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Saturday, March 8, 2025

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Tim Redmond

Tim Redmond
2624 POSTS71 COMMENTS
Tim Redmond has been a political and investigative reporter in San Francisco for more than 30 years. He spent much of that time as executive editor of the Bay Guardian. He is the founder of 48hills.

Did House Speaker McCarthy just make a stealthy visit to Pacific Heights?

Nobody is talking, but that's sure what it looked like to me.

London Breed’s astonishing trickle-down economics define budget message

She praised billionaire CEOs for hiring low-wage janitors. She opposed progressive taxes. She wants even more money for the cops. We've seen this agenda before, and it doesn't work.

SF continues to violate court order on sweeps of homeless people, filing says

Cops and clean-up teams offer no shelter, destroy belongings, and ignore a federal judge's ruling, advocates and unhoused people report.

New City College Board rescinds layoffs, sets plan for rebuilding the school

Turns out the union's budget numbers were more accurate than the administration's.

Banko Brown’s family sues Walgreens

Wrongful death claim comes as attorney general investigates potential flaws in Jenkins' decision to exonerate killer.

The politics of the UN Plaza event

Could we have just watched the unofficial start of the Peskin for Mayor campaign? Or did we just see the Breed for Mayor talking points?

A profound national issue in a dispute over a local parking garage

Maybe we should talk about the future of 5 million jobs. Plus: Will the media hold Breed accountable for the problems on SF streets? That's The Agenda for May 21-28

SF needs a ten-year revenue plan

What progressive taxes on the rich can we use to fill what will be at least a $1 billion hole in the local budget?

Justice for Banko Brown coalition continues to grow—with pressure on Breed and Jenkins

Vocal rally today, comments at Police Commission show community anger at the mayor and her DA

A first glimpse at the two progressive candidates for US Senate

Working Families Party forum brought Lee and Porter to a statewide progressive audience—and both still have some work to do.