Many will have left their polling location with that modest icon of civic participation: the "I Voted" sticker. "I Voted" stickers come in different shapes, sizes and designs across the country.
The sign, erected on the headquarters of the printing company Sticker Mule, has become a flashpoint over free speech, partisan politics — and zoning laws.
Posing for the camera, she proudly displayed an accessory on her accessory: An “I Voted” sticker was freshly pressed onto her satin Vivier bag. Gomez had just voted early in Los Angeles County ...
the designs on the front of “I Voted” stickers are attracting a lot of attention this year. But have you ever considered the back of your Election Day souvenir? “Garment-safe adhesive ...
Sticker Mule’s social media feed occasionally ... to the point of posting commentary on the vice presidential debate and on ...
The Indiana Debate Commission will host a U.S. Senate debate from 7 to 8 p.m. It will be broadcast live from from the WISH-TV ...
Why do people believe this, and is it even worth getting into a debate over? Paul M. Sutter is an astrophysicist at SUNY Stony Brook and the Flatiron Institute, host of Ask a Spaceman and Space ...
The stickers were made to look like an Israeli ... said it’s important to not “blur the line” between “reasonable debate” around the conflict in Israel, and what she described as ...
We polled seven generative AI models, from ChatGPT to Venice AI, on the U.S. General Election. The answers were as ...
That's particularly true among Republican candidates, who have questioned the fairness of LWV debates just as they have the media, election officials and other institutions once touted as neutral ...