David Noriega
Denver’s public school teachers say merit pay destroyed their salaries. Now, they're fighting back.
A corporate-sounding performance incentive program is at the core of the dispute.
Trump's No. 1 legal enemy was the perfect choice to give the Spanish response to the State of the Union
We sat down with California Attorney General Xavier Becerra after his rebuttal to the State of the Union.
Trump's plan to deter asylum seekers is creating a brand-new border crisis
Migrants will be forced back to Mexican border cities, which can have the same problems of violence and poverty they were fleeing from in the first place
Everything you need to know about what’s happening in Venezuela
A 35-year-old politician has declared himself interim president.
This is why teachers in Los Angeles are on strike
More than 30,000 members of United Teachers Los Angeles walked out Monday over chronically underfunded public schools.
Wrongfully convicted people are owed thousands back in taxes — and they have no idea
Congress passed the Wrongful Conviction Tax Relief Act in 2015 but didn’t come up with a way to let people know they were entitled to the money.
Hundreds of U.S. troops are now living at the border in a muddy camp with nothing to do
Army engineers have built facilities to accommodate a long-term deployment
How Brazil’s business elite helped elect the new far-right president
Jair Bolsonaro won as an anti-establishment outsider — but he had the help of the most powerful establishment players of all
Why young people helped elect a far-right authoritarian in Brazil
Young Brazilians don't remember military rule — so they elected someone who wants to revive it
EXCLUSIVE: ICE arrested over 100 undocumented immigrants without criminal convictions in that big Oakland raid
Of the 233 people arrested between Feb. 25 and 28, 111 had no criminal convictions.
Brazilian politics is backsliding toward militarism, and the presidential election could make it worse
“This nostalgia for military order is a response to both political corruption and urban violence. But it’s completely misplaced.”
Police are still working with ICE in sanctuary cities
“If I feel that calling the police is going to lead to my detention or my family's detention, why would I do that?" said Eréndira Randón