Former White House advisors are sounding the alarm on the Democratic Party’s messaging problem during the first week of “Trump 2.0″.
We have a constitutional crisis,” Democratic Sen. Jeff Merkley said of Team Trump's latest scheme. It's worth appreciating what the label means.
DETROIT — The Democratic Party begins 2025 with several looming questions about its future. Among them: how to recover from losing the White House and the Senate, in an election that saw Democrats lose ground across nearly every demographic group ...
The Trump administration has asked the three Democratic members of the U.S. Privacy and Civil Liberties Oversight Board, an independent executive branch agency, to resign by end of day on Thursday or face termination,
Washington — JD Vance is suggesting that some reporters covering the Trump White House are biased — perhaps even Democratic “propagandists” — and the new administration will keep a close eye on those asking questions at press briefings.
Democrats are finding themselves mired in infighting and schoolyard sniping just as President Trump begins his new term. Former first lady Jill Biden and Rep. Nancy Pelosi’s (D-Calif.)
"Pod Save America" podcast co-host Jon Favreau explains to Stephen Colbert what he thinks Democrats got wrong in the 2024 presidential election.
With Vice President JD Vance and other allies in power, an emergent Catholic right expands political horizons and raises doubts about church unity.
A new report painted a dark picture of President Biden's legacy and reported on lingering resentment he feels toward Nancy Pelosi and Barack Obama.
The California governor’s race is not until 2026, but there are already five major declared candidates: Lt. Gov. Eleni Kounalakis, California superintendent of public instruction Tony Thurmond, former California Senate president pro tempore Toni Atkins, former controller Betty Yee, and former Los Angeles mayor Antonio Villaraigosa.
Trump has traversed an almost cinematic journey back to the White House, and he is associated with ... The institutions are the warped reflective surfaces of the Democratic Party’s house of mirrors. They dazzle, but lie. To regain a foothold on reality ...