A growing number of Americans are pointing to immigration as a top concern heading into the election. But a substantive debate on the issue has become impossible, given that Donald Trump and his vice-presidential candidate,
The aspiring vice presidential nominees visited Pennsylvania Saturday in a pair of campaign events within an hour’s distance of each other with messages miles apart. Democratic Gov. Tim Walz stepped onstage at a high school aptly named Freedom and touted his party’s inclusivity,
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.
Arizona lawmakers Sen. John Kavanagh and Rep. Analise Ortiz debated a Republican-devised migration control measure voters will see on the ballot.
Rep. Robert Garcia emphasized being "accurate" as he took a look at a chart once displayed by the former president.
Here, border politics are literally matters of life and death. Federal and local authorities describe a new humanitarian crisis along New Mexico’s nearly 180-mile portion of the border, where migrant deaths from heat exposure have surged and merciless smuggling cartels inflict havoc.
After Tropical Storm Debby forced him to cancel a visit last month, Ohio senator JD Vance made his first appearance in Raleigh Wednesday afternoon.
The politics of immigration look different from communities on the Southwest border that are voting in hotly contested congressional races
The state is getting lots of political attention. After recent visits from Kamala Harris and Tim Walz, JD Vance rallied in Raleigh on Wednesday.