Maine's Total Coverage put together a voting guide with information Mainers should know before heading to the polls.Table of contentsSign up for our NewslettersWhere to vote on Election DayWhat time do the polls open and close?
Voters in Maine and Texas are deciding whether to enact new Republican-backed measures that supporters say would help safeguard elections, but which opponents believe are intended to make voting more difficult.
Tuesday is Election Day and Mainers will be faced with two important referendum questions when they head to the polls.
Here's a recap of the proposals to require photo ID and make changes to absentee voting, and to put in place a red flag law.
This article includes results for communities in Cumberland County. To see election results for the statewide ballot questions other regions of Maine, click the links below.Sign up for our NewslettersMAINE REFERENDUMS | CENTRAL MAINE | MIDCOAST & DOWNEAST | OXFORD HILLS SCHOOL DISTRICT | YORK COUNTYCumberland County residents who wish to jump to election results from their community can click on the name of their city or town from the list below to jump directly to those results.
A statewide ballot question Tuesday asks residents if they want to build on the state’s yellow flag law, which allows police officers to initiate a process to keep someone away from firearms. Approval would add Maine to more than 20 states that have a red flag law empowering family members to take the same step.
An unguarded election process is a threat to all of us. If only a few votes make the difference in the choosing of one candidate over another, as is often the case, then every vote is critical to ensure an accurate and secure election.
The ballot measure would not allow for use of tribal IDs when voting, creating 'incongruency' in the law, according to Maine's Secretary of State.
(WABI) - The results of the 2025 Maine Student Mock Elections from dozens of Maine schools are in. Seventy-eight schools across the state participated Tuesday, with 29 schools, making up more than 4,000 students, reporting their results on the two referendum questions.
Maine voters will decide a pair of high-profile ballot measures addressing elections and gun violence in a statewide referendum election next week.