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Tuesday Oct. 8 is the first day of in-person early voting in Indiana for this fall’s election. And on the ballot, Hoosiers are asked to approve a change to the state constitution.
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Indiana’s three gubernatorial candidates have agreed to take part in a live televised debate in October organized by the Indiana Debate Commission. The commission says Republican Mike Braun, who’s leaving the U.S. Senate after one term, will join Democrat Jennifer McCormick and Libertarian Donald Rainwater during the Oct. 24 debate. It will be held at the studios of Indianapolis public television station WFYI-TV. The three candidates are vying to succeed Gov. Eric Holcomb, a two-term Republican who can’t run again due to term limits. The debate will be broadcast and livestreamed on the commission’s website. The commission says it will solicit questions from the public before the debate.
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Indiana’s three candidates for governor — Republican Mike Braun, Democrat Jennifer McCormick and Libertarian Donald Rainwater — agreed this week to at least one televised debate this fall, while another is still being negotiated.
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Republican gubernatorial candidate Mike Braun's choice for running mate is creating questions and potential issues for his campaign.
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U.S. Sen. Mike Braun (R-Ind.) has won the state's first competitive gubernatorial primary in two decades, according to the Associated Press.
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The results of some primary elections in Indiana could determine the outcome of the general election in a deep red state where Republicans hold a supermajority in both chambers of the state legislature and GOP politicians lead many top offices. The primaries will be held May 7.
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Indiana has been a national leader for more than a decade in sending taxpayer dollars to help fund private school education through its school choice voucher program.
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Reining in Medicaid spending is the task facing lawmakers and the next governor in 2025s budget-writing session.
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A majority of the Republican gubernatorial candidates on a debate stage Wednesday said they don't support the new Indiana law that could hold back thousands of students who fail their third grade reading test.
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Republican gubernatorial candidate Jamie Reitenour said local television stations should correct the injustice of excluding her from primary debates.