www.washingtonpost.com Open in urlscan Pro
23.37.45.67  Public Scan

URL: https://www.washingtonpost.com/nation/interactive/2024/university-antiwar-campus-protests-arrests-data/?utm_campaign=wp_post_mo...
Submission: On May 03 via api from BE — Scanned from DE

Form analysis 1 forms found in the DOM

<form class="w-100 left" id="registration-form" data-qa="regwall-registration-form-container">
  <div>
    <div class="wpds-c-giPdwp wpds-c-giPdwp-iPJLV-css">
      <div class="wpds-c-iQOSPq"><span role="label" id="radix-0" class="wpds-c-hdyOns wpds-c-iJWmNK">Enter email address</span><input id="registration-email-id" type="text" aria-invalid="false" name="registration-email"
          data-qa="regwall-registration-form-email-input" data-private="true" class="wpds-c-djFMBQ wpds-c-djFMBQ-iPJLV-css" value="" aria-labelledby="radix-0"></div>
    </div>
  </div>
  <div class="dn">
    <div class="db mt-xs mb-xs "><span role="label" id="radix-1" class="wpds-c-hdyOns"><span class="db font-xxxs gray-darker pt-xxs pb-xxs gray-dark" style="padding-top: 1px;"><span>By selecting "Start reading," you agree to The Washington Post's
            <a target="_blank" style="color:inherit;" class="underline" href="https://www.washingtonpost.com/information/2022/01/01/terms-of-service/">Terms of Service</a> and
            <a target="_blank" style="color:inherit;" class="underline" href="https://www.washingtonpost.com/privacy-policy/">Privacy Policy</a>.</span></span></span>
      <div class="db gray-dark relative flex pt-xxs pb-xxs items-start gray-darker"><span role="label" id="radix-2" class="wpds-c-hdyOns wpds-c-jDXwHV"><button type="button" role="checkbox" aria-checked="false" data-state="unchecked" value="on"
            id="mcCheckbox" data-testid="mcCheckbox" class="wpds-c-bdrwYf wpds-c-bdrwYf-bnVAXI-size-125 wpds-c-bdrwYf-kFjMjo-cv wpds-c-bdrwYf-ikKWKCv-css" aria-labelledby="radix-2"></button><input type="checkbox" aria-hidden="true" tabindex="-1"
            value="on" style="transform: translateX(-100%); position: absolute; pointer-events: none; opacity: 0; margin: 0px; width: 0px; height: 0px;"><span class="wpds-c-bFeFXz"><span class="relative db gray-darker" style="padding-top: 2px;"><span
                class="relative db font-xxxs" style="padding-top: 1px;"><span>The Washington Post may use my email address to provide me occasional special offers via email and through other platforms. I can opt out at any
                  time.</span></span></span></span></span></div>
    </div>
  </div>
  <div id="subs-turnstile-hook" data-test-id="regform" class="wpds-c-eerOeF center"></div><button data-qa="regwall-registration-form-cta-button" type="submit"
    class="wpds-c-kSOqLF wpds-c-kSOqLF-hDKJFr-variant-cta wpds-c-kSOqLF-eHdizY-density-default wpds-c-kSOqLF-ejCoEP-icon-left wpds-c-kSOqLF-ikFyhzm-css w-100 mt-sm"><span>Start reading</span></button>
</form>

Text Content

5.18.8
Accessibility statementSkip to main content

Democracy Dies in Darkness
SubscribeSign in
Northeast
South
West
Midwest


RIOT POLICE AND OVER 2,000 ARRESTS: A LOOK AT 2 WEEKS OF CAMPUS PROTESTS

Turn on reduced motion

Emerson College, University of California at Berkeley, University of Texas at
Austin: Students nationwide protest against the war in Gaza.


WHERE PRO-PALESTINIAN PROTESTERS ON CAMPUSES ACROSS THE COUNTRY, FROM COLUMBIA
TO UCLA, HAVE BEEN ARRESTED, WITH SOME FACING TEAR GAS, TASERS AND STUN GRENADES

By Dan Rosenzweig-Ziff, 
Clara Ence Morse, 
Susan Svrluga, 
Drea Cornejo, 
Hannah Dormido and 
Júlia Ledur
May 3, 2024 at 6:00 a.m.

Share
Comment on this storyComment
Add to your saved stories
Save
Warning: This graphic requires JavaScript. Please enable JavaScript for the best
experience.

In the 15 days since police arrested dozens of Columbia University students
protesting Israel’s military bombardment of Gaza, officers have cleared similar
encampments at colleges and universities around the nation. On a scale not seen
in decades on college campuses, students and faculty demonstrations have led to
more than 2,000 arrests.

What began as the student arm of pro-Palestinian demonstrations has grown into a
nationwide movement, drawing attention to campuses that are thick with tensions
not only over the war but also over whether the protesters, in trying to further
their cause, are creating distractions or even dangers for other students.

test -protest map

Protests since April 17

Univ. of

Michigan

Yale

UC-Berkeley

Stanford

Columbia

Protests since April 17

WA

ME

MT

ND

MN

OR

Univ. of

Michigan

ID

MIT

WI

NY

SD

MI

WY

Yale

PA

IA

NV

NE

OH

IN

Columbia

UC-Berkeley

UT

IL

WV

CA

Stanford

CO

KS

VA

KY

MO

TN

NC

AZ

OK

AR

SC

NM

AL

GA

MS

TX

LA

AK

FL

HI

Protests since April 17

WA

ME

MT

ND

MN

OR

Univ. of

Michigan

ID

MIT

WI

NY

SD

MI

WY

Yale

PA

IA

NV

NE

OH

IN

Columbia

UC-Berkeley

UT

IL

WV

Stanford

CA

CO

KS

VA

KY

MO

TN

NC

AZ

OK

AR

SC

NM

AL

GA

MS

TX

LA

AK

FL

HI

policepresencedraft

Protests with recorded police presence

Univ. of

Michigan

Stanford

Columbia

Protests with recorded police presence

WA

ME

MT

ND

MN

OR

Univ. of

Michigan

ID

MIT

WI

NY

SD

MI

WY

Yale

PA

IA

NE

OH

NV

IN

Columbia

UT

IL

WV

CA

Stanford

CO

KS

VA

KY

MO

TN

NC

AZ

OK

AR

SC

NM

AL

GA

MS

TX

LA

AK

FL

HI

Protests with recorded police presence

WA

ME

MT

ND

MN

OR

Univ. of

Michigan

ID

MIT

WI

NY

SD

MI

WY

Yale

PA

IA

NE

OH

NV

IN

Columbia

UT

IL

WV

Stanford

CA

CO

KS

VA

KY

MO

TN

NC

AZ

OK

AR

SC

NM

AL

GA

MS

TX

LA

AK

FL

HI

test

No. of

arrests

200

65

Columbia

Washington

University

in St. Louis

UCLA

University of

Texas

200

No. of

arrests

WA

65

ME

MT

ND

MN

OR

Columbia

ID

WI

SD

MI

NY

WY

IA

PA

NE

Washington

University

in St. Louis

NV

IN

City College

of New York

OH

UT

IL

WV

CA

CO

KS

VA

KY

MO

TN

NC

OK

UCLA

AZ

AR

SC

NM

AL

GA

MS

TX

LA

University of

Texas

AK

FL

HI

200

WA

No. of

arrests

65

ME

MT

ND

MN

OR

Columbia

ID

WI

SD

NY

MI

WY

City College

of New York

PA

IA

NE

NV

IN

Washington

University

in St. Louis

OH

UT

IL

WV

CA

CO

KS

VA

KY

MO

TN

NC

AZ

OK

UCLA

AR

SC

NM

AL

GA

MS

TX

LA

University of

Texas

AK

FL

HI

From April 17 through April 30, pro-Palestinian demonstrations have sprung up at
more than 150 colleges and universities across the country, according to the
Crowd Counting Consortium.

On more than 80 campuses, state, local and campus police, sometimes in riot
gear, have monitored or dispersed crowds. They often arrived at the request of
university administrators.

More than 2,000 people have been arrested in campus protests, according to a
Washington Post tally of news reports and police and university statements, as
of Thursday evening.

Most protesters, whose actions have ranged from gathering for daytime chants to
pitching encampments in the heart of campus to occupying university buildings,
have demanded schools cut ties with businesses linked to Israel, part of a
broader movement that has intensified since its invasion of Gaza after Hamas’s
Oct. 7 assault on Israel.

President Biden on Thursday forcefully urged demonstrators to remain peaceful
and rejected the idea of sending the National Guard. The protests have “put to
the test two fundamental American principles,” Biden said. “The first is the
right to free speech and for people to peacefully assemble and make their voices
heard. The second is the rule of law. Both must be upheld.”

At times, protesters have expressed extreme views, including calling for the end
of the Jewish state. “There is only one solution: intifada, revolution,”
protesters at George Washington University in D.C. chanted last week.

test-new

Campus protests per week

since Oct. 7

Monday and

Tuesday

166 protests

325

300

150

Oct.

April

2023

2024

As of April 30

Campus protests per week since Oct. 7

Monday and

Tuesday

166 protests

325

300

150

Oct.

April

2023

2024

As of April 30

Campus protests per week since Oct. 7

Monday and

Tuesday

166 protests

325

300

150

Oct.

April

2023

2024

As of April 30

In many cases, the demonstrations themselves as well as the arrests have been
peaceful or orderly. Still, videos filmed across the country, at small private
colleges and large public universities, include scenes of police deploying tear
gas, wielding paintball guns and forcing students and faculty to the ground
while making arrests.

Story continues below advertisement
Advertisement

Story continues below advertisement
Advertisement


In at least a handful of cases, students and faculty say, officers have broken
protesters’ bones or left them bleeding. Several law enforcement agencies have
also reported injuries to their officers, including a case in which a protester
allegedly hit an officer in the head with a skateboard at the University of
Wisconsin at Madison.

Many of those arrested, including students, professors and some without school
affiliations, were charged with trespassing or disturbing the peace, according
to police and university officials.



The ongoing protests have become a political flash point. Republicans and some
Democrats are insisting on explanations from school officials, pointing to
allegations of antisemitism. Pro-Palestinian groups see some of those less as
claims of concern for Jewish students and more as a way to paint the country as
mired in chaos under President Biden. And Democrats, including Biden, are facing
the prospect of losing the support of key constituencies in November’s elections
because of the administration’s support for Israel.

Throughout the unrest, administrators have struggled to find a balance between
protecting free speech and maintaining safety amid disruptions to campus life.
Many appear eager to tamp down on encampments and demonstrations ahead of
upcoming graduation ceremonies.

Yet there are signs that demonstrators have no plans to stop.

An April 24 update in the 7,000-subscriber Telegram channel Popular University 4
Gaza, where organizers send messages across campuses, had a warning for school
leaders.

“You have lit a flame you cannot hope to control,” it read.




NORTHEAST



The April 18 arrests of 111 demonstrators at Columbia University helped set off
a wave of protests across the nation.

The movement spread quickly across the Northeast, as police arrested nearly
1,000 protesters in the region over two weeks, according to The Post tally.
Demonstrations sometimes began with just a few dozen protesters at a school of a
few thousand undergrads. Many grew as police responded with force.

Some universities, such as Harvard, have mostly avoided police involvement and
instead limited who could join protests to those showing student IDs. Columbia
also restricted access to campus, but university officials said 13 of 44 people
arrested in the April 30 occupation of Hamilton Hall had no ties to Columbia or
affiliated universities.


New York University, April 22: Police arrested protesters at a Palestinian
solidarity encampment. (Reuters)

City College of New York, April 30: Faculty members linked arms with students as
New York police officers arrested protesters. (Spencer Platt/Getty Images)

City College of New York, April 30: Professor Corinna Mullin said her experience
of being arrested at an encampment was “terrifying.” (Spencer Platt/Getty
Images)

Emerson College, April 25: Boston police moved to break up a protest outside the
State Transportation Building. (Joseph Prezioso/AFP/Getty Images)

Princeton University, April 29: Over a dozen people were arrested during a
pro-Palestinian campus protest. (Ben Woodard/The Princeton Tory via Storyful)

Fordham University, May 1: Faculty form a human chain around pro-Palestinian
protesters in New York. (Ed Ou for The Washington Post)

Northeastern University, April 27: Police remove and arrest protesters at the
tent encampment on campus in Boston. (John Tlumacki/The Boston Globe/AP)

At Emerson College, a small campus in the heart of Boston, protesters set
pitched tents in an alley only partly owned by the institution.

The night Boston Police Department officers in riot gear swarmed the alley on
both sides, junior Amelia Oei was bracing for something major after the school
warned of an “imminent” law enforcement response. Oei left her phone and ID with
organizers, ready to be detained with the hope of bringing attention to
civilians killed in Gaza.

Suddenly, after 1 a.m. on April 25, police filled the alley.

In a video filmed by a crying friend in a building above, Oei can be seen
linking arms with dozens of others to form a “front line” in front of the
encampment. The 20-year-old and other protesters heard police might use tear
gas, so more than a dozen people held umbrellas over the eyes of those in front.



“Who keeps us safe?” the group chanted as police, walking single file, closed
in. “We keep us safe!”

Officers ripped the umbrellas out of hands in the crowd. Then they pulled
protesters out of the pack by their limbs or clothing, flinging some to the
ground.

“I was not letting go,” Oei said. Then she felt herself torn from the arms she
had linked with as she was pushed into a telephone pole, then the ground. Police
tied her hands behind her back and arrested her on suspicion of trespassing. She
felt the cause was worth it.

Story continues below advertisement
Advertisement

Story continues below advertisement
Advertisement


Owen Buxton, a 22-year-old senior who was part of the protest, told The Post
that several officers pinned him to the ground after he said he heard an officer
tell the others he had thrown a punch — an allegation he denies. While he was
pinned, an officer pressed a thumb into Buxton’s ear, he said, and black crept
to the edge of his vision. His nose bled.

Medical records show he was later treated at an emergency room, where he told
providers that police had thrown him to the ground.

Boston police said they did not receive any complaints from Buxton or Oei, and
instead referred The Post to an incident report that gave an overall summary of
the event. The report did not note Buxton’s injuries, though police say at least
four officers were hurt.

“They kept telling me I was being dramatic,” Buxton told The Post, referring to
the officers. “I thought I was going to die.”




SOUTH

University of Texas at Austin, April 29 : Police in riot gear arrested students
during a pro-Palestinian demonstration. (Aaron E. Martinez/Austin
American-Statesman/AP)

In the South, some state and local officials have made clear they won’t stand
for encampments. Through May 2, authorities arrested more than 300 protesters
and used tactics including deploying chemical irritants.

At the University of Texas at Austin, 136 arrests were made across two protests,
the most of any campus outside New York and California. Students there were met
by state troopers in riot gear and on horseback who were called in by Gov. Greg
Abbott (R).

“These protesters belong in jail,” he wrote on X.


University of Texas at Austin, April 24: Protesters against the war in Gaza were
confronted by armed state troopers on the campus. (@shoebyron via Storyful)

University of Texas at Austin, April 29: Police use pepper spray on protesters.
(Aaron E. Martinez/USA Today Network/Reuters)

University of Texas at Austin, April 24: Texas Gov. Greg Abbott (R) wrote on X:
“No encampments will be allowed. Instead, arrests are being made.” (Ricardo B.
Brazziell/Austin American-Statesman/AP)

University of Texas at Dallas, May 1: Protesters chant as law enforcement
prepare to dismantle an encampment on the campus in Richardson, Tex. (Juan
Figueroa/The Dallas Morning News/AP)

University of Texas at Austin, April 29: A pro-Palestinian protester yells “Free
Palestine” as she is handcuffed. (Aaron E. Martinez/Austin
American-Statesman/AP)

Emory University, April 25: Atlanta police said officers used chemical irritants
in making arrests. (Mike Stewart/AP)

Tulane University, April 29: Police ordered pro-Palestinian protesters to leave
their encampment. (Chris Granger/The Times-Picayune/The New Orleans Advocate/AP)

Emory University, April 25: Police in Atlanta used a stun gun on a handcuffed
man at a protest. (Ian Gallo via Storyful)

University of Georgia, April 29: Police respond to pro-Palestinian protests on
the campus in Athens, Ga. (Storyful)

According to videos shared on social media, police at UT-Austin wrestled down a
cameraman for a local news station, repeatedly punched a protester as
demonstrators blocked a police car’s movement and used chemical irritants to
clear the crowd.

Abbott’s aggressive response drew widespread criticism, including from some
Republicans who had supported his earlier efforts to back free speech on
campuses.

Story continues below advertisement
Advertisement

Story continues below advertisement
Advertisement


At an encampment at Emory University, where Georgia state troopers used pepper
balls in an April 25 crowd dispersal with 28 arrests, video showed a protester
being hit with a stun gun while pinned to the ground with a handcuff on.
Observers can be heard screaming at police to stop.

Georgia state police said in a statement that only one hand was cuffed, and the
protester had shoved the other under his body. After troopers tried twice to use
a stun gun on the demonstrator’s right shoulder, they stunned him in the abdomen
and then the right quad for five seconds each.

At the University of South Florida, where more than a dozen were arrested across
protests on April 29 and 30, police used tear gas to disperse what they called
“unsanctioned” demonstration after protesters refused to leave by a 5 p.m.
deadline.



Gas-filled videos show students dropping their signs and running away from a
quad as police in riot gear and on bikes close in on the encampment.

“Please do not resist arrest or … injury could occur,” police can be heard
telling protesters in video from the scene.

Some students in the region and across the country say they feel protected by
police, who they say are limiting how far encampments can spread and ensuring
security.

Lilly Fox, a freshman at Tulane University in New Orleans, said she has been
feeling unsafe as a Jewish student. When police at the private school arrested
14 people on Wednesday — after they had arrested six protesters days earlier —
she was relieved.

“I’m grateful that the police were able to clear the encampment,” Fox said.
“This really gave me peace of mind.”




WEST



More than 500 arrests took place at demonstrations on at least 10 campuses in
the West, as tensions rise between increasingly aggressive protesters and
police.

At least one school in the University of California system, the University of
California at Berkeley, said it would allow encampments to continue. But after
an outbreak of violence among protesters and counterprotesters, UCLA brought in
police, who leveled tents of demonstrators early Thursday morning.

Story continues below advertisement
Advertisement

Story continues below advertisement
Advertisement


In a pre-dawn raid, police officers threw stun grenades at protesters who were
quickly trying to erect new barricades.

“Get down,” officers yelled. “Get back!”

They also used at least one fire extinguisher to clear the crowd and arrested
more than 200 people. But even as the crowd thinned, protesters said they’d be
back.

“You can’t stop us!” they yelled.


UCLA, April 28: Protesters in support of Palestinians in Gaza and pro-Israel
supporters scuffle during demonstrations in Los Angeles. (David Swanson/Reuters)

Portland State University, April 30: The university asked for police involvement
to remove students who took over the Millar Library. (Beth Nakamura/The
Oregonian/AP)

University of New Mexico, April 30: A pro-Palestinian protester gets water
poured into her eyes after being pepper sprayed by police in Albuquerque.
(Chancey Bush/The Albuquerque Journal/AP)

UCLA, May 1: Police described “multiple acts of violence within the large
encampment” between pro-Palestinian supporters and counterprotesters. (Reuters)

University of Utah, April 29: Police end a student pro-Palestinian rally with
riot gear and more than a dozen arrests. (Scott G. Winterton/Deseret News/AP)

University of Southern California, April 24: A Los Angeles police officer stands
guard as officers surround a student encampment. (Zaydee Sanchez/Reuters)

University of California at Berkeley, April 26: People pray in front of the
student encampment at Sproul Hall. (John G. Mabanglo/EPA-EFE/Shutterstock)

At California State Polytechnic University at Humboldt in Arcata Calif.,
students on April 22 took over one campus hall, then a second. The Popular
University 4 Gaza Telegram channel called them “the cutting edge of the
movement.”

They barricaded buildings with furniture and damaged lawns and other property
that could cost the university millions of dollars, according to a school
spokesperson.

At 2:30 a.m. Tuesday, after the administration shut down campus, police stormed
the buildings and arrested 32 people on charges including unlawful assembly,
vandalism, conspiracy and assault of police officers.



“What was occurring was not free expression or a protest,” the school, which
remains shuttered until May 10, wrote in a statement. “It was criminal activity,
and there were serious concerns it would spread even further on campus.”

At Arizona State University, campus police came under sharp criticism after a
video surfaced apparently showing them removing the hijab of a protester. Police
removed hijabs of at least four women, according to attorney Zayed Al-Sayyed,
who is representing them and described the move as a violation of religious
freedom.

Story continues below advertisement
Advertisement

Story continues below advertisement
Advertisement


He noted that the women use the scarves to cover their heads in “a religious
symbol of modesty, privacy, and piety.”

“Every one of the four women let the officers know we cannot take off our hijab,
you cannot take off our hijab, they explained the significance,” he said. “To
some of them, they said it’s for your safety, to others they said it’s for the
safety of others.”

The women did not receive new hijabs for 17 hours, Al-Sayyed said, until their
attorneys brought them to jail.

The university said it is looking into the matter.




MIDWEST

University of Wisconsin at Madison, May 1 : Police gather to start removing
tents erected by protesters. (Todd Richmond/AP)

In the Midwest, some universities have begun reaching agreements with
demonstrators. At Northwestern University, students and administrators agreed to
remove tents and the university agreed to answer questions about its endowment
holdings. The University of Minnesota followed with an initial agreement
Thursday.

Those truces came as more than 200 arrests were made throughout the region, The
Post tally shows.


University of Wisconsin at Madison, May 1: Protesters chant "the whole world is
watching" amid demonstrations. (Annika Bereny / The Daily Cardinal)

Northwestern University, April 25: Demonstrators dance the Dabke, a folk dance,
while circling an encampment in Evanston, Ill. (Nate Swanson/Reuters)

University of Chicago, April 26: Student protesters set up an encampment on the
school’s main quad. (Joshua Lott/The Washington Post)

Some officers in the Midwest have also used force.

At Washington University in St. Louis, where campus, city and county officers
cleared an encampment, footage shows police beating a professor, then dragging
him across campus. Steve Tamari, a history professor at Southern Illinois
University, said in a statement he was “body slammed and crushed by the weight
of” several officers. He was hospitalized with broken ribs and a broken hand, he
said.



The St. Louis Metropolitan Police Department and St. Louis County Police
Department each referred questions to school police, who did not respond to a
request for comment.

At Indiana University, state troopers have repeatedly tried to clear the
encampment. Videos show they’ve come in riot gear, some armed with paintball
guns able to fire paint and pepper balls.

Story continues below advertisement
Advertisement

Story continues below advertisement
Advertisement


Sophomore Sydney Glickman was among those observing a demonstration on April 27
as police forced their way into a group of protesters and threw them to the
ground, at least one by the neck.

She said she had felt safe until the state troopers showed up, their actions
leaving her in tears. It felt to her like they were saying the pro-Palestinian
demonstrators didn’t have a right to speak their minds, she said.

“I have never felt more helpless in my entire life,” she said.



Back at Columbia, tensions reached a tipping point Tuesday night. Journalists
and observers were cleared as officers in riot gear massed on the east and west
side of campus. More than 100 police used a tactical ladder and a sledgehammer
to enter Hamilton Hall, which dozens of protesters had occupied. They arrested
more than 100 demonstrators, bringing the total at Columbia to more than 200.

The next day, Popular University 4 Gaza sent a message signaling organizers’
belief that the movement couldn’t be quashed.

“ONE CAMP GOES DOWN,” it read. “TWO MORE SPRING UP.”

ABOUT THIS STORY

The Post used data from the Crowd Counting Consortium, a joint project of
Harvard Kennedy School and the University of Connecticut that collects data on
political crowds in the United States, to determine the number of
pro-Palestinian campus protests, which campuses they occurred on and which
protests had police presence. CCC data covers protests between April 17 and
April 30. To track the number of arrested protesters at such events, The Post
compiled a database, relying on news reports, police and university statements,
and original reporting. All arrest numbers were verified with universities or
police departments by The Post and were last updated on May 2 at 7:30 p.m.
Regional boundaries are taken from the U.S. Census.

Molly Hennessy-Fiske, Niha Masih, Ben Brasch, Erin Patrick O’Connor, Maham
Javaid, Jonathan Baran, Elyse Samuels and Maham Javaid contributed to this
report. Editing by Brittany Shammas and Kainaz Amaria. Photo editing by Max
Becherer. Video editing by Jessica Koscielniak. Data editing by Anu
Narayanswamy. Graphics editing by Kevin Uhrmacher. Design and development by
Aadit Tambe and Agnes Lee. Design editing by Madison Walls. Copy editing by Phil
Lueck.

Share
14 Comments
Dan Rosenzweig-ZiffDan Rosenzweig-Ziff is a reporter on The Washington Post's
General Assignment desk, where he covers breaking news and writes of-the-moment
features. He has reported for The Post from Europe and covered crime and
criminal justice on the Metro desk. He previously worked for the Texas Tribune
and was a Fulbright scholar in Germany. @danrosziff
Clara Ence MorseClara Ence Morse is a political data reporter at The Washington
Post. She joined The Post as the Investigative Reporting Workshop intern with
the Data team, and previously served as the editor in chief of the Columbia
Daily Spectator. She lives in Washington, D.C. @ccemorse
Susan SvrlugaSusan Svrluga is a reporter covering higher education for The
Washington Post. Before that, she covered education and local news at The Post.
@SusanSvrluga
Drea CornejoDrea Cornejo is an award-winning video journalist on The Washington
Post's Health & Science desk. She joined the video team in 2018. @DreaCornejo
Hannah DormidoHannah Dormido is a graphics reporter and cartographer at The
Washington Post. Before joining The Post, she worked as a data visualization
journalist at Bloomberg News in Hong Kong and has led the Asia graphics team at
the Financial Times. @hannahdormido|
AddFollow
Júlia LedurJúlia Ledur is a graphics reporter covering foreign news at The
Washington Post. Before joining The Post in 2021, she worked as a graphics
editor at the COVID Tracking Project at the Atlantic. Previously, she was on the
graphics team at Reuters, covering Latin American politics, the environment and
social issues with data and visuals. @juledurg

Subscribe to comment and get the full experience. Choose your plan →



Company
About The Post Newsroom Policies & Standards Diversity & Inclusion Careers Media
& Community Relations WP Creative Group Accessibility Statement Sitemap
Get The Post
Become a Subscriber Gift Subscriptions Mobile & Apps Newsletters & Alerts
Washington Post Live Reprints & Permissions Post Store Books & E-Books Print
Archives (Subscribers Only) Today’s Paper Public Notices Coupons
Contact Us
Contact the Newsroom Contact Customer Care Contact the Opinions Team Advertise
Licensing & Syndication Request a Correction Send a News Tip Report a
Vulnerability
Terms of Use
Digital Products Terms of Sale Print Products Terms of Sale Terms of Service
Privacy Policy Cookie Settings Submissions & Discussion Policy RSS Terms of
Service Ad Choices
washingtonpost.com © 1996-2024 The Washington Post
 * washingtonpost.com
 * © 1996-2024 The Washington Post
 * About The Post
 * Contact the Newsroom
 * Contact Customer Care
 * Request a Correction
 * Send a News Tip
 * Report a Vulnerability
 * Download the Washington Post App
 * Policies & Standards
 * Terms of Service
 * Privacy Policy
 * Cookie Settings
 * Print Products Terms of Sale
 * Digital Products Terms of Sale
 * Submissions & Discussion Policy
 * RSS Terms of Service
 * Ad Choices
 * Coupons






Already have an account? Sign in

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------


TWO WAYS TO READ THIS ARTICLE:

Create an account or sign in
Free
 * Access this article

Enter email address
By selecting "Start reading," you agree to The Washington Post's Terms of
Service and Privacy Policy.
The Washington Post may use my email address to provide me occasional special
offers via email and through other platforms. I can opt out at any time.

Start reading
Subscribe
€2every 4 weeks
 * Unlimited access to all articles
 * Save stories to read later

Subscribe



WE CARE ABOUT YOUR PRIVACY

We and our 44 partners store and/or access information on a device, such as
unique IDs in cookies to process personal data. You may accept or manage your
choices by clicking below, including your right to object where legitimate
interest is used, or at any time in the privacy policy page. These choices will
be signaled to our partners and will not affect browsing data.

If you click “I accept,” in addition to processing data using cookies and
similar technologies for the purposes to the right, you also agree we may
process the profile information you provide and your interactions with our
surveys and other interactive content for personalized advertising.

If you do not accept, we will process cookies and associated data for strictly
necessary purposes and process non-cookie data as set forth in our Privacy
Policy (consistent with law and, if applicable, other choices you have made).


WE AND OUR PARTNERS PROCESS COOKIE DATA TO PROVIDE:

Actively scan device characteristics for identification. Create profiles for
personalised advertising. Use profiles to select personalised advertising.
Create profiles to personalise content. Use profiles to select personalised
content. Measure advertising performance. Measure content performance.
Understand audiences through statistics or combinations of data from different
sources. Develop and improve services. Store and/or access information on a
device. Use limited data to select content. Use limited data to select
advertising. List of Partners (vendors)

I Accept Reject All Show Purposes