With Paul Ryan’s energy in the House and Cruz’s inevitable loss to Hillary Clinton in the fall, the Republicans still have a shot to rebuild their party.
After a rough couple of weeks, the Democratic front-runner speaks to Al Sharpton’s National Action Network and details plans to reinvest in African American communities.
Jeff Merkley of Oregon gives the Democratic candidate his endorsement in the presidential primary race.
Democrats are trying to pressure the Iowa senator to confirm Obama’s choice for the U.S. Supreme Court, but that strategy shows little sign of success so far.
Will fans of the Democratic presidential candidate succeed in creating an enduring political movement?
The Empire State’s strict registration rules have already tripped up Donald Trump’s kids—but they might hurt Bernie Sanders the most.
The House speaker declared—again—that he’s not running for president. For now.
The Ohio governor has basically no chance of winning the Republican nomination, but hanging on until the Convention may prove smart.
The ultra-conservative views of many in the Russian Jewish community are driven by memories of life in the USSR.
Public schools in the United States aren’t teaching students how to engage diverse opinions.
The senator from Vermont will speak about creating a “moral economy.”
Interviews with the people who tell pollsters they are backing the outspoken billionaire
Bill Clinton’s unforced error on the trail places the 1994 Violent Crime Act back in play.
Some seem concerned with its economic impact—others see it as a threat to the country’s values.
Regardless of which scenario prevails, there’s likely to be conflict in Cleveland.
The Vermont senator’s escalation is more semantic than substantive—he’s been critiquing her decisions on the Iraq war, campaign finance, and free trade for months.
Win or lose, the Democrat has already accelerated a major generational shift within the Democratic party.
The Vermont senator erases his rival’s national lead in a new PRRI / The Atlantic poll, even as he struggles to close the delegate gap.