Caroline Petrow-Cohen is a 2023-24 reporting fellow at the Los Angeles Times and a member of NLGJA, the association of LGBTQ+ journalists. She is a recent graduate of Duke University, where she studied journalism, English and environmental science and policy. Petrow-Cohen grew up in a small town in New Jersey and most recently covered national politics for the Dallas Morning News. When she’s not writing, she enjoys traveling, snowboarding and trying new recipes.
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Cars, apparel, electronics and more could see prices go up if President-elect Donald Trump follows through on his pledge to impose sweeping new tariffs on imports from Mexico, Canada and China.
The auto parts seller is closing hundreds of stores amid waning sales. It plans to shut down four distribution centers on the West Coast.
A union representing University of California service and patient care workers authorized a two-day strike this week, accusing the university system of engaging in illegal bad faith bargaining over the terms of a new contract.
California’s voters typically lean heavily to the left. So, why did a minimum-wage boost fail?
Chicago-based Craveworthy Brands plans to expand Fresh Brothers beyond California. The pizza chain is known for high-quality ingredients and large pies.
The Port of L.A. and Port of Long Beach both posted record-breaking numbers as importers divert their goods to Southern California amid labor disputes elsewhere.
Amazon will phase out its streaming service Freevee, the company confirmed. The free, ad-supported service was the original home for the series ‘Jury Duty.’
LGBTQ+ social networking platform Grindr last year told its all-remote staff they had to return to the office or lose their jobs. Now federal labor regulators say the company’s return-to-office policy unlawfully targeted unionizing workers.
Bitcoin, the world’s largest cryptocurrency, is hitting new records in the wake of president-elect Donald Trump’s victory. Trump has promised to soften regulations on digital currency.
Republicans are clinging to a slim majority in the House and are defending 15 seats seen as toss-ups. No state has more swing seats than California.