Chaos erupted at a campaign rally for Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump in Vermont on Thursday, as protesters repeatedly interrupted the GOP front-runner and clashed with his supporters both inside and outside of the event.
As the presidential candidates preparing for February’s Iowa caucus, Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., named his “Religious Liberty Advisory Board,” including a Latino who supports immigration reform.
A Latino, son of Mexican immigrants, living in the influential state of Colorado is among the focus of the Republican National Committee’s (RNC) latest diversity advertising campaign.
Republican presidential candidate Marco Rubio has criticized Democratic presidential front-runner Hillary Clinton and President Barack Obama for North Korea's experimentation with a hydrogen bomb.
2016 Republican presidential candidate Jeb Bush took a shot at Donald Trump over his multiple marriages and claimed that his fellow GOP contenders are too scared to challenge Trump head on.
The U.S. is in far greater danger than it was when President Barack Obama entered the White House, according Republican presidential candidate Marco Rubio, who detailed his national security plan on Monday.
Latinas Have the Most to Lose Under Republican PresidentWe've heard a lot about the GOP War on Women and the GOP War on Latinos, but we haven't spent enough time focusing on the intersection of these groups: Latinas.
A new poll shows 2016 presidential front-runners Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton with strong double-digit leads over their respective fields for the Republican and Democratic primary races in Nevada -- a state where Latinos make up a large voting bloc.
2016 Presidential hopeful Donald Trump announced on Dec. 29, 2015 that he planned on spending $2 million for TV ads in Iowa, New Hampshire and South Carolina.
Presidential hopeful Marco Rubio used his official position as majority whip of the Florida House of Representatives to request that state regulators give his ex-con brother-in-law a real estate license in 2002.
After being criticized for wearing a necklace made of bullets, Donald Trump spokeswoman Katrina Pierson fired back at her critics by threatening to "wear a fetus" in order to spread an anti-abortion message.