Mike Huckabee announced Tuesday that he will join the race for the 2016 presidential election. Mike Huckabee announced Tuesday that he will join the race for the 2016 presidential election.
As politicians continue to formally announce their bid in the 2016 presidential race, tensions continue to rise in poverty stricken areas in the United States.
Potential presidential candidate Jeb Bush is reaching out to the Latino community. He spoke in fluent Spanish at a conference this week, CBS Local reports according to AP.
In the upcoming presidential race it is obvious that voters are going to want to go for the candidate who understands all the issues, but, with roughly 54 million Latinos calling the U.S. home, it would be prudent for any serious candidate to understand Spanish as well.
Democrats under 30 are backing Hillary Clinton in a hypothetical primary, while their Republican counterparts have yet to settle on a favorite among the GOP's various contenders, a new Harvard Institute of Politics poll showed.
Sen. Cruz continues his attempts to appeal to Latino voters. He recently spoke at the U.S. Hispanic Chamber of Commerce touting Latinos' conservative ideals.
U.S. Senator Bernie Sanders officially launched his bid in the 2016 presidential race on Thursday, promising to fight against "obscene levels" of income disparity in America.
Former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush said the 11 million U.S. immigrants deserve an "earned legal status," but his comments on immigration has drawn ire from groups.
Potential Republican presidential candidate Jeb Bush is in Puerto Rico for a number of events with the commonwealth's Republican Party. He will also speak at the largert Latino Christian conference on Wednesday.
With the 2016 presidential election slowly gaining speed with candidates from major political parties announcing their bid, one organization has been engaging with the Latino community founded on principles of economic freedom.
The Clinton Foundation admits in a Statement Sunday that it has made mistakes in its tax forms. The Clinton Administration admitted in a statement Sunday that it has made mistakes in its tax forms.
It is a good week for Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., one of the confirmed Republican Party presidential candidates. New polling data has Rubio ahead against fellow GOP candidates and Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton.
Rand Paul is the worst of the score of Republicans running for the White House, his Senate colleague from Arizona, John McCain, told Fox News on Wednesday.