Check out our latest edition of Accountable where we check in on the federal gun bill that passed last year. Gave us a lot to think about while we reported this.
The 80-page bill known as the Bipartisan Safer Communities Act was signed into law on June 25, 2022. At the one-year mark of its passage, we ask lawmakers what impact the bill has had so far and what could be next on the issue of guns. https://t.co/Acdwnrc0cr
To get up to speed on some things you might hear in today’s senate hearing on the East Palestine train derailment, watch our interview with @SherrodBrown https://t.co/bSCeACA4Aj via @YouTube
Publishing day for this in-depth piece by my colleagues @LindseySitz and @TheRossGodwin! Check out 'Quiet on Set,' a short documentary from the Washington Post that uncovers the hidden dangers of film and TV production. Stream it here: https://t.co/fdPhd2xhEc
If you need a primer ahead of todays SCOTUS arguments on student debt cancellation, check out a story we did last year on the issue https://t.co/VpZTqOKvuY
Ahead of SOTU, NY-03 constituents are headed to the hill today to deliver a petition to GOP House leadership, calling for Santos’ expulsion. Organizer tells us more here: https://t.co/a4kJt8bTYQ
Join Washington Post reporter Rhonda Colvin (@Rho_Co) on @Reddit today at 4 p.m. ET for an Ask-Me-Anything session going over takeaways from this year’s midterm elections and what to know about the upcoming Georgia Senate runoff: https://t.co/ShKZCWdlPN
Side effect of divisive politics? Unaffiliated voter numbers rise. Watch our interview with nonpartisan Nevada voters + read my latest on how this trend is playing out nationally https://t.co/d3anak2qVm
I’ve reported on how some of the cap hill officers have been taking in the Jan 6 meetings. On our @washingtonpost live coverage, I talk about one of the most poignant moments in the hearing room today:
During our @washingtonpost live hearing coverage, Rep. Raskin talks to us about why the committee ended the day showing examples of possible witness tampering tactics: "We want this to be a warning to the people doing it"
In today's About US: @marianliu on the push to teach #AAPI history in schools to fight bigotry; @SilviaElenaFF on how everyday racism fed the violence that exploded in Buffalo; @PeteJamison on how 50 years later, George Wallace's politics still resonate.
https://t.co/qWDD1TaI4N
Watch how it felt to be in the @washingtonpost newsroom yesterday during our @PulitzerPrizes win for how we covered the 6th. Grateful to have been a part of this. https://t.co/1BwATfYzKp
"We are planning our lives by hours. Days at most" Ukrainian lawmakers spoke to me about their week on the hill, and why they wanted to make in-person pleas to their counterparts in the US: https://t.co/hTsqEbDQbQ
"A lot at stake here" Rep. Mike Quigley, co-chair of the Congressional Ukrainian Caucus gave us his immediate reaction to Pres. Zelensky's appeal to Congress this morning
If you haven't heard about the life of Constance Baker Motley, the first Black woman to be confirmed as a federal judge (and that's just one of her history-making firsts), join us at noon ET for a @PostLive discussion with @TBrownNagin
On Thursday, Feb. 10 at 12:00 p.m. ET- @TBrownNagin will join @Rho_Co to discuss her new book, “Civil Rights Queen: Constance Baker Motley and the Struggle for Equality.” #BlackHistoryMonth#PostLive
Register- https://t.co/ajqi1hjy7v