Chelsea Clinton Gives Birth to Baby Boy

Chelsea Clinton, daughter of presumptive Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton and former President Bill Clinton, announced Saturday she had given birth to a boy named Aidan Clinton Mezvinsky. Clinton tweeted the news on Saturday morning, writing that she and husband Marc Mevinsky were "overwhelmed with gratitude and love as we celebrate the birth of our son, Aidan Clinton Mevinsky."

Chelsea Clinton Gives Birth to Son Aidan, Her Second Child

Chelsea Clinton announced the news in a tweet Saturday morning, saying she and husband, Marc Mezvinsky, were "overwhelmed with gratitude and love." "We are overjoyed to be grandparents again with the arrival of our grandson, Aidan Clinton Mezvinsky," Hillary and Bill Clinton said in a statement on Saturday, NBC News reports .

Chelsea Clinton Gives Birth to Son

Marc Mezvinsky and Chelsea Clinton attend The Headstrong Project's 3rd annual Words of War event at One World Trade Center, Oct. 19, 2015 in New York City. "Marc and I are overwhelmed with gratitude and love as we celebrate the birth of our son, Aidan Clinton Mezvinsky," Clinton, who is married to hedge fund manager Marc Mezvinsky , tweeted.

Hillary Who? Progressive activists not ready for Clinton

Hillary Clinton may be the presumptive Democratic nominee, but the fight to unify the party and its traditional allies in the wake of an unexpectedly long and contentious primary is poised to go on much longer. The more than 3,000 Bernie Sanders supporters and progressive activists gathered here at the "People's Summit" have engaged in little open talk about Clinton, preferring instead to plot a path forward in the wake of the Vermont senator's defeat -- and questioning the motivations of the Democratic Party and the legitimacy of its nominating contest.

Saudi minister rips White House on Syria, talks 2016 campaign

A top Saudi Arabian official visiting Washington gave his full backing Friday to State Department officials protesting the White House's refusal to directly confront the regime of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad. Saudi Foreign Minister Adel Al-Jubeir spoke a day after 51 State Department staff involved in Mideast issues sharply criticized the Obama administration's Syria policy in a formal, classified memo as ineffective and urged a tougher stance, including airstrikes against the Syrian regime.

Lawsuits may offer fodder for Trump, Clinton attack ads

In this May 23, 2005 file photo, real estate mogul and Reality TV star Donald Trump, left, listens as Michael Sexton introduces him at a news conference in New York where he announced the establishment of Trump University. The presidential campaigns of Hillary Clinton and Trump are both trying to prevent the public release of videos that are critical to legal cases involving the candidates.

Meet America’s loneliest supporter of Donald Trump

First came the grimaces - the disbelieving eyes trained upon his shirt, his signs, his car window stickers broadcasting a local betrayal. Then his teenage son refused to drive the family car without redecorating, hiding the three "Make America Great Again" hats that usually sit atop the dashboard.

UK leaders urge unity, recall parliament after Cox killing

The UK recalled Parliament on Monday to pay tribute to murdered Labour Party lawmaker Jo Cox, as political leaders urged unity after weeks of acrimonious campaigning over membership of the European Union. Prime Minister David Cameron and opposition Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn made a rare joint appearance on Friday at the site of the attack to praise Cox and call for restraint in the referendum debate.

Sanders endgame focused on keeping his – revolution’ alive

The Vermont senator is executing an intricate endgame to the Democratic primary that he hopes will continue to inspire the 12 million voters who flocked to him, while drawing lines in the political sand that Hillary Clinton and other establishment leaders won't dare to cross. But come January, he will face an existential test: Can his self-proclaimed revolution survive the move from stadiums roaring with adoring fans to the wood-paneled congressional hearing rooms and private political offices of Washington? Sanders' allies believe their colleague, a 25-year veteran of the House and Senate, returns to his job as a senator in Washington with new power to influence and shape policy on the issues he built his campaign on.

Clinton’s lead over Trump slips after Florida shooting: Reuters/Ipsos poll

A combination photo shows U.S. Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton and Republican U.S. presidential candidate Donald Trump in Los Angeles, California on May 5, 2016 and in Eugene, Oregon, U.S. on May 6, 2016 respectively. A Hillary supporter yells out with a picture of Donald Trump on her phone as U.S. Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton speaks during a campaign stop in Fresno, California, United States June 4, 2016.

Dems at gun filibuster may serve as VP tryout

The debate over gun control is back on Capitol Hill, as well as on the 2016 presidential campaign trail, following a 15-hour filibuster by Connecticut Sen. Chris Murphy to call for action in the wake of the massacre at an Orlando gay club. For some of Hillary Clinton's potential running mate picks, joining their colleague on the Senate floor overnight Wednesday into early Thursday morning, advocating for an issue key to the Democratic base, might have served as a de facto VP try out.

The View Co-Host Slams Oprah’s Hillary Endorsement: ‘A Vagina Isn’t a Self-Interest’

Not everyone is happy about media mogul Oprah Winfrey 's endorsement of presumptive Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton , and I don't just mean spurned potential ticket-mate Donald Trump . On Friday's edition of The View , co-host Paula Faris told her colleagues that Winfrey's endorsement of Hillary is a "disservice to every single woman in the United States, every woman in this country, every woman across the globe" because "you don't vote for someone based upon their gender."

Trump benefits from countries with anti-gay laws

Donald Trump is casting Hillary Clinton as an enemy of the LGBT community and women, using her family foundation's acceptance of contributions from Middle Eastern countries with widely-reported human rights abuses to hit his 2016 presidential rival on the campaign trail. In the wake of the Orlando massacre of 49 people, Trump cited Clinton Foundation's acceptance of up to $25 million in contributions from Saudi Arabia's government as a sign she is not dedicated to the cause of LGBT Americans.