It seems we can’t find what you’re looking for. Perhaps searching can help.
Why We Need a New Dickens
Everyone cares about Oliver Twist. Now we need to help the Artful Dodgers.
Keep readingAlice J. Gallin-Dwyer is the deputy director of Washington Monthly. She has extensive management experience in the non-profit sector. Before joining the Washington Monthly staff, Alice served as vice president of partnerships for the Afterschool Alliance; director of development and partnerships for the Washington Area Women’s Foundation; and deputy director of development and director of foundation and corporate relations at the National Women’s Law Center. Alice has also been an active volunteer on the boards of local community-based foundations, serving most recently as the Whitman High School Education Foundation's president. She is a graduate of Amherst College and Boston College Law School.
Alice is on Bluesky @alicegallin.bsky.social and X @agallin.
It seems we can’t find what you’re looking for. Perhaps searching can help.
Everyone cares about Oliver Twist. Now we need to help the Artful Dodgers.
Keep reading
Revisit writing from this year that we’re proud to have run.
Keep reading
We’re providing new ideas for a stronger America, but we need your help.
Keep reading
It was a beautiful North Carolina spring day in 2000 at the governor’s mansion in Raleigh, and Governor Jim Hunt was sprinting down the giant ruby-red stairs. I was his then-young press aide, and we were running late because he had been on the phone with President Bill Clinton. Naively, I noted something about their discussing a state issue. Without missing a beat, the governor said of Clinton, his fellow Democrat, “I was telling him what he was doing wrong with the country and how to fix it!” So began my real education in politics, which I was quickly learning…
Keep reading
While Trump muscles the media and renames the Kennedy Center, history will get the last laugh. Just ask the good people of Appleton, Wisconsin.
Keep reading
Revisit writing from this year that we’re proud to have run.
Keep reading
To pay for tax cuts, Republicans cut graduate student loan support for female-dominated professions. That turns out to be bad policy and terrible politics.
Keep readingSomething went wrong. Please refresh the page and/or try again.