Louisiana voters will elect six members to the U.S. House of Representatives in the 2025 fall congressional elections.
Tuesday is the last day to register to vote online if Louisianans want to cast a ballot for the presidential election. Here’s how Louisiana is working to maintain election security, keep
Since 2000, when Louisiana flipped to Republican in presidential politics, the shift from Democrat to Republican in voter registration has been greater in LaSalle than any other parish, said John Couvillon, a pollster and demographer in Baton Rouge.
It’s no secret that Louisiana’s coastal region faces serious problems, a fact that almost all of the candidates for Louisiana’s 3rd Congressional District seat agree upon.But despite the district covering a Gulf Coast stretch from the Texas state line to Terrebonne Parish,
Running for Louisiana’s 6th Congressional District, Republican candidate Elbert Guillory believes the American people need a “country boy with country-boy common sense” to help get things back on track.
Since 2000, when Louisiana flipped to Republican in presidential politics, the shift from Democrat to Republican in voter registration has been greater in LaSalle than any other parish, said John Couvillon, a pollster and demographer in Baton Rouge.
On This Week in Louisiana Politics, there are slightly more details being discussed about the governor's tax reform plan. The public is still waiting to learn the full extent of what the legislature aims to do.
A vote “no” on amendment one would send the money to the state general fund. A vote “yes” would send it to the coastal protection and restoration fund. Read the PAR Louisiana guide on the different arguments. It will appear on the Nov. 5 ballot.
Presidential candidates for those parties get the top slots on the ballot, listed in alphabetical order by party. This year the Independent Party did not put forward a candidate for president; that's why there are only four recognized parties on the Nov. 5 ballot.
Running for Louisiana's 6th Congressional District, Senator Cleo Fields aims to finish the work he started decades ago.
Louisiana voters will give a thumbs up or thumbs down to a constitutional amendment that could mean more funding for coastal protection when they head to the polls for the Nov. 5 election. Why it matters: The amendment would direct federal revenue from some renewable energy production into the Coastal Protection and Restoration Authority to pay for projects like marsh creation,