SEATTLE Judge rejects Republicans' challenge to Washington legislative map
Federal Judge Robert Lasnik dismissed a suit brought by a group of Republicans who challenged the state's new legislative district boundaries. The plaintiffs' argument relied on a recent U.S. Supreme Court decision in Louisiana v. Callais, which struck down a Louisiana district created to bolster African American voting strength. The judge ruled that race was not the predominant factor in Washington's redistricting.
The map changes occurred in 2024 after the same judge found that the previous...
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SEATTLE Seattle mayor backs Seattle Center repairs via bond measure
Mayor of Seattle Katy Wilson and City Council member Rob Saka have officially endorsed issuing bonds to fund capital repairs at Seattle Center. The...

EVENTS Seattle Events & Nearby (May 20–27, 2026)
This week Seattle offers a packed schedule for every taste: from the large Northwest Folklife Festival at Seattle Center and the star-studded Stars...

REACTIONS How the World Disagrees with America: Russia, Brazil and India at Washington's Crossroads
In recent weeks news has reached various parts of the globe from Washington: US and Israeli strikes on Iran, tricky manoeuvres around trade in...

SEATTLE Seattle's 2020s Growth: Half the Pace of the Boom Years
In the 2010s, Seattle’s rapid growth was the dominant topic of urban conversation. Now the cranes have disappeared from the skyline, and although the...

WEATHER 🌤️ 10-day weather forecast for Seattle, Washington
Today, 05/20, Seattle is expected to be mostly sunny and warm. High around 75°F, low around 59°F. Wind will be from the southwest at about 10 mph....

WORLD Delcy Rodríguez urged Donald Trump to lift blockade on Venezuela
Acting President of Venezuela Delcy Rodríguez appealed to U.S. President Donald Trump to immediately end the country's economic blockade, saying that...

WORLD Negotiations between the US and Iran: Pakistani mediation amid ultimatums
Negotiating efforts between Washington and Tehran continue with Pakistan acting as intermediary, while the international community anxiously awaits...

SEATTLE Gorilla Gives Birth at Woodland Park Zoo: Second Infant Expected
A female western lowland gorilla named Jamani gave birth at Woodland Park Zoo in Seattle, becoming the first of two pregnant gorillas expected to...

SEATTLE Seattle News: gorilla birth, prison probe and sports
In today’s digest: a baby of an endangered gorilla species was born at the Woodland Park Zoo in Seattle, the U.S. Department of Justice has opened an...
Seattle

Missed the low tide in Seattle? Here’s what you missed
On Monday, Puget Sound experienced some of the lowest tides of the year — the water level fell 4.04 feet below normal. That exposed sea life usually...

Bellevue bans targeted protests outside private homes
The Bellevue City Council passed an ordinance banning “targeted protests” outside private homes. The measure, approved by a 6–1 vote, defines such a...

King County shuttle-to-trails season starts Memorial Day weekend
From May 23 through August 30 on weekends and holidays (including Independence Day), King County is resuming the Trailhead Direct service — dedicated...

Sunny week in Seattle, but four beaches closed
After a stretch of unsettled weather, western Washington will finally see the long-awaited sun: the National Weather Service forecasts a week of...

Lion cubs debut at Woodland Park Zoo
Four-month-old cubs Kamari and Zawadi, whose names mean "moon" and "gift" in Swahili, will make their first appearance in the Woodland Park Zoo’s...

Storm Warning: Air, Rates and Layoffs Shake the Pacific Northwest
Seattle and Tacoma landed among the top 10 U.S. cities with the worst air quality due to increased wildfires; Pierce County residents are facing...

Who’s Moving to Washington and Who’s Leaving — Census Data
According to data from the U.S. Census Bureau, about 191,000 adults move to the state of Washington each year, while 193,000 leave — figures that are...

Chinook and Cayuse passes to open by Memorial Day weekend
Two mountain passes in Mount Rainier National Park — Chinook and Cayuse, also known as highways 410 and 123 — will open in time for the upcoming U.S....

Lowest May low tide — Monday at lunchtime
On Monday, at exactly 12:37 p.m. local time, the water in the Puget Sound inlet at Seattle will drop to -4.04 feet (-1.23 meters) — the lowest tide...
Neighbors

Neighbourhood Wars and Celebrity Life in British Columbia
A roundup of news from British Columbia: a legal dispute between owners of a luxury mansion over a removed hedge, the Smashing Pumpkins touring Canada, and the home of a How I Met Your Mother star tucked into the wilderness.
Neighbourhood war on the "Golden Mile": owners of a $24M mansion sue over removed hedge
A serious dispute has erupted between neighbours in Vancouver’s prestigious Point Grey neighbourhood that could turn into a multimillion-dollar court case. Israel and Elaine Shafran, who...

Hantavirus in British Columbia: first case and new challenges
A first case of the Andes hantavirus has been confirmed in British Columbia in a passenger from a cruise ship, but authorities say there is no public threat. Against this backdrop, Vancouver is preparing for a busy week of concerts, festivals and sporting events. Meanwhile, Major League Soccer’s Vancouver Whitecaps are threatening to move to Las Vegas, and the B.C. Lions are negotiating their future at BC Place.
First confirmed hantavirus case in British Columbia: no public threat
The province...

British Columbia News Digest: resort, AI and basketball
Today's edition covers three key topics: the sale of a remote mountain resort for the price of a modest Vancouver house, the BC Greens' call for a moratorium on building AI data centres over environmental risks, and the Vancouver Bandits' loss to the Edmonton Stingers.
Batnuni Lake Resort: remote BC lake resort selling for the price of a cheap Vancouver house
Real estate sometimes produces surprising contrasts: for example, when the price of an entire mountain resort is comparable to the cost...

Vancouver: health threat, real estate and the fate of soccer
Today in the digest: an unusual real estate offer — a resort for the price of a Vancouver apartment; experts warn of a measles outbreak risk during the FIFA World Cup; and government, First Nations and business leaders unite to keep the Whitecaps from moving to Las Vegas.
A whole resort in Canada is for sale for the price of an old Vancouver apartment
An unusual listing has appeared on British Columbia’s real estate market: for $1.1 million you can buy not just a house but a fully operating...

Vancouver incidents and life: crash, housing privacy and the Whitecaps
Today's news from Vancouver covers three key topics: a serious crash involving a police vehicle that left an elderly man critically injured; a ruling to keep short‑term rental addresses private despite a long campaign by an activist; and a coalition of city, provincial and Indigenous leaders working to keep the Whitecaps soccer club in the city.
Police‑involved crash closes Vancouver street: elderly man critically injured
Early Friday morning in Vancouver's West End, a serious crash involving a...

Vancouver: Tragedy, Sport and Real Estate
Today's digest brings together three important stories from British Columbia: a woman's tragic fall from the Granville Street Bridge has sparked public outrage and calls for safety barriers; the Vancouver Whitecaps soccer club is fighting to survive with support from politicians and Indigenous nations; and a unique real estate listing — a home with a private golf course — is on the market for $1.68 million.
Tragedy on the Granville Bridge: Police watchdog probes woman's fall as public demands...

World Cup Preparations and the Whitecaps Crisis
In the digest — updates to BC Place for the 2026 World Cup, the British Columbia premier’s stance on AI risks following the Tumbler Ridge tragedy, and pivotal talks to save the Vancouver soccer club involving government and Indigenous leaders.
Getting ready for the World Cup: BC Place transformed for the 2026 tournament
A month before the start of the 2026 FIFA World Cup, British Columbia Premier David Eby unveiled the upgrades made to BC Place. One key change was the installation of a hybrid...

Vancouver: AI race, energy and housing affordability
Today's digest covers three key topics: building "sovereign" AI data center clusters in British Columbia, the premier's recognition of AI's dual nature as both threat and opportunity, and Vancouver's ranking as one of Canada's least affordable cities to buy a home.
Plan to create a "sovereign" cluster of AI data centers in Kamloops and Vancouver
The federal government of Canada and telecom giant Telus announced a partnership to establish a network of several data centers in British Columbia for...

Vancouver: from an unusual crash to new wildfires
Today's news from Vancouver and British Columbia cover three main events: an unusual motorcycle crash that left the bike hanging from a traffic light, a drop in home sales on the housing market, and two new lightning-caused wildfires.
Motorcycle stuck in a traffic light: an unusual crash in Vancouver
An attention-grabbing traffic collision occurred in the Metro Vancouver area, drawing notice not only from police but also from local residents. As a result of the crash, a motorcycle ended up...
USA

How "Breaking News" Works: Power, Tragedy, and the Reporter in an Age of Constant Crisis
In three texts that at first glance seem unrelated — about Donald Trump's unprecedented tax deal with federal authorities in the NBC News piece, about a pedestrian killed by a garbage truck in Keene, New Hampshire, in a report by MyKeeneNow, and about the new breaking‑news reporter at the Raleigh News & Observer in the News & Observer column — a single theme emerges. It’s not just “what happened,” but how the breaking‑news ecosystem is organized: how such stories are formed, how journalists...

Fragile Boundaries: Public Spaces Becoming Arenas of Conflict
Stories about a popular monkey at a Japanese zoo, a cult horror attraction in Springfield, Missouri, and a new turn in the Jeffrey Epstein case in Surrey, England, may at first seem unrelated. But if viewed not as isolated episodes but as symptoms of the same trend, a coherent picture emerges: society is painfully rethinking where the boundaries of acceptable behavior in public spaces lie, who controls them, and how to respond when those boundaries are breached — physically, legally, or...
Fragile security in a world where anything can go viral
Stories from a Japanese zoo about a monkey called Punch, a canceled U.S. strike on Iran, and an air show in Idaho at first glance seem unrelated. But viewed together, a common theme emerges: security as a constantly disrupted and rebuilt balance between risk, public attention, and the responsibility of individuals and institutions. This is an account of how the modern world responds to threats — from a prankster in a smiley-mask to the prospect of war and an air disaster in front of...

Violence, Sport, and the Fragility of Human Security
In this compilation of seemingly disparate pieces — two crime reports from Pennsylvania and a sports recap of the University of Kansas softball season — a common theme unexpectedly emerges: how quickly normal, everyday life turns into a situation of grave danger, and how people respond. In some stories this is an escalation of conflict to shootings and stabbings; in another, it is a sporting contest where a one- or two-game effort erases the result of a record-breaking season. Everywhere the...
![Nepali mountaineers Kami Rita Sherpa and Lhakpa Sherpa visit the statues of Tenzing Norgay and Edmund Hillary to mark the 11th International Everest Day in Kathmandu on May 29, 2018 [Prakash Mathematics/AFP]](https://www.aljazeera.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/AFP__20180529__15F801__v1__HighRes__NepalMountaineeringEverestAnniversary-1779008045.jpg?resize=770%2C513&quality=80)
Leaders, Heroes and Victims: How We Choose Those Who Manage Risk and Fate
In three seemingly unrelated news items — about intra‑party elections in Fatah and the son of Mahmoud Abbas, about a fatal crash in Pennsylvania, and about record ascents by sherpas on Everest — a common thread unexpectedly emerges: how societies and individuals manage risk, power and responsibility. From political succession amid war and weakening legitimacy, to everyday vulnerability on the road and extreme sports turned industry — the same question repeats everywhere: who makes decisions for...

Power, Violence and Legitimacy: How States Fight for Control
Three seemingly unconnected stories — a US-Nigerian special operation against ISIS, a local shooting in Wyoming, and a dispute between Virginia Democrats and the US Supreme Court over redistricting — actually describe the same line of tension: how the modern state asserts and defends its monopoly on violence and political control. Through fighting terrorism, responding to street violence at home, and legal battles over election rules, different levels of authority confront one basic question:...

Vulnerability and Control: How We Respond to Different Threats
Events happening in different parts of the world may at first seem unrelated: a domestic dispute involving a sharp instrument in a small American town, an outbreak of a rare virus on a cruise ship, and a tennis player breaking a historic record. But viewed more broadly, all these stories are about how people confront risk, vulnerability and unpredictability, and how individuals, societies and institutions build strategies to control chaos. At the center is the question: what can we keep under...

Everyday Surprises: How We Encounter Rare Events
Sometimes the news arranges itself so that there doesn’t seem to be a single unifying theme: a fishing line with a record catfish in Florida, an electrical fire on the tracks at New York’s Penn Station, corporate negotiations between giants of the food industry, and technological innovations in the texture of protein bars. But if you look at them not as disconnected facts but as reflections of how modern life is organized, an interesting story emerges: we live in a world where extremely rare,...

Security Under Pressure: From Local Incidents to a Crisis of the Rule of Law
Stories that at first glance seem unrelated — a false bomb threat at a Pittsburgh-area supermarket, a patient attacking a medic in an ambulance, and the turbulent chronicle of Donald Trump’s second term — are in fact linked by one thread. It is the growing tension around the notion of “security” and how authorities, institutions, and individuals deal with it: where it is genuinely provided, where it is used as a political tool, and where it becomes a convenient justification for undermining the...
Reactions
How the World Sees America Today: China, Germany and Israel
A dense ring of interpretations, fears and hopes is closing in on the United States again. The trigger was several Washington moves at once: Donald...
How the World Reads Washington: Saudi Arabia, India and Australia on America's New Phase
Debates about the role of the United States in the world have returned to the forefront — but if you look not from Washington, but from Riyadh, New...

Between War, China and Chips: How Ukraine, South Korea and Japan View the United States Today
The view of the United States from Kyiv, Seoul and Tokyo in spring 2026 is no longer the familiar story of a “global leader,” but a multi-layered mix...

The world through Washington's lens: how Australia, China and France debate America today
When you look at the United States from the inside, it seems like the whole world revolves around American elections, the Supreme Court, the next...
How the World Sees America Now: War with Iran, Hormuz and Trump's Shadow
Around the United States a dense information cloud is once again gathering—from Paris to Tel Aviv and Riyadh. The central axis of almost all...
How the World Sees America Today: The Iran War, NATO Without the US and Washington’s Economic...
In mid‑May 2026 the United States once again found itself at the center of global debate, but the perspectives in Paris, Delhi and Ankara look little...

Washington Between Kyiv, Moscow and Tehran: Debates in Ukraine, Australia and Russia
In mid‑May 2026 the United States are again at the center of other countries’ news — but this time it is no longer the classic story of the “world’s...

Trump Between Berlin, Beijing and Kyiv: Debates Over New U.S. Foreign Policy
In May 2026, global attitudes toward the United States are focused on three interwoven themes: Donald Trump’s visit to China and the attempt to...

How the World Sees Washington: Views from Brazil, Saudi Arabia and Israel
The United States remains the nervous center of global discussions — not only because of its own internal crises, but also due to the constant...
World

Strait of Hormuz: talks without a breakthrough, maritime tension rises
The situation in the Strait of Hormuz remains tense: reciprocal restrictions and verbal statements about negotiations do not lower the intensity of the conflict. U.S. President Donald Trump unexpectedly said there are “serious negotiations” with Tehran and reported that he postponed a previously planned strike on Iran — “for a short time or perhaps forever.” However, these peaceful notes come against the backdrop of real naval maneuvers and growing diplomatic tension, which only increases...

The Alex Saab Case: Venezuela Does Not Intervene
Acting President of Venezuela Delcy Rodríguez stated that the case of Alex Saab, a Colombian national who performed functions in Venezuela, is exclusively a matter between him and the United States. She emphasized that all government decisions, including the administrative measure of deportation, are made solely in Venezuela's interest, ensuring the country's calm, peace, and development. Rodríguez assured citizens that the authorities act only to protect national rights and the people's...

Armed anchors on Iranian TV: symbol of war or division?
The appearance of armed anchors on Iranian state television became more than a moment in wartime reporting; it was a visual shift by the broadcasting corporation Sada va Sima from mobilizing rhetoric to displaying weapons directly in the studio. Official channels showed presenters with Kalashnikov rifles, studying instructions on their use in programs such as "Military Headquarters" on Ofogh, "Field Commander" on Channel Three and "Time" on Channel Two. Footage circulated on social media...

Trump gives Iran an ultimatum: "the clock is ticking," threatens strike
U.S. President Donald Trump said that "the clock is ticking for Iran" and they should "act very quickly, or nothing will be left of them." According to Axios, Trump warned that Tehran would face a "much harsher strike" if it did not offer better terms for a deal. Although the American leader still prefers a diplomatic settlement, he returned to talking about a military option after Iran refused key concessions, particularly in its nuclear program.
Domestic factors influence Washington's stance:...

TSA inspections at Venezuela's airports for new flights
The U.S. Embassy in Venezuela reported that the Transportation Security Administration (TSA) is conducting inspections at the airports in Barcelona and Maracaibo to open new commercial routes between the countries. This is part of a gradual restoration of air service after an almost seven-year pause in direct flights: earlier, in March, the resumption of flights on the Caracas–Miami route was authorized. The TSA's goal is "to connect more Venezuelan cities with the U.S.," the diplomatic mission...

The World Against Iran's Nuclear Weapons: Distrust and Ambitions
No state in the world supports Iran possessing nuclear weapons — even countries close to it by religion within the Organization of Islamic Cooperation — because of weak trust in its political behavior. Iran’s theoretical right to peaceful nuclear energy under IAEA supervision remains in force, yet the veto power of the five permanent members of the UN Security Council limits the international community’s ability to impose a unified stance. Despite the 2003 fatwa by Iran’s supreme leader banning...

Awaiting Iran's Response: Split in the Trump Administration
The United States has frozen in anticipation of Tehran's official reply to the latest American proposal. Disagreements are mounting within President Donald Trump’s administration: some senior officials insist on limited military strikes to "break the deadlock," while others believe diplomacy should be given another chance to avoid a full-scale conflict. Al Jazeera's correspondent reports that leaks from the Pentagon confirm a deep split within the security agencies.
Official Washington has...

Venezuela Deported Colombian Alex Saab in Accordance with the Law
On Saturday, May 16, the government of Venezuela, through the Administrative Service of Identification, Migration and Foreigners (Saime), announced the deportation of Colombian citizen Alex Naim Saab Moran. The official statement emphasizes that the procedure was carried out in strict accordance with the country's migration legislation. The reason for the deportation was Saab's involvement in committing various crimes on the territory of the United States, which, according to the authorities,...

Trump's controversial photo sparks rumors of an attack on Iran
A photo published by Donald Trump showing warships, among which a vessel flying an Iranian flag was noticed, accompanied by the caption "the calm before the storm," has sparked a new wave of speculation about a possible escalation from Washington. The post appeared immediately after the president's return from China, where, according to U.S. media, no significant progress was made on the Iran issue.
Trump said that PRC Chairman Xi Jinping agrees on the need to force Tehran to open the Strait of...
Knowledge

Buy Bread for a Song: How One Market’s Rules Predicted the Future
Imagine you come to a market with a painting you made yourself and leave with a basket of apples and fresh bread. No money — just an exchange. Sounds like a fairy tale? But that’s exactly how the Fremont Sunday Market in Seattle worked (and still works!), which began in 1990 and accidentally invented the rules that now govern half the internet.
This is the story of how a group of neighbors from the city’s quirkiest neighborhood created a place where people could trade not only goods, but time,...

How Seattle's Garage Brewers Taught a City to Share Secrets
In the 1970s something strange happened in Seattle: beer became boring. The stores sold only beverages from three giant companies, and they all tasted almost the same — as if someone had decided the whole world should drink the same thing. But a group of neighbors decided that wasn’t fair and started a secret revolution right in their garages and basements. This is the story of how ordinary people who just wanted good beer accidentally invented a new way to live and work together — a way other...

A Market Where Engineers Trade Inventions: An Open-Air Sunday Lab
In Seattle’s Fremont neighborhood something unusual happens every Sunday. People come to the market not just for vegetables and old books. They bring strange machines they built at home, solar panels attached to toys, and bicycles that can make cocktails. It’s a place where engineers and artists turn trash into treasures, and ordinary people learn to invent right out on the street.
The Fremont Sunday Market has become more than a shopping destination. It has turned into a living laboratory...

Flying Fish That Saved Their Home: The True Story of Pike Place Market
Imagine: a huge silvery fish sails through the air like a football, and a vendor catches it with bare hands and shouts, “One salmon for the lady!” Tourists clap, take photos, laugh. This is the famous Pike Place Fish Market in Seattle, where fish fly every day. But few know the real story: these flying fish are not just a funny show. They are a symbol of a great victory when ordinary people—fishmongers, farmers, grandmothers and grandfathers—stood up to powerful interests and saved their...

The Man Who Made Teriyaki for Everyone: How One Cook Transformed Seattle
Imagine you’re walking down a street in Seattle and you see a small shop with a sign that says “Teriyaki.” You walk on — another one. Turn the corner — teriyaki again! This city has more of these restaurants than anywhere in the world outside Japan. But the most surprising thing is that they don’t make teriyaki quite like in Japan. It’s a distinct “Seattle teriyaki,” and it has its inventor. His name was Toshi Kasahara, and he was more than a cook — he was a food engineer who figured out how to...

The Secret Underground Rope: How Cable Cars Learned to Climb Seattle's Steepest Hills
Imagine a city where the streets were so steep that horses couldn't pull wagons uphill. People were exhausted from climbing on foot, and in winter the slippery slopes were downright dangerous to walk. That was Seattle in the late 19th century — a city on hills where every walk became an adventure. Engineers then came up with something surprising: streetcars that didn't propel themselves but gripped a huge rope hidden deep underground. The system worked like magic, yet few today remember that it...

The Market Nearly Eaten by Bulldozers: How Fish and Flower Sellers Taught a Whole City to...
In 1971 something remarkable happened in the American city of Seattle. Ordinary people — fishmongers, grandmothers buying vegetables, artists and students — stepped in and saved an entire market from demolition. It wasn't a fairy tale where a hero slays a dragon. It was a real story of how city residents realized their voice could be stronger than the plans of wealthy developers and city officials. And that story changed how people around the world think about their cities.
Pike Place Market is...

The Witness Tree That Made Engineers Rewrite the Plans
Imagine you're a tree. You're 150 years old; you've watched the first wooden houses go up around you, carts with horses roll down muddy roads, the first cars appear, and later — skyscrapers. One morning people come to your roots with blueprints and say, “We're going to build a huge building here.” What would you do? That's exactly what happened to a special Douglas fir in Seattle’s South Lake Union neighborhood when Amazon began transforming the old quiet block into a modern tech campus.
This...

Berta: the Giant Machine That Became a City Star
Imagine a machine the size of a five-story building that can chew its way through roads underground. Sounds like something from a sci-fi movie, right? But in Seattle such a machine really existed, and its name was Berta. It was the largest tunnel-boring machine in the world, and city residents loved it so much they wrote songs about it, painted pictures, and even celebrated its birthdays. Berta’s story shows how a massive engineering project can turn into an adventure that brings a whole city...