I'm excited to share something new: election2026.net — a free, nonpartisan site that lets any voter in the United States research their 2026 candidates and races.
It's built entirely on Quarex.
Enter your zip code and immediately find your US House, Senate, and Governor races with links to in-depth, AI-powered candidate profiles. Every profile is a Quarex book — structured, sourced, and free of editorial spin.
The site covers:
You can also browse by state (see which races are active in any state) or by branch of government.
Right now, voters trying to research candidates face a broken information landscape:
Billions of dollars are spent every cycle to shape what voters believe. Election 2026 is the opposite of that — no ads, no accounts, no tracking, no editorial filter. Just structured questions and sourced answers, powered by the same Quarex architecture you already know.
The next major feature will be state proposition and ballot measure analysis. The same Quarex format that powers candidate profiles will be applied to ballot measures — what a proposition actually does in plain language, arguments for and against, fiscal impact, who supports and opposes it, and historical context.
This is something most voter guides do poorly. They either editorialize or dump raw legal text. Quarex's question-driven approach lets voters actually understand what they're voting on.
If you find Election 2026 useful, the most valuable thing you can do is share it. The site is brand new and needs visibility. A few specific ways to help:
The 2026 midterm cycle is starting now. Public trust in media is at historic lows. People are actively looking for nonpartisan, non-algorithmic sources of truth. Nothing else like this exists.