For many of the blue-collar Latino men in and around an Austin Home Depot on the day after the 2024 election, Donald Trump made sense.
The numbers so far ‘represent a move to the right, but it’s going to be a while before we know how far a move is taking place,’ one analyst says.
The results of the 2024 election have confirmed a reality that is too frequently denied by Democratic Party leaders and strategists: The American working class is angry — and for good reason. They ...
Proposition 314 makes it a state crime to cross the border unlawfully, allows police to arrest and deport migrants.
In the 2020 election, Trump received 37.74 percent of the vote in New York, while Biden secured 60.87 percent. However, in ...
After Vice President Kamala Harris’ defeat in the 2024 U.S. presidential election, some people have turned their frustration toward an unexpected target: ...
Oakland County, sprawling suburban territory that both campaigns had visited in the race’s closing days. Harris won by 10 ...
Outgoing President Joe Biden will welcome President-elect Donald J. Trump to the White House this week, extending an olive branch to a man who he has spent […] ...
Brian Leija, a 31-year-old small-business owner from Belton, Texas, was not surprised that a growing number of Latino men of ...
The “Saturday Night Live” cast sarcastically tells Donald Trump they never wavered in their support of him and begs not to be ...
About 7 in 10 Hispanic voters were "very concerned" about the cost of ... But that happens in political campaigns. Many of the people who voted for President Trump were able to get past this and trust ...
Working-class voters, people of color and immigrants voted in lower numbers or moved to Trump, and national party leaders ...