The final Republican presidential debate before "Super Tuesday" wrapped up on Thursday night, and issues affecting the Latino electorate were addressed from the start.
The 2016 U.S. Presidential Elections is fast approaching. And as the campaign period intensifies, former presidential hopeful Mitt Romney urges Republican nominees to release their tax return, putting emphasis on Donald Trump.
Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents (ICE) will now be granted the option of taking just released federal inmates both targeted for deportation and further criminal prosecution directly into custody.
Here are few details and rumors about Super Tuesday 2016. Less than a week from now will be Super Tuesday. Politicians and voters are both excited for the said event.
The Republican presidential primary appears to be a three-horse race with Trump, Cruz and Rubio, but Florida senator needs a major win in the Sunshine State to maintain contender status.
Now-deleted Twitter accounts purportedly beloning to Latinos tweeted their support for Donald Trump on Tuesday night, minutes after the Republican presidential front-runner had won the Nevada caucus.
As most of the immigration talk coming from GOP has focused on deploying more border patrol agents and building a wall along Mexico, Republican candidates have spent far less time publically discussing changes that will likely soon come regarding the nation’s policy on Cuban immigrants.
Donald Trump won his third consecutive presidential primary, but rival Ted Cruz is banking on a "Super Tuesday" wins, especially in his home state of Texas.
But in January, Cruz said he was opposed to "deportation force." Sen. Ted Cruz, who is aspiring to presidency under the Republican Party, made his stance clear on illegal immigrants in a televised interview Tuesday.
Many media outlets proclaimed that the Bush Family dynasty was over when Jeb Bush suspended his presidential campaign. The 63-year-old Bush announced he was dropping out last Feb. 20 after getting disappointing results in South Carolina.
Republican hopeful Ted Cruz recently went out of his way to assure Fox News host Bill O'Reilly he is totally committed to a plan to deport all 12 million undocumented immigrants estimated to live in the U.S. if he is elected president.
Ted Cruz and Marco Rubio are both concentrating on their Nevada ground games in hopes of slowing down hard-charging Republican front-runner Donald Trump.
Senator Ted Cruz fired his spokesperson Rick Tyler for publishing an implicating video of his fellow candidate as other presidential hopefuls accuse the Texas lawmaker of doing “anything to get elected.”