The Trump lawyer’s talk-show gaffes have created a “fall from grace” narrative, but Giuliani’s days as “America’s mayor” weren’t all they’re cracked up to be.
The former president has stepped out to campaign for Democrats in the 2018 midterms in a way he never did as president.
Public servants used to quit on principle. Now, they leak to Bob Woodward and write op-eds in The New York Times.
In the swirl of headlines around President Trump and the White House, Vice President Mike Pence hardly merits a mention.
The “toughest sheriff in America,” pardoned by Trump a year ago, was crushed in Tuesday’s Republican Senate primary in Arizona.
Donald Trump lowered the White House’s bar to entry. Stormy Daniels’s lawyer is stepping right over it.
Polling shows a tight race for governor, and a series of special elections has hinted at Trump fatigue in big swings for Democrats.
The First Amendment lawyer Floyd Abrams says Trump easily surpasses Richard Nixon as the greatest threat the news media in America has ever faced.
Ego may be driving the president’s campaign itinerary more than anything else.
They must hold 10 seats in Trump country and overperform in contested states. But with a blue wave forecast, anything could happen.
After Charles Koch criticized President Trump’s trade war and budget deficit, Trump lashed out, calling the Koch brothers’ vast conservative money machine “overrated.”
President Trump is trying to keep a very red House seat in Republican hands in a special election on Tuesday.
The Democrats avoid the I word as much as possible as they campaign to reclaim the House, refusing to give Trump a “gift” to energize his base.
None of this summer’s electoral trends is etched in stone. But there is turbulence even among the president’s voters.
Helsinki may be the extraordinary moment when Donald Trump’s worst traits were so blatantly self-exposed that even some of his own partisans were forced to say, “Enough.”
The Republican ad assault on the Democratic leader Nancy Pelosi is now in its 12th year, but it may not work in the 2018 midterms.
Conventional wisdom holds that the four vulnerable senators are screwed if they vote against Brett Kavanaugh. But there’s a counter-case to be made.
Despite the party suffering yet another identity crisis, Trump backlash may be sufficiently strong to propel it to victory, whichever route it takes.