Robert F. Kennedy Jr. was able to get off the ballot in North Carolina, but he has now failed to do so in another battleground state: Wisconsin.
Wisconsin Supreme Court ruled Robert F. Kennedy Jr.'s name should remain on the Wisconsin ballot even though he has dropped out of the race.
Veteran political reporter Craig Gilbert tells us what to look for in the voting of people in Wisconsin in the Nov. 5 election.
Former President Trump is holding a campaign rally in the key battleground state of Wisconsin Saturday, as the race for the White House remains close less than six weeks until Election Day. The
Waukesha County no longer produces lopsided results for Republicans, putting the county in focus for Wisconsin Democrats.
Vice President Kamala Harris is fund-raising in California this weekend, while the other candidates fan out across the Midwest, where new polling shows a tight race.
The decision came after more than 418,000 absentee ballots have already been sent to voters. As of Thursday, nearly 28,000 had been returned, according to the Wisconsin Elections Commission.
Independent presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. will be listed on Wisconsin voters' ballots after he tried to get courts to remove it.
When the elections clerk in Wisconsin’s heavily Democratic capital city of Madison announced on Monday that duplicate absentee ballots had mistakenly been sent to around 2,000 voters, it ignited concerns about election integrity from a Republican congressman and others on the right.
The Wisconsin Supreme Court ruled Friday that Robert F. Kennedy Jr.'s name will remain on the swing state's ballot, upholding a lower court's ruling that candidates can only be removed from the ballot if they die.