Hunger advocates said that Trump's facts are incorrect after the candidate gets food stamp enrollment wrong while making fun of a protester.
Donald Trump was "either mistaken or he's lying" about seeing Muslims in New Jersey cheering on 9/11, politicians and Muslim advocates said.
Sen. Marco Rubio said he's "not happy" about last week's attacks in Paris, but they're a "positive development" because Americans will be forced to focus on national security.
A new ABC/Washington Post poll found voters are paying more attention to the 2016 race than they have in 30 years.
Trump also promised to employ surveillance against mosques in the U.S.
Sergeant Tayyib Rashid's tweet to Donald Trump on Thursday launched the #MuslimID hashtag, in which American Muslims have been sharing their own ID cards on social media.
"This is shocking rhetoric. It should be denounced by all seeking to lead this country," Hillary Clinton said Friday.
Donald Trump is calling on journalists to stop using the term "masterminds" for the Paris attack organizers. He prefers "thugs and losers."
Rhetoric from the two leading Republican presidential candidates risks stirring Islamophobia, an official with a Muslim-American group asserted Thursday.
"Certain things will be done that we never thought would happen in this country in terms of information and learning about the enemy."
Saba Ahmed, who appeared on "The Kelly File" Tuesday, said she wants the GOP to embrace Muslim voters.
Less than a week after the deadly attacks in Paris, Jeb Bush will deliver remarks on military readiness Wednesday in South Carolina.
Many pundits expected that the business mogul and former reality TV star, with no national security experience, would suffer in the polls after a terrorism attack in Paris Friday.
Jeb Bush and others want Congress to renew a provision that broadens the surveillance powers of the National Security Agency. But opponents say not so fast.
The Republican presidential candidate stressed the need for upping surveillance of the Muslim community during a call to the MSNBC's "Morning Joe" Monday.
The former Republican presidential hopeful criticized the Obama administration's measured approach to fighting the Islamic State group.
GOP presidential candidates strongly criticized President Barack Obama's foreign policy, calling Saturday for the U.S. to take a stronger stance against ISIS.
However, her rival Bernie Sanders received a lot of support in post-debate polls.
Democratic candidate and Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders called Hillary Clinton's plan to regulate Wall Street "not good enough."
O'Malley, under pressure to have a breakout moment at tonight's Democratic debate, also used the name at the first debate.
The Democratic presidential candidates square off beginning at 9 p.m. EST, so make a beer run before then.
Here's how voters view former U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders and former Maryland Gov. Martin O’Malley.