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Donald Trump has been in office for less than six months of his four-year term. That doesn't stop voters from looking to the 2028 election with polls and betting odds showing a mix of candidates for both the Republican and Democratic parties.
GOP Vice President JD Vance and Dem ex-Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg are the leading candidates for their parties’ primary nods in the 2028 presidential race, a new poll shows.
JD Vance has demonstrated his ability to become a key player in the Trump administration, serving as the president's most prominent advocate and advancing his agenda.
Vice President J.D. Vance is by a significant margin the most popular potential 2028 Republican presidential candidate among GOP primary voters, according to a new survey conducted by Emerson College Polling.
President Donald Trump has about three years and six months left in his second term, but one top GOP figure has already opened up a commanding lead in the race to succeed him as the Republican Party standard-bearer.
Democrats considered potential candidates for the 2028 presidential election quickly pounced on Vice President Vance for casting the tiebreaking vote to pass President Trump’s massive tax and
As Vance inadvertently shows how Trump is shafting his own people with his big budget bill, a progressive organizer campaigning against the bill in swing states reports that it has some Trump voters in revolt.
The U.S. Supreme Court agreed on Monday to hear a Republican-led challenge on free speech grounds to a provision of federal campaign finance law that limits spending by political parties in coordination with candidates running for office in a case involving Vice President JD Vance.
BetOnline.ag reports that wagers on President Donald Trump caused his odds to improve to win the 2028 Republican nomination and presidential election.
The case, which centers on free speech claims, involves VP Vance, who was a Senate candidate in Ohio when the lawsuit was initiated.
Rep. Thomas Massie (R-Ky.) fired back at a Tuesday post from Vice President Vance questioning if his successors saw as much “excitement” as him while in office. “Ask Mike Pence about his
Vance, who doubles as the nation’s second-in-command and the Republican National Committee finance chair, is courting the Massachusetts island’s wealthy summer crowd to bolster Republicans before the midterm elections.