LATEST NEWS
After Trump, can Americans bridge a chasm of political beliefs to meet halfway on immigration issues?
Immigrant rights advocates claim that the abuses of the criminal legal system parallel institutional injustices against migrants.
Major ICE contractor socked with violation of labor law.
Migrant advocates are heartened by Biden’s pledge to reverse many of Trump’s signature actions—but want him to go much further.
An adviser for Physicians for Human Rights says that immigrant family separation cases meet all four United Nations criteria for torture.
Capital & Main’s new series examines whether the incoming president can tackle the nation’s migrant crisis.
The county’s efforts to enact environmental safety measures are being met with fierce resistance.
Even in the face of catastrophic changes to the environment, fossil fuel interests continue to advance their agenda in the Golden State.
L.A. County is projected to see an 86% increase in chronic homelessness by 2023.
A 204-bed hospital in L.A.’s Mid-Wilshire district is shuttering, despite the city’s need for intensive care beds for COVID-19 patients.
California’s workplace safety agency has received complaint after complaint about COVID-related cases fueled by lax labor protections.
The state’s slow-footed distribution of COVID-19 shots is the result first and foremost of a federal botch-job of the highest order.
On Wednesday photographer Ted Soqui covered a clash between 500 pro-Trumpers and counterprotesters. The melee turned out to be a sideshow to the riot at the U.S. Capitol.
New Mexico is facing a drier than normal winter — its reservoirs are nearly tapped out. And things are going to get worse.
Vons and other supermarkets will soon start replacing their delivery drivers with gig service contractors.
Dorian Warren of Washington, D.C.’s Community Change was preparing to celebrate the Georgia Senate wins. Then everything changed.
Today’s attack on the Capitol was not only predictable; it was the very quintessence of Trumpism.
More than 40% of New Mexico’s income relies on oil and gas, leaving the state vulnerable to the industry’s boom and bust cycle.
How could only 29% of Black Californians be willing to take a vaccine that might save them?
Here are five ways the president-elect will seek to break with the policies of the past four years.