Congress needs to pass a spending bill by September 30 to avoid a partial government shutdown. Dockworkers and ports must strike a contract by the same date.
The Fed announced it will cut interest rates by half a point, its first cut since 2020, making mortgage payments and credit card bills more affordable for Americans. How will the big economic news affect the presidential race?
A new Yahoo News/YouGov poll reported that 67 percent of Americans are anxious about the November election, showing an increase in concern compared to results from four months ago with a
Vice President Kamala Harris sat for a nearly 45-minute interview with the National Association of Black Journalists.
The state is getting lots of political attention. After recent visits from Kamala Harris and Tim Walz, JD Vance rallied in Raleigh on Wednesday.
The Trump campaign is attempting to shore up support in North Carolina after seeing a drop in the polls once Harris became the Democratic nominee.
A fair economy. Inflation. Crime. Last week, as the country moves closer to Election Day, the Journal ran a series of stories based on a poll done by Research & Polling Inc. The poll questions sought opinions from likely voters and was done Sept. 6-Sept. 13, except for Sept. 10, which was the night of the presidential debate.
Vice President Harris is finding new support in the three Rust Belt states that helped deliver President Trump’s 2016 victory. On issues like the economy and immigration, the two are now essentially tied in polling on who would do a better job at dealing with such problems.
Republican candidate for governor Kelly Ayotte said Wednesday that Democratic rival and former Manchester Mayor Joyce Craig “failed” as a leader, and she vowed if elected to have
The president said he was not declaring victory over inflation, but marking a pivot point for the recovery from pandemic recession.
Vice President Kamala Harris sits atop the Democratic ticket, and she is taking a different tack when approaching Latino voters: hammering a middle-class message on the economy, while speaking about immigration only sparingly.