The World According to Bernie Sanders
The left-wing candidate has little to say about foreign policy, other than trade. Americans need to know more.
Presidential and congressional elections were held in the United States on November 8. The Atlantic Sentinel endorsed the Democratic candidate, Hillary Clinton, who lost to Republican Donald Trump. Republicans defended their majorities in Congress.
The left-wing candidate has little to say about foreign policy, other than trade. Americans need to know more.
Now that the businessman is no longer getting relatively more delegates than votes, he is crying foul.
The billionaire businessman doesn’t lift people up; he drags his supporters down to his level.
Many of the businessman’s supporters are looking for a savior who doesn’t care what other people think.
The Texan deals his rival for the Republican nomination a serious blow, but Donald Trump’s home state is next.
The Texan is willing to risk Donald Trump winning the Republican nomination if it helps him.
The Florida senator asks “his” delegates to vote for him even though he ended his presidential bid.
The senator’s outrageous proposal to patrol “Muslim neighborhoods” isn’t even the worst of it.
Hillary Clinton is likely to win in November, but only because her Republican opponents are disliked even more.
The Republican presidential candidate calls for an American withdrawal from East Asia and Europe.
Ted Cruz and John Kasich must put an end to their dog-eat-dog contest and start working together.
The gatekeepers of the convention aren’t thinking about nominating a Paul Ryan or a Mitt Romney.
Delegates elected at the state level to vote for Donald Trump might not actually support him.
Five states and the Northern Mariana Islands vote in the presidential primaries on this second “Super Tuesday”.
What good is a political party if it cannot be mobilized to stop a man who is patently unfit for high office?