LATEST NEWS
100 days in, the self-styled champion of the working class has delivered layoffs, trade wars and an erosion of worker protections.
These findings run contrary to the national political narrative and are fueling advocates’ efforts to safeguard expanded Medicaid benefits in the state.
Rodney Scott led the U.S. Border Patrol sector in San Diego when officials killed immigrant Anastasio Hernández Rojas.
From Harvard’s president facing down political pressure to a science foundation scrubbing controversy from its website, the battle for free speech and open inquiry plays out where ideas are meant to thrive.
The president has gone nuclear against federal union jobs — historically African Americans’ ladder to economic equality.
Many cities with laws restricting local law enforcement cooperation with federal immigration officials have joined the lawsuit. Los Angeles is noticeably absent.
Casa del Migrante has hosted migrants since 1987, but with the Trump administration slashing foreign aid, the shelter is navigating a new way forward.
In Pennsylvania, a hydrogen hub in upheaval as natural gas producer pauses involvement while four others bail on the project.
Many students losing visas and research funding are union members. Some in the labor movement are pushing back.
Assemblymember Ash Kalra’s bill would improve the Tenant Protection Act. Landlords and developers have declared war.
Louisiana is one the most dangerous states in the U.S. for workers. The Trump administration plans to close its lone protection unit.
Like labels on cigarettes, opponents say fossil fuel warnings could change attitudes. Others call it gasoline “shaming.”
Russians who fled their homeland could be held in U.S. custody for years while ICE pushes back on the decision to grant them freedom.
Health care advocates and labor unions mobilize against proposed cuts, pressuring swing-district Republicans with protests, ads and town halls.
With the Department of Education in turmoil, who will distribute Pell grants and other assistance?
To block a union that would represent 2,500 faculty members, the private university echoed a corporate argument.
Legislators from both parties and in multiple states are rolling back wage hikes and paid sick leave policies approved by voters.
The operation included dozens of officers, some with guns in hand, as they moved through a paint business.
Medicaid is a lifeline for people with disabilities like Josh Lockwood-Wewer. As GOP lawmakers push for cuts, his mother is taking a stand.
The World Series champions, whose franchise integrated baseball, have angered some by accepting Trump’s invitation to the White House.