What Is It Like to Be a Millennial in Congress?
The generation dealing the most with the changing nature of the United States is starting to shape politics.

The generation dealing the most with the changing nature of the United States is starting to shape politics.

Tulsi Gabbard and Aaron Schock talk to National Journal about the challenges.

People of color already own a majority of local businesses in seven U.S. metro areas.

With employment in traditional career fields more uncertain and barriers to launching businesses lowered, many millennials look to work for themselves.
Americans pursuing science, tech, engineering, and math careers for career stability and higher pay are at risk of being pushed out of their fields in favor of younger workers.

One way to boost earnings of single, low-income women is to urge them to seek out jobs in skilled trades instead of retail and service gigs.

The most pressing challenges outlined at a Next America event: Delivering higher ed that equips Americans — many first-generation collegians — to work in the new economy.


The federal government has spent billions since the start of the Great Recession on a single job-training program, but a new report shows there's not enough data to know if it helps out-of-luck workers.

That's the financial reality for 20 million Americans who live in deep poverty, an Urban Institute report indicates.
