Network exit polls suggest Donald Trump erased the advantage Democrats had with low-income voters across the country.
These are challenging days for Democrats ahead of Donald Trump’s return to the White House. Their party has yet to land on a clear message or a leading messenger, leaving the president-elect mostly unchallenged,
RNC chair Michael Whatley says President-elect Trump will play a "significant" campaign trail role supporting GOP candidates in the 2026 midterms, even though he won't be on the ballot.
At the Atlantic, Russell Burman details this reasoning in his new article “Maybe Democrats Didn’t Do So Badly After All ”: Now a clearer picture of the election has emerged, complicating the debate over whether Democrats need to reinvent themselves—and whether voters really abandoned them at all.
In the wake of Democrats’ electoral defeat last month, some of the party’s Christian leaders are calling for a reconsideration of how Democrats talk about faith issues, with an eye toward reconnecting with a voting bloc they long since surrendered to Republicans.
Instead of asking what’s the matter with Kansas, the question for 2025 and beyond is what’s the matter with Democrats.
A handful of prominent Democratic governors are quickly adjusting their approach to President-elect Donald Trump before he takes office in January
While some GOP senators have indicated they are all-in for Donald Trump's picks, others have withheld support, for now, especially on some of his more controversial nominees.
Mr. Manchin says America is ready for a third party to absorb centrist and moderate voters who feel alienated by both party’s excesses.
President-elect Donald Trump wants Mexico, Canada, the Panama Canal and Greenland in his stocking this Christmas season. There’s no truth to the rumor, however, that he wants Mexico to return the $10 million we paid for the Gadsden purchase. Though he’d take that money and use it to buy another golden toilet at Mar-a-Lago.
The longtime congressman fired shots at President Joe Biden, President-elect Donald Trump, and everyone in between in an exit interview with The Boston Globe published Thursday. Kuster’s answer as to why she is retiring from Congress was two-fold. The first reason was the issue of gerontocracy.