Republican presidential hopeful Marco Rubio on Thursday vaulted into second place in a daily tracking poll, but still trails front-runner Donald Trump by double-digits in the New Hampshire primary
Read More >>Florida Sen. Marco Rubio captured third place in the Iowa caucuses with 23 percent of the vote, which has given him significant media attention for exceeding expectations. Given Rubio’s positioning as a conservative who can also appeal to the GOP establishment, his Iowa performance represents a threat to the campaigns of the other three candidates who are generally thought of as seeking the establishment “lane” in the nominating contest, former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush, New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, and ... Read More >>
Gov. Chris Christie fell short of the very modest expectations he had for success in the Republican caucus in Iowa, denying him a momentum-changing springboard that could revive his presidential campaign.
Read More >>Jeb Bush, Chris Christie and John Kasich now have a clear goal for their long-shot efforts in New Hampshire: Stop Marco Rubio.
Since the 44-year-old Florida senator entered the presidential race, his rivals for the support of establishment Republicans have spoken of him as a candidate running more on his youthful potential and personal story as the son of Cuban immigrants than on any record of accomplishment.
Read More >>Ted Cruz beat the polls and beat Donald Trump Monday in Iowa, garnering the most votes in the history of the Iowa caucuses. Marco Rubio finished a strong third. If history is a guide, those are the only three tickets out of Iowa.
Read More >>The Iowa caucuses are over and done, and now the candidates (most of them, at least) are moving on to New Hampshire. Two candidates, former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee and former Maryland Gov. Martin O’Malley, ended their campaigns after disappointing results, and it is possible one or two more will pull the plug within the next few days.
Aside from pushing a few candidates out of the race, what will be the impact of the Iowa caucuses on the Democratic and ... Read More >>
The Iowa caucuses finally took place last night, after months of Democratic and Republican presidential campaigns criss-crossing the state. Polls were volatile heading into caucus night.
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