(AP Photo/Stephanie ... party and warned that Donald Trump is obsessed with revenge and his own personal interests. Less than 48 hours earlier inside Madison Square Garden, Trump called his ...
In light of the Democratic party’s loss of the presidency, Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders, an independent who has twice sought the party’s nomination, shared some strong words with the leaders ...
The Vermont independent called the Democratic Party's campaign "disastrous." Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders issued a scathing statement on what he called the Democratic Party's "disastrous" campaign ...
Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders issued a scathing statement on what he called the Democratic Party's "disastrous" campaign after Vice President Kamala Harris lost the presidential election to former ...
Former presidential candidate Marianne Williamson discusses the results of the 2024 election and what Kamala Harris' loss means for the future of the Democratic party. Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders ...
As the 2024 presidential race draws to a close with a Donald Trump victory that could well signal a realignment of the American electorate, the Democratic Party is likely to be forced to rethink ...
If Harris wins, she would extend and expand upon the policies of the Biden-Harris administration and continue the Democratic Party’s shift toward appealing primarily to female, Black ...
But if the Democratic Party now is going to lose to him twice, and this guy's IQ is barely double digits, this guy is, in my opinion, a deranged clown, a buffoon of a man.
Jewish New Yorkers are deserting the Democratic party because of the far left’s “anti-Israel fanaticism,” Congressman Ritchie Torres, a Democrat who was just re-elected as a New York representative ...
Donald Trump was elected president, defeating a resurgent Democratic nominee in Vice President ... they see as deeply flawed after their party failed to connect with voters preoccupied by ...
Arizona remains too close to call in early results, but the former president picked up wins in other swing states.
A genuine nomination process would have made the Democratic Party seem much more functional, because, well, it would have been. Voters would have spoken, and the best candidates would have emerged.