We have a moral responsibility to stand up to Donald Trump, and that's what we're going to do.
It is an outrage that Donald Trump can swear and scream on national television and no one says boo about how he presents himself.
I'm kind of a builder of institutions. I think I've got some ability to look at what's out here, look at a playing field, and identify gaps and niches.
Writing at the 'American Spectator' in the 1990s, we threw everything we thought would stick at President Clinton.
Certainly going back to 2008 during the primary, Secretary Clinton was subjected to various forms of sexism - overt, subtle - that were detrimental. Fortunately, Senator Obama was not subjected to something similar; the culture seemed to tolerate sexism and not racism. We ought not tolerate either.
All of these attacks on Secretary Clinton, at the end of the day, are character attacks.
It's all a sham: I have seen, and I know firsthand, indeed from my own pen, how the organized Right has sabotaged not only journalism but also democracy and truth.
I'm an incredibly hard worker, I'm incredibly tenacious, and I'm incredibly detail-oriented.
Republican presidential debates have become contests of who can terrify viewers the most.
It turns out that the Republican Party is not a hero to anyone but the racist, xenophobic caricature of a candidate that is Donald Trump.