The GOP planned a dynastic restoration in 2016. Instead, it triggered an internal class war. Can the party reconcile the demands of its donors with the interests of its rank and file?
The South Carolina senator ran on more war, less Social Security, and immigration reform—the opposite of frontrunner Donald Trump.
Where does Donald Trump end and Donald Trump playing Donald Trump begin?
When the presidential candidates met for the third time on Saturday, their distinct approaches were on full display.
The presidential candidate tangled with the Democratic National Committee Friday over a data breach.
The Republican presidential candidate and his Senate colleague, Mike Lee, want Americans to be able to buy drugs that have been approved by other developed countries.
The Republican frontrunner has long called for more executions—even when his proposals run afoul of the Constitution.
The country’s largest communications and media labor union announces it will stand in the presidential candidate’s corner.
On ISIS, the Kentucky senator steers a distinctive course between his party’s neoconservatives and its bellicose populists.
Distaste for big money in politics hasn’t stopped supporters from finding ways to back the presidential candidate.
On Tuesday night, Ted Cruz and Marco Rubio clashed over NSA surveillance—but they can’t tell the public what they’re arguing about.
As a field of boutique candidates caters to the well-heeled, the frontrunner dominates the down-market demographic.
The GOP candidates shared a stage in Vegas, but seemed locked in their own, only occasionally intersecting conflicts.
GOP leaders must face down their primary voters before their party can capture the presidency—and show little appetite for the task.