As California lawmakers returned Monday to Sacramento for the legislative session, Democrats acknowledged a clear message from voters: California’s sky-high cost of living needs to drop back down to Earth.
The Democratic reaction to Republicans winning back the White House and control of Congress initially focused on the theme that swing voters care far more about the economy that they do the bold
“We get it,” Democratic state Sen. Dave Cortese told the San Jose Mercury-News. “The Democratic Party, has, in effect, just been called out by the voters on that issue.” Talk is cheap, especially political talk. There’s a big difference between ...
“We get it,” Democratic state Sen. Dave Cortese said. “The Democratic Party, has, in effect, just been called out by the voters on that issue.” The state’s Democrats say they’ll focus ...
“We get it,” Democratic state Sen. Dave Cortese told the San Jose Mercury-News. “The Democratic Party, has, in effect, just been called out by the voters on that issue.” Talk is ...
“We get it,” Democratic state Sen. Dave Cortese told the San Jose Mercury-News. “The Democratic Party, has, in effect, just been called out by the voters on that issue.” Talk is cheap, especially political talk. There’s a big difference between ...
“We get it,” Democratic state Sen. Dave Cortese told the San Jose Mercury-News. “The Democratic Party, has, in effect, just been called out by the voters on that issue.” Talk is cheap, especially political talk. There’s a big difference between ...
Voters approved $1.5 billion in debt spending for wildfire preparation projects statewide. California Democrats plan to tap that spending just for Los Angeles.
Labor attorney Florice Hoffman will lead the party into the 2026 midterm election cycle with a vision to grow its ranks across Orange County.
Four state party chairs are backing Minnesota's Ken Martin in his bid to chair the Democratic National Committee (DNC), ABC News has learned. David Hogg, gun control activist, March for our Lives ...
A leading candidate to become the next chairman of the Democratic National Committee is heading into the final weeks of the campaign with a broad coalition of party faithful supporting him.
Despite leaving nothing but political wreckage after two disastrous years as Colorado Republican state chairman, Dave Williams is finding new ways to destroy a once great party.