"This is a long and complicated web," said 2024 Republican presidential nominee and former President Donald Trump during a news conference from Trump Tower in New York City, following oral arguments in his appeal of the E.
Mayor Eric Adams spoke directly to New Yorkers on Tuesday and said he is focused on the city -- not the ongoing federal investigations into City Hall and the NYPD. Adams said he has no concerns about the professionalism or the leadership of the NYPD despite a federal investigation that has forced Police Commissioner Edward Caban and other top
The first ballots in the US election were slated to go out to voters Friday, two months ahead of what looks set to be a nail-biting finish in the race for the White House between Kamala Harris and Donald Trump.
A man serving time on a 20-year prison sentence for threatening officials in New Jersey has made it onto Alaska’s general election ballot for the state’s lone U.S. House seat this November
"Here is the New York Times' attempt at a cure for its own habit of sane-washing, in which, in the end, it sane-washes Donald Trump again," the MSNBC host fumed.
MSNBC's Lawrence O'Donnell blasts the New York Times for paraphrasing Donald Trump's "incoherent" ramblings into a format where they can make sense of what he might be trying to say: LAWRENCE O'DONNELL,
The California governor and Kamala Harris both launched their political careers in San Francisco two decades ago. Now, he's fundraising and promoting her run for the White House.
The poll comes ahead of Harris and Trump’s ABC News debate on Tuesday night, the only scheduled debate so far between the two candidates. And that debate could be even more cruc
The California governor and Kamala Harris both launched their political careers in San Francisco two decades ago. Now, he's fundraising and promoting her run for the White House.
Only 40 percent of likely voters said Ms. Harris represented “change,” while 55 percent said she represented “more of the same.” Mr. Trump, in contrast, was seen as representing “change” by 61 percent of voters, while only 34 percent said he was “more of the same.”
Trump was convicted in May on 34 felony counts of falsifying business records in relation to a "hush money" payment to an adult film star before the 2016 election.