Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
For some of the North Carolina women supporting Trump, the message resonated. “We're not single issue voters,” says Zeenath Abplanalp, a 48-year-old Republican woman who lives south of ...
With only a few days left until Election Day, candidates — and their surrogates — are doing everything they can to get out the vote with mail, email, calls and text messages.
John Anthony, a black Republican conservative talk host who received one of the texts said that they were the work of a leftist group attempting to make Trump look bad. [3] [4] The NAACP condemned the message saying that they were consequences of the 2024 Presidential election as racist groups now feel emboldened to spread hate. [6]
This underrepresentation makes our political participation even more imperative. To that end, HuffPost Women has partnered with Rock The Vote, and more than 50 other women's media brands for a cross-brand effort to encourage and help women across the country to register to vote. Because, quite simply, #OurVoteCounts.
To some, the unsolicited messages are not just annoying, but somewhat alarming.
Even after four years of lies from the Trump administration, the center reports that exit polls in 2020 showed that up to 55% of white women voted for a second Trump term, while 90% of Black women ...
U.S. presidential election popular vote totals as a percentage of the total U.S. population. Note the surge in 1828 (extension of suffrage to non-property-owning white men), the drop from 1890 to 1910 (when Southern states disenfranchised most African Americans and many poor whites), and another surge in 1920 (extension of suffrage to women).
In 1918, President Wilson faced a difficult midterm election and would have to confront the issue of women's suffrage directly. [42] Fifteen states had extended equal voting rights to women and, by this time, the President fully supported the federal amendment. [49] [50] A proposal brought before the House in January 1918 passed by only one vote.