Bianca Facchinei chats with The Hill’s White House correspondent Alex Gangitano about the aftermath of the ABC News Presidential Debate. Hear them breakdown what politicians and experts are saying about the performances of Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Donald Trump and speculation if there will be another debate.
If you’re one of the many Americans already worn out by the presidential election, here’s a bit of unsettling news: Tonight’s debate doesn’t signal that we’re near the end of the campaign, as it has in the past.
Policy, not politics, is the key focus for Wall Street as the possible elimination of the filibuster emerges as a key issue.
Kamala Harris and Donald Trump have agreed to face off for the first time in a live TV debate ahead of the US election.
Voters will officially head to the polls just over a month later on Nov. 5 for Election Day, though early voting starts significantly earlier in many states. In Illinois, early voting will begin on Sept. 26 and will run through Nov. 4, with Election Day voting held at a designated polling place from 6 a.m. to 7 p.m. on Nov. 5.
A slew of new national and swing-state polls have come out in the past 24 hours — particularly from battleground Pennsylvania — and they tell three consistent storylines after last week’s presidential debate.
All eyes were on the candidates for the Hillsborough County State Attorney's Office during the election forum Wednesday morning.
Donald Trump appeared to close the door to another debate on Thursday, declaring on social media that the first two covered enough ground.