Despite not making a third try for the White House this year, Joe Biden might not be done quite yet with holding office--which is often par for the course with vice presidents who don’t end up holding the top job.
Despite not making a third try for the White House this year, Joe Biden might not be done quite yet with holding office--which is often par for the course with vice presidents who don’t end up holding the top job.
As the old saying goes, all politics is local.
And a new statewide survey indicates Floridians are happiest with the politicians closest to home.
Results released this week from the annual USF-Nielsen Sunshine State Survey show that residents give their best ratings to city and county governments, followed by state government and then the federal government.
David Jolly is prepared to make television networks pay for running ads featuring him and Donald Trump.
Conservatives have decried the mainstream press as having tilted the playing field in favor of Democrat presidential candidate Hillary Clinton. Specifically, they claim that the media has ignored, belittled, or attacked those simply asking the question, “Are Secretary Clinton’s health problems a concern?”
Most of America’s vice presidents have been cheerfully forgotten, thanks in part to dismissive quotes from some of the men who have held the office. Throughout the nineteenth century and the start of the twentieth century, important politicians turned down the job while non-controversial third stringers filled the job. After getting paired with obscure upstate New York Congressman William Wheeler in 1876, Republican presidential candidate Rutherford B. Hayes wrote “I am ashamed to say: Who is Wheeler?" That was par for the course for most of American history as lesser lights like George M. Dallas, Levi Morton and “Sunny” Jim Sherman held the post.
Hillary Clinton continues to trounce Donald Trump in Florida, according to a poll released Thursday morning from the University of North Florida.
Some polls might show Hillary Clinton ahead of Donald Trump, but the former First Lady and first woman ever to run for president of the United States isn't dropping her guard. She says the fight for the White House isn’t over yet.
Incumbent Republican Marco Rubio and Democratic Congressman Patrick Murphy clashed Wednesday night in an intense, hour-long debate -- over foreign policy, the economy, the minimum wage, Donald Trump and, of course, who has the better credentials to serve Florida in the U.S. Senate.
In the fall of 2014, more than a quarter of the students who had transferred to state universities after earning associate in arts degrees in the Florida State College System were enrolled at the University of Central Florida.
The Orlando university's ability to enroll 27.2 percent of the state college graduates contrasts sharply with Florida A&M University's enrollment of less than 1 percent of those students, a new report given to the state Board of Education on Wednesday showed.
In a highly anticipated second television debate, U.S. Sen. Marco Rubio and Congressman Patrick Murphy will square off against each other at 7 p.m. ET Wednesday at Broward College in Davie.