The Democratic Party’s left wing is responding to President Joe Biden’s strong words about the possibility of an American oligarchy with a combination of appreciation, bemusement and frustration
Democrats are finding themselves mired in infighting and schoolyard sniping just as President Trump begins his new term. Former first lady Jill Biden and Rep. Nancy Pelosi’s (D-Calif.)
Biden leaves behind a complicated legacy of legislative wins and economic gains, along with a trail of fractured relationships and grievances within his own party.
The return of the portrait of the seventh president is a reminder of certain resemblances between the two. Jackson's demeanor, like Trump's, appalled
As currently fueled and crewed nationally and from state to state, are Democrats better constructed for protest and resistance than governance and leadership?
(AP Photo/Susan Walsh) President Joe Biden hugs Vice President Kamala Harris after giving his farewell address from the Oval Office ... AP) Democratic presidential candidate Sen. Kamala Harris, D-Calif., speaks during the California Democratic Party ...
In a sit-down interview with Fox News, President Trump remained focused on past grievances as much as new goals for his returning administration.
NEW YORK — (AP) — The Democratic Party's left wing has warned ... President Joe Biden elevated such concerns from the Oval Office for the first time this week, just before he leaves office.
President Donald Trump has begun his second administration with a series of controversial moves and decisions.
That has left Trump more emboldened than ever — and with a long to-do list. He’s launched into a frenetic pace of appearances that is a dramatic departure from his predecessor, Joe Biden, who often faded from public view by his own staff’s design.
Senate Republicans advanced the nomination of Russell Vought to lead the White House budget office as Democrats boycotted the meeting to protest the administration’s recent efforts to freeze
Donald Trump 2.0 is, so far, very much the same as his first go around. But eight years after he was last sworn into office, the new Republican president is emboldened, far more experienced and surrounded by a very different team.