Jenny Jarvie is a national reporter for the Los Angeles Times based in Atlanta, where she covers a range of stories on U.S. identity, politics and culture. She has lived in the South for more than 20 years, working for The Times as Atlanta bureau chief, Fast Break reporter and political reporter covering the 2024 and 2020 presidential campaigns, as well as freelancing for publications including The Times, the New Republic, Atlantic’s CityLab and ArtsATL. Raised in England and Italy, Jarvie studied English literature and philosophy at the University of Glasgow in Scotland and began her journalism career at the Daily Telegraph in London.
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The 26-year-old former data engineer’s political ideology, steeped in a hodgepodge of online Silicon Valley tech philosophy and heterodox ideas, defies neat left-right categorization.
The students huddling in Pepperdine University’s library watched through the windows as flames crested the Santa Monica Mountains.
President-elect Donald Trump says Americans have given him a ‘mandate’ to enact sweeping change. But his share of the popular vote might be less than 50%.
If approved, Mehmet Oz will head an agency that provides health coverage to more than 160 million people. One expert calls Trump’s selection of the doctor and TV star ‘madness.’
Who is Pete Hegseth, the Fox News host and military veteran President-elect Donald Trump nominated as Defense secretary? His book offers clues.
Noem, 52, a Trump loyalist who has offered firm backing for the GOP leader’s promise to carry out mass deportations, will preside over multiple agencies.
The president-elect named Thomas Homan, the former acting director of ICE, to be his “border czar.” Stephen Miller is expected to become deputy chief of staff.
The Justice Department has unsealed criminal charges in a thwarted Iranian plot to kill President-elect Trump before the presidential election.
Donald Trump’s decisive presidential victory was confirmed after he picked up the battleground states of Georgia, North Carolina, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin.
Federal law enforcement and swing-state election officials both reported bomb threats to polling stations Tuesday, saying they believed the threats originated in Russia.