Marco Rubio and Ted Cruz claim that, as the field narrows, a more traditional candidate will emerge to overcome the Trump phenomenon. They’re wrong.
The mothers of slain black men and women are stumping for Clinton at grassroots events for African Americans, while her rival relies on huge rallies.
The campaign groups are enriching the people who run them—but are they helping anyone else?
The GOP presidential race has put two members of Generation X at center stage, signaling an era in which its members will run most institutions.
“We had people who didn't really seem to understand finances,” he said. “Or maybe they did—maybe they were doing it on purpose."
The Republican frontrunner rolled to another dominating victory in Nevada, gathering steam as he heads into Super Tuesday.
Donald Trump has the lead, Marco Rubio has the momentum, Ted Cruz has the organization, and all three have a shot in the Silver State.
White evangelicals are culturally and economically disaffected—anxious to protect the conservative Christian culture rapidly disappearing in America.
The Republican presidential candidate is disrupting a broken political system—but he’s doing so by exploiting fear.
Facing an intense fight for the Democratic nomination, the presidential candidate is going on the offensive. Will it hurt or help?
Under fire for “dirty tricks," the Texas senator abruptly fires his communications director for spreading a false story about Marco Rubio and the Bible.
Is Rome really ISIS’s “ultimate trophy”?
How the real-estate mogul's attacks against Jeb Bush fueled his rise
Thousands of adoring fans came to see Bernie Sanders on Sunday, but his challenge with black voters—and in the state overall—remains daunting.
Clinton continues to struggle to convince many Democratic voters of her authenticity—or at least, that she’s on their side.
Discouraged with Congress, some representatives elected in the Tea Party wave are leaving Washington after just three terms. Here are four of their stories.
Marco Rubio’s coalition is still too shallow, and Ted Cruz’s too narrow, to challenge Donald Trump—can either build beyond that?
He eschewed pragmatism for vision and leadership. Then he went on the offense to change political dynamics. Sometimes, instead of compromising, you just have to go for the big play.
The Florida senator bounces back to finish second in South Carolina. Meanwhile, Cruz is in trouble, Bush is out—and Trump is still on top.