IDA "" The road from Shreveport to the Arkansas state line is a short and lonely one, a seemingly forgotten path through rural northwest Louisiana with few attractions or diversions.
LITTLE ROCK - Republican attorney general nominee Gunner DeLay says it was unethical for his Democratic rival Dustin McDaniel to accept thousands of dollars in contributions from utilities.
LITTLE ROCK Republican attorney general nominee Gunner DeLay is calling Democratic rival Dustin McDaniel's acceptance of thousands of dollars in contributions from utilities unethical.
By Betsy Turner Arkansas News Bureau LITTLE ROCK - A new poll has the Democratic and Republican candidates for attorney general both claiming victories of sorts.
Governor's debate gets testy By Doug Thompson FAYETTEVILLE - Mike Beebe is double-talking and Asa Hutchinson is saying anything to get elected, according to their criticisms of each other during the second debate between major party governor's candidates on Wednesday.
Halter leads, Holt gains in poll By Doug Thompson FAYETTEVILLE - Republican candidate Jim Holt picked up 7 percentage points from a month ago but still trails Democrat Bill Halter by double digits in the race for lieutenant governor, results of an Arkansas News Bureau-Stephens Media poll show.
Whirlpool Corp. said on Tuesday it will cut at least 1,200 jobs at U.S. plants in Indiana and Arkansas and expand production at a Mexico refrigerator plant.
By Doug Thompson Arkansas News Bureau FAYETTEVILLE - Republican candidates for state office and legislative seats reaffirmed their opposition to gay marriage on Monday.
Poll shows Beebe with 18-point lead over Hutchinson in governor's race By Rob Moritz LITTLE ROCK - Democrat Mike Beebe maintained a double-digit lead over Republican Asa Hutchinson in the governor's race, according to results of a second independent poll commissioned by Arkansas News Bureau-Stephens Media released Monday.
AARP starts media campaign to educate voters on state candidates By Betsy Turner LITTLE ROCK - Although AARP Arkansas' new media advertisements say "Don't Vote," the organization's leaders say the real message is for Arkansans to get educated on candidates before casting a ballot.