"We have to take seriously the job of repairing and restoring the perceptions of our party and our brand," DNC Chairman Ken Martin said.
5dOpinion
Hosted on MSN‘It’s Racist’: James Carville, Dem Senator Torch Their Party For Treating All Minorities As ‘The Same’Democratic strategist James Carville and Democratic Michigan Sen. Elissa Slotkin criticized their party in a Saturday video ...
5d
Hosted on MSNJames Carville, Dem Senator Torch Their Party For Treating All Minorities As ‘The Same’Democratic strategist James Carville and Democratic Michigan Sen. Elissa Slotkin criticized their party in a Saturday video ...
Rahm Emanuel has landed his first post-Biden-presidency gig at CNN as a senior political and global commentator. The former ...
As Trump takes aim at core Democratic policies, Martin’s task as DNC chair is to get the party to coalesce around common ...
Shaun Chornobroff, SC Daily Gazette A Greenville businessman is the first Republican to announce a bid to take on U.S. Sen. Lindsey Graham next year. M ...
12d
Alternet on MSN'Lindsey is not one of us, we all know that': Republican launches challenge to Sen. GrahamHe’s running to the right of Graham, saying South Carolina’s senior senator — first elected to the seat in 2002 — is not a ...
The Chair of the Democratic National Committee echoed sentiments voiced by other leaders of the Democratic Party regarding ...
Vice President JD Vance expressed a view on executive power on Sunday that alarmed politicians and legal experts. “If a judge ...
Opinion
15dOpinion
Daily Caller on MSN‘They Don’t Get It’: Victor Davis Hanson Says Dem Rep Trying To Impeach Trump Exemplifies Party’s Failure To LearnHoover Institution Senior Fellow Victor Davis Hanson argued during a Friday podcast that Democratic Texas Rep. Al Green announcing he will bring articles of impeachment against President Donald Trump ...
The Democratic National Committee won't have former two-time Colorado congressional candidate Adam Frisch around to nudge ...
Never let them tell you that nothing ever changes in politics. In 1996, just 27 percent of American adults believed that the law should recognize same-sex marriages. A decade later, at about the time ...
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