The Democratic candidate says states should be allowed to set their own laws on weed—in other words, that federal law should match what’s already happening across the nation.
Politically? Yes. Mathematically? Not so much.
Two senators had very good nights, while a former Florida governor struggled more than ever.
As Clinton consolidates her support, the GOP struggles to coalesce around a candidate.
With their momentum showing signs of faltering, two unorthodox candidates turned negative over the weekend. Will it work?
Can the former frontrunner outflank the new leader, and will he buy TV ads to do it?
Many on the right grudgingly say the former secretary of state avoided missteps and bested her interrogators in Thursday’s House committee marathon.
The Democratic frontrunner is pouring resources into state-based organizing, hoping to execute an Obama-like strategy in both the primary and general election.
Former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton testified before a House committee, the climax of months of investigations and weeks of political sparring.
Any plan that maintains one group’s payouts while diminishing others’ risks deflating support for the program as a whole.
If elected, he would empower bureaucrats in the Department of Education to slash funding for colleges that show “extreme political bias.”
Good luck to him—elite workers rarely succeed at fencing off space for their personal lives.