South Dakota voters are deciding whether to add protections for abortion rights to the state constitution and potentially overturn the state’s abortion ban.
With Americans expressing concerns about violence following the presidential election, AG Marty Jackley is calling for a peaceful transition of power.
South Dakota Attorney General Marty Jackley is urging citizens to support a peaceful transition of power after Tuesday’s Presidential Election.
South Dakotans are voting on a ballot measure that would guarantee a right to abortion in the first trimester. It would allow the state to regulate abortion only in ways “reasonably related to the physical health of the pregnant woman” in the second trimester.
South Dakota is God’s Country. It is the greatest state in the nation, and I want to work to keep it a wonderful place to live, work and raise a family. I’ve served in the legislature previously, and I know though that we have issues we need to address.
View results from the 2024 South Dakota House of Representatives election. Follow live outcomes and maps by district as votes are added up on Election Day.
South Dakotans will decide whether to adopt gender-equal officeholder references in the South Dakota Constitution and if the state can require work requirements on enrollees for Medicaid expansion. Those questions are Amendment E and Amendment F,
Florida, Arizona and seven other states are asking voters whether they want to enshrine a right to abortion in their state constitutions.
Four states will put the question of whether to legalize recreational marijuana or medical marijuana to voters on Tuesday.
While electing officials to make and enforce laws, voters in dozens of states are also deciding on more than 140 ballot proposals affecting the way people legally live, work and die.
The battle over Constitutional Amendment H that South Dakota voters will decide on Tuesday is the latest in a series of disputes about how political candidates should be chosen in the state. H calls for all candidates seeking an office to be on one primary ballot that all voters would receive,