With Jed Rakoff ’64, Andrea Young ’76, and Phil Weiser ’90
Recorded at Swarthmore College on Thursday, November 5, 2020
With Jed Rakoff ’64, Andrea Young ’76, and Phil Weiser ’90
Recorded at Swarthmore College on Thursday, November 5, 2020
Jamie Stiehm is a Washington journalist and public speaker who writes a syndicated column on national politics and history for Creators Syndicate, an independent media and syndication company. Some of her latest work for their readership can be seen here:
The Three Women of San Francisco
Jan 18, 2023
WASHINGTON — So, what city gave America the only woman House speaker, the most senior senator and the first woman vice president? San Francisco, of course, that fair city. Read More
Full House Theater: An American Tragedy
Jan 11, 2023
WASHINGTON — A full House for four days and four nights felt like 40 in the political wilderness. Pumping his fist like a frat bro, California Republican Rep. Kevin McCarthy eked out a victory for House speaker. Read More
New Year's Light on Lies Clears the Air
Jan 04, 2023
WASHINGTON — They thought they'd fool the grown-ups and get away with it all. George Santos and Sam Bankman-Fried are arrivistes in their 30s. A coincidence? I think not. Read More
The Kindness of Women Who Made You Feel at Home
May 4, 2022
My mother calls me every morning from Santa Monica, sounding like a lark, ever since the pandemic. A professor into her 80s, she has a subversive streak and went places all over the world, once to a civil war with a United Nations peacekeeping team. She sees her three daughters as a bit "unadventurous." Read More
Racing Away From Our Past With Judge Jackson
April 6, 2022
The vortex of our vexed record on race came out with the cherry blossoms. These three things: the Senate vote on a historic Supreme Court nominee; an anti-lynching law passed at last; and marking the cruel April day Martin Luther King, Jr. was murdered in Memphis, Tennessee.
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Three Stages of Violence: Hollywood, Washington, Ukraine
March 30, 2022
Violence is breaking out all over, in places we thought we'd never see it: on the Academy Awards stage, in the Capitol and a war in Europe. Are these ugly events somehow connected? Let's take the Academy scene first.... Read More
Pelosi Makes Most of History Every Day
Mar 23, 2022
WASHINGTON — What do you know for women's history month? March is going fast. Quick, when did women win the vote? "A Week in the Life of Speaker Pelosi" is my picture for the gallery. Read More
Biden's Perfect Pick is in the House
Feb 16, 2022
WASHINGTON — The first Black woman on the Supreme Court is justice delayed, and President Joe Biden — and the nominee — has the historical burden of presenting the perfect pick to the nation. I think I know who that woman would be.... Read More
Old Newsrooms Under Deadline: A Story Told by Carl Bernstein
Feb 09, 2022
WASHINGTON — I just read Carl Bernstein's new memoir, "Chasing History," on being a "kid" in the newsroom, when young President John F. Kennedy was alive. It almost broke my heart. Read More
Katie Couric: Now I Needed To Be the Girlfriend Next Door
Nov 17, 2021
Katie Couric's new bestselling memoir, "Going There," proves critics right. Shedding her skin as a sweet, smiling — if shallow — public figure, now she's the second coming of Katie Scarlett O'Hara, with threads, leather and beaux to boot. Read More
Two Californias Clash in a Divided House: Pelosi Versus McCarthy
(for Mark Shields)
Aug 7, 2021
It's a first in American history: The speaker of the House and the minority leader hail from the same state. But they barely speak.
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© Jamie Stiehm 2021