The Republican presidential candidate is trekking through battleground states this weekend in a last-second effort to appeal to independent and disenfranchised Democratic voters. His chances may rest with Latinos, the country's fastest-growing voting bloc.
The voice of the evangelical Latinos has been studied by the City University of New York regarding their preception of the two presidential nominees. It was found out that in 2006, the religious backing mattered so much on the result of the election. This year it is anticipated that the Latnos, were hesitant over the presidential candidates because of their ideals.
Arnold Schwarzenegger gave an announcement that he would have run for president if he is allowed. Arnold Schwarzenegger has revealed in a recent interview that he would have run for presidency in 2016 if he was allowed.
PayPal co-founder and Silicon Valley billionaire Peter Thiel is getting political, and is getting ready to fund Donald Trump, Republican presidential candidate of the GOP. Thiel is expected to donate $1.25 million to Trump's presidential campaign.
The New York Times cases to have addressed two ladies who say they were casualties of the Republican chosen one in two separate episodes that occurred in 1980 and another in 2005.
Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump faced off at Washington for the second presidential debate of the 2016 general election. But their debate will change the path of the race in American Politics
Hillary Clinton is expected to gain critical ground on Donald Trump based on her strong performance in their first head to head debate on the campus of Hofstra University Monday night.
John Oliver is doing his part to make certain voters are aware of the differences he sees in the level of scandals presidential candidates Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump have found themselves at the center of.
Less than two months away from the 2016 Presidential Elections in November, map projections and predictions based on numerous polls for what the electoral college vote outcome could potentially look like - state by state - are gaining more and more attention.
Hillary Clinton is besting Donald Trump by a nearly 4 to 1 margin among Hispanic voters, giving her a larger overall lead among that sector than even the staggering 44 points President Obama topped Mitt Romney by in 2012.
Hillary Clinton maintains a significant edge over Donald Trump in their bitter battle to snare the 270 electoral votes needed to ascend to the White House as President Obama's successor.
The 2016 presidential race is heating up while both candidates, Democratic Party nominee Hillary Clinton and Republican Party nominee Donald Trump, prepare to face head on in the first 2016 presidential debate at a time where their numbers are narrowing in recent presidential polls. Take a look at each candidates’ views on pressing issues in the United States before the first presidential debate on Monday Sept. 26.
Even as he walked away with the Emmy for outstanding variety talk series, John Oliver admitted his mind was fixated on just one thing. "I thought Beyoncé was going to be here," said the "Last Week Tonight host.
The first presidential debate for the 2016 U.S. General Elections is less than two weeks away taking place on Monday Sept. 26 on the campus of Hofstra University in New York. Before GOP candidate Donald Trump goes head to head with former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, take a look at the type of questions asked at first presidential debates in the past that may come up again:
The latest Quinnipiac Poll showed that Americans are voting against, rather than for, a candidate. In the Sept. 14 poll, researchers found that Hillary Clinton leads Donald Trump 48 to 43. Recent polls also show that people are likely to vote for third party candidates. Libertarian candidate Gary Johnson has a 13 percent chance of winning voters while Green Party candidate Jill Stein had a 4 percent chance of being voted for president.
Hillary Clinton holds an average 5.2 point lead over Donald Trump in a poll of 11 key battleground states. According to Politico, Clinton tops Trump 45.2 to 40 percent in a weighted poll based on the averages of surveys conducted by several well-known polling outlets, among them Quinnipiac, NBC/Wall Street Journal/Marist, Monmouth, CBS News/YouGov, Suffolk University, The Washington Post, Marquette Law School, Bloomberg, Fox News, CNN/ORC and Public Policy Polling.
The National Front for the Family organization is taking responsibility for an anti-gay marriage march that drew thousands of protesters to the streets of Mexico this past September 10, 2016. The demonstration was aimed at bringing raised attention to President Enrique Pena Nieto's recent proposal to recognize same-sex marriage across all of the historically conservative country.