Politics and Government

  • Is Seattle Mayor a Bad Job?

    One and done. That’s been the story of late when it comes to the number of terms Seattle mayors serve. Seattle Met asked three experts, including UW history professor Margaret O’Mara, to offer their takes.

    02/25/2021 | Seattle Met
  • Seattle touts itself as the country’s most literate, most educated city. Whoa. We used to be pretty rough.

    Dig a little, and Seattle’s scrubby past inevitably pops up. We might be all high-tech now, all digital wizards, but back there are the city’s ancestors. They could be rough. Really rough. John Findlay, professor emeritus of history at the UW, is referenced.

    02/22/2021 | The Seattle Times
  • Carbon-Free Electricity Requires Policies To Build And Finance Transmission And Storage

    Aseem Prakash, professor of political science, explains why the United States will need to expand its transmission capacity.

    02/21/2021 | Forbes
  • New UW study examines Trump followers' MAGA beliefs

    A nationwide study is delving deep into the beliefs and attitudes of self-described Trump supporters. Christopher Parker, professor of political science at the UW, and his team surveyed hundreds of people in the Make America Great Again movement, both before and after the Jan. 6 insurrection at the U.S. Capitol.

    02/19/2021 | KUOW
  • Is there a place for ‘good union jobs’ in tech?

    Science Friday producer Christie Taylor talks to legal scholar Veena Dubal, and Margaret O'Mara, professor of history at the UW, about a rise in union activity, and the way tech companies have impacted our lives — not just for their customers, but also for their workers.

    02/19/2021 | Science Friday
  • Opposition to military rule in Myanmar

    Mary Callahan, associate professor of international studies at the UW, says that there hasn’t been significant opposition to military leadership in Myanmar within the officer ranks in 50 years. [This is an NPR broadcast on KUOW]

    02/19/2021 | KUOW-FM (Seattle, WA)
  • Carbon emission cuts need to be 80 pc more ambitious to meet Paris Agreement targets: Study

    A new study says that carbon emission cuts need to be about 80% more ambitious to stay below 2 degrees Celsius global warming — considered a threshold for climate stability and climate-related risks such as excessive heat, drought, extreme weather and sea level rise. The UW's Adrian Raftery, a professor of statistics, and Pieran Lu, a doctoral student in statistics, are quoted.

    02/18/2021 | Yahoo! Style
  • Ancient coins seized at Blaine border transferred to UW

    Homeland Security agents transferred ancient coins seized at the Canadian border to the University of Washington on Thursday. UW classics professor Sarah Stroup and Sandra Kroupa, UW Libraries’ book arts and rare books curator, are interviewed.

    02/18/2021 | Kiro7
  • "Republicans continue to believe conspiracy theories"

    Margaret O’Mara, professor of history at the UW, says too much screen time in the COVID-19 era may have led to the proliferation of conspiracy theories, especially among “QAnon yoga moms.” [This clip teases a later story in which O’Mara is not interviewed]

    02/18/2021 | KUOW-FM (Seattle, WA)
  • Opinion: Capitol marble

    “Watching the second impeachment trial of Donald Trump, an epochal event in U.S. history, I could not take my eyes from the rostrum. Though attentive to the words being spoken, with their pointed meaning and sharp emotion, I could not unseize my view from the polished stone wall that framed every speaker. It was — and is — as arresting as anything said during this extraordinary, profoundly disturbing trial,” writes Scott Montgomery, lecturer of international studies at the UW.

    02/17/2021 | Global Policy Journal
  • Cowlitz County youth jail ends contract with ICE

    The Cowlitz County Youth Services Center in Longview, WA — one of the last detention centers in the country that holds undocumented immigrant youth — has moved to terminate its contract with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement. Angelina Godoy, professor of law, societies and justice at the UW and director of the UW Center for Human Rights, is mentioned.

    02/16/2021 | Oregon Public Broadcasting
  • The Trumpiest Republicans Are At The State And Local Levels — Not In D.C.

    The Republican Party’s most-Trump and pro-Trumpism contingent and the forces in the party pushing its growing radical and antidemocratic tendencies are often not national Republicans, but those at the local and state levels. Jake Grumbach, assistant professor of political science at the UW, is quoted.

    02/16/2021 | FiveThirtyEight
  • Fights Over Indian Farm Laws Ignore Green Revolution’s Climate And Economic Problems

    Of the two sides in the conflict over India's new farm laws, Nives Dolšak, professor of marine and environmental affairs at the UW, and Aseem Prakash, professor of political science at the UW, write, “Neither camp offers any solution to the most crucial challenge: ensuring that the Green Revolution belt farmers grow less rice, which is economically and ecologically problematic.”

    02/16/2021 | Forbes
  • A UW professor explains why the GOP, even now, just can’t quit Trump

    There’s a sense of disbelief that a president could foment a riot at the Capitol to disrupt the peaceful transfer of power, and yet his party remains reluctant to hold him to account. Christopher Parker, professor of political science at the UW, isn’t the least bit surprised.

    02/12/2021 | The Seattle Times
  • Opinion: How long can democracy survive QAnon and its allies?

    “Has a bloc of voters emerged that is not only alien to the American system of governance but toxic to it?” writes columnist Thomas B. Edsall. A study by Christopher Parker, professor of political science at the UW, and Rachel Blum of the University of Oklahoma is quoted.

    02/12/2021 | The New York Times