Kate Rabinowitz, Washington Post

Kate Rabinowitz

Washington Post

Washington, DC, United States

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Recent:
  • Unknown
Past:
  • Washington Post
  • CityLab
  • ProPublica
  • Pacific Standard
  • Business Insider
  • Grtr Grtr Washington
  • Washingtonian

Past articles by Kate:

There have been over 200 mass shootings so far in 2022

There hasn't been a single week in 2022 without a mass shooting, where four or more people are injured or killed, in the United States. → Read More

One million covid deaths: Visualizing 114 lives, cut short.

Remembering one person for each week of the pandemic: what brought them joy and what they wanted to do next. And how that was cut short. → Read More

Public transit agencies try to lure riders to buses, trains

Public transit demand during the pandemic has shifted to neighborhoods with high numbers of Black, Hispanic and lower-income workers, flattening peak travel periods and forcing transit agencies to respond to new patterns, a Washington Post analysis of national data shows. → Read More

Voting laws proposed by Republicans in 43 states would limit voter access

At least 250 new laws have been proposed in 43 states to limit mail, early in-person and Election Day voting. → Read More

Joe Biden’s Cabinet picks: The names being floated

One of President-elect Joe Biden’s very first tasks will be filling the key positions in his White House and Cabinet. → Read More

The battleground states that might count election results the slowest

More than 1 million early votes have already been cast in the 2020 election, but in several battleground states mail-in ballots will go virtually untouched until right before Election Day. → Read More

Election 2020: How to vote in your state

Voting in 2020? Here's everything you need to know about voting by mail, in person, early or absentee. → Read More

Since 2016, 11 states and D.C. have expanded voting rights for the currently and formerly incarcerated

Millions have regained the right to vote since the 2016 election through expanded voting access for formerly and currently incarcerated Americans convicted of a felony → Read More

Vote by mail: Which states allow absentee voting

The coronavirus pandemic will change how millions of Americans vote in November, as states expand access to vote-by-mail as a safer alternative to voting in person. → Read More

Their 2018 win was historic. What have these Democrats accomplished?

It`s been a year since the wave election gave the House the youngest and most diverse group of lawmakers ever. → Read More

America’s schools are more diverse than ever. But the teachers are still mostly white.

Minority students, particularly Latinos, are on the rise, but few of their classes are taught by teachers of the same race. → Read More

Who’s who in the whistleblower complaint

The people and events described in the whistleblower complaint. → Read More

Why now? The moments that moved Pelosi and House Democrats toward impeachment.

Democratic support for impeachment has grown in fits and starts, often corresponding to key junctures in the many investigations of President Trump. Here's how the momentum built. → Read More

More students are going to school with children of different races. But schools in big cities remain deeply segregated.

Big-city schools remain segregated but in small towns and suburbs across the nation, there's a rise in integration. → Read More

Six findings in The Post’s analysis of diversity in school districts

The number of children attending U.S. public schools with students of other races has nearly doubled, a Washington Post analysis has found. → Read More

Which Republican senators support nullifying Trump’s national emergency

The resolution has enough votes to pass the Senate, but not to withstand a presidential veto. → Read More

What Republican senators are saying about Trump’s national emergency declaration

Where Republican senators stand on Trump’s national emergency declaration. → Read More

Trump’s changing vision of the wall

Trump’s consistently rallied for a wall, but his wall has taken on different heights, lengths, costs and materials over time. → Read More

Stocks are down after a volatile year, but that’s not the whole picture

See how much money you would have if you invested at various points in the last two decades. → Read More

This watchdog agency has gotten smaller, quieter and less active under Trump

The new director will probably continue gutting the agency, but with their new majority in the House, Democrats have a way to push back. → Read More