Capital & Main’s Latest News Section.
The newsroom drama chronicles the investigation that exposed a Hollywood producer and helped ignite the #MeToo movement.
Microsoft, Google, Centene, Koch Industries and others support committee that gave millions to elect Lake.
The governor may need his full second term to make real inroads toward ensuring that Californians have access to quality care.
Author Rick Wartzman’s new book examines how improvements in pay by the retail giant fall far short of what society owes workers.
Tips for covering the extremes driven by climate change, and the potential perils of biofuels.
Inside the latest, smallest group in the California Legislature.
Shapiro and Fetterman defeat pro-drilling candidates, but their policies on key issues remain uncertain.
48,000 underpaid student workers in the University of California system prepare to go on strike Nov. 14.
Some races with moderate Democrats backed by oil money running against progressives remain too close to call.
To do so he must transcend an office bound to the status quo, say his predecessors.
Kenneth Mejia won with a progressive mandate, but Laura Chick says the controller’s office has been weakened by factors beyond its power.
The organizer and scholar says the midterms affirmed the power of grassroots organizing — and of the Black and female vote.
The state faces devastating effects from climate change but voted against taking action.
The state’s majority Democrat Legislature has yet to fully fund enforcement of recently strengthened regulations.
For the first time, they could qualify as employees and enjoy benefits and rights that have been off-limits for years.
Pennsylvania’s far-right gubernatorial candidate has vowed to expand oil and gas production and roll back regulations.
Like the Tea Party before them, Freedom Caucus House members have been loud and divisive. Why haven’t they paid the same price?
With election deniers up and down the ballot, key voters don’t rank democracy as a big concern.
As the state’s top prosecutor, gubernatorial candidate Josh Shapiro promised Dimock residents justice for years of water pollution. Resolution has yet to come.
Their opposition to co-locating charters on traditional campuses reflects tensions throughout many schools and districts.