We want to report on what matters to you post election day. Ask your questions here.
Get news updates and deep dives from all of our shows, including Your Call, Crosscurrents, and State of the Bay.
Our media and community partners:
News & Analysis
-
Your CallIf Donald Trump wins the election, JD Vance is one step away from the White House. He entered politics as the Senator of Ohio just two years ago.
-
CrosscurrentsMike Madrid, a co-founder of the Lincoln Project and author of “The Latino Century,” recently took part in a live discussion at KALW on what Latino voters care most about today.
-
tbhIn 2023 alone, lawmakers introduced 42 bills that restrict discussions about gender and sexuality in K-12 schools. In this story, tbh producer Amaya Dorman Mackenzie shares her story growing up in a school district that supported LGBTQ+ students. She shows what can happen when educators, lawmakers, and community members listen to youth.
-
Your CallScientists are warning that extreme weather events are becoming more frequent and intense as a result of climate change.
-
CrosscurrentsThe 'call to action' of a campaign led by young people in Richmond makes their appeal to apathetic voters very simple and personal.
-
Your CallSasha Abramsky writes about how polarization threatened to break apart two American communities and how one found a way back while the other splintered.
-
Your CallNew York Times global economics correspondent Peter Goodman discusses how monopolistic industries exploited the COVID-19 crisis and what's really driving inflation.
-
Your CallIn his new book, Yale professor of philosophy Jason Stanley exposes the danger of the authoritarian right’s attacks on education and efforts to erase history.
-
CrosscurrentsKALW’s Executive Producer Ben Trefny speaks with Oaklandside's arts, culture and community reporter Azucena Rasilla about what’s most pressing for the people living in Oakland’s District 5.
-
State of the BayState of the Bay talks to Deputy Secretary for Forest and Wildfire Resilience Lisa Lien-Mager. And we hear from both sides of Prop D which aims to eliminate half of San Francisco's city commissions. Plus, local author Caroline Paul discusses her new book "Tough Broads".
Gimme My Props
-
Proposition J would create an oversight body to monitor city government spending on programs helping children and young people.
-
Proposition I would improve retirement packages for 9-1-1 dispatchers, as well as nurses who transition from temporary to full-time roles.
-
Proposition H would lower the retirement age for San Francisco firefighters from 58 to 55.
-
Proposition G would reduce rent in hundreds of units serving extremely low-income seniors, families and people with disabilities.
-
Proposition F allows retirement eligible police officers to stay on the job while receiving both their salary and pension for up to five years.
-
Proposition E would create a five member task force to assess San Francisco’s many commissions and recommend whether any should be altered or eliminated to improve local governance.
-
Proposition D would dramatically alter governance in San Francisco, slashing City Hall commissions from the current 130 to a maximum of 65, retaining 20 major commissions.
-
Proposition C aims to fight corruption in the San Francisco government by creating an inspector general to investigate fraud, waste and abuse.
-
Proposition B would let San Francisco borrow up to $390 million to build new infrastructure and upgrade existing buildings, roads, and public spaces.
-
Proposition A would let the San Francisco Unified School District borrow up to 790 million dollars to upgrade, repair and retrofit its properties.
Bay Area Headlines
-
The results of the election have had a polarizing effect on communities across the country. KALW asked San Franciscans about how they were moving forward.
-
Monday was the last day for California voters to register by mail or online for the November 5 election.
-
Continued San Francisco Unified School District travails, an Oakland election explainer, Bay Area voter outreach to swing states.
-
A group of business and community leaders held a press conference in Oakland’s Chinatown today to speak out against the campaign to recall Mayor Sheng Thao.
-
San Francisco Mayor London Breed did not appear for a mayoral forum last night that was hosted by the San Francisco League of Women Voters.
-
A Bay Area-based nonprofit polled 900 Latinos from across the state on their election concerns.
-
The first week back for 50,000 students in San Francisco’s public schools was capped with an unexpected change of leadership on the school board last Friday.
-
Amid campaigns to recall Oakland Mayor Sheng Thao and Alameda County District Attorney Pamela Price, a group of recall opponents gathered in East Oakland to push back.
-
While a huge showing of California delegates are at the Democratic National Convention to support Kamala Harris, not all in attendance are there to root for her.
-
The San Francisco Bay Area Planning and Urban Research Association — or SPUR — is a public policy think tank that aims to develop solutions to the problems facing Bay Area cities. The nonprofit released a 44-page report that details the inefficiencies it sees in San Francisco’s government.