalist’s life—and gives a few clues about the seemingly inexplicable crash on a straight-as-a-laser city street.
How a Nobel Prize winning economist teamed up with Charles Koch to create today’s GOP agenda.
Concern for hostages and the impact of fighting on civilians fail to slow Israeli attacks in Gaza.
In Britain, where failure is often celebrated, his survival has done him no favors.
In a case that fully demonstrates the pervasiveness of surveillance cameras in America, the absence of cameras at one of the biggest trials of the year is glaring. Andrew Quemere examines how the federal courts have managed to stay happily anachronistic.