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South Asian Americans are growing in number and political influence — especially in North Texas. Some of these voters and volunteers in Collin County, an area expected to represent larger statewide and national election outcomes, shared the issues they care about.
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The Tarrant County Elections Administrator said last week a printing issue has left many mail-in ballots unscannable. The county approved almost 60 more people to help the elections office duplicate the ballots that can't be scanned.
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Both Republican Rep. Ron Wright and his Democratic challenger, lawyer Stephen Daniel, want Congress to approve more coronavirus aid. Exactly what should be in that bill is only the start of their disagreements about the economy.
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Political groups are getting creative by using the internet, particularly social media, to engage with younger voters — and their tactics are working.
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The senator also addressed stalled coronavirus relief talks.
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For some El Pasoans, the question isn't who to vote for — it's whether to vote at all.
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Numbers show the state House is "competitive and both sides believe it."
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If approved, the $3.7 billion bond package would improve nearly every school and facility in the district and technology and infrastructure at schools.
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It's a wide open race for the state's 24th Congressional District, and Democrats see a chance to flip this historically red seat.
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Tax policy hasn’t exactly been front and center in this presidential election. Neither has poverty. But one policy promoted by former Vice President Joe Biden has a lot of support among anti-poverty advocates, and some bipartisan support.
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With 8.5 million votes already cast, Texas may be the election's biggest mystery. Just days before Nov. 3, polls range from Trump by 5 points to Biden by 4.
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About a third of the mail-in ballots scanned so far in Tarrant County were printed with a defective barcode. The ballots will be remade, a process that is already common when people send in damaged ballots.