It will set a precedent for political behavior – what actions by presidents are acceptable? – and how and when Congress can hold them accountable.
Author: Susan Page, USA TODAY
Competing parties, clashing realities: Campaign’s final sprint opens as conventions end
The Republican and Democratic conventions didn’t so much change the political landscape as sharpen the differences, and underscore the stakes.
Three things President Donald Trump and the GOP need to do at their convention
Keep it Trumpian: For one thing, Donald Trump at the Republican convention needs to remind reluctant voters why they elected him in the first place.
With no balloon drops, what’s a convention for? Three things Joe Biden needs to do at his
For Joe Biden, the to-do list at this week’s virtual convention includes spanning a political spectrum from John Kasich to AOC.
You have to win first: What Joe Biden’s pick of Kamala Harris tells us about Biden
By choosing Kamala Harris as his running mate, Joe Biden signals that he doesn’t want to rock the boat in this campaign, and he doesn’t hold a grudge.
USA TODAY/Suffolk Poll: Support for Big Government rises to record levels amid coronavirus crisis
Americans say the federal government is doing too little – not too much – to deal with the health and economic repercussions of the deadly pandemic.
Analysis: Joe Biden insists he still has a path to the nomination. Others have trouble seeing it.
If Joe Biden doesn’t score a convincing victory in the Feb. 29 South Carolina primary, his third bid for the presidency could be effectively over.
As public impeachment hearings open, the surprise was that there was a surprise: Analysis
The first public impeachment hearing was expected to be an effort by Democrats to put into context the private testimony. Then news happened.
From ‘Anonymous,’ key excerpts from inside Trump White House on Putin, Hillary
Key excerpts from “A Warning,” a book by an anonymous senior administration official about President Trump and his administration.
‘Anonymous’ author warns that Trump ‘will not exit quietly,’ even if defeated or impeached
The anonymous official who has written a scathing account of President Trump suggests he might refuse to leave office even if impeached or defeated.