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Indiana school referendum elections: Districts seek funding for teacher pay, class size, buses
Six Indiana school districts are seeking approval from their voters for operating referendums to fund priorities like higher teacher pay, school resource officers, and bus service.
Gov. Mike Braun's call for a special session Nov. 3 began a 40-day clock for the legislature to meet, and they are still working through their calendars.
Gov. Mike Braun set a Nov. 3 special session for lawmakers to consider redrawing Indianas congressional districts, a move aligned with national Republican pressure to reshape maps.
It's unclear whether enough Republican lawmakers will support the mid-decade redistricting effort that Trump has urged them to pursue.
Chalkbeat on MSN
Why Indiana’s lieutenant governor is door-knocking to defeat a local property tax referendum for schools
Beckwith wants voters to defeat Avon schools’ referendum, which funds teaching positions and programming at the district. Avon schools says he doesn’t even go here.
Indiana Gov. Mike Braun has called a special session to redraw the state’s congressional maps mid-decade, as requested by the Trump administration.
By: Casey Smith Indiana Capital Chronicle For The Republic INDIANAPOLIS — Indiana lawmakers will not convene on Monday for an upcoming special session, House Speaker Todd Huston said Wednesday, instead signaling that the Republican-led General Assembly plans to meet later within the 40-day window allowed by state law.
A new federal lawsuit is challenging Indiana’s new election laws centered around proof of citizenship documentation. According to court documents filed on Tuesday in Indianapolis federal court, a group of nonpartisan voting rights organizations filed the lawsuit against Diego Morales,
Indiana follows other red states, including Texas and Missouri, which have already made changes to their maps to make more favorable maps for Republicans ahead of the 2026 midterm elections. Republicans already hold seven of the state’s nine ...
Four Indiana nonpartisan voting rights organizations filed a lawsuit against the state Tuesday for two new Indiana election proof of citizenship laws arguing that recently naturalized Hoosiers
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