Neither the Democrats nor the Republicans truly represent most Americans. Fixing that is exceedingly unlikely.
Look no further than the Georgia GOP primary for governor.
Kamala Harris will be very, very busy the next two years.
Explaining the continuing cowardice of GOP Senators.
Richard Burr, Jim Inhofe, David Perdue and Kelly Loeffler should go to jail.
Earlier this month, Senator Lindsey Graham blocked a bipartisan resolution condemning the Armenian Genocide, Now we know why.
It wasn’t exactly a warm reception for President Trump at last night’s World Series Game Five.
Democrat Jon Ossoff has thrown his hat in the ring to challenge David Perdue for Georgia’s Senate seat in 2020.
Georgia Senator Johnny Isakson will retire at the end of 2019, setting up a contest in 2020 to fill the remainder of his term.
Stacey Abrams, best known for losing the race for Governor of Georgia in 2018, is still apparently thinking of getting in the race. Her chances seem slim at best.
The narrow loser of the Georgia governor’s race has left open the possibility of running for President.
The woman famous for losing the Georgia governor’s race is eyeing a bigger job.
As the government shutdown enters through its twenty-fourth day, attention is shifting to Senate Republicans who could be pressured to break ranks and potentially force a resolution.
Congress is no closer to a resolution of the DACA fix than it was earlier this year.
The White House’s immigration plan is facing opposition in both chambers of Congress from moderate and conservative Republicans alike.
The fundamental premise at the heart of the immigration bill that President Trump backed earlier this month has no merit whatsoever.
The President has endorsed a bill that would cut legal immigration in half.
Two Republican Senators are introducing legislation that would result in drastic reductions in the number of people allowed into the country legally.
An adviser close to Hillary Clinton is talking about expanding the Electoral College map in 2016, but even without such an expansion the GOP faces an uphill battle.
Republicans performed better among Latino voters this year than they did in 2012, but that doesn’t mean they’ve solved their problems.
2014 was not supposed to be a wave election, but it clearly qualifies as one.
Things are looking good for the GOP to take over the Senate, but there are still several right races that could tip the balance one way or the other.
There’s at least a 50-50 chance we won’t know who controls the Senate until weeks after Election Day.
Third-party candidates in several states could end up having a big say in the battle for control of the Senate.
A number of factors unique to 2014 make it likely that control of the Senate could be up in the air for months after Election Day.
Republicans still have an advantage, but Democrats seem to be holding their own in the battle for Senate control.
The GOP has a good chance of taking the Senate in 2014, but it will be by a narrow margin.
Tea Party backed candidates may have lost most of the GOP primary battles, but they’ve won the war for control of the Republican agenda.
A victory for the GOP Establishment in Georgia.
A new poll indicates that Democratic candidates are holding their own against Republican challengers in three southern states.
Should it matter if a candidate for office isn’t a college graduate? Georgia Republican David Perdue thinks so.