Georgia Secretary of State and Commissioner of Securities Brad Raffensperger has issued an emergency order against Atlanta Discount Home Deals (ADHD) and its founder, Mark Jackson.
The Republican elected official sat for the interview with 11Alive's The Georgia Vote just days before a new presidential administration is set to take office.
The state of Georgia asks a federal appeals court to interpret the 1965 law in a way that could make it much harder to prove minority votes have been illegally diluted.
A Georgia appeals court on Friday affirmed the dismissal of six counts in the state’s 2020 election interference against President-elect Trump and his allies, upholding a trial judge’s
The long-running fight over Georgia's district lines for Congress and the state legislature could have broader implications for the future of the Voting Rights Act.
The Georgia Secretary of State’s Office issued an emergency order against Atlanta Discount Home Deals and its owner after an “extensive investigation” into a series of financial crimes.
A judge’s attempt to resign after his election loss last year could have effectively canceled the will of voters. Critics are demanding an end to the loophole.
Why is President Donald Trump so committed to having the minimally qualified Pete Hegseth at the head of the Department of Defense? Trump tends to like telegenic people that he’s seen on TV. Check. Trump appears to be attracted to the super-macho war-fighting ethos,
Georgia seeks another Supreme Court showdown over the Voting Rights Act, questioning its use to prove minority votes have been illegally diluted.
British national jailed in Miami for voting illegally six times in US elections while using fake documents to claim citizenship.
ATHENS, Ga. — The University of Georgia is investing more than $115 million to update a residence hall built in the 1960s. UGA officials say Creswell Hall is one of the university’s landmark residence halls. They say they want to modernize the building while maintaining its “role as a cornerstone of campus housing.”
The plaintiffs in the case, including Alpha Phi Alpha fraternity, a historically Black fraternity active in civil rights causes, claimed the enacted maps diminished Black voting power by failing to increase the number of Black majority districts in the metro Atlanta area, after the 2020 census showed increased Black population growth.