News

See how the Democrat and Republican presidential candidates stack up for the 2016 United States election. ... He wrote in George H.W. Bush on his 2004 presidential election ballot.
After losing a presidential election, candidates oftenuse their high profile in a variety of ways. Some seek office in their home state, others appear ontalk shows, publish books or even join ...
Republican Sen. Rand Paul was a favorite of the libertarian corner of the GOP long before he began his presidential bid. Some thought he had a good chance of going far in the 2016 cycle with his ...
Most media coverage of the race includes six Democrats and 14 Republicans (or fewer), but the full list of declared presidential candidates has soared, thanks to a late August surge, to 1,049.
A multitude of candidates are hoping to win their party’s nomination for the 2016 presidential election. Between now and election day, many candidates will enter and leave the race for a variety ...
A Harvard Medical School graduate and career physician, Jill Stein is the likely Green Party representative for the 2016 presidential election. Last February, she formed an exploratory committee ...
How the 2016 presidential candidates measure up on social media Social media is an increasingly crucial part of campaigning for president. Here's how this year's candidates stack up.
6:21 p.m. ET Ohio Governor and former presidential candidate John Kasich is wasting no time after Election Day -- he plans to deliver a speech on his vision for the future of the GOP just two days ...
Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump pats the stomach of daughter Ivanka Trump, who is expecting a baby, in Spartanburg, S.C. jim Watson—AFP/Getty Images Republican presidential ...
Republican 2016 presidential candidates, from left, New Jersey Governor Chris Christie, ... Likewise, it's one of the things that makes Kasich potentially formidable in a general election.
Third-party candidates helped determine the outcome of the 2016 presidential election, but this go-round the mostly obscure slate of alternative hopefuls appear far less viable, making 2020 more ...
Published Nov 08, 2016 at 9:41 AM EST Updated Dec 13, 2016 at 11:46 AM EST People arrive to vote in the U.S. presidential election at Potomac Middle School in Dumfries, Virginia, November 8.