The two Democratic leaders will make an appearance together on Monday.
The Republican candidate is deeply unpopular, and his Democratic rival is promoting her own version of American nationalism.
The city is riding high after the NBA final. But with the GOP convention looming, residents are bracing for disappointment.
Demographic data shows that a Briton’s education level may be the strongest indication of how he or she voted.
Should the United Kingdom referendum serve as a warning not to underestimate Donald Trump?
The U.K.’s vote to leave the European Union betrays a failure of empathy and imagination among its leaders. Will America’s political establishment fare any better?
The U.S. presidential candidate excluded several events during her tenure as secretary of state, according to the AP.
“I think it’s a great thing that happened,” the U.S. presidential nominee said on Friday.
“I’m going to do everything I can to defeat Donald Trump,” the Vermont senator told MSNBC.
The Supreme Court’s deadlock on immigration suggests that the protest should have been in the Senate, not the House.
The presidential candidate has been cozying up to conservative Christians. Recently, they’ve been cozying back.
For the first time, the Republican nominee’s operation shows real signs of changing course. But can changing the campaign change the candidate?
Donald Trump converted around $50 million in loans to his campaign to a gift—but did he have any choice?
She has vowed to expand President Obama’s executive actions. Thursday’s decision won’t necessarily prevent her from doing so.
He was convicted in federal court earlier this week on racketeering and other charges.
A judge has ruled that a 3.3-mile zone around the convention, to be held in July, infringes on demonstrators’ rights.
In a survey, more than half of people in Florida, Pennsylvania, and Ohio, were opposed to a mandate requiring public schools to allow it.
Voters from both parties in North Carolina, a newly minted swing state, are grappling with the weaknesses of the presumptive Republican nominee.
Plenty of those who backed the Vermont senator still don’t feel warmly toward the presumptive Democratic nominee.
The Republican’s support comes from voters who are resistant to demographic change—but they’re a distinct minority.