President Trump signed into law the Fallen Journalists Memorial Act, authorizing the planning and construction of a memorial in Washington, D.C., to slain journalists. The push behind this act came after the 2018 Capital Gazette shooting, where a gunman killed five journalists in the deadliest attack on journalists in U.S. history. At the WBUR podcast “Here and Now,” Host Robin Young speaks with Maria Hiaasen, one of the widows from that day, about the memorial and her husband’s memory.
Dreier Roundtable Blog
Archives
Categories
- Appropriations
- Biden
- Bipartisanship
- Budget
- Bureaucracy
- Business
- California Politics
- Campaign Finance
- Character
- China
- Civic Education
- civic virtue
- Civil Rights
- Civil War
- Civility
- Claremont McKenna College
- Congress
- Constitution
- Coronavirus
- Corruption
- Crime
- Debate
- Debt
- Declaration of Independence
- Deliberation
- Democracy
- Disabilities
- Dreier
- Economic Policy
- Education
- Election Security
- Elections
- Electoral College
- Emergency
- Environment
- Ethics
- Europe
- Federalism
- Federalist
- First Amendment
- Foreign Policy
- Freedom of Press
- George Washington
- Higher Education
- History
- House of Representatives
- Immigration
- Impeachment
- International Relations
- Internet
- Jobs
- Journalism
- Judiciary
- Language
- Law
- Lincoln
- Local Government
- Madison
- Mass Media
- Military
- Misinformation
- Newspapers
- Nixon
- Oversight
- Patriotism
- Polarization
- Police
- Populism
- Presidency
- Problem Solvers
- Public Administration
- Public Opinion
- Public Service
- Race
- Reagan
- Redistricting
- Regulation
- Religion
- Rhetroric
- Russia
- Science
- Senate
- Separation of Powers
- Slavery
- Social Media
- Social Security
- State Government
- Statistics
- Supreme Court
- Technology
- Thanksgiving
- Threats Against Journalists
- Tocqueville
- Trade
- Transparency
- Uncategorized
- Vaccine
- Veterans
- Viewpoint Diversity
- Virtue
- Volunteering
- War Power
- Washington