The hometown star: Bruce Harrell
High school valedictorian, college football standout and UW-educated lawyer who built a career in his hometown, where a mayor told him at age 12 he should consider public office.
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High school valedictorian, college football standout and UW-educated lawyer who built a career in his hometown, where a mayor told him at age 12 he should consider public office.
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Four hours before deadline, frontrunner Tim Burgess exited the Seattle mayor's race. Those last days were a frantic effort to retool his faltering campaign. Here's why he concluded that it was too late and too difficult to pull it off.
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An initiative campaign and a state commission are both moving to focus more attention on tax breaks for companies.
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Green Acre Radio: As more jobs become part-time and low-wage, the fight for worker's rights may be just beginning.
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The Washington Liquor Control Board has put together wide-ranging rules to implement the voter-approved legalization of pot.
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Lawmakers in Oregon and Washington question whether prosecutors' offices should rent out their names and letterhead to private firms collecting on bad checks.
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Alison Holcomb, a drug policy advocate and long-time lawyer, has her mayoral priorities in order, but she's not falling too far into the serious trap.
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Guest Opinion: Air traffic controllers are back at work, but others are still squirming under the effects of the sequester.
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It's only Day 1 of the special session, but there's no shortage of political infighting.
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Inslee finally got down to business today about his top priorities for the special session. Does he have the leadership chops to get 'em done?
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The Legislature's special session starts today. Here's what's on the table.
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Snowstorms, anarchists and gold rushes. It's not easy being Seattle's CEO.
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Gold in them thar initiatives. Pebble Mine: Bad news for salmon.
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Ignore the "This American Life" stigma. The second of Daisey's two-part Seattle return holds powerful political punch.
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Seattle School Board member Kay Smith-Blum will stay put. For now, anyway.
READ MORE | 1 COMMENTSThe latest from news outlets and blogs around the Northwest and beyond, chosen by Crosscut editors.
The new Republican nominee for lieutenant governor made the statement in a video last year.
Much anger but little to go on.
Not to mince words: "The reputation of the Obama White House has, among conservatives, gone from sketchy to sinister, and, among liberals, from unsatisfying to dangerous. No one likes what they're seeing. The Justice Department assault on the Associated Press and the ugly politicization of the Internal Revenue Service have left the administration's credibility deeply, probably irretrievably damaged."
After a second round of very intrusive questions, the Tri Cities Tea Party concluded it was being targeted for a turn-down.
"You want government workers who are alert to their own tendency toward bossiness; who ladle out their power carefully, gram by gram; who are aware that they are not really as benevolent and disinterested as they seem to themselves. Most of all, you want people with a strong sense of self-restraint."
"On Tuesday, it looked like we had three possible political scandals brewing. Two days later, with much more evidence available, it doesn’t look like any of them will pan out. There’ll be more hearings, and more bad press for the Obama administration, and more demands for documents. But — and this is a key qualification — absent more revelations, the scandals that could reach high don’t seem to include any real wrongdoing, whereas the ones that include real wrongdoing don’t reach high enough."
Jonathan Chait writes: "As they attract more and more scrutiny, the Benghazi and the IRS stories both look increasingly benign. Reporters...have heroically attempted to justify lumping these incidents together as “scandals” with the common theme of dangerous big government overreach. One could no less persuasively lump them into the “narrative” of government employees making good-faith efforts to undertake difficult judgments in the face of implacable partisan opposition exploiting raging paranoia."
Spokeswoman Victoria Nuland, the columnist argues, is unfairly blamed in the talking-points saga.
A perfect storm of embarrassing revelations, and Obama's people can't get their stories straight.
The man makes no sense on the internet tax and other topics. Making sense is not the point.