In the swing state of Nevada, the Harris campaign needs the Vegas hotel union’s ‘army’ to overcome Donald Trump.
With 15 days to go, Democratic voters in the Badger State feel the pressure of the election and are organizing accordingly.
Young men complicate the reproductive rights debate this election season.
On today’s episode, David and Hassan talk about what’s wrong with the courts.
Today on TAP: This year’s prize went to three institutionalist critics of neoliberalism. The award is overdue.
Rebalancing conflicts over state policy will require that blue states wield power differently.
Arkadi Gerney and Sarah Knight
Democrat Maggie Goodlander, a former Biden antitrust official, is bringing a message of fighting corporate power to New Hampshire’s notoriously prickly voters.
As the program, which cuts in whistleblowers on enforcements awards, grows exponentially, conflicts of interest are emerging. AI could make it worse.
Blue states are the hot spots for the country’s housing affordability crisis.
Today on TAP: Yahya Sinwar’s death is unlikely to change the situation in Gaza.
Progressive state and city officials are pushing back against the right’s war on ‘woke capitalism.’ They could be doing even more with trillions of dollars in pension funds.
Crypto and weed are not how to advertise her ideas for this group.
Multiple Harris donors at an upcoming fundraiser are representing Google in its case against the Justice Department over monopolizing digital advertising.
Today on TAP: Yes, if they are framed right. Biden and Harris are winning the battle for fair pricing. That should be a big deal in the campaign.
Red and blue states look past each other on issues like carbon emissions, power generation.
It’s a move to enshrine values into law, but it’s not beyond the realm of possibility.
You need only look at the state level to understand who supports workers and who doesn’t.
Today on TAP: Announcing Organized Money, a new show about how the business world really works
Every major policy issue is now also a courtroom battle, decided in increasingly partisan settings. And there’s no end in sight.
To compensate for exaggerated expectations of claims, they jack up rates and hollow out coverage, giving themselves more profit than before.