Three of the four Republican candidates for president will make a flurry of campaign appearances across Nevada on Friday as they seek to get out the vote just a day before the state's caucuses.
Most of the remaining Republican presidential candidates spent Friday barnstorming across Nevada -- one day before that state's critical first-in-the-West presidential caucuses.
After a blockbuster few months, the race for the Republican presidential nomination may be about to hit the snooze button. The closely watched early states are done, and the competition has been whittled down to a hardy four candidates. The next landmark day is a month off — March 6, otherwise known as Super Tuesday. Read full article >>
The four high-profile candidates running for San Diego mayor have raised a combined $2.4 million as they hit the campaign’s stretch run toward the June 5 primary.
Phase two of the Uttar Pradesh elections will see a whopping 118 candidates with a criminal background. The details released by the Association for Democratic Reforms reveals that out of the 337 candidates analysed for the second phase of Uttar Pradesh Assembly Elections, 118 candidates have declared criminal cases against them. Vicky Nanjappa reports.
Four Republican candidates vying for the nomination to challenge Democrat Bob Casey's re-election bid to the U.S. Senate barely disagreed with each other at a suburban Philadelphia forum, although some sparks flew as they worked to distinguish themselves from each other with less than three months until the primary election.
The League of Women Voters of Freeport will host a special Candidates Forum on March 1, featuring candidates from the 17th Congressional District race, as well as from four contested Stephenson County Board races.
Political experts call California an ATM or a gold mine for presidential candidates.The Golden State lived up to its nickname in 2011: The major presidential candidates and several former candidates hauled $25 million from the state last year -- before a
In anything-goes Nevada, the Republican presidential candidates must tread a fine line between voters and vice. This is not a place of farmhouses, mom-and-pop diners, chitchats with voters over apple pie. This is a place of neon signs, abandoned homes, billboards promising quick vasectomies and slot machines shouting: Wheel! Of! Fortune!