An incumbent Iowa Republican seeking re-election to the House has accused her Democratic opponent of "wasting taxpayer money" by pursuing a recount of their close contest.The Associated Press has not yet called the race in Iowa's 1st Congressional District,
Iowa's four Catholic bishops published a letter Tuesday addressed to Iowa's migrant community, saying "we want to assure you that you are not alone."
The Democrat looking to unseat an incumbent Republican in a close Iowa congressional race, one of a handful yet to be called after Republicans won control of the U.S. House, has asked for a recount. Democrat Christina Bohannan’s campaign on Thursday requested the recount in her bid against Republican incumbent Rep.
Matthew Whitaker, who served briefly as interim attorney general during Trump's first term, gets the nod as US ambassador to NATO.
Pollster J. Ann Selzer is calling it quits — a decision made more than a year ago — after missing the mark in the final Iowa Poll released days before
Congressional election observers deployed to Iowa after Democrat Bohannan called a recount in the House race against GOP incumbent Miller-Meeks.
Coralville, said the Iowa Democratic Party needs to demonstrate a genuine understanding and responsiveness to the economic realities and priorities of middle-class and working-class Iowans.
The pollster’s pre-election findings said Kamala Harris had a slight lead over Donald Trump in Iowa, which Trump went on to carry handily.
FairVote, a nonpartisan advocacy group that promotes voting reform, found that it's extremely rare for a recount to reverse the outcome of a race.
Iowa candidates have until Nov. 18 to request a recount in their race. Here's who is asking for a recount and how the process works.
J. Ann Selzer's Nov. 1 poll showed Kamala Harris leading Donald Trump in Iowa, 47% to 44%. Trump eventually carried the state by 13 points.