How Seriously Should We Take The Polls Showing Bernie Sanders Surging?
Bernie Sanders is closing in the polls, but it still seems as though it doesn’t mean as much as some political pundits will try to tell you it does.
Bernie Sanders is closing in the polls, but it still seems as though it doesn’t mean as much as some political pundits will try to tell you it does.
If Jim Webb runs for President, he will be the only candidate in either party who is on record defending the Confederate Battle Flag. And he’s thinking of running as a Democrat.
A new poll shows that Hillary Clinton remains largely unstoppable on her quest for the Democratic Presidential Nomination, and she has a pretty clear path to the White House as well.
More Democrats are calling themselves “liberal” than they have in years. Republicans, too.
Two new polls show Bernie Sanders rising in the polls in New Hampshire, but they likely don’t mean anything in the long term.
Even with a recent negative downturn in the polls, the reports of Hillary Clinton’s impending political demise are largely wishful thinking on the part of conservatives.
Lincoln Chafee began his bizarre run for the Presidency in the strangest way possible.
Hillary Clinton remains as much the inevitable Democratic nominee as she always has been.
The “Draft Warren” movement is basically dead.
The New York Times really, really wants a horse race for the Democratic nomination.
Martin O’Malley is running for President for some reason.
Hillary Clinton is a deeply flawed candidate who might not even make a very good President. But that doesn’t matter in the race for the Democratic Nomination, and she’s probably going to be the next President anyway.
Maryland’s former Governor will announce his candidacy for President next week. Don’t expect him to go very far.
Bernie Sanders is running for President. He’s not going to win, but he’s not running because he thinks he can win.
Even for political junkies, the thrill seems to be gone.
The GOP race remains tight, but some candidates have benefited from their entry into the race more than others. Overall, though, Hillary Clinton continues to dominate.
Once again, Massachusetts Senator Elizabeth Warren says she isn’t running for President, and has no plans to do so.
Ted Cruz kicks off with the first of what is likely to be a string of candidates getting into the 2016 race in the coming month.
The 2008 runner-up has scared off all serious challengers for 2016. Why?
Do the nonprofit’s foreign donors create a conflict of interest?
With no real opponents in the race for the Democratic nomination, Hillary Clinton has no reason to rush getting into the race.
The Republican wave extended even to Governor’s races that, in any other year, they should have lost.