The Massachusetts senator will reportedly endorse Hillary Clinton in the coming weeks.
The Iowa Republican is running for his seventh term in the Senate, but this time, he faces a tough challenger amid growing criticism for his handling of President Obama’s Supreme Court nominee.
When he discusses his faith, the Republican candidate sounds a great deal like the businessman-turned-politician who coined his campaign slogan.
It’s easier to ask short-sighted questions about the election than it is to grapple with the big picture.
A federal judge says new laws made it too easy to throw out provisional ballots, potentially hurting minority voters.
Asking Democratic party elites to support him after he garnered fewer votes, won fewer states, and earned fewer pledged delegates cuts against the core spirit of his candidacy.
On Tuesday, the GOP nominee proved that he is capable of behaving himself for a night. But can he retain the support of his base if he sounds like a typical, boring politician?
Claiming the Democratic nomination for United States president, Hillary Clinton fully embraced the magnitude of her milestone.
With a series of decisive wins, Clinton secures the delegates she’ll need to become the first woman to be a major-party nominee.
Her journey to the Democratic nomination is one of the most improbable political turnarounds of recent years.
House Speaker Paul Ryan forges ahead with the first plank in a substantive policy agenda—and promptly gets drowned out by Donald Trump.
Bernie Sanders’s campaign and supporters are furious about declarations that Hillary Clinton is the presumptive nominee, but their arguments don’t hold up to scrutiny.
Rumors suggest she’s a possible pick for the Democratic ticket. But there could be significant downsides.
Some liberals and conservatives claim they don’t trust establishment news sources. Their Facebook habits say otherwise.
Repudiating their support would be virtually unprecedented—but so, too, were Trump’s nakedly prejudiced attacks on a respected federal judge.