My focus is on breaking news, voting rights issues and election disinformation. My role involves a mix of reporting from the campaign trail, explanatory journalism and contributing to live coverage of election results, debates and candidate speeches.I am especially interested in tracking voting legislation, keeping tabs on threats against election offices and officials and more broadly, monitoring actions that undermine democracy.
My Background
Previously, I covered a wide range of breaking news stories, including the police killing of George Floyd, several mass shootings, pandemic-related news and more. I have written about the Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol, pandemic grifting, cold case breakthroughs, hurricanes and eclectic topics, like bee infestations and the story of a man who tried and failed to walk on water from Florida to New York on a hamster wheel.
I graduated from Vanderbilt University in Nashville, Tenn., where I was editor of the student newspaper. I covered Connecticut and national politics for The Hartford Courant and Hearst, reporting on four national conventions and two inaugurations. I was named an outstanding state political reporter by The Fix, The Washington Post’s political blog. When I am not reporting, I moonlight in celestial and street photography.
Journalistic Ethics
Independence and sound news judgment are the bedrock of covering politics. That’s why I place a heavy emphasis on seeking out a variety of voices and perspectives for stories. Not only is it vital to be accurate and transparent, it’s critical that we understand the nuances of the issues that we’re writing about, both for the sake of readers and sources. I am uncompromisingly apolitical, including how I conduct myself on social media. You can learn more about The Times’s ethics policy here.
Gov. Tim Walz took jabs at Trump and his vice-presidential pick, JD Vance, at a rally in St. Cloud, Minn., hours before the Republican duo were scheduled to arrive for their own campaign event.
Representative Ronny Jackson, who was Donald J. Trump’s White House doctor during his presidency, said the bullet from an assassination attempt pierced part of the cartilage on Mr. Trump’s ear.
The theatrical former professional wrestler flexed his muscles — and electrified the crowd — with an impassioned account of how he came to support the former president.
Relatives of several service members who were killed when a suicide bomb exploded at a gate to the airport in Kabul in August 2021 delivered an anguished tribute.
On Tuesday, Republicans effectively took a victory lap in the middle of the presidential race, expressing a sense of invincibility at their convention.