Early voting for South Dakota’s Nov. 5 general election begins today. To cast an early ballot, voters should first make sure they’re registered. Voter registration status can be checked in the South Dakota Secretary of State’s online voter information portal at vip.
Early voting began in Minnesota, South Dakota and Virginia on Friday, letting voters in those states cast ballots while Election Day remains a month and a half away, on Nov. 5.
An anti-abortion group's lawsuit to invalidate an abortion rights measure appearing on South Dakota's statewide ballot won't be resolved until after the November election
Voters in Minnesota, Virginia and South Dakota will begin casting ballots for the 2024 presidential contest Friday as officials work to address concerns about election security and delivery problems with the U.
A Rapid City-based nonprofit is launching a statewide campaign to increase Native American voter participation
The two-hour Vote South Dakota forum will take place Thursday night from 8 p.m. to 10 p.m. It will feature candidates for the Public Utilities Commission and representatives of both sides of constitutional amendments and initiated/referred measures that will appear on the Nov. 5 ballot.
Vote South Dakota is hosting a candidate and issue forum at Dakota Wesleyan University's Sherman Center on Thursday, Sept. 19 ahead of the 2024 general election. The forum airs from 8 to 10 p.m. Central on Thursday on South Dakota Public Broadcasting television and radio stations across the state.
The event is part of the national "Team Trump Agenda 47 Policy Tour," which coincides with Trump's efforts to distance himself from Project 2025.
Gov. Noem expected Kamala Harris to pull "the woman card" during Tuesday's debate. The real ace up her sleeve was her moderate background, experts said.
Voters in Minnesota, South Dakota and Virginia lined up to fill out their 2024 ballots in person on Friday. CBS News' Natalie Brand is on the ground in the Old Dominion state.
Trina Lapp, an 18-year-old Milbank native who attends Dakota Wesleyan University, doesn’t view politics or the upcoming election as an afterthought. She’s digging in. “I think it’s important for young people to be involved and learn about the candidates and issues,