Editor's Weekly: Snapshots of the new media world
Photos of election night show more than the Beacon newsroom abuzz with activity. They are snapshots of an emerging news ecosystem that will shape how you get your news.
Photos of election night show more than the Beacon newsroom abuzz with activity. They are snapshots of an emerging news ecosystem that will shape how you get your news.
Woven through the returns were signals that Americans are neither as fickle or facile as many campaigns and pundits seem to assume. To the contrary, our quadrennial electoral checkup revealed that certain vital signs of our democracy are healthy and strong.
Even if you follow our election coverage closely, you might easily lose sight of the full range of work available to help you decide how to vote. Here's a guide.
Todd Akin's "legitimate rape" comment was no run-of-the-mill campaign gaffe. It brought attention to positions and divisions that threaten to undermine Republicans' hopes to retake the Senate and White House -- topics that some politicians just didn't want to talk about.
Usually, political candidates tilt toward their parties' most active wings during primary season, then tilt toward the middle. But this year, they seem to be skipping the Etch A Sketch reset. Do the stark ideological lines drawn this week really give voters the information they need?
In the days following Missouri's primary, the Beacon has been filled with news of church as well as state. Both politics and religious institutions are shaped by the intertwined forces of power and belief.
Missouri's usually sleepy August primary is getting a jolt of energy this year as veterans face off against each other and strong fields of challengers take on incumbents perceived to be vulnerable.