A quiet ceremony memorialized the April, 19, 1995, attack on the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building in downtown Oklahoma City that left 168 dead.
Republican presidential candidates honing their economic message are trying tap into a lingering sense of insecurity among Americans seven years after the financial crisis.
As the Republican field remains wide open, candidates tried to distinguish themselves from their potential opponents. Donald Trump made an appearance, too.
The presidential candidate now says she is reserving judgment on the Pacific trade pact she once described as "the gold standard."
The Democrat's flip from her 2007 stance was attributed to the "far different" political landscape of 2015, a spokesman said.
“There is a difference in the way conservatives are treated versus liberals," the Republican candidate said.
The former secretary of state's remarks this week put her at odds with President Barack Obama, who has put limits on aid.
"She never hesitates to hold powerful people's feet to the fire," Hillary Clinton wrote of Sen. Elizabeth Warren. "Yes, even presidential aspirants."
The organization announced restrictions to foreign financial contributions, but critics remain skeptical of the policy.
Clinton's supporters in Congress include over half of the Senate's Democrats and over a third of House Democrats.
New Jersey Governor Chris Christie, who is making cutting Social Security and Medicare the centerpiece of a possible presidential campaign, conceded on Wednesday that he is taking a risk with the proposal.
China's state-run media has begun a campaign to assure netizens that Hillary Clinton's presidential aspirations are no threat to Sino-American relations.
With Hillary Clinton formally announcing her plans to run for president Sunday, Bill Clinton might be preparing for a possible return to the White House.
With its first-in-the-nation caucuses that can make or break presidential candidacies, Iowa is crucial for any White House contender.
The Electoral College keeps presidential elections from becoming a popularity contest, but name recognition can certainly be a boon. A very big boon.
A one-term senator cites his "improbable" biography and offers "generational" change? Marco Rubio sounds a lot like Barack Obama.
The comments were unexpected, at least by progressives, who saw them as an early sign she may shift away from the centrist economic policies pursued by her husband.
Rubio called on lawmakers to lower taxes, repeal Obamacare, and end the “dangerous concession to Iran and its hostility to Israel.”
Marco Rubio is facing scrutiny for flip-flopping on immigration reform while Hillary Clinton has remained quiet on the issue.
Their wedding is set for July 19 in Chicago -- no word on whether Clinton will attend.
In her monologue at the 2015 MTV Movie Awards, host Amy Schumer joked that Hillary Clinton would replace Zayn Malik in One Direction.
The growing 2016 presidential field and the political establishment reacted swiftly to Hillary Clinton's presidential campaign launch Sunday.