If Trump Wins
If the property tycoon does win the election, he might accomplish little more than building his wall.
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.
If the property tycoon does win the election, he might accomplish little more than building his wall.
The Republican candidate believes what he reads on the Internet, not what any “expert” might tell him.
The Florida senator must triangulate in time for Super Tuesday.
Let’s dispel with this fiction that Marco Rubio represents the future of the Republican Party.
Only Ted Cruz and Marco Rubio can now stop Donald Trump becoming the Republican Party’s nominee.
The former secretary of state’s first outright victory confirms that she is still faraway the favorite for the nomination.
A candidate’s perceived competence and the national conditions matter more than trustworthiness.
The former Florida governor may be running out of time to prove to Republicans that he is a viable contender.
Nearly one in two Hispanic voters in the United States now see the Republican Party as hostile to them.
The Florida senator is always one moment away from victory. Maybe South Carolina will be different.
Republicans are starting to come to terms with the failures of their last administration. It isn’t pretty.
Bernie Sanders is trying to turn the Democratic Party into something it’s not: an ideological project.
If the Florida senator insists on touting his “judgement” and “understanding” of foreign affairs, let’s take a look.
No favorite to take down Donald Trump emerges from the first Republican presidential primary.
A Bloomberg candidacy is unlikely but reveals something about New York’s role in American politics.