Will President Biden debate challengers Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and Marianne Williamson? Democratic primary voters overwhelmingly say he should.
Author: Susan Page, USA TODAY
Will Biden win? 3 clues to track – and his approval rating isn’t one of them
At the moment, President Joe Biden has more in common with recent predecessors who won four more years in the White House than those who didn’t.
‘Firsts matter’: Why Donald Trump’s arrest in New York is such a political earthquake
Now the debate begins: Did DA Alvin Bragg prove no person is above the law? Or did he open the floodgates for score-settling with other presidents?
Women of the Year: In Congress, record numbers, record diversity and new power
It hasn’t been fast and it hasn’t been easy, but the rising tide of congresswomen is changing Capitol Hill.
How do you challenge Trump for the nomination? With Nikki Haley in, let’s count the ways.
There’s the Anti-Trump, the Next-Generation Trump, the Trump-Without-The-Baggage. Like him or not, former President Donald Trump defines the field.
What’s going to happen in Washington over the next 2 years? Americans don’t expect much.
Exclusive poll: The messy battle to elect Kevin McCarthy as House speaker was a sign for most of stalemate ahead.
In search of the perfect president: What Americans say they want, from age to gender
Republicans and Democrats value different leadership styles in the Oval Office, one reason it’s hard to get things done.
Paging Elon Musk: Poll shows Americans back Twitter safeguards amid worry over hate speech
Americans by overwhelming numbers express concern about rising antisemitism and white nationalism, a USA TODAY/Suffolk University Poll finds.
Trump in trouble: Republican support for his 2024 bid falls amid political, legal setbacks
Most Republican voters want Trump-ism but are no longer so enthusiastic about ex-President Donald Trump himself, a warning sign for his 2024 campaign.
Nancy Pelosi on her future: Still in the House, but staying out of the congressional kitchen
The groundbreaking House speaker says the attack on her husband made her more open to remaining in the House while stepping back from the leadership.