ADAM BEAM, Associated Press
Election Day arrived Tuesday in California with a huge number of votes already cast.
The coronavirus pandemic transformed Election Day into election month for many places
A two-car collision caused by a red-light violation jammed up traffic in the area of 4th and Olympic Tuesday afternoon.
First responders arrived at the intersection right outside of the
There is an ominous calm filling the streets of Santa Monica as police cruisers roll by boarded-up businesses and people sit at home in anxious anticipation of tonights’ results. The
Across Santa Monica stores are boarding up and ballots are going in. As the City prepares for the possibility of unrest, here is everything you need to know to navigate Election Day.
As the traditional Election Day closes in, Americans are exhausted from constant crises, on edge because of volatile political divisions and anxious about what will happen next. Their agony is not in deciding between President Donald Trump or his Democratic challenger, Joe Biden.
Turnout has been heavy during the early voting period as Californians cast ballots for president, the state Legislature, local offices and on a dozen statewide propositions. Here are five things to know about the Nov. 3 election
Tuesday’s election will test the boundaries of California’s left-leaning politics as a new generation of state voters is being asked to roll back affirmative action and property tax laws put in place decades ago.