Mueller's Conclusion: No Coordination Between Trump Campaign and Russia
As for obstruction evidence, he punts the matter to Congress.
As for obstruction evidence, he punts the matter to Congress.
How much will we see of the special counsel's report? And when?
Friday A/V Club: The past and possibly future presidential candidate starred in some of the greatest, strangest campaign ads ever made.
Plus: Robert Kraft, Dyma Loving, Michelle Aldana, and others in the news for mistreatment by the U.S. criminal justice system
Confidants of the late senator have either buckled, joined #NeverTrump plotters, or bolted.
Medicare for America doesn't solve the problems of government-run health care. It just creates new ones.
Putting the government at the center of health care means putting politics at the center of doctor-patient relationships.
He's a free trader against dumping, a deficit hawk for Medicare expansion, and an anti-drug warrior who wants to imprison pharma execs.
Plus: Former Sen. Mike Gravel may run, Donald Trump Jr. doesn't understand censorship, and the "Neoliberal Shill" contest has a winner.
The 2020 presidential candidate ran on spending cuts, troop withdrawls, and means-testing Social Security while primarying an incumbent Democrat 7 years ago.
She's a centrist turned progressive.
Don't give the government more power to pick winners and losers.
There's a word for that….
Legitimately interesting yet eminently mockable GenXer Beto O'Rourke joins the 2020 presidential scrum.
George Mason's Todd Zywicki says the senator and presidential hopeful has inherited the ideas of Louis Brandeis without learning the lessons of overregulation.
Nobody in the media should be supporting an elected official trying to control what speech online platforms allow.
Meanwhile, both support single-payer, which would radically cut payments to health care providers.
When voters see what the actual options are, their interest in political competition plummets.
How will a former vice president with a lot of baggage fare in an increasingly progressive, intersectional Democratic primary?
The Massachusetts Democrat is running for president, but sometimes it seems like she's running for America's super-CEO.
Democratic mega-proposals, GOP budgetary fictions, prostitution decriminalization surprises, and Zardoz moments galore
In a New Yorker interview, the would-be primary challenger compares the president to Charles Lindbergh.
The former Colorado governor enters the presidential race, for no particular reason anyone can see.
Voters "still want someone who is not a politician," the billionaire tells the Daily News. "And you're not getting that from anyone in the Democratic Party."
Just 18 percent of Americans have favorable views of socialism.
We live in desperate times when the brake on both Democratic socialism and Republican executive-branch abuse is a 78-year-old San Francisco Democrat.
The senator's own San Francisco is a case study in the policy's poor consequences.
There's intersectionality in theory, and then there's intersectionality as practiced by the most hysterically identity-obsessed activists.
The libertarian Republican tells CNN's Jake Tapper "it is important that we have someone in there who is presenting a vision for America that is different from what these two parties are presenting."
The president's speech at CPAC was a bedazzling mix of bravado, B.S., humor, and positive vision no Democrat will be able to top.
Beto O'Rourke-who won't call himself a "progressive," let alone a "democratic socialist"-is expected to jump into the presidential race.
Democrats approached the issue carefully in 2016. Now six presidential candidates are all-in for complete reform.
Plus: Democrats move to make ad targeting illegal, and more on Elizabeth Warren's child care proposal
Ronna McDaniel's CPAC comments are latest indication that the Republican National Committee will tilt heavily Trump in 2020.
Harris said it was an "unintended consequence," but CNN reports it was the explicit purpose of the policy, which she opposed changing.
"All I can do is keep plotting straight ahead," says the GOP field's lone challenger, who is polling at 18 percent.
"I think that we have to understand though that it is not as simple as that."
Plus: Sanders on democratic socialism, Medicare for All, and what to do about Venezuela
The possible presidential contender has come a long way since his tough-on-crime speech at the 1992 Republican National Convention, but he's still emphasizing his U.S. attorney past.
Richard Nixon faced a primary challenger in 1972...and he squashed him like a bug.
The Vermont independent has yanked Democrats so far to the left that his competitors are becoming mini-mes.
All too often, the Massachusetts senator and 2020 hopeful gets key details wrong.
Medicare for All, free college, breaking up the banks, a $15 minimum wage-the Vermont socialist wants to do it all.
How an independent helped shape the Democratic policy agenda.
The Minnesota senator says the national debt constrains policymaking, giving the rare impression of a candidate who has actually thought things through.
Plus: on hate crimes and hoaxes; Warren's child care plan; growing government discontent; and building new kink communities
The first semi-declared 2020 GOP challenger comes out blazing against the president while trying to wriggle off the hook about his recent Libertarian past.
Pro-choice, Obama-supporting "Libertarian for life" will take a "substantial" move Friday toward competing for the Republican presidential nomination.