Wealth gains in the Palmetto State may make it a more corporate -- and Bain -- friendly political climate than you'd think.
Driving from Washington, D.C., to San Jose, a writer discovers some of the best regional specialties the country has to offer
Obama won Omaha in 2008, but a victory may not be so easy in the next presidential election
The city's natives flock to greener pastures like Charlotte and Atlanta, but those places lack the charm of the old steal city
Roads? Religion? Accent? Food? Which factor dictates where the North ends?
Mapping out the political whiplash
The White House may have to come to grips with the fact that it's looking at the Bush/Kerry map as its blueprint for 2012
Which states to watch, and when
Tomorrow, the social media site will track the volume and gender of voters who "check in" at their polling places
Americans like to think of themselves as less tied to political parties than they really are
Appalachian voters are not taking kindly to House Democrats scrambling to explain their votes for cap-and-trade
In an exciting development for politics geeks, Google provides one-stop shopping for electoral maps, race ratings, and candidate research
The Ohio River Valley has always flip-flopped between parties--but now, the rest of the country is just as fickle
This state is starkly divided by class (and baseball), making the race between Blumenthal and McMahon one to watch
To win the only district in the country that voted for John Kerry and John McCain, Joe Sestak will have to cater to an idiosyncratic region
Reagan had lower employment figures and approval ratings at the end of his first term than Obama does now--and it didn't turn out all too badly for him
Sky-high metrics in some states present tricky politics for both parties
Alaska, a political, economic, and geographic oddity, split pretty evenly for Miller and Murkowski
The senator may be smart to give up on Wisconsin voters of German descent--they're among the most Republican in the state
The House Speaker's urban constituents differ dramatically from those her colleagues are attempting to woo