The suburban counties outside of Milwaukee have been reliable Republican strongholds, but the region’s politics have become more complicated, and less predictable, under Trump.
During a rally on an airport tarmac in Erie, the President built out a whole excuse for his potential electoral defeat, even as he continued to call defeat an impossibility.
On Thursday night, Biden made a convincing case that a post-Trump future was within reach, projecting an image of a politician already assuming the posture of the Presidency.
With its blitz of events, interviews, surrogate appearances, and advertisements, the Biden campaign is determined not to repeat Hillary Clinton’s mistakes.
Since 2016, the state G.O.P. has added more than a hundred thousand registered voters, while the Democrats have lost eighty thousand. Should Biden be worried?
The President’s Supreme Court nomination, three upcoming debates against Joe Biden, and his continuing threats to disregard unfavorable election results are the topics that will dominate the public’s attention in the weeks ahead.
Democrats have spent four years arguing about why Hillary Clinton lost the 2016 election. The concerns now being raised about Biden focus on why he’s winning.
The app, which was developed by the ad broker and software company Phunware, gathers users’ data in an invasive way reminiscent of the methods of Cambridge Analytica.
During a speech in Pittsburgh, Biden said that Donald Trump, having failed to respond to the coronavirus pandemic, “looks at this violence and sees a political lifeline.”
On Monday, the former Fox News personality turned Trump campaign official and girlfriend to Donald Trump, Jr., delivered a short speech whose tone might be described as high-key dystopian.
For one night, at least, Michelle Obama, Bernie Sanders, and even some Republicans agreed that the need to remove Trump from office made any other considerations secondary.
A heady moment of confrontation with Joe Biden at a debate seemed likely to linger awkwardly, dooming a future political partnership. But, on Tuesday, evolution was in the air.
The President’s interest in the Republican primary seemed to be about continuing to punish his former Attorney General. He had already cast him out of Washington; now he wanted to bury him.