Jon Tester and Tim Sheehy's campaigns are spending big to influence the Senate race in Montana with outsized importance.
When Montana voters cast ballots in the Nov. 5 general election, they’ll decide not just the nation’s marquee U.S. Senate race but most likely which party will control the closely divided chamber for at least the next two years.
Nan and William Nagle climbed into their Ford 150 pickup, buckled their seatbelts and said goodbye to the state they had called home for the past seven decades.
Tim Sheehy, the novice Republican candidate in perhaps the most important Senate race in the country, was not downplaying his lack of a political pedigree when he stepped in front of a welcoming audience at the American Legion hall in downtown Big Timber, Mont.
A ballot box incident was investigated in Glacier County, Montana, but county officials found that tampering did not happen. The Facebook post includes a link to an Oct. 23 Daily Wire article that says a "Democrat operative" named Laszlo Gendler was videotaped appearing to try to tear a ballot box off a wall.
After spending millions on broadcast advertisements and door-knocking efforts, the campaign backing abortion rights recently launched another media and awareness push.
With exactly one week left until Election Day, the Montana Secretary of State's Office reports voters have returned 283,327 absentee ballots to county election
Tester is trailing Republican challenger Tim Sheehy for the U.S. senate seat that could determine control of Congress, per a new poll.
Dozens of people were in line to register at the Gallatin County Courthouse on Wednesday as early voting was in full swing, and a stronger turnout was reported, making up
With a week left to go until Election Day 2024, polls that show presidential candidates neck-and-neck mirror some of the races closer to the Treasure State. While the presidential race doesn’t appear to be close in Montana,
Montana has been reliably red since 1952. The Big Sky State regained its second congressional District, which they lost in 1990, following the 2020 Census, giving them more Electoral College votes. When Donald Trump beat President Joe Biden by 16 points in 2020,