Dozens of undecided voters gathered in St. Louis last night for the second presidential debate between Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump, hoping the candidates’ answers might better inform their ballots in November. Co-moderated by ABC
In an attempt to dismiss an apparent policy disagreement between the two men at the top of the Republican ticket, vice-presidential nominee Gov. Mike Pence accused ABC News’ Martha Raddatz, the co-moderator of last night’s
When Gorbah Hamed, an uncommitted Missouri voter, addressed presidential nominees Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton at Sunday night’s debate, she asked how the election of either candidate would affect people like her, who are Muslim
The day after the second presidential debate, President Barack Obama took to Twitter to express his support for Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton. The president borrowed a line from his wife, Michelle Obama, whose use
Federal law may prevent Donald Trump from fulfilling a big promise he made at last night’s debate, according to former U.S. Justice Department chiefs from both political parties. “If I win, I am going to
House Republicans are preparing to hold a conference call today and, after a weekend when a wave of party leaders withdrew their support from their GOP presidential nominee, the subject of Trump’s candidacy is expected
Within minutes of Sunday night’s debate, Donald Trump turned the biggest moment of the presidential campaign into what his bid for the White House has always been at its core: a wild, unruly, anger-fueled spectacle.
Donald Trump‘s running mate Mike Pence decried reports that he was thinking about leaving the campaign as “absolutely false.” “That was absolutely false. … These rumors just furl around presidential campaigns,” Pence said on Fox
–11 MOMENTS THAT MATTERED AT THE DEBATE: The second presidential debate came at the end of a tumultuous and unprecedented week on the campaign trail, and the battle between Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump reflected every
Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump went personal in the second presidential debate, attacking each other on everything from vulgar language to emails. The debate’s co-moderator, ABC News’ Martha Raddatz, said she saw “a lot of