Fox News' Peter Doocy reports the latest from the White House. The 'Fox & Friends' co-hosts discuss the latest on the Harris campaign's massive debt and the fallout from angry, laid-off staffers.
Failed veep candidate Tim Walz is reportedly going to address the defeated Dems’ 2024 donors Tuesday — after going into obscurity in the weeks following his devastating loss with Vice
Rep. Ilhan Omar stuck close to the Democratic ticket through the turbulent election year, never calling on President Joe Biden to step aside but quickly getting behind Vice President Kamala Harris when he did.
Vice President Harris and her vice presidential pick, Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz (D), will address her campaign’s top donors over a call next week, a source familiar with the planning told The Hill. The meeting comes weeks after Harris lost to President-elect Trump in the 2024 presidential election.
Noah Hobbs, a student of Walz’s in 2004, made some phone calls for the campaign and said other alumni participated in virtual fundraisers. In early October, he went to a Mankato West football game where Walz appeared to support the candidate.
Vice President Harris and Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz (D) are set to address the Democratic National Committee’s (DNC) finance directors amid reports that the campaign is $20 million in debt after a lavish spending spree.
By shifting so many young, Black and Latino voters into his column, the president-elect has solidified his movement as a cultural force.
The union representing DNC staff launched a GoFundMe to raise money for those who were abruptly laid off last week – as some described the cuts as a "betrayal" of party values.
You’re going to scrutinize Gov. Tim Walz’s every pronouncement (which you deem to be “fake”) and his agenda (deemed “tired”) and his supposed “love affair” with socialism (if you even know what socialism actually is).
In a social media post, president-elect Trump endorsed Brevard County's Randy Fine for the 6th congressional district seat.
It’s a much more complex story than what happened among Democrats, even if Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz was even more obscure than Vance before last summer.