Ford, Apple and Nabisco are among the companies that have been openly criticized by the presumptive Republican presidential nominee.
Despite their differences, Sen. Elizabeth Warren endorsed Hillary Clinton Thursday and the two met Friday to discuss how to take on Donald Trump.
President Obama told “Tonight Show” host Jimmy Fallon that he is “worried” about the Republican Party.
The presumptive Democratic presidential nominee is at the center of an investigation over how classified information got on her private email server.
In backing Democrat Hillary Clinton for president, the U.S. senator from Massachusetts called the Republican a “loud, nasty, thin-skinned fraud.”
HUD Secretary Julian Castro is one of several oft-cited candidates to be the VP choice of the presumptive Democratic presidential nominee.
The U.S. senator from Massachusetts will back Clinton during an interview Thursday night with MSNBC's Rachel Maddow.
The Democrat’s response Thursday to a tweet by the Republican received far more retweets and likes.
The president once painted his former rival as a “corporate lawyer sitting on the board at Walmart” and famously said he found her “likable enough.”
Billionaire donors, unwilling to support Donald Trump, pour money into Senate, House and judicial races instead.
In a video Thursday, the president officially backed Hillary Clinton's White House run, saying: “I don’t think there’s ever been someone so qualified to hold this office.”
Speaking after a White House meeting with President Obama, Bernie Sanders said he will stay in the presidential race through the last primary next week.
Seth Meyers broke down the historical significance of Hillary Clinton’s nomination on “Late Night.”
Numerous records requests for documents from Hillary Clinton’s tenure as secretary of state have been delayed until after the presidential election.
The mogul’s candidacy is forcing newsrooms to rethink long-standing journalistic ideas about objectivity.
Advisers to the U.S. senator from Massachusetts have had frequent conversations with Clinton’s campaign team in recent weeks, sources told Reuters.
The Republican presidential candidate could fall as much as $500 million short of his fundraising goal.
California’s tech hub donated heavily to Bernie Sanders — to the tune of at least $6 million. But Hillary Clinton won big in the Bay Area.
Associated Press writers were reportedly threatened after the news organization called the primary race for Hillary Clinton.
If you're looking to cast a protest vote against one of the two major candidates, here are some other options in the 2016 presidential race.
While Hillary Clinton could make history in the U.S., India, Germany and South Korea and many other nations have all already had female heads of state.
Now that both major parties have their presumptive presidential nominee, which candidate do most voters prefer?