Republicans once made opposition to the Affordable Care Act central to their message—but their nominee understands the dangers of taking health care away from those who need it.
Political reporters were taken aback by Hillary Clinton’s charge that half of Trump’s supporters are prejudiced. Few bothered to investigate the claim itself.
Asian Americans are the fastest growing voting block in the country—but we rarely see politicians actively courting their support.
The candidate’s doctor disclosed the diagnosis after Clinton’s sudden departure from a 9/11 commemoration.
Clinton said half of Donald Trump’s supporters were prejudiced. If anything, her numbers are too low.
Clinton’s remarks played into the perception among GOP and independent voters that Democratic Party leaders are hateful and smug.
If Clinton wins in November, she should resist the urge to replace all of Barack Obama’s appointees.
Four years ago, Mitt Romney denounced Russia as America’s top geopolitical foe. Today, Donald Trump sees Putin’s lawlessness and brutality as a feature, not a bug.
Campaign gear should be ugly, tacky, and hidden away by the second week of November. That’s what makes the Make America Great Again hat, well, great.
Liberals who hope a good, thorough fact-checking would disillusion the Republican nominee’s supporters are doomed to disappointment.
Some Democrats believe what was once unthinkable could become a reality in November.
The candidate’s plan to constrict legal immigration would sharply reduce the flow of immigration over the next half century.
At a candidate’s forum on Wednesday night, the Democratic nominee served up loads of specifics—but no positive story to weave them together.
The former president heads out on the stump, working to rally voters who don’t even remember his administration.