Sponsored link
Sunday, February 23, 2025

Sponsored link

Tim Redmond

Tim Redmond
2615 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.

Progressive unity rally seeks to get out the vote

Large turnout as candidates push the narrative that a handful of billionaires are trying to take over the city.

Fact Check: The attacks on Jackie Fielder in D9

We try to put the the mailers and ads in some actual political context.

Four jurors in Tenderloin shooting case say they wrongfully voted for a conviction

In extraordinary move, public defender seeks new trial alleging that jurors were under undue pressure and got bad instructions.

Two polls show Peskin and Lurie are gaining; what does that mean?

Trends suggest Farrell is dropping, Breed isn't gaining—and maybe political corruption is starting to be an issue.

As big-money ads drop, progressives work on GOTV efforts …

... plus a test case for Breed's neighborhood upzoning efforts. That's The Agenda for Oct. 20-27

Supreme Court hints at sweeping ruling that could gut the Clean Water Act

San Francisco may have just handed the right-wing judges the ability to undermine decades of environmental law.

The race for second place is heating up in the SF mayor’s race—and it’s all about Farrell

Safai backs Farrell. Some progressives back Breed—just to oppose Farrell. The RCV strategy is emerging.

A hearing on Mayor’s Office corruption…

... Plus the cost of structural racism at SFPD—and a strange tale of how expensive it is to resell affordable housing. That's The Agenda for Oct. 14-21

The school closure process is a disaster that never needed to happen

Close Harvey Milk and Yick Wo? After a bungled secretive process that has no credibility? Where are the School Board candidates?

Supes pass resolution seeking to avoid a sweeping attack on the Clean Water Act

Dorsey tries to say move is an attack on the City Attorney's Office, but that's not the issue—and by 8-2, members agree that the city should settle with the EPA over sewage