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Connecticut residents will have a chance to vote in contests for state executive offices, the U.S. House and Senate, the state General Assembly, and more in November. We’ve answered some key questions about the elections below.
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Long Islanders will have a chance to vote in contests for state executive offices, the U.S. House and Senate, the state legislature, and more in November. We’ve answered some key questions about the elections below.
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Connecticut GOP gubernatorial candidate Bob Stefanowski narrowly lost the Independent Party nomination on Tuesday. That means his name won’t be on two lines on the ballot in November.
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A new poll by Siena College finds Democratic Governor Kathy Hochul leading Republican Congressman Lee Zeldin in the 2022 race to hold New York's top elected post.
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Governor Hochul defends the plan to change overtime pay for farm workers.
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After an appellate court invalidated legislative lines for the New York Assembly districts last month, a lower court is moving forward with drawing new ones for 2024 elections. But the judge overseeing the matter hasn’t decided on an exact process for doing so.
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Connecticut Governor Ned Lamont has chosen Mark Kohler, a retired state official, to complete Secretary of the State Denise Merrill’s term in office.
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Connecticut’s Democratic Governor Ned Lamont and his Republican challenger Bob Stefanowski are seeking the endorsements of two minor parties — the Connecticut Working Families Party and the Independent Party of Connecticut. WSHU’s Ebong Udoma spoke with Quinnipiac University political scientist Scott McLean about why a third-party endorsement is important.
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State Attorney General William Tong and Dominic A. Rapini, a candidate for secretary of the state, this week became the first candidates for statewide office to qualify for Connecticut’s public financing of campaigns in 2022.
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The New York State Legislature approved new voting rights legislation on Thursday that would, among other things, require certain local governments to seek clearance from the state when they make changes to their elections, like clearing voter rolls or moving polling sites.