Black and Latino voters moved toward Republican Donald Trump in this year's presidential election, and some of the biggest ...
Achievement gaps between white, Black and Hispanic students can be substantially explained by one factor: Their family’s ...
Those who invested in the Negro League, and now in an equitable and inclusive economy, are creating a true meritocracy. I am ...
This division strategy may seem effective, but it’s a pyrrhic victory, and all Americans will pay the price for allowing this ...
Both Democratic presidential candidates Hillary Clinton and Joe Biden won majorities of Latino voters — with 63% and 59%, ...
Any White House has only a partial impact on ... And neither period is the clear economic winner. Black unemployment was roughly the same on average across both periods, at a historically low ...
Majorities of younger Black voters and Latino voters said the economy is not working well ... Trump’s return to the White ...
At the end of July, shortly after Kamala Harris became the Democratic candidate for President, The Economist described her ...
Black and white farmers became progressively less landed ... Eric Foner: [The] larger economic context... is very disadvantageous. Cotton prices are falling. World demand for cotton is slowing.
Anxiety about inflation was high nationally, and voters broadly believed that Trump would be better equipped than Harris to ...