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Jason Miyares, Virginia’s attorney general, launched his first television ad for the Nov. 5 general election, in an effort to expose his Democratic opponent ahead of a tight battle.
Latino voters are changing rapidly. They have moved away from the Democratic Party, but this doesn’t mean they are becoming ...
It has been five years since a $60 million bribery scheme funded by FirstEnergy Corp. came to light in Ohio with the stunning arrests ofa powerful Republican state lawmaker and four associates in ...
The two women vying to be Virginia’s next governor have so far followed dramatically different strategies, their campaign ...
Bottom line is that if Mr. Rosado had not had an angel like Joe or Marjorie Carollo, he never, never, never would have gotten elected,” Carollo said.
Sinema retired from the Senate more than six months ago, but her latest filing shows almost $400,000 in expenditures on ...
The Eastern and Western Roman Empires had a layered history, experienced a major division, and left lasting cultural and ...
If it feels like there is an influx of political ads right now, it's because there are. We look at why the ads are everywhere and who is paying for them.
The Trump administration has moved on from Comey and Brennan to Obama now with their desperate attempt to erase Trump's Russiagate corruption and pretend it never existed.
Nearly a half million bucks are being spent on TV ads for Detroit mayoral candidates, but it's impossible to tell who is paying for most of the ads.
The congressman is one of only two House Republicans who voted against President Trump’s One Big Beautiful Bill.
Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez has outraised everyone else in the U.S. House so far this year with a whopping $15.4 million.