Internet Explorer 11 is not supported

For optimal browsing, we recommend Chrome, Firefox or Safari browsers.
GOVERNING Avatar Logo

Daniel Luzer

news editor

Daniel Luzer -- News Editor. Daniel previously worked as the Web editor at the Washington Monthly and as an editorial fellow at Mother Jones. His work has appeared at Mother Jones, Salon, Pacific Standard, the Washington Monthly and Columbia Journalism Review.

(It's pronounced Loot-zer.)

Amount the Texas Department of Transportation will return to tollway users who have been overbilled.
Amount the Secret Service wants lawmakers to provide to build a scale replica of the White House in Beltsville, Md. It would be used to train agents to better protect the presidential mansion.
1
Number of congressional districts in which trade with China has produced more jobs than it's cost.
Anthony Weiner, the former Congressman from New York, explaining why he agreed to appear in the movie "Sharknado 3."
Adam Eidinger, chairman of the D.C. Cannabis Campaign, on Washington, D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser's decision to give him the special license plate number "420," which is a popular reference to marijuana. Eidinger said he suspects the license plate is due to his recent decision not to protest the mayor's support for banning pot clubs in the city.
Legislators approved a bill on Wednesday to establish a state-run registry for convicted white collar criminals to combat Utah's high level of affinity fraud, which occurs predominantly among Mormons.
Legislators are wondering why Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s administration has such a policy in place.
Employees from Florida’s transportation, health and water agencies have approached reporters to confirm that they, too, were pressured to drop any references to the man-made phenomenon in official communications.
Utah state Rep. Paul Ray, who sponsored a bill to bring the firing squad back as a method of execution. Utah, like other death penalty states, is having a hard time procuring the drugs for lethal injections amid a nationwide shortage.
Edwin Gray, who's being sued by his neighbors for smoking inside his home in Washington, D.C., which legalized marijuana last month. The lawsuit asks for $500,000 in damages.