This is the perfect interview to get started with if you're not familiar with the junior U.S. senator of Vermont.

Presidential candidates Hillary Clinton and Bernie Sanders will meet for a debate in New York on CNN and NY1 on April 14, just five days before the state's critical primary election, where 291 Democratic delegates are at stake.

Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders and Texas Sen. Ted Cruz both lead their competitors in Tuesday's presidential primary race in Wisconsin, but they may face significant obstacles in the battle for the nomination, which comes in just three months, according to The Associated Press.

When Donald Trump heads to the Republican National Convention in Cleveland, Ohio in July, he is likely to have the popular vote and the Electoral College lead ahead of his two opponents--Texas Sen. Ted Cruz and Ohio Gov. John Kasich, but that does not mean he will clinch the nomination.

The two will square off in Brooklyn on Thursday, April 14, five days before the state's primary.

Recent rallies and events in The Big Apple show that not all of the Vermont Senator's supporters are white men.

Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders was left off the ballot for the upcoming Washington, D.C. primary because of a registration error by the district's Democratic Party, but the chairwoman is confident the candidate would appear on the slate, reports CNN Politics.

If all holds, Sanders could take home 60 plus delegates and cut Clinton's lead down to 20 percent, but he still has a long battle ahead.

The dating app Tinder had an influx of users filling the app with political messages. As a result the company launched, “Swipe the Vote” where users are "matched" with a presidential candidate based on a compatibility survey.

It’s Super Tuesday and everyone here in Missouri, Illinois, North Carolina, Ohio, and Florida are taking it to the poll to vote in the primary election for November’s presidential poll. We got a call from Senator Bernie Sanders and listen to what he has to say as in why we should vote for him. Related […]

News & Gossip

Roland Martin and NewsOne Now took an in-depth look at Sunday night's CNN/TV One Democratic Town Hall.

When asked by Terina Allen, the sister of Sam Dubose -- a Black man fatally shot by former University of Cincinnati officer Ray Tensing during a traffic stop last year -- about police accountability, Sanders insisted that institutional racism police reform would be priority if he were to become president.