Trump Once Unified Democrats and Divided Republicans. The Shooting And Debate Turned the Tables.
The attempted assassination of the former president prompted his Republican critics to relent, perhaps permanently.
The attempted assassination of the former president prompted his Republican critics to relent, perhaps permanently.
Many foreign officials see an era of political violence ahead in the United States.
In wake of shooting, GOP officials are quick to blame Democrats for demonizing the former president.
Sixty years ago, another presidential candidate turned his VP pick into the stuff of gossip and rumor — to great strategic effect.
Should Biden drop out, or is there a path back to a win?
Weakened, threatened or wounded, the former president has relied on a singular visual to boost his political advantage.
Despite the bitter atmosphere, there are real ways to ease political tensions
Even before the most basic details had emerged, the political conversation had turned to media criticism, partisan vitriol and wild conspiracy theories.
Hilario Deleon is the young Latino chair of the Milwaukee County GOP, and he’s determined to find more people like him to vote for Donald Trump.
Pulitzer Prize-winning photographer David Hume Kennerly has photographed every presidential convention since 1976, from the behind-the-scenes delegate wrangling to onstage victory laps.
Here’s what would happen at the convention.
Marco Rubio was the GOP’s rising star — until Donald Trump came along. Now, a decade later, a new version of the senator is back in the conversation about the party’s future.
After years of answering for their own party’s dysfunction, GOP lawmakers are delighted to watch Democrats squirm over what to do about Joe Biden.
Historians and political analysts weigh in on the fallout of a first-ever conviction of a former (and possibly future) president.
Donald Trump’s pick for vice president made a 180-degree turn from fierce critic to bulldog surrogate for the former president.
The right has become obsessed with the media after the president’s bad debate.
Phone calls begin with boilerplate, they say, then ask: ‘Is there any reason you couldn’t or wouldn’t support the president?’
The real story behind a venerable D.C. organization's legal settlement tells us a lot about the current state of political warfare.
Trump or not in the White House, NATO has to embrace some hard realities to survive another five — much less 75 — years.
The prime minister of Norway thinks the alliance can win over its critics.