"There are downsides to flying — people die every now and then. Do you want to stop all air flights?"
The poll reveals that the race is tightening and too close to call, but Twitter doesn't care about nuance.
She was trying to say something smart about gun control, but it backfired.
The Daily Signal suggests a list of news sites to include among those Facebook scours for trends.
That 'bimbo' retweet? 'Over your life, Megyn, you've been called worse.'
Priorities USA Action plans to portray the Republican opponent as unworthy of the presidency.
It's "far more open and fair to conservatives than Twitter," says Erick Erickson.
One veteran GOP consultant, a key figure in the NeverTrump movement, has a trick up his sleeve.
"Take it to the bank."
"It would be interesting to look him in the eye."
It even hires them!
Aziz Ansari and his mom, too.
The billionaire says he'd run if he could 'throw bombs' at Trump.
Trump's rhetorical salvos consistently attract more notice than any other candidate.
Talk about disruption.
"They win when we leave the conversation."
The Democratic candidate used Snapchat to mock Trump's claims that he can act more "presidential."
A little political jiu-jitsu.
"Trump is an entertainer. Most of the candidates don’t even know what entertainment is."
Politics -- and programmatic ad buying -- make strange bedfellows.
"Deportations to begin."
Welcome to the future, political advertisers. The Web has been waiting for you.
"We are seeing the Republican Party on the verge of falling apart."
The Salesforce CEO has emerged as a leading voice against so-called "religious freedom" laws.
Just as it has in many industries, the Internet has undercut the power of established political institutions.
Fiorina was the only early candidate who proved she could stand up to Donald Trump.
The Hewlett Packard Enterprise CEO and former Republican politician has joined the fight to derail The Donald.
Report concludes there was undue influence by President Obama.
The Hewlett Packard Enterprise CEO whacks the New Jersey governor for "political opportunism."
Newsom tells Re/code Executive Editor Kara Swisher that he wants tech companies to take an active role in fixing the socioeconomic problems caused by their success.
Writer Greg Ferenstein says it might seem like a mass of contradictions until you understand the unique perspective of technology elites.
Are you celebrating his death, or paying your respects?