In a social media world where news spreads quickly, journalists and politicians have a special obligation not to fuel uncertain narratives.
Author: Ingrid Jacques, USA TODAY
Voters supported abortion rights. Here’s what anti-abortion leaders should learn from it.
Faced with two extremes during the midterm elections, voters chose the option they believed more closely resembled what they had with Roe v. Wade.
Abortion an answer to inflation? Democrats have overplayed their hand, and voters know it.
Polls show a shift toward Republicans in recent weeks, even among independent women, as the economy tops all other concerns in midterm elections.
Will Oregon go Republican? GOP surge at state level shines a light on what voters want.
What’s happening in Oregon echoes around the country, where citizens sick of failed Democratic policies lead to the rise of surprising candidates.
GOP is no longer the party of old, white men. Meet the conservative women on the rise.
Conservative women are working on the front lines and behind the scenes to shape politics and policy that affect all Americans.
Is GOP’s ‘big tent’ shrinking? Traditional conservatives find themselves without a home.
Recent primaries and elections haven’t been all bad news for Republicans who would just as soon move on from Donald Trump and his grip on the party.
First lawsuit is filed challenging Biden’s costly, unfair student loan forgiveness plan
The Pacific Legal Foundation filed a federal lawsuit Tuesday with the intent of putting a stop to the loan cancellation plan.
‘Forgiving’ student loans isn’t motivated by kindness. It’s all about cold, hard politics.
Biden has extended the pause on student loan payments four times and is mulling another, leaving borrowers dangling as he measures political winds.
Democrats so badly want Trump to go away, but FBI’s Mar-a-Lago search is helping him stay
Former President Donald Trump released what looks very much like a campaign ad soon after news broke about the FBI search of his home in Florida.
School choice is sweeping America. Now, Supreme Court has given parents even more options.
The frustration that parents felt juggling work and their children’s learning spurred an explosion of school choice initiatives around the country.