Hillary Clinton’s 'slow and steady push' is hardly inspiring. But it shows she is playing the long game, already positioning herself as the centrist candidate for the election in November.
Voting in Port Washington, NY.
Shannon Stapleton/Reuters
Two weeks ago Bernie Sanders and Ted Cruz were riding high. The New York primary changes all that with decisive victories for Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump.
Team Clinton: from 1992 to 2016.
White House & Brendan McDermid/Reuters
New research on first impressions offers hope that the presidential front-runners may still be able to win over voters who have unfavorable opinions of them.
Hillary Clinton is a flawed presidential candidate. But she’s still probably the best on offer.
Reuters/Lucas Jackson
The rise of women to very powerful positions has not, to date, opened the way for other women. So there is no reason to believe a Hillary Clinton presidency would change that.
Bernie Sanders is pumped in Wisconsin.
Reuters/Mark Kauzlarich
The Trans-Pacific Partnership is one of President Obama's biggest accomplishments of his second term. Can it survive the anti-trade tide in the race to replace him?
Presidential candidates are using voter anger to fuel more divisions and discord rather than to start a conversation about the collapse of collective bargaining.
A early chest, belonging to Sir Thomas Bodley, founder of The Bodleian Library at Oxford Unviersity.
mira66
A President Trump or Sanders would be likely to pursue protectionist trade policies such as higher tariffs. History suggests such policies could lead to a trade war, with painful consequences.
Sanders supporters in Phoenix, Arizona on March 15, 2016.
REUTERS/Nancy Wiechec
Sanders and Clinton have been trading blows over who’d be best to reform Wall Street, but new research suggests they may not have the ‘authority’ to do it.
Hillary Clinton with Cecile Richards, President of Planned Parenthood Federation of America.
Scott Morgan/Reuters
Democratic candidates support access to contraception, while candidates from the Republican Party favor policies that could severely restrict access to contraception.
Trump versus Clinton – who would win?
Reuters/Scott Audette (L), Javier Galeano (R)
Using a new model that considers state-by-state polling, statisticians from Oklahoma State look at who would win the presidential election if it were held today.
Presidential candidates such as Hillary Clinton and Bernie Sanders have proposed a debt-free or a free college education. Is this feasible? Should wealthier students get such subsidies?
The Ivanpah Concentrating Solar Electric Generating System, built on public land in California’s Mojave Desert.
ATOMIC Hot Links/Flickr
The U.S. energy system is gradually transitioning away from fossil fuels and toward renewables. Will the next president speed up America's shift to renewable energy or step on the brakes?