Here’s what to watch for.
City bureaucrats are deciding how much you have to drive before you get a union vote.
It was the best of seasons, it was the worst of seasons. But on Saturday, it could become the best ever.
Tech companies could have an outsized role in how far the president-elect gets with his destructive agenda.
A party official explains their case for getting ‘major party’ status in Washington.
Allegations of rape will get you an audience with the King County Prosecutor’s office. But justice is more elusive.
Signs of an anti-Trump movement: All of the city’s districts now have Neighborhood Action Councils.
A portion of the proceeds go to pay for tiny houses at new city-sponsored encampments.
New rules proposed by the LCB don’t address the fact that labs make money from inflated potency readings.
The mayor and county executive are deciding whether and when to set up pilot safe drug sites.
Depending on how you count the vote, Gary Johnson either did or did not get 5 percent of the vote in Washington, which would qualify his party for all sorts of goodies.
The platform says it’s a force for social justice, haters be damned.
Located in White Center, West Seattle, and Licton Springs, they will shelter more than 200 souls.
The tribe doesn’t envision a repeat of 2001, when Clinton granted, then Bush repealed, recognition within hours. But that doesn’t mean it’s done fighting.
“The work does not end when you come back from North Dakota.”
It’s not propaganda to take Islamophobia seriously.
Something’s going to happen with King Street Station soon. The only question is what.
When you graffiti a sign that no one can understand anyway, does it make a stand?
A Seattle poster exchange with Istanbul looks at which direction each country is going.
Nasro Hassan and her mother, Dahabo, speak about the assault on November 15.
