A quarter-century ago, Hillary Clinton made a snippy remark about baking cookies, then won a competition with Barbara Bush. Can the prospective first gentleman measure up?
Making controversial claims without providing evidence gets attention. It’s also reckless.
The Republican candidate brings on board a new religious-outreach director.
After a federal court struck down the state’s strict voting law as racially discriminatory, Republicans are trying to restrict voting at the county level.
The talk-radio host’s unintentionally dissonant diagnosis of what threatens America.
Hillary Clinton’s proposal to make public higher education more accessible to lower- and middle-income students could have the opposite effect.
The Democratic nominee’s team says it expects more divisiveness with a Breitbart News executive now in leadership.
Instead of forcing Hillary Clinton to generate enthusiasm for her candidacy, the Republican seems determined to motivate her coalition to vote against him.
A campaign with a reputation for avoiding the media finds new ways to generate positive publicity in a digital era.
The Republican nominee is airing his first ads of the general election starting on Friday, according to media reports.
The GOP presidential nominee has hired a senior executive from Breitbart News and promoted a senior aide in an attempt to jump-start his foundering campaign.
Seeing the Republican nominee’s prolific mendacity in a new light.
A Hillary Clinton presidential victory promises to usher in a new age of public misogyny.
It’s the latest example of a campaign that indulges in its most destructive and self-destructive impulses.
The retired Red Sox ace is making noises about challenging Senator Elizabeth Warren in 2018. Let’s take a look at the oppo file.
Three out of five Trump voters in the Lone Star State would back secession if the Democrat wins, a new poll finds.
A report that the recently ousted Fox News boss is advising the Republican fits with a campaign that increasingly resembles a political remake of The Expendables.
A last-ditch attempt to accelerate the president’s initiative shows why commutations for federal offenders are so hard to procure.
Former Interior Secretary Ken Salazar and other veterans of the last two Democratic administrations will lead the planning effort for 2017.