In the wake of the Supreme Court’s rejection of Roe v. Wade, progressive men are being called on to raise their voices and become more active for abortion rights.
Author: Bill Keveney, USA TODAY
LA City Council racism scandal shows ugly side of creating political maps. Can redistricting reform help?
The recording shined a light on L.A.’s process for creating political maps and led to calls for redistricting reform.
Will President Biden’s marijuana pardons win over voters in 2022 elections and beyond?
President Biden kept a promise by announcing marijuana reform. It could also win over more Democratic constituencies.
Abortion ruling’s rapid impact: 66 clinics have stopped doing procedure in these 15 states
Many clinics have stopped providing abortions, with some closing, due to state abortion bans taking effect after Roe v. Wade was overturned in June.
After Hurricane Fiona, will Puerto Rico ever become a state or an independent nation?
Power failures and a lack of running water in Puerto Rico after Hurricane Fiona put a new spotlight on the U.S. territory’s government status.
Compromises in Democrats’ climate bill will hit communities facing most pollution hardest, critics say
Critics question whether the Inflation Reduction Act will help people of color and low-income communities as much as intended.
Abortion ‘trigger’ bans to take effect in multiple states this week. What do they change?
More state abortion bans take effect this week, many stemming from ‘trigger’ laws enacted years before the Supreme Court reversed Roe v. Wade.
ICE limits migrants’ legal rights, raising deportation risk, ACLU report says
Immigrants’ right to legal representation is hampered by policies at ICE detention centers, including restricted phone and mail access, a report says.
‘Horrors and harms’: California says slavery legacy requires ‘comprehensive reparations’
A California task force released an extensive history of Black oppression in the U.S., setting the stage for a groundbreaking reparations proposal.
Doctors, nurses risked their lives to battle COVID. Now they’re facing a mental health crisis
A wave of doctors and nurses quitting could weaken the healthcare system. Many say they are burned out from dealing with the COVID culture wars.