WASHINGTON — Vice President Kamala Harris said Tuesday that she wouldn’t have done anything differently than Joe Biden has done as president over the last four years, promptly drawing attacks from Republicans eager to cast her as a clone of Biden, who remains unpopular.
Former first lady Melania Trump in her new memoir questioned how Fox News was able to call Arizona for Biden "so early" on election night.
Sen. JD Vance’s refusal to accept the legitimacy of the 2020 election at last week’s vice presidential debate culminated his years-long conversion from a Never Trump critic into a MAGA supporter.
Vice President Kamala Harris said Tuesday that she couldn’t think of anything she’d have done differently than President Joe Biden during the last four years, aside from having a Republican in her Cabinet.
Vice President Kamala Harris, in a Tuesday appearance on ABC's “The View," was unable to name a decision she would have made differently than President Joe Biden. Her answer encapsulated Harris' challenge in portraying herself as a candidate who can deliver the change voters want after serving four years as a loyal member of the current administration.
Vice President Kamala Harris answered a question Tuesday on ABC's "The View" about "specific differences" between a Harris presidency and the Biden presidency. She said, "Obviously we're two different people,
President Joe Biden is making a rare jump into the 2024 battleground political fray since ending his reelection bid
When Donald Trump was president, he attempted something similar to what he falsely claims the Biden/Harris administration is doing with FEMA funds.
Kamala Harris likes to boast that under the Biden administration, hundreds of thousands of manufacturing jobs have been created. But while the Democratic presidential nominee is correct, there are asterisks. In California, for example, the number of manufacturing jobs is down this year and is expected to grow slowly in the near future.
The Supreme Court has turned away a challenge from Republican state lawmakers in Pennsylvania to a Biden administration executive order that is intended to boost voter registration
President Joe Biden is making a rare jump into the 2024 battleground political fray since ending his reelection bid