
Poll: Republican leaders running neck-and-neck with Hillary Clinton
A Suffolk University poll of likely voters shows Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump solidly ahead in their respective nomination fights heading into Iowa.

A Suffolk University poll of likely voters shows Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump solidly ahead in their respective nomination fights heading into Iowa.

Augusta Free Press editor Chris Graham leads our live coverage of the Fox Business Network Republican Party presidential debate. Candidates on the stage include Donald Trump, Ben Carson, Marco Rubio, Jeb Bush, Ted Cruz, John Kasich and Carly Fiorina and Rand Paul.

Donald Trump surged to the top of the Republican polls this summer on the strength of 24/7 news coverage. But that was nothing compared to the 11-hour infomercial for Hillary Clinton brought to you by the House Benghazi committee on Wednesday.

The first two Republican Party presidential debates of the 2016 cycle pivoted around Donald Trump. Hillary Clinton was the pivot of the first Democratic Party debate, and she showed Tuesday night why she is the frontrunner.

The Chris Graham Show attempts to make sense of the first Republican presidential debate – Donald Trump, Jeb Bush, Scott Walker, Fox News and the rest – then shifts gears to say goodbye to Daily Show host Jon Stewart.

Who knew that the folks at FNC could be hard on Republicans? Well, OK, they were hard on Donald Trump, and they don’t seem to think he’s an actual Republican.
Former UVA Football walk-on Derek Dooley rallied to clinch a spot in the June 16 run-off for the Republican nomination for Jon Ossoff’s U.S. Senate seat from Georgia, but per the latest polling data, he’ll need to pull off another comeback to win the primary.
The Southern Baptist Convention voted on Wednesday to advance a proposed ban on women pastors.
The right at 175,000 Social Security recipients in the Sixth District in Virginia could vote en masse for the party that has a plan for saving Social Security from going insolvent by 2032.
A report released by the Social Security Administration on Tuesday tells us the Social Security program is on track to be insolvent by the end of 2032, which would trigger cuts in monthly checks of 22 percent.
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