A growing body of research indicates that many of the solutions to the climate crisis and economic inequality are the same.
Since the law’s passage, the federal government has seen the largest year-over-year drop in corporate tax revenue outside of a recession.
Test your knowledge about Wall Street’s favorite alternative investment class.
A federal subsidy could knock down some barriers to housing for America’s 37,000 homeless veterans.
We bid a long goodbye to 2019’s education controversies with 10 Capital & Main stories that captured the year.
Pull back the curtain on the Trump economy and you’ll find a nation where income inequality is rising to become the new normal.
For the full story read Mark Kreidler’s “Industry Seeks to Flatline Universal Health Care.”
The reality is that many young people are fighting the conditions of homelessness when we’re still works in progress. But we are more than statistics.
Our reporting began with the Los Angeles teachers strike and included coverage of the immigration, housing and climate crises.
Capital & Main’s interviews with newsmakers echoed with warnings and hope.
“Our administration will look like America,” the presidential contender tells Capital & Main. “We have got to undo the racism and xenophobia of the Trump administration.”
For Indians who are not part of a casino-connected tribe, life on the state’s reservations and rancherias can be a hardscrabble existence.
Disneyland is facing a class-action lawsuit from workers who claim the Anaheim resort is dodging a new minimum wage law.
Ahead of Thursday’s Democratic debates, Golden State native Manuel Pastor offers a primer for the presidential hopefuls.
Detainees have lodged a complaint concerning “abuses, atrocities, violations of human rights, racism and hate.”
Rent-controlled properties remain on home-sharing platforms like Airbnb in violation of a new ordinance.
A family of toxins known as PFAS has gotten its closeup on the silver screen via Dark Waters. Will regulators take note?
A deeply funded lobbying group led by a former Hillary Clinton aide is out to kill Medicare for All. Its ideological roots run back to the Truman era.
Immigrant detainees are not convicted criminals, yet they suffer hostile, prison-like conditions in America for years at a time.