News

William Lacy Clay Sr.'s career in political office started when he was 28 years old. The civil rights advocate was a strong ...
Explore how $500M in USAID cuts devastate Black maternal health globally, disrupting supply chains and threatening workforce ...
Nauzhae Drake recently gave birth to her fourth child — and for the fourth time — that baby arrived on July 7. Yep, you read ...
Putting Black women through the wringer has been the business plan of Tyler Perry for 20 years, and there are no signs of ...
News 3 interviewed both of the nominees in Virginia's governor's race: Republican Winsome Earle-Sears and Democrat Abigail ...
ST. LOUIS — William "Bill" Clay Sr., Missouri's first Black congressman and a St. Louis civil rights leader, died Thursday morning. He was 94.
For decades, the public sector has been a lifeline for Black women shut out of economic opportunity. It’s no surprise that Trump's federal downsizing targeted them first, explains gender economist ...
The location of Trump's immigrant detention center has a painful history of incarceration, abuse, and private interests.
An unrepentant liberal, Clay served more than three decades in Congress, the first African American from Missouri. His son, Lacy Clay, succeeded him.
Doulas are being supported by bipartisan bills in South Carolina and other states to increase access to doula services for Medicaid beneficiaries, as research shows they can improve health outcomes ...
In 1898, in the landmark case of U.S. v Wong Kim Ark, the Supreme Court reaffirmed the birthright citizenship guarantee, ...