Noah Bierman is an enterprise reporter focusing on clashes between red and blue states in the Washington bureau for the Los Angeles Times. He previously covered the White House and wrote for the paper’s national desk. Before joining the newspaper in 2015, he worked for the Boston Globe in both Boston and Washington, covering Congress, politics and transportation. He has also reported on higher education, crime, politics and local government for the Miami Herald, the Palm Beach Post and the Duluth (Minn.) News-Tribune. Bierman is a native of Miami who attended Duke University.
Latest From This Author
GOP senators had signaled skepticism about Matt Gaetz as attorney general. Trump instead names another loyalist, former Florida Atty. Gen. Pam Bondi.
Trump has promised to forcibly remove homeless people and place them in tent cities. L.A. Mayor Karen Bass does not believe aggressive tactics will be needed.
President-elect Donald Trump’s picks for his Cabinet and other high-profile posts will be a test for the new Senate. Will it approve all his appointees or push back?
President-elect Donald Trump returned to Washington to meet with the sitting president as well as a Congress that is expected to cede him even more power than he had in his first term.
Arizona voters approved a ballot measure intended to force police to crack down on homeless encampments by giving property owners tax rebates if they can prove damages.
President-elect Donald Trump, though he had been in office before and committed a host of previously disqualifying crimes and deeds, represented the ultimate change.
Trump overcame an assassination attempt and a shift from Biden to Harris to win. Ferocity and extreme views that alienated some sounded ‘authentic’ to many others.
The mood at Howard University, where Harris supporters gathered hoping to witness history, went from hopeful to despondent as election returns came in.
More than 83 million Americans have already cast ballots in the White House contest between Democratic Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Trump.
Kamala Harris’ Philadelphia rally was intended as a show of force — bringing celebrity firepower to the biggest city in the most important swing state.