
Biden’s Economic Plans Are Solid, but We Need Action
The president’s SOTU address tasked Congress with an ambitious agenda, but Biden needs to do much more on his own.
The president’s SOTU address tasked Congress with an ambitious agenda, but Biden needs to do much more on his own.
Strong jobs numbers are not enough. The president should keep pushing a bold legislative agenda while deploying every executive tool at his disposal to achieve a more equitable economy.
Omar Ocampo joins Harrison’s Reality Check to discuss a modest annual tax on the world’s richest, and what we could accomplish with that revenue.
A new joint report from Fight Inequality Alliance, Institute for Policy Studies, Oxfam, and Patriotic Millionaires details what can be funded by simply taxing the rich.
One year after the January 6 insurrection, is the United States on the verge of break-up?
The bill helps Americans get good jobs and afford food, housing, health care and child care — a strong response to inflation.
Ending enhanced unemployment benefits didn’t get people back to work. It just made them poorer.
As the super-rich got richer, the most economically precarious have been pushed to the curb.
We asked nine leading Black labor organizers and policy advocates how to advance racial equity in the COVID recovery — and beyond. Here are their responses.
The next few months will be crucial to securing the big, bold policy wins needed to build a more equitable, sustainable country for all.
Why is the far right jumping on the anti-vaccination bandwagon?
The increase would have come on top of the more than $750 billion the budget resolution already reserved for the Pentagon.
Rep. Cori Bush delivered a win for millions of renters, but inequalities that make Black women particularly vulnerable to evictions continue.
Immigrants played a key role in keeping families and the economy functioning during the pandemic. Congress must ensure these essential workers share in the benefits of recovery.
As the federal eviction moratorium expiration date looms, housing organizers in one of America’s most unequal states offer a new, equitable path forward.