Election workers in Senate District 26 are working to meet deadlines for the special election following a court-ordered date change.
The 2026 midterm elections have some hotly contested Arkansas offices along with a slew of unchallenged incumbents.
Gov. Sarah Huckabee Sanders says new timeline for District 26 and District 70 races could violate military voting laws but complies with state Supreme Court order.
Special Primary Election Day is Tuesday, Jan. 6. Polls open at 7:30 a.m. and close at 7:30 p.m. To request absentee or UACOVA ballots, you can call (479) 667-3607 and dial EXT-0. Ask for Sam or Char-Leigh.
LITTLE ROCK, Ark. – A federal judge says some new state election laws may be unconstitutional. A new ruling will keep the Secretary of State’s office from enforcing some of Arkansas’ newest election laws while the laws proceed through federal court.
ARKANSAS, USA — Early voting will began in some Arkansas communities on Wednesday, Nov. 12, with Election Day set for Tuesday, Nov. 18. Here's what residents can expect to see on their ballots. However, some counties or cities may not have an election this November.
The following candidates filed for offices in Benton, Boone, Carroll, Madison and Washington counties. This list also includes filings for legislative seats and nonpartisan judicial positions in Northwest Arkansas.
After Gov. Sarah Huckabee Sanders agreed to move up the special election dates for House District 70 and Senate District 26, candidates for the respective seats welcomed the decision.
All three of the Arkansas Senate districts in the Fort Smith metro will have either a contested primary or general election, and six of the 11 Arkansas House districts
Sanders’ declarations resetting the election dates were distinctly combative in tone, casting the governor as the victim of rogue judges who Sanders accused of “intentionally ignoring statutory requirements” and “substitut[ing] judicially invented election policy for the General Assembly’s lawfully enacted statutes.
The Arkansas Supreme Court on Wednesday (Nov. 13) denied an effort by the office of Arkansas Attorney General Tim Griffin to stay a lower court’s ruling requiring a new