Clinton Likely To Solidify Delegate Lead In Super Tuesday Part Two Contests
When all is said and done, Super Tuesday Part Two is likely to put Hillary Clinton significantly closer to being the inevitable Democratic nominee.
When all is said and done, Super Tuesday Part Two is likely to put Hillary Clinton significantly closer to being the inevitable Democratic nominee.
Less than twenty-four hours before voting starts, Donald Trump looks to do very well on what is arguably the most important day of the campaign.
Less than a week before what may be the most important week of the campaign, Donald Trump is in very good shape. Marco Rubio and John Kasich? Not so much.
Another big night for Donald Trump puts him another step closer to being the presumptive GOP nominee.
Both Donald Trump and Ohio Governor John Kasich face big tests in tomorrow’s Michigan primary.
Bernie Sanders won two of the three Democratic contests last night, but he fell further behind in the delegate count any way and isn’t very far from being mathematically eliminated.
Donald Trump and Ted Cruz split the wins on ‘Super Saturday,’ while Marco Rubio and John Kasich continue to struggle for relevance in the 2016 race.
As expected, Hillary Clinton won big last night while Bernie Sanders largely floundered, thus going further toward making Clinton’s victory inevitable.
A new national poll suggests that the newly aggressive tone from Senators Rubio and Cruz has done nothing to stop Donald Trump’s momentum.
Donald Trump is positioned to do very well on Super Tuesday, while Ted Cruz should win his home state. Marco Rubio, meanwhile, seems to be struggling to maintain his relevance.
There’s little doubt that Hillary Clinton will win today’s South Carolina Primary, the only question is how big a win she’s likely to score.
On Tuesday, Ted Cruz’s campaign faces what amounts to a do-or-die battle in Texas.
If Marco Rubio can’t win in his home state, where can he win?
With the Democratic race headed into territory where Hillary Clinton is heavily favored, Bernie Sanders may finally be coming to realize that he can’t possibly win the Democratic nomination.
Donald Trump racks up another big win, while Marco Rubio surges into second and likely saves his campaign for now.
Hillary Clinton and Bernie Sanders are battling today for votes in a caucus whose outcome could go either way.
Tonight’s results in South Carolina could have a significant impact on the race going forward. (Plus, a projection)
More likely than not, South Carolina marks the end of the road for Jeb Bush’s bid for the Presidency.
Hillary Clinton still has a massive lead in South Carolina, and in the Super Tuesday states that follow.
Donald Trump is on the verge of another big victory.
Donald Trump appears headed for another victory in South Carolina’s primary.
One week before the South Carolina Primary, the remaining Republican candidates for President clashed in a headed debate.
Donald Trump is back on top, but the field below him remains as confused as ever.
Unless the polls are very wrong, it looks to be a good night for Bernie Sanders and Donald Trump. Beyond that, there’s a lot that’s still up in the air.
The real question about the GOP primary in New Hampshire will likely be about who comes in second and third place. But what if there are no clear winners for these positions?
Marco Rubio was the man in the cross hairs in last night’s Republican debate.
With the Vermont Senator holding a seemingly insurmountable lead in New Hampshire, Bernie Sanders and HIllary Clinton clashed last night in their most contentious debate yet.
Donald Trump continues to lead, while Marco Rubio surges, in the first polls out of New Hampshire since the Iowa Caucuses.
Clinton is a virtual lock for the Democratic nomination. Rubio is the most plausible Republican winner in a messy field.
Hillary Clinton eked out the narrowest of wins in Iowa, but now she’s headed to New Hampshire where Bernie Sanders holds a seemingly insurmountable lead in the polls.
Ted Cruz won, Marco Rubio surged into a stronger than expected third place, and Donald Trump was humbled just a little bit, but he was hardly a “loser.” The race for the GOP nomination has begun for real.
The final polls of the Iowa Caucus show that the outcome of tonight’s caucuses depend almost entirely on turnout at this point. Plus, a projection of who will win and the order of finish.
With just over a week to go, the New Hampshire primary is being dominated by a bombastic New York celebrity and a septuagenarian Vermont socialist.
The final Des Moines Register poll before Caucus Night shows Donald Trump leading the GOP field, and Hillary Clinton with a narrow lead over Bernie Sanders, but much of the final outcome will depend on who shows up for the respective party caucuses.
With mere days until voting starts, the possibility of Donald Trump running the table in the February primaries and caucuses, or nearly doing so, is more and more likely.
With less than a week to go before the Iowa Caucuses, Hillary Clinton and Bernie Sanders are fighting a closely-pitched battle that will depend largely on turnout.
With less than a week to go before voting starts, Donald Trump continues to dominate the GOP race, with Ted Cruz the only candidate even close to looking like a viable challenger.
After grabbing a lead at the end of last year, Ted Cruz has seen Donald Trump completely reverse fortunes in Iowa with just one week to go before voting starts.
Hillary Clinton and Marco Rubio have won the endorsement of the Des Moines Register, but it’s unclear how much this will help their respective campaigns.
Marco Rubio’s campaign strategy depends on a lot of hope, and no small degree of ignoring reality.
Hillary Clinton and Bernie Sanders clashed in the final debate before the Iowa Caucuses in the context of a race that has appeared to become tighter than it was before Christmas.
With almost no sign that he’ll be able to turn his campaign around, many of Jeb Bush’s top campaign donors are looking to jump ship to other candidates.
The attacks on Ted Cruz’s eligibility to be President have no legal merit, but they appear to be having an impact with at least some Iowa voters.
Polling is continuing to show a tightening in the race for the Democratic nomination, even though most Democrats continue to believe that Hillary Clinton will be their eventual nominee.
There are signs that Ted Cruz’s rise in the Hawkeye State will be short-lived.
Rand Paul and Carly Fiorina are the biggest losers in the lineup for the latest Republican debate on Thursday.
The Democratic race in Iowa and New Hampshire is tightening, according to new polling, but this still seems to be Clinton’s race.
With under a month to go before voting starts, the race for the GOP nomination looks about the same as it did before Christmas.