IE 11 is not supported. For an optimal experience visit our site on another browser.
  • UP NEXT

    Trump didn't want wounded veterans in military parade, John Kelly confirms

    11:45
  • How Lincoln can teach us to be be 'happier, healthier, better Americans'

    06:17
  • 'This is like a show for him': Trump in court for civil fraud trial

    05:02
  • Garth Brooks, Trisha Yearwood team up with Habitat for Humanity for affordable housing

    09:08
  • Steve Inskeep: Lincoln found common ground with those who differed from him

    09:24
  • Nick Offerman joins the fight for regenerative farming

    07:19
  • House GOP civil war is hurting the American people, says Rep. Jeffries

    11:42
  • 'There's only one cure for treason...being put to death'

    03:05
  • Happy Birthday Rev. Al Sharpton

    00:44
  • House member victim of armed carjacking in Washington

    00:45
  • 'He wants to exploit this trial': Legal expert on why Trump went to start of civil trial

    07:00
  • House Democrat slams Speaker McCarthy as 'untrustworthy'

    03:21
  • Neil deGrasse Tyson looks 'To Infinity and Beyond'

    06:38
  • How Biden can get it right on Ukraine and the U.S. border

    07:06
  • Chris Matthews: Trump trusts nobody, and he isn't to be trusted

    09:53
  • 'No one is above the law': NY AG Letitia James speaks ahead of trial start

    00:34
  • 'We don't take an oath to a wannabe dictator': Milley pushes back against Trump

    04:51
  • Rep. Schiff: Speaker McCarthy does the right thing after doing everything else

    07:17
  • Laphonza Butler to fill Dianne Feinstein's Senate seat

    01:00
  • 'We should be unflinching': Marty Baron on the role of journalism in 2024

    08:29

One polling number that could spell doom for Trump in 2024 — if he decides to run

01:41

Sixteen percent of Republicans say if former President Trump is the Republican nominee in 2024, they will either vote for the Democratic candidate, vote for someone else, or sit out of the election all together. "Those numbers are going to be hard to overcome," says New York Times political correspondent Michael C. Bender.