
What Happened to Hillary Clinton's Support Among Latinos?
The electorate seemed poised to help her secure a victory, and yet her support trailed behind Barack Obama’s numbers in 2012.
The campaign coverage you need from the staff of The Atlantic

The electorate seemed poised to help her secure a victory, and yet her support trailed behind Barack Obama’s numbers in 2012.

Synagogues hosted prayer and healing services on Wednesday for congregants grappling with the outcome of the U.S. presidential election.

White, conservative Christians voted for the Republican candidate by a huge margin, but this election revealed deep fractures among leaders and churches—especially along racial lines.

The president-elect won by locking in support from traditional “blue wall” states Hillary Clinton thought were in her corner.

A candidate who dismissed boasts of sexual assault as “locker room talk” will now serve as president.

His victory shocked the world and reordered the American political landscape.

The Philadelphia GOP was supposed to be a minority party in a Democratic-leaning swing state. On election night, something else entirely happened.

The Republican nominee put together a coalition of non-college-educated, non-urban voters—and they turned out for him with tremendous enthusiasm.

The Republican candidate pulls off a stunning upset, as his party retains control of both houses of Congress.

They’d been saying it for more than a year—but few bothered to hear them.