Incumbent Republican Bruce Westerman took office in the U.S. House in 2015. He served in the Arkansas House from 2011 to 2015. He began his political career on the school board in Fountain Lake, AR in 2006. Westerman sits on the Transportation and Infrastructure Committee and is chairman of the Committee on Natural Resources.
Diana Gonzales Worthen of Springdale has taught for more than 15 years. She was the director of Project Teach Them All at the University of Arkansas, a program which trained teachers to teach students who speak English as a second language.
A group of delegates to the Republican Party of Arkansas' state convention has filed a motion for a preliminary injunction requiring the state party chairman and Arkansas' secretary of state to close the party's primaries to non-Republican voters, and to declare its convention leader is authorized to certify its electors.
President Bill Clinton, Gov. Mike Huckabee, a White House chief of staff and Calif. Sec. of State were all born here
A federal appeals court has reinstated an Arkansas rule prohibiting election officials from accepting voter registration forms signed with an electronic signature
A new poll has found that 50% of likely Arkansas voters approve of Gov. Sarah Huckabee Sanders' job performance, while 38% approved of Pres. Joe Biden's work.
Democrat Sandy Maier is challenging Republican incumbent John Payton for his seat in Arkansas Senate District 22
President Joe Biden’s job approval rating is relatively unchanged from a previous reading, while Gov. Sarah Sanders has support for her job performance from 50% of Arkansas voters, according
A new Talk Business & Politics-Hendrix College Poll shows that three issues that may appear on the November ballot have chances of passage ranging from certain to possible. The
A display of the U.S. Constitution will be available all week inside the Boreham Library on the University of Arkansas at Fort Smith campus in honor of Constitution Week, which is being commemorated with a variety of events. (File Photo/River Valley Democrat-Gazette)
Arkansas officials can again implement a new “wet signature” rule that limits the use of electronic signatures on voter registration forms after the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit granted a temporary administrative stay Friday evening.