
How Hillary Clinton Can Build a Bridge to Trump Supporters
Emphasizing infrastructure spending may give the Democratic front-runner the chance to win over disaffected working class voters.
The campaign coverage you need from the staff of The Atlantic

Emphasizing infrastructure spending may give the Democratic front-runner the chance to win over disaffected working class voters.

It could lead to a public health disaster, says The Atlantic's healthcare policy writer Vann R. Newkirk II.

The case for cautious optimism about future, despite the disappointing choices in this year’s presidential election.

As the Republican candidate attempts to solidify his hold on his supporters, it becomes harder for him to gain any ground with other voters.

The labor organization threw its weight behind the Republican front-runner, citing his hardline stance on immigration.

The candidate outlined his half-baked “cyber thought process” in an interview with The New York Times.

A petition garnered tens of thousands of signatures—but how serious was its author?

Donald Trump succumbs to the age-old temptation to see capitalism not as an economic system but a morality play.

Differential wages for the disabled are discriminatory—and Clinton is putting the issue into the spotlight.