Taxes & Spending

 Seattle Has Heard the Promises. Now Wilson Needs to Deliver Results

 Seattle Has Heard the Promises. Now Wilson Needs to Deliver Results

Since the turn of the Millennium, six consecutive Seattle mayors (Paul Schell, Greg Nickles, Mike McGinn, Ed Murray, Jenny Durkan, and Bruce Harrell) have each left office against their wishes. Will current Mayor Katie Wilson meet the same fate as her six predecessors, or will she overcome the perils of office to depart from the...

Government over-regulation is reducing housing units, forcing increased rent

Government over-regulation is reducing housing units, forcing increased rent

On a recent segment on her [un[Divided podcast, Brandi Kruse examined a current court case on how over-regulation by the City of Seattle has turned once profitable rental properties into investment losses. As a result, many property owners (especially smaller ones who can’t absorb the costs) have pulled their units from the market and investment...

Washington’s 2026 Session: Are We Getting What We’re Paying For?

Washington’s 2026 Session: Are We Getting What We’re Paying For?

A Tax Reversal That Raises Process Questions In 2024, the Washington State House of Representatives passed citizen’s initiative 2111 — an income tax ban — by a 76-21 vote. The Senate followed 38-11. Over 400,000 citizens had signed petitions to place the initiatives in front of the legislature. Yet, just two years later, the legislature...

More Spending, Less Oversight: Washington’s Growing Accountability Problem

More Spending, Less Oversight: Washington’s Growing Accountability Problem

Washington taxpayers have been told for years that rising taxes and ever-larger budgets are necessary to solve urgent problems like homelessness, housing availability, crime, taxes, education, etc.) But spending has exploded as those problems are all worsening, and serious questions about how money is actually being used have gone unanswered. Instead of immediate, independent investigations...

Seattle’s Grocery Crisis Was Created by City Policy. The Fix Isn’t Government-Run Stores

Seattle’s Grocery Crisis Was Created by City Policy. The Fix Isn’t Government-Run Stores

Government policies and actions (or inactions) are placing burdens on Seattle’s big and small businesses. These struggling employers face: More taxes and regulations which neighboring cities and states do not face Public safety concerns which keep customers from visiting their neighborhoods A continuing retail theft problem with a revolving door justice system which immediately releases...

Times’ movie date with the Governor raises concerns over who is keeping the powerful accountable

Times’ movie date with the Governor raises concerns over who is keeping the powerful accountable

On November 15, The Seattle Times published a front-page photo of one of its top political reporters (David Gutman) laughing with Washington Governor Bob Ferguson while sitting in a local movie theater. The justification for the picture and related interview is that in the new movie “One Battle After Another,” Leonardo DiCaprio plays a character...

The Price of Silence

The Price of Silence

When is the last time you visited downtown Seattle? Or Portland? Or San Francisco? Are these places the towns you once vacationed to and felt safe site seeing? Nearly thirteen years ago, I prayed for death as I wandered the streets of Tacoma in the middle of the night—no place to go, no belongings, everything...

Commonsense Solutions to our never-ending “Homelessness Emergency”

Commonsense Solutions to our never-ending “Homelessness Emergency”

Last week, ChangeWA reviewed the negative outcomes of Seattle and King County’s Emergency Declaration issued 10 years ago this month. This week we look at two commonsense ways to quickly lower homelessness, cut dependence on costly government programs, and save taxpayer money.  Progress has been made – just a few years ago these policies weren’t...

Lack of action from state leaders means more fraud and waste will occur

Lack of action from state leaders means more fraud and waste will occur

Recent statements and releases from our state’s s highest elected officials suggest that their attention is primarily directed towards partisan disputes with the Trump Administration, rather than safeguarding taxpayer dollars. This emphasis on political battles appears to come at the expense of implementing effective oversight measures to prevent waste and fraud in public spending. As...

Billions Wasted, Zero Consequences: No One Fired, Demoted, or Punished

Billions Wasted, Zero Consequences: No One Fired, Demoted, or Punished

Major stories about government fraud and waste make headlines for only a day or two before vanishing. Because the media quickly drops these stories, the people responsible avoid accountability and keep profiting from the wasteful and fraudulent system. Politicians make promises to fix the problem, but rarely is anything meaningful done as the waste and...

Your tax dollars are promoting fentanyl use as a “friend-building” activity

Your tax dollars are promoting fentanyl use as a “friend-building” activity

Is a new big budget ad campaign from the State of Washington the latest proof that our government is not interested in reducing lethal drug use? [un]Divided podcast host Brandi Kruse asserts that a recently released television ad from the Washington State Department of Health is more evidence that “our government does not want to...

Halfway through session: WA Lawmakers have curious priorities

Halfway through session: WA Lawmakers have curious priorities

This article republished here, courtesy of Future 42. Much of the attention during this legislative session has centered around the handling – or lack thereof – of the six citizen-led initiatives. Despite the state constitution’s requirement for them to take precedence over all matters aside from the state budget, none of them have been granted...

Outgoing Seattle Councilmembers impose new problem for the new council to fix

Outgoing Seattle Councilmembers impose new problem for the new council to fix

One of the important items which might have missed your attention during Thanksgiving week was the outgoing Seattle City Councilmembers passing its supplemental $7.7 billion budget for 2024.  The two key takeaways from the last City of Seattle budget six of the nine councilmembers will pass are: Like the State of Washington, the City of...