Trump’s legal assault on Obamacare could mobilize large numbers of Latino voters against him in Florida and Texas.
Polls show Joe Biden ahead by as many as nine points in Michigan, a state Trump won in 2016 by just 10,704 votes.
In rural Iowa, farmers bearing the brunt of climate change may play an outsize role in electing the next president.
How is Proposition 15 getting its message out during the pandemic?
A surge of white supremacism in Alamance County has been met with a burgeoning racial justice movement.
Mark Kreidler speaks to Eunice Balencio, a South San Francisco nurse on the front lines of the COVID-19 battle.
Colin Kaepernick’s lonely protest in 2016 was just the first of many expressions of outrage.
Despite the reservation’s Democratic tendencies and its struggles amid the pandemic, the president is trying to woo Navajo voters.
Co-published by L.A. Taco
In the wake of Exide’s bankruptcy filing, questions arise about the state’s missed opportunities to secure recovery costs from Exide.
The president and members of Congress are spared the search for affordable health care.
When Silicon Valley rents came north, Santa Rosa passed a rent control ordinance. Then the real estate industry went to war.
What is the president’s obligation to those sickened or killed by a virus he could have done far more to tame?
North Carolina public housing tenants seek safe housing after years of federal underfunding.
Fresno, the working class capital of California’s San Joaquin Valley, remains a hardscrabble town with a history of radical activism.
Employees call for leadership change as inspector general prepares to release first report.
Trump and Biden exchanged words over climate change on Tuesday night. How many of them were accurate?
Will Gov. Newsom sign a bill that would require employers to rehire service workers laid off in hotels, airports and event centers?
Images from the inferno threatening an historical observatory and a billion dollars worth of communications equipment.
If California’s new governor had looked too good to be true in his first months in office, environmentalists would soon learn the truth.
Donors to a campaign claiming to represent small shopkeepers and homeowners include North America’s largest freight railroad network, two New York real estate giants and one of Earth’s richest men.