The Overcast by The Seattle Times brings you in-depth interviews with Pacific Northwest newsmakers and takes you behind the scenes with top journalists. Smart conversations about local news and politics, hosted by Jim Brunner and Daniel Beekman.
122 Available Episodes (122 Total)Average duration: 00:29:34
Feb 29, 2020
Ep. 123: Reporter Steve Miletich on "A police officer's lie, a Seattle man's suicide"
00:26:16
Seattle Times criminal justice reporter Steve Miletich joins Daniel Beekman from The Seattle Times and Simone Alicea from KNKX to discuss his recently story about Seattle police officer's ruse and the tragedy that followed.
Feb 14, 2020
Ep. 122: Seattle City Councilmember Andrew Lewis on evictions, policing and taxing big businesses
00:33:25
New Seattle City Councilmember Andrew Lewis joins Daniel Beekman from The Seattle Times and Simone Alicea from KNKX to discuss the debates that have been roiling City Hall in recent weeks.
Feb 06, 2020
Ep. 121: 'Outsiders' podcast brings lessons from a year of reporting Olympia's homelessness crisis
00:31:45
KNKX's Will James and Seattle Times Project Homeless reporter Scott Greenstone discuss the yearlong reporting project on a shocking rise in homelessness near the state Capitol.
Jan 15, 2020
Ep. 120: Investigative reporter Daniel Gilbert on problems at WA's private psychiatric hospitals
00:36:45
Seattle Times investigative reporter Daniel Gilbert discusses his stunning recent series, 'Public Crisis, Private Toll,' which explored the hidden costs of Washington's mental-health industry expansion.
Dec 24, 2019
Ep. 119: Bundyville podcaster Leah Sottile on investigation of Washington lawmaker Matt Shea
00:35:13
Journalist Leah Sottile, whose Bundyville podcast has delved into extremist anti-government activity across the American West, joins The Overcast to discuss the recent release of an investigative report accusing Washington state Rep. Matt Shea of engaging in domestic terrorism.
Seattle Times Eastside reporter Paige Cornwell chats about elections which saw one of the first Muslim woman elected to a WA City Council, plus a tax vote in Medina, a doggy doo crisis in Kirkland, and more.
Nov 07, 2019
Ep117: Rep. Denny Heck's inside view of Trump impeachment inquiry
00:37:31
Washington Democratic Rep. Denny Heck has sat in on closed-door depositions in the Trump impeachment inquiry. He calls Trump's Ukraine actions a threat to U.S. national security.
Oct 26, 2019
E116: Monisha Harrell on what could happen in Seattle's City Council elections
00:29:10
Political consultant and Equal Rights Washington board chair Monisha Harrell shares her thoughts on Seattle's intense City Council races ahead of the Nov. 5 elections.
Oct 18, 2019
E115: Boeing reporter Dominic Gates on the 737 MAX saga
00:37:06
Seattle Times aerospace reporter Dominic Gates, who's penned scoop after scoop related to deadly crashes involving Boeing's 737 MAX, breaks down the still-evolving story.
Oct 10, 2019
E114: The case for letting Washington's new affirmative-action law take effect
00:33:52
Former Seattle Deputy Mayor Hyeok Kim from the Washington Fairness campaign explains why her side is defending Washington's new affirmative-action law by urging voters to vote "yes" on Referendum 88.
Oct 04, 2019
E113: Why some voters want to repeal Washington's new affirmative-action law
00:31:33
Kan Qiu from the Reject Referendum 88 campaign joins the show describe why his side wants to repeal Washington's new affirmative-action law. Next week, The Overcast plans to talk with the law's proponents.
Aug 10, 2019
E112: Rehashing the Seattle City Council primary election
00:32:12
Seattle Times reporter Daniel Beekman and KNKX 88.5 reporter Simone Alicea discuss City Council primary results.
Jul 16, 2019
Ep. 111: Breaking down Seattle's crowded City Council primary races
00:35:41
Seattle Times City Hall reporter Daniel Beekman fields questions from Times politics reporter Jim Brunner and KNKX 88.5 reporter Simone Alicea about Seattle's City Council races ahead of the Aug. 6. primary election.
Jun 20, 2019
Ep. 110: Journalist and author David Neiwert on the rise of "Alt-America"
00:37:51
Seattle-based journalist and author David Neiwert discuss his reporting on right-wing extremism, including his book "Alt-America: The Rise of the Radical Right in the Age of Trump." The book's cover recently got Neiwert kicked off Twitter.
Jun 06, 2019
Ep. 109: Incrementalism is 'killing the Democratic Party' says state Sen. Joe Nguyen
00:29:23
First-term state Sen. Joe Nguyen, D-Seattle, talks about facing down lobbyists and other eye-opening experiences as one of the first two Vietnamese Americans - and few people of color - in the Washington Legislature.
May 24, 2019
Ep. 108: Transportation reporter Heidi Groover on shareable electric scooters in Seattle
00:28:05
Seattle Times Traffic Lab reporter Heidi Groover joins the podcast to talk about shareable electric scooters in Seattle and as part of the gig economy.
May 09, 2019
Ep. 107: Washington Public Lands Commissioner Hilary Franz on wildfires and more
00:42:35
Hillary Franz, Washington state's Commissioner of Public Lands, joins Seattle Times reporter Jim Brunner and KNKX 88.5 reporter Simone Alicea to discuss the 2019 wildfire season and her political future.
May 02, 2019
Ep. 106: Reporter Vianna Davila on breaking the cycle from homelessness to jail and back
00:28:04
Seattle Times reporter Vianna Davila discusses her recent story on Vital, a local program for people who are repeatedly booked into jail for property crime or drug offenses and who are struggling with serious mental illness and chemical dependency.
Mar 31, 2019
Ep. 105: Seattle City Attorney Pete Holmes talks drugs, homelessness and 'Seattle is Dying'
00:30:29
Seattle City Attorney Pete Holmes addresses street crime and criticism the city isn't doing enough. He also defends city effort to create an income tax.
Mar 21, 2019
Ep. 104: Rep. Pramila Jayapal on Medicare for All and the progressive agenda in Congress
00:38:56
Rep. Pramila Jayapal fields questions on Medicare for All, the 2020 presidential race, and whether she agrees Amazon should be broken up.
Mar 08, 2019
Ep. 103: On the presidential campaign trail in Iowa with Jay Inslee
00:27:10
Hosts Jim Brunner and Daniel Beekman discuss Brunner's recent reporting trip to Iowa, where Washington Gov. Jay Inslee sought to raise his profile after launching his presidential campaign.
Feb 21, 2019
Ep. 102: State Rep. Nicole Macri on the push in Olympia for eviction reforms
00:27:34
State Rep. Nicole Macri, D-Seattle, joins hosts Jim Brunner and Daniel Beekman to discuss efforts in the Legislature this session to reform Washington's eviction laws. Tenants now can be evicted for non-payment in just three days.
Feb 15, 2019
Ep. 101: Reporter Hal Bernton on the tragic, final voyage of the crab boat Destination
00:25:54
Reporter Hal Bernton speaks with host Daniel Beekman about his six-day series on the Destination, a Seattle-based crab boat that sank without a mayday call two years ago in the Bering Sea.
Feb 08, 2019
Ep. 100: Howard Schultz's presidential aspirations and Seattle's school-district levies
00:27:23
Hosts Jim Brunner and Dan Beekman celebrate their 100th episode, discuss whether Howard Schultz will run for president and hear from education reporter Dahlia Bazzaz about the two public-schools levies on Seattle's February ballot.
Jan 31, 2019
Ep. 99: The hidden history of Washington's 'forgotten prison'
00:24:58
Washington's McNeil Island prison preceded and outlasted Alcatraz, yet its history has remained obscure. A new project by KNKX reporter Simone Alicea shines light on the forgotten lockup
Jan 10, 2019
Ep. 98: The politics and planning for Seattle's impending 'Viadoom'
00:25:54
How will Seattle drivers navigate the looming teardown of the waterfront Viaduct? Will Mayor Jenny Durkan emerge unscathed?
Dec 20, 2018
Ep. 97: Will Seattle follow Minneapolis in banning single-family zoning?
00:33:02
Anna Nelson of the group Neighbors for More Neighbors discusses how Minneapolis became the first major U.S. city to open up all city neighborhoods to denser housing.
Dec 07, 2018
Ep. 96: Can Gov. Jay Inslee contend in 2020 presidential race?
00:25:07
Washington Gov. Jay Inslee has formed a federal PAC and is considering a 2020 presidential run, with climate as a central issue. Does he have chance in a crowded Democratic field?
Nov 15, 2018
Ep. 95: What does Amazon’s HQ2 decision mean for the company, Seattle and the business world?
00:27:45
To make sense of the tech giant’s decision to expand in New York City and Northern Virginia, reporters Jim Brunner and Daniel Beekman talk with Matt Day, who’s covered Amazon for The Seattle Times.
Nov 09, 2018
Ep. 94: Did Washington contribute to blue wave? Dissecting Tuesday's elections
00:31:58
Seattle Times reporters Jim Brunner and Daniel Beekman discuss Washington's congressional and legislative elections. They also recap what happened with state initiatives and briefly look ahead to 2019's Seattle City Council races.
Oct 11, 2018
Ep. 93: A southwest Washington congressional race grabs attention
00:21:52
Congresswoman Jaime Herrera Beutler (R) is facing the fight of her political career from political science professor Carolyn Long (D) in Washington's 3rd District. Reporter Hal Bernton helps analyzes the district and the race.
Oct 04, 2018
Ep. 92: Opponent of Washington's carbon fee Initiative 1631 says it lacks oversight
00:24:08
Last week, we heard from a proponent of Initiative 1631, Washington's proposed carbon fee. This week, a counterpoint from Dana Bieber, a spokeswoman for the 'No' campaign, who argues the measure lacks accountability and will raise gas prices.
Sep 27, 2018
Ep. 91: Looking at Washington's carbon fee Initiative 1631
00:26:08
This week, an interview with Abigail Doerr, campaign manager for the Yes on I-1631 campaign, which would create a $1 billion a year carbon fee in Washington state.
Sep 14, 2018
Ep. 90: Education reporter Neal Morton on Washington state's teacher-contract chaos
00:19:08
Seattle Times education reporter Neal Morton schools The Overcast on Washington state's many teacher-contract battles, some of which are still raging.
Aug 30, 2018
Ep. 89: Pediatrician Kim Schrier on running against Dino Rossi in WA-08
00:35:44
Kim Schrier talks taxes, healthcare, Trump, and makes her case for becoming the first Democrat to be elected in Washington's 8th Congressional District.
Aug 10, 2018
Ep. 88: Could a blue wave leave GOP with just one House seat in Washington?
00:24:43
Seattle Times chief politics reporter Jim Brunner breaks down the results of Tuesday's primary elections for U.S. Senate, Congress and the state Legislature.
Aug 02, 2018
Ep. 87: Seattle Times whale tracker Lynda Mapes on grieving orca
00:28:51
Environmental reporter Lynda Mapes delves into the story of a mother orca carrying her dead calf through the water for more than a week and explains why Puget Sound's resident orcas are in danger.
Jul 27, 2018
Ep. 86: Burien Deputy Mayor Austin Bell on immigration politics in a Seattle suburb
00:22:21
In the wake of an alleged hate-crime attack on Burien Mayor Jimmy Matta, Deputy Mayor Austin Bell discusses the tumultuous past year in the Seattle suburb's once-sleepy politics.
Jul 20, 2018
Ep. 85: Police-reform expert Lisa Daugaard on the pick for Seattle's next police chief, Carmen Best
00:21:50
Seattle Mayor Jenny Durkan has nominated Carmen Best to serve as the city's police chief. So what does Public Defender Association director Lisa Daugaard think about the pick and the process that preceded it?
Jul 13, 2018
Ep. 84: Seattle Times data columnist Gene Balk talks "mean world syndrome," neighborhood crime rates
00:22:59
Gene Balk's recent columns on crime perceptions, realities and trends across Seattle neighborhoods got a lot of readers talking – and contacting him with their opinions.
Jun 12, 2018
Ep. 83: Billionaire Tom Steyer explains his $40 million campaign to impeach President Trump
00:29:44
Tom Steyer joins the podcast to argue the case for impeaching President Trump, and tangles with Democratic leaders who have shied away from that fight. Is he being realistic?
Jun 07, 2018
Ep. 82: Washington state Democratic Party chairwoman Tina Podlodowski on 2018's big races
00:29:20
Tina Podlodowski chairs the Washington Sate Democratic Party. She sits down with The Overcast to talk about races for Congress around Spokane and Issaquah, plus other topics.
Jun 01, 2018
Ep. 81: New Washington state GOP chairman Caleb Heimlich on 2018's upcoming elections
00:25:47
Caleb Heimlich is the Washington State Republican Party's new chairman and the youngest state GOP chair in the country. He talks to The Overcast about upcoming races for the U.S. Senate, Congress and state Legislature.
May 18, 2018
Ep. 80: the politics and repercussions of Seattle's new head tax
00:25:08
Now that Seattle has passed a controversial $275 per employee head tax on larger businesses to pay for homelessness services and housing, what's next for the city and its relationship with Amazon and other businesses? Political reporters Jim Brunner and Daniel Beekman break down what happened and what's next.
May 04, 2018
Ep. 79: Downtown Seattle Association's Jon Scholes on Amazon and the case against city 'head tax'
00:28:44
Amazon is threatening to scale back Seattle growth in response to City Hall's proposed "head tax" on larger employers to address homelessness. Downtown Seattle Association President Jon Scholes joins The Overcast this week to argue against the tax -- and say what businesses would prefer instead.
Apr 27, 2018
Ep. 78: Seattle Councilmember M. Lorena González on a proposal to tax large employers for housing
00:26:49
The Seattle City Council is considering a "head tax" on large employers that would raise $75 million per year for homeless housing and emergency services, and Councilmember M. Lorena González is a sponsor. She joins The Overcast to explain the plan and answer questions.
Apr 19, 2018
Ep. 77: Prison abolitionist Dean Spade explains King County's No New Youth Jail campaign
00:35:47
Seattle University law professor Dean Spade joins reporter Daniel Beekman of The Seattle Times and Simone Alicea of KNKX 88.5 to discuss the No New Youth Jail campaign, which has been trying to halt King County's construction of a new juvenile detention center in Seattle.
Apr 12, 2018
Ep. 76: Traffic Lab reporter David Gutman on Seattle's streetcar and congestion-pricing plans
00:25:46
Seattle Times reporter David Gutman brings The Overcast up to date on a traffic jam of transportation news at City Hall. Mayor Jenny Durkan has halted streetcar and bike-lane projects and announced a plan to pursue tolls on downtown streets, and the City Council has eased parking regulations for housing developers.
Apr 05, 2018
Ep. 75: Freedom Foundation's Maxford Nelsen on his organization's fight with public-sector unions
00:34:43
Maxford Nelsen is the labor-policy director for the Freedom Foundation, a conservative think tank that's been fighting with Washington state's public-sector unions. He sits down with The Overcast to talk about the state of play, and whether unions have benefits for workers.
Mar 30, 2018
Ep. 74: Seattle City Councilmember Teresa Mosqueda on rent laws, a head tax and domestic workers
00:32:49
City Councilmember Teresa Mosqueda, elected in November to a citywide seat, joined The Overcast to discuss what she's working on, such as protections for domestic workers, and some headlines, such as a ruling against Seattle's first-come, first-served rental law.
Mar 22, 2018
Ep. 73: J.T. Wilcox, Washington's new House Republican leader, on Seattle and the rest of the state
00:28:41
J.T. Wilcox, a Yelm Republican, is the new minority leader in Washington's state house. He sat down with The Overcast this week to talk about the recent legislative session, relations with Seattle politicians and the upcoming midterm elections. Will a "blue wave" hit here as a rebuke of President Trump?
Mar 12, 2018
Ep. 72: Andrè Taylor on the Legislature’s agreement to change Washington's police deadly-force law
00:32:30
After Seattle police fatally shot his brother in 2016, Andrè Taylor began pushing to change a Washington law that's made it virtually impossible to prosecute law-enforcement officers for their use of deadly force. Last week, the state Legislature agreed to do just that.
Mar 02, 2018
Ep. 71: Washington Policy Center's Todd Myers on Washington's carbon-tax question
00:31:16
Todd Myers, an environmental-policy analyst with the free-market Washington Policy Center think tank, joins The Overcast to question the carbon-tax proposal under consideration by Washington lawmakers.
Feb 22, 2018
Ep. 70: Sightline Institute's Kristin Eberhard on the path to Washington taxing carbon
00:31:02
The Sightline Institute's climate-change expert, Kristin Eberhard, joins The Overcast to break down the carbon-tax proposal heating up the Washington Legislature and the initiative campaign waiting to pounce if lawmakers don't act.
Feb 15, 2018
Ep. 69: SEIU leader David Rolf on labor's WA agenda and reshaping the union movement
00:36:06
SEIU 775 president David Rolf talks about his union's past victories and future agenda in Washington state and Seattle - and whether a looming U.S. Supreme Court ruling will further cut union membership.
Feb 09, 2018
Ep. 68: State Sen. John Braun rebuts Reuven Carlyle on property taxes, plus more
00:20:46
Last week, state Sen. Reuven Carlyle, a Seattle Democrat, joined The Overcast and attacked Washington's new school-funding plan as too reliant on property taxes and too burdensome for Puget Sound communities. This week, state Sen. Johh Braun, a Centralia Republican, tells his side of the story. Braun helped draw up the funding plan.
Feb 02, 2018
Ep. 67: State Sen. Reuven Carlyle on property taxes and more
00:23:20
Property-tax bills are set to be mailed next month and many homeowners in the Seattle area are expecting big increases. That's partly because state lawmakers passed a new schools-funding plan. Sen. Reuven Carylye, a Democrat, voted against the plan. This week, he explains why and what to expect next.
Jan 19, 2018
Ep. 66: Reporter Paige Cornwell on what 250 readers told her about consent
00:24:07
Seattle Times education reporter Paige Cornwell sent out a call to readers to ask when - or if - they learned about sexual consent. She got back 250 response from people of all ages. She explains what she learned and how Seattle-area schools are leading the way on teaching consent to students.
Jan 11, 2018
Ep. 65: Transportation reporter Mike Lindblom on Seattle's "Period of Maximum Constraint"
00:22:36
Seattle is entering its PERIOD OF MAXIMUM CONSTRAINT. That's what planners are calling a span from 2018 to 2021 during which your ability to move through downtown will take a back seat to big infrastructure projects and super-charged growth. For Episode 65 of The Overcast, Seattle Times transportation reporter serves up an inside scoop.
Jan 04, 2018
Ep. 64: Sharon Nelson on what the state's newly-empowered Democrats will and won't get done in 2018
00:24:58
Democrats now control the Washington governor's office and both houses of the state Legislature. But their majorities are slim. What will and won't they be able to do with their new power? Sharon Nelson, the state senate's majority leader, tells The Overcast what she expects and tries to dodge questions about lawmakers making their correspondence public.
Dec 22, 2017
Ep. 63: Ranking the biggest politics stories of 2017 and predicting the biggest stories of 2018
00:36:59
What were the biggest stories of 2017 in Seattle and Washington politics? What will emerge as the biggest stories in 2018? Make a list and then see whether you agree with The Overcast, as reporters Jim Brunner and Daniel Beekman remember the year that was and look ahead at the year to come.
Dec 15, 2017
Ep. 62: From Seattle to Miami, a push for more diversity in school programs for gifted kids
00:26:13
Only 0.7 percent of Seattle’s African-American students are enrolled in the district’s most exclusive gifted classes. The rate for whites is nearly 18 times higher. That outrageous disparity is tied to how the district goes about identifying highly-capable kids. Seattle Times education reporter Claudia Rowe explains the issue and a different approach in Miami that's yielding results.
Dec 08, 2017
Ep. 61: Why Seattle needs a new police chief and why it matters, with reporter Steve Miletich
00:27:05
Seattle Police Chief Kathleen O'Toole will step down at the end of the year, Mayor Jenny Durkan has announced. Seattle Times reporter Steve Miletich tells The Overcast where O'Toole came from, what she did, why she's leaving and what comes next.
Dec 01, 2017
Ep. 60: An exit interview with 51-day Seattle City Councilmember Kirsten Harris-Talley
00:26:10
Temporary appointee Kirsten Harris-Talley served only 51 days as a Seattle City Council member this fall. But she had plenty to do, diving into contentious negotiations over the city's next budget and a proposed tax on big businesses. In Episode 60, Harris-Talley tells The Overcast what it was like for an activist to take part in Seattle politics on the inside.
Nov 02, 2017
Ep. 59: Launching Project Homeless, a deep dive into a crisis in the Seattle area
00:27:20
What's working and what's not as the Seattle region grapples with homelessness? Seattle Times reporter Vernal Coleman joins politics reporters Jim Brunner and Daniel Beekman to discuss Project Homeless, a new Seattle Times initiative that explores and explains a complex and troubling set of problems.
Oct 27, 2017
Ep. 58: Mike O'Brien pitches business tax to battle homelessness, money to study congestion pricing
00:29:53
With the City Council working on Seattle's 2018 budget, Councilmember Mike O'Brien sits down with The Overcast to discuss two proposals. One would tax large businesses to help fight homelessness. The other would pay a consultant to study the possibility of tolling motorists who drive into downtown.
Oct 20, 2017
Ep. 57: Understanding Seattle's mayoral candidates and their race to lead the city
00:30:15
KNKX's Simone Alicea, usually behind the scenes on The Overcast, jumps in front of the microphone to talk mayoral politics with Seattle Times political reporters Jim Brunner and Daniel Beekman.
Oct 13, 2017
Ep. 56: Environment reporter Lynda Mapes on missing martens and salmon and a fish-farming disaster
00:30:41
Seattle Times environment reporter Lynda Mapes explains why martens may be missing in the Olympic Mountains, what scientists are worried about after a survey of waters off Washington and how 105,000 Atlantic Ocean salmon wound up in the Salish Sea.
Oct 06, 2017
Ep. 55: Former WA GOP chair Chris Vance on leaving the party for a new centrist movement
00:28:16
Former Washington state GOP chairman Chris Vance and Nick Troiano, executive director of the Centrist Project argue a new centrist political movement can attract voters fed up with Democrats and Republicans. Hosting this week, political reporter Jim Brunner presses them on whether a centrist movement can really take hold in Washington state or nationally.
Sep 29, 2017
Ep. 54: A tragic death and persistent problems in Washington's child-welfare system
00:18:38
Seattle Times reporter Nina Shaprio discusses her recent story about five-year-old Gary Blanton, who died in the care of an aunt struggling with six kids in a “chaotic” home. Why did the state keep him there? And what are officials doing to longstanding problems in Washington's welfare system?
Sep 22, 2017
Ep 53: Seattle City Council President Bruce Harrell on becoming mayor... for less than a week
00:28:12
Seattle Times reporters Jim Brunner and Daniel Beekman interview Seattle City Council President Bruce Harrell about a very unusual time in local politics. Harrell became mayor after Ed Murray resigned amid allegations of sexual abuse but only stayed in the role for a few days.
Sep 15, 2017
Ep 52: Amazon seeks second headquarters and Ed Murray resigns as Seattle mayor
00:29:00
Seattle Times business reporter Matt Day discusses Amazon's decision to seek a second headquarters somewhere other than Seattle. Then politics reporters Jim Brunner and Daniel Beekman break down Mayor Ed Murray's stunning resignation amid allegations of child sexual abuse.
Aug 25, 2017
Ep. 51: Debate over safe-injection sites in Seattle, King County heads to court
00:34:41
Seattle and King County officials plan to open safe-injection sites to help keep drug users alive. But Initiative 27 would block that from happening. Now public-health experts and proponents of the sites are suing to keep I-27 off the ballot. Seattle Times reporters Jim Brunner and Daniel Beekman hear from their lawyer, Knoll Lowney, and then talk to an I-27 booster, Joshua Freed.
Aug 18, 2017
Ep. 50: Local politicians on Charlottesville and Monisha Harrell on Seattle's mayoral primary
00:31:34
How did Washington state's congressional delegation react to white supremacists rallying in Virginia and to President Donald Trump withholding judgment? What do the results of Seattle's mayoral primary mean for November's general election? Monisha Harrell, political consultant and board chair of Equal Rights Washington, joins Seattle Times reporters Jim Brunner and Daniel Beekman.
Aug 10, 2017
Ep. 49: Homelessness and people living in vehicles – a revived debate
00:26:16
Seattle Times homelessness reporter Vernal Coleman explains how City Councilmember Mike O'Brien has reignited a debate about how Seattle should deal with homeless people living in vehicles on the streets.
Aug 02, 2017
Ep. 48: Seattle's next mayor will be a woman, but which one?
00:26:18
Who's got the edge after Seattle's historic mayoral primary? This week, The Overcast brings a snap analysis of front-runner Jenny Durkan, and her probable November rivals, Cary Moon or Nikkita Oliver. Also, why did former Mayor Mike McGinn flop so hard?
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Jul 28, 2017
Ep. 47: Sidewalk interviews with voters about the race for Seattle mayor
00:29:48
The Overcast hits the streets for Episode 47 as Seattle Times politics reporters Daniel Beekman and Jim Brunner chat with voters in Columbia City, Beacon Hill, downtown Seattle, Capitol Hill and Lake City about who they're supporting for mayor. Support independent journalism: www.seattletimes.com/subscribe
Jul 21, 2017
Ep. 46: New information on decades-old sexual-abuse allegations against Seattle Mayor Ed Murray
00:27:23
Seattle Times watchdog reporter Lewis Kamb and political reporter Jim Brunner discuss their recent story on a 1984 Child Protective Services investigation of sexual-abuse allegations against Ed Murray. Then they talk with City Hall reporter Daniel Beekman about reaction from mayoral candidates and City Council members.
Jul 14, 2017
Ep. 45: Seattle's Mexican consul, Roberto Dondisch, on Trump, trade and immigration
00:32:22
How has President Donald Trump's election changed life for Mexicans and Mexican-Americans in Washington state? How has it changed trade between the Puget Sound region and Mexico? Roberto Dodisch discusses. Mexico's consul in Seattle, who served as his country's negotiator for the Paris climate agreement, also talks climate change.
Jul 07, 2017
Ep. 44: Olympia reporter Joe O'Sullivan on the Legislature's secret talks and midnight budget
00:28:29
Seattle Times Olympia reporter Joe O'Sullivan describes how the state Legislature narrowly avoided a government shutdown by passing a $43.7 billion budget negotiated behind closed doors. Lawmakers were so pressed for time that many voted for the deal without having read through the entire budget.
Jun 29, 2017
Ep. 43: Debating the wisdom - and legality - of a Seattle income tax
00:35:39
With Seattle city leaders determined to vote soon on an income tax for the wealthy, The Overcast looks at whether a city-only tax makes sense, and whether it's even legal. Guests: income-tax proponent John Burbank with the Economic Policy Institute, and tax critic Jason Mercier of the Washington Policy Center.
Jun 22, 2017
Ep. 42: Pundit-o-rama on the Seattle mayoral race with Monisha Harrell and Marco Lowe
00:34:35
Two local politics experts, Monisha Harrell and Marco Lowe, map out the contours of Seattle's scorching-hot race for mayor. Will Bob Hasegawa's public-bank concept catch fire? Will young voters turn out for Nikkita Oliver? Will Ed Murray re-enter the race? This week's episode was recorded in KNKX 88.5's Seattle studio.
Jun 16, 2017
Ep. 41: Should landlords get to screen for criminal history?
00:36:01
Seattle is considering restrictions on what landlords can ask prospective tenants about their criminal histories. We hear from advocates who argue the importance of a clean slate, and from a landlord rep, who fears the rules put landowners and other tenants at risk.
Jun 09, 2017
Ep 40: Seattle Times investigative reporter Mike Baker on double-booked surgeries
00:24:00
Investigative reporter Mike Baker takes us inside Quantity of Care, an ongoing Seattle Times series delving into business practices in the health-care industry. The latest story in the series is about doctors carrying out more than one surgery at a time.
Jun 02, 2017
Ep. 39: Rep. Pramila Jayapal on five months in Congress, and why she'd consider impeaching Trump
00:27:54
Rep. Pramila Jayapal of Washington's 7th Congressional District talks about her first five months in Congress, what it's like to be in the Democratic minority, her bills targeting President Donald Trump and why she's already mentioning impeachment.
May 26, 2017
Ep 38: Seattle soda tax? A health advocate and a burger boss debate city's proposal
00:37:50
Seattle Mayor Ed Murray has proposed a 1.75 cent per ounce tax on the distribution of sweetened beverages, and the City Council is considering it. Lindsay Hovind of the American Heart Association and Ryan Hopkins of West Seattle's Boss Drive-In debate the proposal.
May 19, 2017
Ep 37: State Attorney General Bob Ferguson talks Trump's travel ban, coal trains and chess
00:27:25
Washington State Attorney General Bob Ferguson's successful effort to block President Donald Trump's travel-ban executive order has catapulted the Democrat into the national spotlight. But he tells political reporters Jim Brunner and Dan Beekman he's also grappling with the federal government over coal and national monuments. Plus, Ferguson uses chess to explain Trump's governing approach.
May 12, 2017
Ep 36: A suddenly wide-open race for mayor of Seattle after Ed Murray ends his re-election campaign
00:29:20
Seattle Times reporters Jim Brunner and Daniel Beekman discuss a race for Seattle mayor that was turned upside down this week when Ed Murray announced he was ending his campaign for a second term.
May 04, 2017
Ep 35: Tyrone Beason on Portraits of Homelessness, a new Seattle Times project
00:26:11
Pacific Northwest Magazine staff reporter Tyrone Beason discusses Portraits of Homelessness. He and Times photographer Erika Schultz visited homeless encampments in Seattle and asked people there to share their thoughts, hopes and dreams with the rest of the city by writing in a scrapbook.
Apr 27, 2017
Ep 34: Who's to blame for the budget impasse in Olympia?
00:33:19
Charges of "ghost money" and political stunts are flying in the state Capitol. Must be budget season! With state lawmakers at an impasse over taxes and a McCleary solution, political reporter Jim Brunner talks with two key players about prospects for an agreement before summer. Guests: State Sen. Dino Rossi, R-Sammamish, and House Majority Leader Pat Sullivan, D-Covington.
Apr 20, 2017
Ep 33: Nikkita Oliver on Seattle politics and her campaign for mayor
00:38:43
Nikkita Oliver explains why she wants to become Seattle's mayor. But first, Seattle Times reporters Jim Brunner and Dan Beekman analyze the state of the race, including former Mayor Mike McGinn's comeback bid and the latest news on child sexual abuse allegations against Mayor Ed Murray.
Apr 14, 2017
Ep 32: Delving into the sex-abuse allegations against Ed Murray
00:25:10
This week's hosts Dan Beekman and Gina Cole talk with Seattle Times reporters Jim Brunner and Lewis Kamb about their reporting on the sex abuse claims against Seattle Mayor Ed Murray.
Apr 06, 2017
Ep 31: Seattle Times reporter Steve Miletich on a police reform milestone in the Trump era
00:17:22
Seattle Times reporter Steve Miletich discusses a new report from the court-appointed monitor overseeing Seattle's police reforms. He also explains what President Donald Trump's takeover of the U.S. Justice Department could mean for the city's police department.
Mar 30, 2017
Ep 30: UW researcher Caleb Banta-Green on opioid addiction and Seattle safe-injection sites
00:36:15
Caleb Banta-Green, a University of Washington public health professor specializing in opioid addiction believes Seattle and King County should experiment with safe-injection sites but says other ways to tackle the heroin crisis may be more important.
Mar 23, 2017
Ep29: State Sen. Mark Miloscia's crusade to block Seattle safe-injection sites
00:28:51
State Sen. Mark Miloscia talks with political reporter Jim Brunner about his bill that would block Seattle from opening safe-drug injection sites - and why he believes drug users should be stigmatized.
Mar 17, 2017
Ep 28: Reporters Mike Lindblom and David Gutman on car-tab fees and Trump transit cuts
00:22:53
Seattle Times Traffic Lab reporters Mike Lindblom and David Gutman explain why car owners are paying higher fees, how Sound Transit values vehicles and what some state lawmakers want to do about it. Then Lindblom breaks down the potential effects of President Trump slashing funding for light-rail and street-car projects.
Mar 10, 2017
Ep 27: Seattle's Kshama Sawant on Ed Murray, Trump's election, homelessness and taxes
00:33:29
Seattle City Councilmember Kshama Sawant, who belongs to the Socialist Alternative Party, discusses her differences with Mayor Ed Murray on immigration, resisting President Donald Trump and last year's presidential election. She also talks homelessness and taxes.
Mar 03, 2017
Ep 26: Transit Riders Union on new "Trump Proof Seattle" campaign for a city income tax
00:20:40
Katie Wilson of the Transit Riders Union answers questions about the new "Trump Proof Seattle" campaign for a city income tax that her group and others recently launched. The tax would target wealthy households.
Feb 24, 2017
Ep 25: Mayor Ed Murray on the state of Seattle, homelessness and resisting Trump
00:31:18
Seattle Mayor Ed Murray explains why he wants a new $275 million property-tax levy for homeless services, a new $16 million per year tax on sugary drinks to pay for education programs and information from the Trump administration about sanctuary cities.
Feb 17, 2017
Ep 24: Gov. Inslee on resisting Trump, his own political future and taxes for schools
00:23:22
Gov. Jay Inslee trashes President Donald Trump, fields a question about his own political ambitions and discusses the state Legislature's most pressing puzzle: How to adequately pay for public education.
Feb 29 | 00:26:16
Ep. 123: Reporter Steve Miletich on "A police officer's lie, a Seattle man's suicide"
Feb 14 | 00:33:25
Ep. 122: Seattle City Councilmember Andrew Lewis on evictions, policing and taxing big businesses
Feb 06 | 00:31:45
Ep. 121: 'Outsiders' podcast brings lessons from a year of reporting Olympia's homelessness crisis
Jan 15 | 00:36:45
Ep. 120: Investigative reporter Daniel Gilbert on problems at WA's private psychiatric hospitals
Dec 24 | 00:35:13
Ep. 119: Bundyville podcaster Leah Sottile on investigation of Washington lawmaker Matt Shea