The hope of an intervention is that treatment can restore a person to who they really are. But voters already see exactly who Trump really is.
In Raleigh, North Carolina, the Republican vice-presidential nominee insists the ticket and the party are unified.
The surrogate illustrates the difficulty of campaigning for the Republican nominee without publicly disgracing oneself.
Surveys show that most young voters view Donald Trump as racist or disrespectful. Unfortunately for the Democratic nominee, they don’t think much of her either.
On his first solo swing of the campaign, Tim Kaine presses the case against Donald Trump in the urban South.
After days of controversy and reports of a campaign intervention, the Republican nominee doesn’t seem committed to assuaging allies’ concerns.
Mike Pence endorsed his former House colleague, even though Donald Trump won’t.
The Republican nominee lagged behind Hillary Clinton by just $10 million in July—the closest he has come to her fundraising totals yet.
Despite a wild ride over the last week, the nominee can count on a solid, fervent base. His problem is reaching out beyond those backers.
Genuine religious freedom requires accepting Muslims even without their wartime heroism.
Donald Trump’s running mate has backpedaled his candidate’s controversial remarks in recent days—but will that do anything to ease concerns among voters and Republican leaders?
Did liberals botch their chance to take down Trump by hyperbolically attacking past Republican nominees? Probably, though the GOP is no more innocent.
The Obama administration is giving the two parties’ nominees office space and a first glimpse of the government’s secret intelligence.
That whole likability thing? Still an issue.