Author: Edward Mills

William Lewis is publisher and chief executive officer of The Washington Post. The Washington Post will not be making an endorsement of a presidential candidate in this election. Nor in any future presidential election. We are returning to our roots of not endorsing presidential candidates. As our Editorial Board wrote in 1960: “The Washington Post has not ‘endorsed’ either candidate in the presidential campaign. That is in our tradition and accords with our action in five of the last six elections. The unusual circumstances of the 1952 election led us to make an exception when we endorsed General Eisenhower prior…

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Five Republican hopefuls took center stage at Wednesday night’s third presidential debate in Miami, Florida, again without former President Donald Trump in attendance, but that did not stop the field from addressing the world’s top foreign policy issue – the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. All five candidates showed their unanimous support for Israel after Palestinian group Hamas’ attack on Oct. 7, yet none addressed the plight of Palestinians killed in Israel’s strikes, which this week climbed to more than 10,000, including over 4,000 children. “They’re massacring innocent people, they would wipe out every Jew,” said Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis – generally running…

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African countries must sustain a common position in their demand for permanent seats on the UN Security Council, the president of Equatorial Guinea said Friday. Obiang Nguema Mbasogo said the continent has been pushing for the position since 2005 without significant progress toward achieving its legitimate aspirations. There is a need for a “renewed and revitalized action on the part of the African continent, in its demand to correct the historical injustice it has been suffering, as it is the only continent that does not have representation in the UN Security Council,” Nguema said while addressing a summit of the…

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Frankfurt (3/12 – 12) The relatively rapid cohesion of disparate nations, historically competitive or even at war with one another, into the European Union came about in part because of the ongoing threat from the Soviet Union. The specter of a tank invasion from Warsaw Pact nations, today forgotten, was such a reality that the German government kept a major portion of its gold bullion across the Atlantic. The USSR, an ally in World War II after being double-crossed by Hitler – remember the “Non-Aggression Pact signed in Moscow by von Ribbentrop and Molotov – was soon appraised as a…

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The super PAC supporting Gov. Ron DeSantis (R ), Never Back Down, rolled out a new video hitting former President Trump over his commutation of former Detroit Mayor Kwame Kilpatrick ahead of Trump’s campaign stop in the Michigan city’s suburbs on Sunday. The spot, titled “Welcome to Detroit,” details Kilpatrick’s sentence to 28 years in prison on corruption and fraud charges in 2013 and how Trump commuted his sentence on his last day as president in 2021.  The video alludes to how millionaire businessman Peter Karmanos relayed the clemency request to Trump’s son-in-law and former White House adviser Jared Kushner before Trump commuted his…

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WASHINGTON — The Arkansas Arts Council recently announced Linden “Lin” Rhea as the 2023 Arkansas Living Treasure for his work and dedication to the craft of bladesmithing. “Lin Rhea is an outstanding addition to the Arkansas Living Treasure program,” Mike Mills, secretary of the Arkansas Department of Parks, Heritage and Tourism, said in a news release. “He has contributed so much to the rich creative culture of Arkansas.” The Arkansas Living Treasure program annually recognizes, honors and celebrates masters of traditional crafts or folk arts in Arkansas with the goal of highlighting and preserving Arkansas’s unique heritage, identity, culture and…

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Ten years ago, control of Washington’s government was split between the two major political parties; the National Rifle Association was one of the most powerful lobbying organizations in America; and even some Democratic state lawmakers wouldn’t support stricter firearms legislation. Contrast these events with Tuesday’s bill-signing ceremony in the state reception room at the Capitol building and you’ll see just how much the conversation around guns has changed in Washington. Flanked by dozens of advocates and Democratic elected officials in a Capitol closed due to security cautions, Gov. Jay Inslee signed into law shortly before noon a trio of ambitious…

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OLYMPIA – Washington is on track to receive the state’s first electric fire engines through grants that aim to reduce harmful diesel exhaust. The Washington Department of Ecology has awarded $1.18 million towards the purchase of electric fire engines for the Bellevue and Redmond fire departments. The cities are expected to receive the new vehicles from Pierce Manufacturing and replace two existing diesel-powered fire engines in 2026. “Electric fire engines are an emerging technology, with only a few in service across the nation,” said Molly Spiller, with Ecology’s Clean Diesel and Volkswagen Settlement programs, which provided the funding. “Through these grants, we’re…

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OLYMPIA, Wash. — On Thursday, Governor Jay Inslee signed five new bills into law aimed at protecting reproductive and gender-affirming healthcare in the state. The five bills don’t just protect people and doctors in Washington, but also those in other states seeking care in the Evergreen State. “We have Mt. Rainier, we have the Puget Sound, and we have the freedom of choice for women in the state of Washington,” Gov. Inslee said. As some states around the Inland Northwest pass laws banning abortion and gender-affirming care, new Washington laws do the opposite. One new law acts as a shield…

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Climate protesters in Washington, D.C. were handcuffed on Thursday after they dragged paint on a glass cover protecting an art sculpture. The incident happened at the National Gallery of Art by the activism group Declare Emergency in an attempt to bring attention to climate change, according to the Washington Post. After two people from the group smeared their hands across the glass covering of Edgar Degas’s “Little Dancer Aged Fourteen,” they were removed by police in handcuffs. One of the individuals taken into custody wasn’t issued any criminal charges but is banned from the museum for life, according to a tweet from…

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