The Windy City’s second-largest racial group will prove decisive in tomorrow’s election.
Working in America
A Teacher Answers Back
Today on TAP: With public schools under attack, American Federation of Teachers President Randi Weingarten counters the right wing’s slanders.
The State of American Cities
Gabrielle Gurley and Luke Goldstein discuss the condition and politics of the U.S. urban fabric.
The Double Standard for Keeping Capital and Labor Honest
Today on TAP: There is far more corporate crime than crimes by unions. But corrupt labor officials are prosecuted and jailed, while executive thugs walk.
Using Industrial Policy to Promote Social Justice
Today on TAP: Can the Biden administration maximize its leverage—and speak with one voice?
Labor Journalism, Past and Present
Harold Meyerson and Jarod Facundo discuss how reporting on unions has changed over the years.
The Problems With the Amazon Labor Union
Today on TAP: How the company’s refusal to bargain has empowered the ALU’s president but hurt the union
Are Advocates for Corporate Disability Inclusion Anti-Worker?
The corporate-funded nonprofit organizations can shield corporations from the consequences of worker abuse.
Labor Developments in the Rust Belt
Michigan is one step closer to repealing right to work; why the end of two-tier wages at Caterpillar shows corporate America’s immense power over workers.
The Filthy Emissions of Railroad Locomotives—and the Rail Unions Sounding the Alarm
Diesel engines have gotten a sweetheart deal from environmental regulators. It’s time that changed.

