This Halloween, which presidential candidate has the biggest sweet tooth?
Which presidential candidate has the biggest sweet tooth?
A mix of political amateurs and diehard fans are convinced that Clinton will run for president — and that they can help her.
Support for Todd Akin. A source says the decision comes as Missouri polls tighten.
The FEC has released a summary of the money raised and spent in the first 18 months of the election. $4 billion in five graphs.
Says race isn't about month to month totals.
Winning Our Future still has $5.6 million in the bank, and will decide how to spend it "soon," spokesman says.
Say hello to the "Howard Stern Fans For a Baba Booey Tomorrow, Tomorrow" PAC.
Uses "I don't care what the unemployment rate is gonna be" line. It's a terrible soundbite, but in context, Santorum argues that freedom, not the economy, is the central issue in the fall.
Romney Campaign and Death Star are burying Santorum even more dramatically than usual. [UPDATED]
Romney is keeping it close in the Bible Belt and this is a big reason why. A source sends along these figures for media-buying in Alabama and Mississippi before tomorrow's primaries. [Updated with Gingrich campaign spending.]
Red, White and Blue Fund is buying big in Michigan, headed to Ohio and the South. "It's not just about saying why Romney is a scum-sucking toad," Roy says.
Jon Stewart and Stephen Colbert are making a complete mockery of U.S. election law by stretching the limits of what can be considered "non-coordination" between presidential candidates and the Super PACs that back them. They're also making history.