Seattle City Council approves the city's biggest budget in history Kim Malcolm talks with David Hyde about the Seattle City Council's biggest vote of the year: the annual budget. Kim Malcolm
What party will Eyman join? Anti-tax activist Tim Eyman hasn't declared a party yet, in his expected run for Washington governor. If he runs as a Republican, it's unclear whether the party will back him. Paige Browning
'I feel like I'm the bad guy.' Seattle landlords grudgingly comply with new tenant law The Washington Supreme Court has upheld Seattle’s “first-in-time” housing law. It requires landlords to accept the first qualified tenant who applies. Opponents say they will appeal the decision to the U.S. Supreme Court. But in the meantime, the law is in effect and landlords say they’re trying to comply. Amy Radil
Before protest hashtags, there was the WTO and Indy Media Twenty years ago this month tens of thousands of activists flooded into Seattle protesting the World Trade Organization. No demonstrations since have come close to the level of violence that ensued. One thing activists learned from those protests was how wield a brand new technology: the Internet. Casey Martin
Friday politics: Governor Eyman? Initiative 976 sponsor Tim Eyman says he'll run for governor in 2020. Angela King talks with political analysts Joni Balter and C.R. Douglas about his chances. Angela King
Trump says no to vaping ban. This UW expert says that's deadly for public health Kim Malcolm talks with Dr. Vin Gupta about the federal government's role in preventing vaping deaths and injuries. Kim Malcolm
Tim Eyman is running for governor ... and against Seattle Tim Eyman, the man behind anti-tax initiatives in Washington state, says he's running for governor. Joshua McNichols
‘This hatred has to stop.’ A survivor’s story Mrs. Eva Schloss turned 90 years old this year. The story of what happened to her as a young girl betrays the likeliness of that longevity. John O'Brien
A cop shot this wooden bullet at me at the WTO protests in Seattle. Here’s the story it tells During the WTO protests, a police officer shot a wooden bullet at me. It bounced off the wall, and landed at my feet. It didn’t hurt me. But it shattered something: A myth about what Seattle was in 1999 and what it could give to the rest of the world. Joshua McNichols
With R-88 defeated, what's next for affirmative action in WA? Kim Malcolm talks with Austin Jenkins about the future of affirmative action in Washington state. Kim Malcolm