Almost from the moment that Glenn Youngkin became Virginia's governor four years ago, the political world has wondered what's ...
Chile needs order — order in the streets, in the state, in the priorities that have been lost,” José Antonio Kast bellowed in ...
Mayes has cast herself as Arizona Democrats' most aggressive advocate, but critics said she hasn't kept a commitment to ...
In the days before she launched her Senate campaign, U.S. Rep. Jasmine Crockett tried to develop a slate of Democratic ...
This is just some of the wildlife that can be found at the proposed 42-lot subdivision planned for Wendover Road in ...
Mike Pence has split with President Donald Trump once again. Giving voice to anti-abortion advocates increasingly frustrated ...
Trump has spent months attempting to remake D.C. in his MAGAfied image, including paving over the White House Rose Garden, ...
Mark Mitchell, head pollster at the conservative polling firm Rasmussen Reports, spoke with the president at the White House ...
For 17 years, PolitiFact has made an annual tradition of sorting through the year’s rhetoric to identify the statement, collection of statements or theme that had the most significant impact. The ...
PolitiFact editors pick the official winner. This year, PolitiFact is spotlighting three stories that exemplify the consequences of falsehoods in 2025, which we’re calling our Year of the Lies.
Young Americans are rejecting the Republican Party not over ideology but economics, facing 10.4% youth unemployment and 47% housing cost increases since 2020.
José Antonio Kast, a far-right politician, who has praised Chile's dictatorship, has won the presidency, signaling a sharp rightward shift fueled by fears over crime, migration, and the economy.