Besides municipal runoff elections in many communities Louisiana voters are being asked to choose a Senator, some Representatives and decide on the future of the Lafayette airport.
Many people believe that the process of seeing a doctor and the added expense of paying for an office visit are primary reasons that some sexually active young people are not using available birth control methods.
Tonight's debate will air on statewide television beginning at 7pm. It's one final chance for each candidate to sway the hearts and minds of voters before Saturday's election.
Based upon Tuesday's results the sitting Senator has a lot of ground to make up on Bill Cassidy. You can expect the barbs to be flying fast and furiously over the next few weeks as we get closer to the December 6th runoff
If it sounds like more of the same, it is. Chances are this debate will not shed any new light on any glaring issues that we the people of Louisiana feel are really important.
Chances are you won't see the actual candidates or candidate committees sponsoring those heinous "my opponent hits puppies" advertisements . The real dirt will come from the national big spenders like the Democratic or Republican parties.
Is it possible that 21% of Louisiana voters hold the key to controlling the United States Senate? Here's even more proof that your vote really does count.
Last night was the final debate among the three major candidates for the Louisiana Senate. It had the usual barbs and bites but when all was said and done, more was said than will ever get done.
It's been dirty, it's been expensive, and it's been divisive, it's Louisiana's hotly contested Senate race. The latest poll and how you and I might vote next Tuesday says the winner will be...
What makes this total very interesting is the fact that nearly 93-thousand more people voters registered as "no-party" voters compared to the last time there was a Senate election involving Mary Landrieu.
Politics is a strange game. Nothing has been stranger than this year's United States Senate race. Here are some of the latest observations how your vote might count November 4th.
As nasty as the United States Senate race in Louisiana has been over the past few months, you aint seen nothing yet. If this campaign follows the history of every campaign I have ever witnessed the commercials are going to get meaner and you're going to hear and see more of them.
So after a lot was said and very little was done we got to see all three candidates appear in the same room at the same time. Based upon the early observations of people who observe people who watched debates nothing appears to have changed.
If you want your voice to be heard in the November 4th election then, today is the deadline for Louisiana residents who have never registered to vote before or for those wishing to make a change in their voter registration information.