Donald Trump’s presidential campaign is teetering on the edge of implosion over the obscene sexual comments he made about women, with the nominee facing unprecedented calls from Republicans to drop out of the race.
Senate Republican leadership and vulnerable GOP incumbents are wrestling with the dilemma of whether to fully withdraw their support from Donald Trump.
GOP lawmakers and elected officials are abandoning presidential nominee Donald Trump in droves just one month before Election Day over tape of his sexually obscene remarks on women.
Melania Trump says she was offended by her husband Donald Trump’s “unacceptable” sexual remarks about women, but asked the nation on Saturday to accept his apology.
The Republican Party would face enormous political and legal problems should it decide to replace Donald Trump as its presidential nominee, election law experts agree.
Audio recordings revealing Donald Trump’s vulgar and graphic language about women during a taped 2005 interview threatens to exacerbate an already glaring demographic weakness for the Republican presidential nominee.
Senate Democrats say Hillary Clinton needs to share the wealth with down-ballot candidates, as she’s sitting on millions of dollars in contributions while Democrats in battleground states get pummeled by outside groups.
A federal contractor recently arrested for removing classified materials from the National Security Agency (NSA) is no Edward Snowden, former intelligence and law enforcement officials say.
Supporters of former Democratic presidential candidate Bernie Sanders on Saturday expressed anger and vindication over leaked comments made by Hillary Clinton to banks and big business that appeared to confirm their fears about her support for global trade and tendency to cozy up to Wall Street.