Young voters and the Democratic nominee have a complicated relationship. But her platform is an excellent match for their values.
Follow along for the latest updates on how world financial markets are reacting to the U.S. election
Francis Nichols, a pretrial-service officer in Washington D.C., talks about trying to get assistance to people in the justice system, especially those who aren’t straight.
Because they do poorly overseas, hits like Bad Moms are becoming a rarity as the industry prioritizes big-budget action films.
A boost for the Democratic candidate’s campaign translated into a surge across financial markets.
Julie Cruse, a petroleum engineer in Wyoming, discusses negative perceptions of her industry and how she navigates a male-dominated profession.
A state ballot initiative to instate a carbon tax is opposed by, of all people, many environmentalists.
Doris Bobadilla talks about being the first self-identifying Hispanic female to be admitted into law practice in Mississippi, and how that still drives her today.
Chicago’s dramatic, title-clinching World Series win garnered ratings reminiscent of the pre-steroids and pre-cord-cutting era.
Since Donald Trump said “there are no jobs” in 2015, the U.S. has created 3 million of them.
Firms in places with more tolerant laws, new research indicates, attract more talented workers and file more patents.
October’s numbers are good: The U.S. economy created 161,000 jobs last month, and wages are rising steadily.
Questioning a basic orthodoxy
With paper ads in massive decline, legacy newspapers like The New York Times are slowly returning to the business models that dominated the ’30s—the 1830s.
Several readers have responded to a callout we made in our Daily newsletter yesterday (as part of our Working series…
An outdated, hazy understanding of race led a federal court to approve of workplace bans on the hairstyle.
At its November meeting, the U.S. central bank has voted not to raise interest rates, although many believe a hike in December is likely.
The president’s get-out-the-vote pitch shrewdly invoked a chain with centrist appeal.
Corporate executives haven't always believed that transactions must have winners and losers. But that’s not Donald J. Trump’s view.
Because they prefer chips from CVS and going out to restaurants. And, increasingly, so do their parents.
An investigation