Watch CBS News

Republican Party

ctm-gop-chairman-0321-500691-640x360.jpg

Reince Priebus joins “CBS This Morning” from Washington

The controversy surrounding Donald Trump's campaign extends beyond the violence at his rallies, and the inability of the Republican party to embrace the front-runner is making a contested convention more likely. Republican National Committee chairman Reince Priebus has said the party is preparing for the possibility. Priebus joins “CBS This Morning” from Washington to discuss how the party is preparing for the Cleveland convention and what he thinks about Trump's repeated attacks against Fox News host Megyn Kelly.

ftn-panelfull-0320-500532-640x360.jpg

"Face the Nation" aired a political panel with Susan Page of USA Today, Reihan Salam of The National Review, Ruth Marcus of The Washington Post and Jonathan Martin of The New York Times discussing Bernie Sanders and GOP efforts to stop Donald Trump

"Face the Nation" aired a political panel with Susan Page of USA Today, Reihan Salam of The National Review, Ruth Marcus of The Washington Post and Jonathan Martin of The New York Times discussing GOP efforts to stop Donald Trump and the prospects of Democratic candidate Bernie Sanders. The panel aired Sunday, March 20, 2016.

ftn-panel1-0320-500517-640x360.jpg

Susan Page of USA Today, Jonathan Martin of The New York Times, Reihan Salam of The National Review, and Ruth Marcus of The Washington Post discuss the possible paths forward to stop Trump from clinching the Republican nomination

Susan Page of USA Today, Jonathan Martin of The New York Times, Reihan Salam of The National Review, and Ruth Marcus of The Washington Post discuss the possible paths forward to stop Trump from clinching the Republican nomination, including the validity of a third-party threat to a Trump presidency.

ftn-kasich1-0320-500474-640x360.jpg

Republican presidential candidate and Ohio Gov. John Kasich explains that none of the potential GOP nominees will have enough delegates to clinch the party’s nomination. The Ohio governor states that he is the only candidate that can beat Hillary Clinton

Republican presidential candidate and Ohio Gov. John Kasich explains that none of the potential GOP nominees will have enough delegates to clinch the party’s nomination. The Ohio governor states that he is the only candidate that can beat Hillary Clinton in the fall.

ftn-kasich2-0320-500465-640x360.jpg

Republican presidential candidate and Ohio Gov. John Kasich, says that he would not want the help of the “Stop Trump” campaign. He added that he would not drop his campaign in order to make way for Texas. Sen. Ted Cruz’s presidential bid

Republican presidential candidate and Ohio Gov. John Kasich, says that he would not want the help of the “Stop Trump” campaign. He added that he would not drop his campaign in order to make way for Texas. Sen. Ted Cruz’s presidential bid.

0319-satmo-newman-angryvotersqanda-500352-640x360.jpg

In a presidential campaign season that has been unlike any other, one word has been used time and time again to describe how many voters are feeling: angry

In a presidential campaign season that has been unlike any other, one word has been used time and time again to describe how many voters are feeling: angry. So where are the angriest voters in the U.S.? How is that impacting the presidential race? Yahoo Finance columnist Rick Newman crunched the numbers and joins “CBS This Morning: Saturday” to discuss his findings.

0317-cbsn-dhs-kasichmomentum-499783-640x360.jpg

Republican front-runner Donald Trump has told Fox News that he expects riots and "bad things to happen" if he doesn't get the GOP presidential nomination

Republican front-runner Donald Trump has told Fox News that he expects riots and "bad things to happen" if he doesn't get the GOP presidential nomination. This comes after protests have shaken up his campaign rallies throughout the country. The Daily Beast's Betsy Woodruff and CBS News senior political editor Steve Chaggaris have more on the GOP race.

0317-ctm-brennan-scotusfight-499692-640x360.jpg

Republicans are standing by their vow not to consider the 63-year-old federal appellate judge, or any nominee, before the November election

The political showdown over the new Supreme Court nominee shifts to the Senate. President Obama's choice, Merrick Garland, will go to Capitol Hill Thursday to meet with Democratic senators. Republicans are standing by their vow not to consider the 63-year-old federal appellate judge, or any nominee, before the November election. Margaret Brennan reports.

Show More
View CBS News In
CBS News App Open
Chrome Safari Continue