All Politics
- Public trust In government hits new lowsIn 1972, most Americans said that they trusted government always or most of the time, but the Watergate scandal drove trust in government down to 36 percent. Now, 40 years after Watergate, it's at 13 percent.
- US airstrikes hit ISIS in northern IraqPresident Obama has been reluctant to get involved in Iraq again, but conflicts of this kind have a way of taking on a life of their own. At the very least, this is unlikely to be a short engagement.
- Monitor BreakfastPaul Ryan: US competitiveness hindered by Obama environmental regulationsThe Obama administration's regulations aimed at combating climate change are an excuse to expand government and raise taxes, Rep. Paul Ryan (R) said at a Monitor Breakfast.
- Richard Nixon resignation: his raw, personal farewellIn his unvetted, emotional goodbye to supporters, Richard Nixon expressed, in a phrase, the failing that led to his own downfall: 'Those who hate you don't win unless you hate them, and then you destroy yourself.'
- Back to school: No snacks for you, Michelle Obama saysMichelle Obama's push to stop kids from eating snacks and buying sugary drinks will be realized when kids go back to school. It risks being seen as government intrusion.
- What is Bill's value to a Hillary Clinton campaign?Is there a relationship between how people view Bill Clinton and how they view Hillary? One data set suggests "yes," and that the relationship is significant.
- GOP establishment wins primary battle, but it let tea party win the warYes, it looks like the Republican establishment will successfully beat back the tea party in every Senate race this cycle. But it has had to veer far to the right to do it.
- Voter ID laws a solution in search of a nonexistent problemA new study shows that the kind of fraud that voter IDs can stop is extraordinarily rare, suggesting that the burden such laws put on the poor, elderly, and minorities might be worse than the actual problem.
- Richard Nixon's resignation: the day before, a moment of truthForty years ago, a Republican delegation led by Barry Goldwater told Richard Nixon he had lost almost all his remaining support in Congress. The next day, he resigned.
- Kansas continues to fascinateIn the Kansas Republican primary Tuesday, two members of the House faced challenges from the center while Sen. Pat Roberts faced a challenge from the right. All survived. Now, it's the governor's turn to worry.
- Lamar Alexander: how a Senate moderate is thriving in GOP primarySen. Lamar Alexander voted with Senate Democrats to back immigration reform, yet that doesn't appear to have clobbered his prospects in Thursday's GOP primary.
- General McChrystal: Does endorsement signal he may get into politics, too?Retired Gen. Stanley McChrystal, forced to step down after published remarks critical of the president, endorsed former Marine Seth Moulton for a US House race 鈥 prompting speculation that he's open to run himself.
- Mike Huckabee says Obama 'deserves' impeachment. Is he serious?Mike Huckabee, a potential Republican presidential candidate, plays both sides, saying he backs impeaching President Obama but that it's not politically feasible.
- Do you know the scandal that changed America? Take our Watergate quiz.
Watergate roiled American politics like no scandal before or since. It resulted in President Richard Nixon losing in disgrace the office he had coveted all his life. Some of the highest ranking members of the Nixon administration went to jail as a result of the Watergate break-in, including Attorney General John Mitchell and Chief of Staff H.R. Haldeman. In the end 48 US officials and associates were convicted of Watergate-related crimes.
Think you know all about this fascinating piece of history? Try our quiz and see.
- Bill Clinton factor: Can he tip Senate race to topple McConnell?Bill Clinton's campaign swing in Kentucky aims to give a boost to Democrat Alison Lundergan Grimes, who is slipping in the polls in a key Senate race.
- Why political 'corruption' is goodHonest efforts to rein in backroom deals and money in politics have had unintended consequences, making governing harder and empowering the political extremes.
- Tables turning on GOP, social issues now benefiting DemocratsOnce upon a time, Republicans would use social issues like gay marriage and abortion to drive voter turnout and attack Democrats. But that dynamic is shifting.
- Tuesday's primaries offer important lessons in Republican civil warThe tea party failed to beat the vulnerable Sen. Pat Roberts of Kansas, but it did fend off an establishment challenge against two influential House members. The big takeaway: candidate quality matters.
- Hillary Clinton surprise stop on 'Colbert': Will book tour never end?The inventive Stephen Colbert made the Hillary Clinton stop-by more than a boring recitation of difficult foreign policy choices. He began by 'criticizing' her new book as 600-plus pages of name-dropping.
- Video of undocumented immigrant cornering Rep. Steve King is amazingAn undocumented immigrant who was brought to the US as a child and qualifies for Obama's deferred deportation program confronted immigration hardliner Rep. Steve King. The video highlights a key point of the illegal immigration debate.