Of the counties with nearly complete results, more than 90 percent shifted in favor of former President Donald J. Trump in the 2024 presidential election. Circles show our estimate for which candidate leads in the remaining votes.
View live results of the Indiana presidential election. See maps of county-by-county presidential election results in the race between Donald Trump and Kamala Harris.
Indiana Democrats failed to win any statewide seats in Indiana and appear unlikely to break the supermajority.
Many Indiana voters went to the polls Tuesday for the 2024 election. Check below for the latest Indiana election results as they come in.
Republican Mike Braun has won the Indiana governor’s race. He defeated Democrat Jennifer McCormick and extended the GOP’s 20-year-hold on the state’s top office.
Forty-five U.S. House of Representatives members, including two from Indiana, will not seek re-election, guaranteeing a new representative.
Rep. Jim Banks (R-Ind.) and Democratic challenger Valerie McCray, a clinical psychologist, will face off Tuesday in the Indiana Senate race. Former President Trump endorsed Banks in
At least three new lawmakers from Indiana will join the U.S. House of Representatives, no matter the results, as voters decide on all nine of the Hoosier state’s seats. Incumbents decided not to seek reelection in three of the districts. Republicans currently hold seven seats, while Democrats hold two.
Indiana voters have three open congressional seats to fill in the election Tuesday. Republicans hope to keep them while aiming to knock off a Democrat in the northwest part of the state.
Donald Trump has won the last two presidential elections here in Indiana. In 2016, Trump trounced then-Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton by 19 points.
House Republicans tapped Houchin for a GOP conference leadership role, which opened after President-elect Donald Trump began announcing cabinet picks.
Indiana Lt. Gov.-elect Micah Beckwith called the Indiana Daily Student ’s 2024 election edition “woke propaganda” and appeared to threaten both the IDS and Indiana University in an X post (formerly known as Twitter) on Nov. 12. Here's what you need to know.