Today in the District, our elections are more competitive than they have ever been. At the time of writing this, Democratic primary voters in Ward 3 have six active candidates to choose from for their council representative (though nine!-->…
Giant Food plans to open a store in D.C.'s Ward 7, where it will serve as an anchor tenant at a stalled mixed-use development that was derailed when Walmart had abruptly pulled out more than six years ago.
Ellen Hughes lives in the Parkview neighborhood of D.C. and says violent crime is her top issue in this year’s race for mayor. She gives Mayor Muriel E. Bowser (D) passing marks on how she handled the pandemic and schools, so she’ll vote!-->…
WASHINGTON (AP) — One month ahead of President Joe Biden’s trip to Saudi Arabia, the District of Columbia is renaming the street in front of the Saudi embassy Jamal Khashoggi Way, trolling Riyadh for its role in the killing of the!-->…
George Washington University will retire its “Colonials” moniker, a name intended to honor its namesake but that has long been criticized as a term that glorifies colonialism, officials announced Wednesday.
News Release — Executive Office of the Mayor and the DC Office of the Deputy Mayor for Planning and Economic Development
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
June 15, 2022
CONTACT:
LaToya Foster (EOM)
Natalia Vanegas (DMPED)
As!-->!-->!-->!-->!-->!-->!-->!-->!-->!-->!-->!-->!-->…
The George Washington University “Colonials” will soon be no more: the college announced on Wednesday that it’s officially dropping its long-held moniker, which has been criticized for glorifying colonialism, slavery, and racial!-->…
With the Democratic primary election for D.C. mayor less than a week away, more than 36,000 people have already voted, dropping off or mailing in their ballots or casting them at an early voting location. That is more than one-third of the!-->…
In the days before Tuesday’s D.C. Democratic primary, some mayoral and council candidates are going negative, attacking their opponents through TV and digital ads and mailers.
Most political missives stuffing D.C. mailboxes these days look pretty much the same, plastered with bright colors, block lettering, and smiling faces, so it can be easy to disregard them entirely on the way to the recycling bin. But every!-->…
A college dormitory in Brookland has been transformed into the first shelter for unaccompanied minors between the ages of 13 and 17 in Washington, D.C. Its objective is to help adolescents who crossed the border alone, and arrived in the!-->…