The Democratic debate was 100 percent body-part reference-free, and, in places, actually educational.
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Steve Sebelius
If you’ve ever been struck in a traffic jam on Interstate 15 between Las Vegas and California, you might become more sympathetic tothe idea of the Xpress West high-speed train.
SlashPolitics watched the Republican Fox News debate, so you didn’t have to! You SO owe us.
The slow-motion self-destruction of the Republican Party presents its adherents with a tantalizing existential question: Would you rather win an election led by an awful candidate, or lose while hewing to principle?
The victim of a 2012 allegation about taxes has become the 2016 wielder of accusations about taxes.
When regular-people voters disdain the party elite, you’d naturally turn to the most elite Republican in America for help. Right?
A roundup of results and observations after a super night of voting.
If ever there was an event that screamed out for a drinking game, it’s the Republican debate scheduled for Thursday night.
Say what you like about the political performance art that is the Donald Trump presidential campaign, but don’t say it’s not a ratings winner.
To be honest, I thought Gov. Brian Sandoval was an odd choice for nomination to the U.S. Supreme Court from the very start.
And now, it’s the Republicans turn! A somewhat diminished Republican field now (mostly) turns its attention to Nevada, the last stop before Super Tuesday.
Nevada loves Hillary Clinton. And in 2016, Nevada loved her a little bit more than it did the last time she ran in a competitive Democratic race for the presidency.
We know where Nevada’s senior senator, Harry Reid, stands on quickly appointing a new justice to fill the seat of the late Antonin Scalia — he’s all for it.
It’s caucus time. Finally. On Saturday, Nevada’s Democrats will gather to debate the merits of their two remaining candidates and try to persuade each other that either former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton or Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders is the best choice to lead America.
Not to put too fine a point on it, but Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., is a disgrace to the Senate, a traitor to his oath and, if he retained the slightest vestiges of decency, would resign immediately.