The Overcast - podcast cover

The Overcast

The Seattle Timessoundcloud.com
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.

Episodes

Ep 33: Nikkita Oliver on Seattle politics and her campaign for mayor

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 20, 201739 min

Ep 21: Unhappy Democrats consider new leadership; two GOP lawmakers shape Trump's EPA

They're demoralized by President Trump's win and losses in some down-ballot races. Now Washington Democrats debate who should lead the party for the next two years. We hear from state Democratic chair Jaxon Ravens and his challenger, Tina Podlodowski, on what they'd do to turn things around - and whether they'd kill the caucus system. Also: two Republican legislators get top EPA posts. Who wins and loses?

Jan 27, 201742 min

Ep 19: Stealth inequities in public schools and Seattle's plans for the Trump inauguration

Seattle Times education reporter Claudia Rowe uncovers stealth inequities in Washington's public schools. Education Lab engagement editor Dahlia Bazzaz addresses the achievement gaps that plague even the state's best schools. And politics reporter Jim Brunner previews the Seattle area's plans for Donald Trump's presidential inauguration.

Jan 13, 201724 min

Ep 18: Seattle's apartment boom, explained, and Gov. Jay Inslee's tax plan for schools, disputed

Jim and Dan are joined by Seattle Times real-estate reporter Mike Rosenberg, who breaks down the city's unprecedented apartment-construction boom. Then Jim talks with state Senate Majority Leader Mark Schoesler, R-Ritzville, who pans Gov. Jay Inslee's proposed tax increases to fund public schools as laughable. Daniel Zavala with the League of Education Voters joins the podcast to talk through what the Legislature must accomplish this session to finally end a contempt order on schools funding.

Jan 06, 201736 min

Ep. 17: The biggest stories of 2017 and New Year's resolutions for 2017

Seattle Times politics reporter Dan Beekman and assistant digital editor Gina Cole rehash 2016's top five stories in local politics: a state Department of Corrections controversy, the Seattle area feeling the Bern, Mayor Ed Murray struggling to combat homelessness, a controversial Sodo arena vote and a $54 billion mass-transit measure.

Dec 30, 201621 min

Ep. 16: Will Trump's tough talk on China hurt Washington? And Hamilton electors flame out

Seattle Times business columnist Jon Talton talks with politics reporters Jim Brunner and Dan Beekman about how Donald Trump's tough stance on trade with China could backfire on Washington state. Then assistant digital editor Gina Cole and Dan quiz Jim on the last gasp of the local "Hamilton electors" and why Washington led the nation in "faithless" Electoral College votes.

Dec 23, 201632 min

Ep 15: "Hamilton Elector" explains anti-Trump plot and Jay Inslee wants $4 billion in new taxes

Jim and Dan talk with a leader of the longshot "Hamilton Electors" movement. Bret Chiafalo, a Democratic elector from Washington state, hopes to unite with Republican electors to deny Donald Trump the White House when the Electoral College votes. Then capitol bureau reporter Joseph O'Sullivan hopes on the phone to break down Gov. Jay Inslee's budget request that includes more than $4 billion in higher taxes pay for public schools, mental health system fixes and more. Senate Republicans call that...

Dec 16, 201632 min

Ep. 14: Seattle's $108 million new dump and schools clinging to the edge of a levy cliff

Assistant digital editor Gina Cole asks Seattle City Hall reporter Dan Beekman about his tour of Seattle's new North Transfer Station, a $108 million dump that isn't all that dumpy. Then education reporter Paige Cornwell schools Gina and Dan on the $74 million budget shortfall facing Seattle Public Schools. The gap is partly attributable to the so-called "levy cliff." Plus, this week's winner and losers in politics.

Dec 09, 201621 min

Ep. 13: What Trump means for legal pot, and how Washington trails Oklahoma on drug-crime reform

Jim and Dan sit down with colleague Bob Young to talk about how a Trump administration may deal with legal pot. There are lots of fears about Attorney General pick Jeff Sessions, but Bob notes Trump has said marijuana should be left up to the states - and he doesn't think Trump gains anything by picking a fight on this. Then, the ACLU's Alison Holcomb - author of Washington's legal marijuana law - talks about a related cause: ending mass incarceration due to drug crimes. She helped lead a campai...

Dec 02, 201640 min

Episode 11: Will Trump threaten Amazon? Plus a look at how WA Republicans fared this election

Donald Trump has clashed with Amazon founder Jeff Bezos over the Washington Post's aggressive coverage. Trump also has claimed the company has "a huge anti-trust problem." Seattle Times Amazon beat reporter Àngel Gonzàlez explains what the Trump administration could mean for the giant Seattle employer. Then GOP consultant Keith Schipper makes the case that local Republicans did better than many thought possible in Washington this year, especially in legislative races.

Nov 18, 201631 min

Episode 9: Reporting on the Dakota Access Pipeline, debating ST3 and an $18 million food fight

We hear from Seattle Times environment reporter Lynda V. Mapes about her on-the-ground coverage of the Dakota Access Pipeline protests, including a herd of bison thundering past demonstrators, and host a debate about the $54 billion Sound Transit 3 ballot. Plus, state Attorney General Bob Ferguson notches a win over a trade association for grocery giants.

Nov 04, 201647 min

Episode 8: Sonics arena politics, and pollster Stuart Elway breaks down WA races & 'rigged' polls

A new suitor for a possible Sonics arena emerges. We talk with Seattle Times reported Geoff Baker about the effort to revive KeyArena for basketball, and how it complicates Chris Hansen's rival SoDo arena plan. Then, veteran Washington pollster Stuart Elway talks polling methods, who's winning Washington races, and Donald Trump's claims of 'rigged' polls. Also, a Halloween special: what's scaring Republicans and Democrats this fall?

Oct 28, 201643 min

Episode 7: Kim Wyman rips Trump's voter fraud talk, Inslee & Bryant on police shootings

Donald Trump says the election is "rigged" with voter fraud. But Washington's Republican Secretary of State Kim Wyman says Trump doesn't know what he's talking about. She says even the state's controversial 2004 governor's race didn't show widespread fraud. Also, Seattle Times Olympia reporter Joseph O'Sullivan joins us to break down the final gubernatorial debate - including where Jay Inslee and Bill Bryant stand on police shootings.

Oct 21, 201617 min

Episode 6: the latest on tunneling machine Bertha. New protections for hotel workers?

This week, ace transportation reporter Mike Lindblom gives a progress report on Bertha, the giant Seattle tunneling machine now halfway through its work on a waterfront tunnel. Then, a debate on I-124, the Seattle initiative run by a hotel-workers union that would require "panic button" and other protections for housekeepers and other hotel workers - rules hotel owners say are onerous and that would create an unfair "blacklist" of guests accused of harassment. This week's winner: Seattle's notor...

Oct 14, 201634 min

Episode 5: Should Washington vote for a carbon tax? Bob Ferguson & Seattle taxpayers lose the week

This week, we look at the food fight over Washington Initiative 732, which would create the nation's first state carbon tax to fight climate change but which has divided environmentalists and progressives. I-732 proponent Yoram Bauman says it's great policy. Critic Rebecca Saldana argues it's a product of a "white-privileged" environmental movement. Also: why Attorney General Bob Ferguson and Seattle taxpayers lost big this week.

Oct 07, 201638 min