Joe Biden on "Medicare for All" and taxes
"Nobody's going to say how they're going to pay." Joe Biden dismisses his opponents' plans to provide "Medicare for All."
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"Nobody's going to say how they're going to pay." Joe Biden dismisses his opponents' plans to provide "Medicare for All."
"Eight years of Donald Trump will fundamentally change the nature of who we are as a country." Joe Biden makes the case for what's at stake in 2020 and what Republicans senators would need to hear from constituents before voting to remove the president.
"I don't worry about the gaffes. And, you know what, the American people know who Joe Biden is," Jill Biden says about her husband's performance in primary debates.
Joe Biden says his son, Hunter, did nothing wrong when he was paid to serve on the board of a Ukrainian gas company while his father was vice president and overseeing U.S. policy in Ukraine.
Joe Biden says President Trump is perpetuating and encouraging foreign interference in American elections. The former vice president calls President Trump "an idiot" for saying Russian election interference is a hoax.
"I want to earn this on my own." Joe Biden tells "60 Minutes" he asked former President Obama not to endorse him in his run for White House.
As Norah O'Donnell speaks to former Vice President on "60 Minutes" this Sunday, revisit his last appearance on the broadcast when he spoke to O'Donnell in October 2015 about his decision not to run for president in 2016.
Former Vice President Joe Biden had a lot at stake in Tuesday night's Democratic presidential debate. CBS News campaign reporter LaCrai Mitchell spoke to CBSN's "Red and Blue" from a Biden watch party in North Charleston, South Carolina.
As 2020 Democratic candidates jockey for position in early contest states, CBS News polling suggests many voters are still not firmly committed to one particular candidate. CBS News' senior manager with the elections unit Kabir Khanna joins "Red & Blue's" Tanya Rivero for a closer look at what voters may be thinking.
The chair of the House Oversight committee is requesting testimony from top Biden aides.
Almost five months after former President Joe Biden left the White House, questions still swirl about how fit for the job he was when he was in the Oval Office. Franklin Foer, who wrote an account of Biden's first two years in office, joins "The Takeout" to discuss the former president's legacy.
A large-scale drone attack struck deep inside Russia over the weekend. Benjamin Jensen, senior fellow at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, joins "The Takeout" to discuss how Ukraine carried out the secretive operation and what it could mean for ceasefire efforts.
Former Minnesota Rep. Dean Phillips' primary challenge to then-President Joe Biden in 2023 was met with derision and fury by the Democratic establishment. Phillips joins "The Takeout" to reflect on his decision to take on Biden and to discuss what he thinks Democrats should do after their 2024 losses.
President Biden speaks at DNC; Donald Trump holds campaign event in Pennsylvania
Former President Joe Biden gave his first public remarks since his office revealed his prostate cancer diagnosis earlier in May. Speaking with reporters after, he dismissed allegations of a cover-up of any sort of decline in his physical and cognitive health while in office. Politico senior national politics correspondent Adam Wren has more.
The Trump administration has scrambled to address a NOTUS article that found its "MAHA" commission report misinterpreted several studies and cited others that do not exist. Alex Tin, CBS News health reporter, and Dr. Céline Gounder, CBS News medical contributor, join with analysis.
Former President Joe Biden made his first public remarks since his cancer diagnosis announcement. Biden also spoke with reporters after his speech at an annual Memorial Day event in his home state of Delaware. CBS News' Mugo Odigwe has the latest.
Former President Joe Biden made his first public remarks since his office announced he was diagnosed with an "aggressive form" of prostate cancer.
Sen. Joe Manchin joins "The Takeout" to discuss his political career and the state of American politics in 2024. Manchin provides insight on his disagreements with Democrats during Biden's presidency, why he left the party and how it can move forward after falling short this past election.
For this edition of "The Takeout," Major Garrett sits down with Rep. Adam Smith of Washington, who is one of several House Democrats to publicly call for President Biden to drop out of the 2024 race. Smith discusses the need for a new candidate, and how Vice President Kamala Harris could steer American optimism in a positive direction.
Senator Chris Coons of Delaware tells CBS News' Major Garrett on "The Takeout" that he thinks Joe Biden is likely going to run for president.
For this edition of "The Takeout," Major Garrett speaks to political analysts and hosts of the "Night Owls" podcast, Joe Klein and John Ellis. Ahead of the Super Tuesday primaries, the trio discuss all things politics, from President Biden's age, to the war in Gaza, to the happenings on the 2024 campaign trail.
Democrats plea for Senate to pass voting rights bill; Biden to meet with Japanese PM Fumio Kishida
On Sunday, Joe Biden's office announced that the former president had been diagnosed with an aggressive form of prostate cancer. CBS News executive director of elections and surveys, Anthony Salvanto, joins to look back at Biden-era polling on how Americans felt about the then-president's health.
A new book accuses former President Joe Biden's inner circle of trying to hide his mental and physical decline. Alex Thompson, co-author of "Original Sin," sat down with CBS News chief Washington correspondent Major Garrett to discuss his reporting.
Senators convened for a rare Saturday session aimed at ending the government shutdown, with no signs of an imminent breakthrough.
Supreme Court Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson on Friday froze, for now, a lower court order that required the Trump administration to swiftly provide full SNAP benefits to roughly 42 million Americans.
The FAA ordered airlines to cut thousands of flights ahead of this weekend as the agency deals with air traffic controller shortages during the government shutdown.
The Federal Aviation Administration on Saturday ordered MD-11 and MD-11F aircrafts to be grounded as authorities investigate the deadly UPS plane crash in Kentucky.
Kilmar Abrego Garcia's lawyers argued an interview conducted by a U.S. asylum officer last month did not amount to sufficient due process.
Under a deal between the Commanders and D.C., the team will return to the nation's capital in a new stadium expected to cost nearly $4 billion.
More than a dozen people were standing outside Bradley's, a popular LGBTQ bar, when the car crashed into them after a police chase.
Syrian President Ahmed al-Sharaa, whose rebel forces ousted longtime ruler Bashar al-Assad late last year, is due to meet President Trump at the White House on Monday.
A driver fired shots at Customs and Border Patrol agents in Chicago's Little Village neighborhood on Saturday, according to the Department of Homeland Security.