The Times, you’ll recall, demanded Biden withdraw from the race (June 28) before calling Trump unfit (July 11). Interestingly, in Sunday’s piece, the Times calls Trum’s condition a “cognitive change,” while the story’s URL says it’s “cognitive decline.” Even in this instance, it’s likely a telling hedge.
As newspaper editorial boards lose influence, or withdraw from the space altogether, there are openings for others. In New York City, a group of veteran journalists are trying to fill the gap.
Two men, one from New York and the other from New Jersey, are the latest to be sentenced to prison for their roles in the January 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol.
The paper's editorial board has endorsed Democratic candidates in every election since it endorsed Eisenhower, a Republican, in 1956.
The source of the poll is unclear, but the questions revolve around the former governor and how voters perceive him.
After a collapse in the mid-terms, New York Democrats are betting a revamped party can help win a House majority
New York Democrats launched a coordinated campaign modeled on more traditional battleground state efforts. Federal, state and local leaders are combining efforts to target a group of House GOP freshmen.
A win for Democrats in Amedure at the state’s high court would follow an earlier victory in which a Republican challenge to the state’s Early Mail Voting Law was rejected. That case paved the way for the wider use of no-excuse absentee voting — which raises concerns about increased voter fraud.
New York and California, routinely overlooked in presidential elections, are shaping up as potentially pivotal battlegrounds in a nail-biter struggle for control of the US House.
The images emerged as Lawler, a first-term Republican, is locked in a competitive reelection fight for his congressional seat in New York's Hudson Valley.
The candidate had asked the justices to intervene after a state judge found that he had used an improper home address in election paperwork.