Forrmer Pennsylvania Senator Rick Santorum has pulled off what some are calling a "miracle" and a "hat trick," sweeping this week's three Republican contests.
With the results from Tuesday's Florida primary now in, it appears the Republican primary race is one step closer to being in the hands of former Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney.
President Obama used last night's opportunity more for campaigning than addressing policies
President Barack Obama delivered his constitutionally-mandated State of the Union address yesterday to a packed gallery filled with Members of Congress and guests and millions of observers watching on television and online.
The general election has just begun. Mitt Romney has taken on the mantle and the rhetoric of the Republican presidential nominee and started his race against President Barack Obama.
After a wild ride in Iowa last week, the New Hampshire primary held on Tuesday evening provided no surprises to voters and observers of the GOP race.
After chaotic weeks of polling, scrambling and constant political and media maneuvering, the Republican Party has concluded its first Presidential contest of the drawn-out Presidential process in Iowa. With a practical tie in the Jan. 3 contest between Mitt Romney and Rick Santorum (which I predicted in a blog just a few weeks ago), the race is now down to a two- or three-man contest.
After 17 grueling debates, the field of 2012 Republican Presidential candidates has narrowed, shifted dynamically and experienced more than their 15 minutes of fame. These men and women have been exposed to more scrutiny than any other candidates over the past 30 years. That scrutiny will continue tonight at the last national GOP debate before the caucuses and primaries begin.
The men and woman running for the Republican Party's Presidential nomination sparred in the 18th and final debate for the 2012 election cycle yesterday on the Fox News network. The candidates discussed lightning-rod social issues, foreign affairs, traded barbs among themselves and hurled attacks against President Barack Obama.