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Washington’s Place in the Recruiting Hierarchy

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Washington’s Place in the Recruiting Hierarchy


Trying to figure out recruiting success based solely on offers is a bit of a fool’s errand. There is no accountability system out there to verify an offer. Every recruiting service has stories of schools texting/calling an outlet to say we didn’t actually offer that kid. But coaches can’t say anything publicly. And even if they did say the words “we’re offering you a scholarship”, there’s no way to verify that an offer is still valid 1, 3, or 6 months later.

That’s why going off of official visitors is a bit more of a reliable method even if it lowers your sample sizes. Teams are required to put their money where their mouth is when it comes to flying a prospect and their family into town and paying for their meals and lodging while there. The bigger the school, the more likely they’re willing to bring someone on an OV that they don’t really want all that badly. But most of the time if a player takes an official visit it means they’re at worst a high plan B option for the school.

Washington brought in 43 players this cycle for an official visit and 22 of them are committed to the Huskies with a chance at a few more. Those players took an average of 3.3 official visits this spring/summer so for most of them there was a clear indication of who else the Huskies competed against for their commitments.

What better way then to get a sense for how well Washington is recruiting than to look at what schools they were competing against for OVs and how well each school converted for those prospects?

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I put together a little formula for each school that essentially shows how much better or worse UW did at getting a commitment from those mutual prospects than the other school. If neither school got a commitment then it doesn’t count in either team’s favor.

There were 8 schools who Washington shared at least 4 prospects on OVs this cycle. Here they are in order of best to worst for the Huskies to get a sense for where UW stands against their most frequent competition (higher numbers are better and zero is roughly average).

Arizona State: 60.0% (5 prospects: 3 to UW, 0 to ASU)

Mutual players: TE Vander Ploog, TE Baron Naone, S Rylon Dillard-Allen, ED Smith Orogbo, LB Cyrus Polu

There was some serious competition for tight end help between the Huskies and Arizona State this cycle. Three major targets ended up between the two schools as ASU wrapped up AJ Ia early on while both Vander Ploog and Baron Naone took visits to Tempe. Washington ended up being just find that Ia decided to commit before visiting Seattle because the Huskies wound up with both Ploog and Naone who are rated above him in the 247 rankings.

Washington was less happy when Arizona native and four-star safety Rylon Dillard-Allen decided to commit to home state ASU early on this spring before he could take an official visit to Seattle. The Huskies and other schools kept on recruiting RDA though and he eventually decommitted, took several more visits, and picked the Huskies over SEC schools Alabama and Texas A&M among others. Both schools missed out on four-star edge rusher Smith Orogbo (Texas) and LB Cyrus Polu (Utah).

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California: 57.1% (7 prospects: 5 to UW, 1 to Cal)

Mutual players: WR Chris Lawson, TE Vander Ploog, WR Deji Ajose, TE Baron Naone, ED Devin Hyde, S Aiden Manutai, OL John Mills

For a while this looked like it would be close to a clean sweep for the Huskies. The lone player in this group to commit to Cal was Hawai’i safety Aiden Manutai. Washington seemed to be out front for Manutai after they got his last visit but they ended up also landing Rylon Dillard-Allen and are in the thick of it for Ladarian Clardy, each of whom is ranked higher than Manutai. He could be a great pickup for the Bears long-term but the Huskies have to feel okay that they ultimately didn’t end up with his commitment.

The one player who got away from both schools was OL John Mills who ended up committing to Texas. We’ll get to the Longhorns later on but there’s no shame losing out to their recruiting these days.

Adding insult to injury is the fact that Washington came into Cal’s backyard for most of these commitments. Three of the Huskies’ commitments came from players in the greater Bay Area with Chris Lawson (San Francisco), Deji Ajose (Oakland), and Devin Hyde (Menlo Park). The other two were Vander Ploog who is from Southern California and Baron Naone who is mostly in between the two schools in Oregon. No matter the context, Washington pretty soundly kicked Cal’s butt going head-to-head.

UCLA: 57.1% (7 prospects: 4 to UW, 0 to Cal)

Mutual players: LB Zaydrius Rainey-Sale, WR Dylan Robinson, S Rylon Dillard-Allen, ED Devin Hyde, TE Kaleb Edwards, OL Darius Afalava, OL Demetri Manning

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Washington also ended up with 4 of the 7 mutual players who took official visits to both UCLA and UW but this time it was a clean sweep. Edge rusher Devin Hyde is the only player that took visits to all 3 of Cal, UCLA, and UW so it wasn’t just that there was significant overlap between all 3 schools. The Bruins were able to get visits from four-stars Zaydrius Rainey-Sale, Dylan Robinson, and Rylon Dillard-Allen but Washington was ultimately able to win for all 3 prospects (in addition to Hyde).

Both schools missed out on offensive linemen Darius Aflava (Oklahoma) and Demetri Manning (Oregon) as well as TE Kaleb Edwards (Alabama). The average player who took a visit to UCLA as well was higher than for Cal with a rating of 0.8943 compared to 0.8834 which is roughly the difference between a high three-star and low four-star player.

Utah: 33.3% (6 prospects: 3 to UW, 1 to Utah)

Mutual players: TE Vander Ploog, CB Dylan Robinson, WR Deji Ajose, LB Cyrus Polu, OL Darius Afalava, CB LaRue Zamorano

The Utes have been extremely feisty on the recruiting trail with their sustained success but it looks like Washington still managed to best them for the most part this year. Utah was viewed as the primary contender for TE Vander Ploog but the Huskies were able to close out that recruitment. Four-star CB Dylan Robinson and WR Deji Ajose both took official visits to Utah but didn’t seem to be among the final few schools for either so Ploog was the only true heads up recruiting battle in which Washington prevailed.

Utah was able to land in-state linebacker Cyrus Polu but Washington countered by landing a pair of four-star in-state linebackers of their own to counter the blow. Both schools thought they had a chance with Darius Afalava who was one of the better offensive linemen out West and who ended up picking Oklahoma. CB LaRue Zamorano ended up committing to Michigan State after seemingly being a UW lean for several weeks before Dylan Robinson committed in what may have been a “one spot for two guys” situation.

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Oregon: 0.0% (4 prospects: 1 to UW, 1 to Oregon)

Mutual players: WR Chris Lawson, OL Demetri Manning, TE Kaleb Edwards, DL Josiah Sharma

Technically, both schools were equal here as each one got one commitment out of the group and saw 2 players commit elsewhere. So UW is recruiting just as well as Oregon then, right? This cycle saw more evidence that Jimmy Lake may have been right that UW and Oregon aren’t rivals on the recruiting trail. Oregon has been focused mainly on the national stage in this recruiting class and only have 5 of their 14 current commits from California, Oregon, and Washington. That has led the Huskies to nab the top player from each state and if recent Minnesota OT decommit Zac Stascausky pulls the trigger it will mean Washington has taken 3 players from the state of Oregon who the Ducks didn’t target.

Washington won a battle to end up with WR Chris Lawson who had both the Huskies and the Ducks in his final 3 schools. They also lost the battle for OL Demetri Manning from Bellevue, WA which definitely stings. Manning is currently Oregon’s lowest rated commitment though.

Oddly enough, both Washington and Oregon have at times earned commitments from DL Josiah Sharma who took official visits to both schools. Sharma committed to Washington under DeBoer then decommitted after the coaching change. He pledged to the Ducks at the end of June in what was viewed as a bit of a surprise but less than a month later flipped to Texas who were the favorites the day before his June commitment to Oregon. Both schools missed out on TE Kaleb Edwards who committed to Alabama.

USC: -16.7% (4 prospects: 1 to UW, 1 to Oregon)

Mutual players: OL Champ Taulealea, OL Elijah Vaikona, LB Matai Toga’i, WR Donovan Olugbode, WR Andrew Marsh, WR Phillip Bell

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This is the one entry with the most potential for change. Two out of the 6 players who took visits at both schools are still uncommitted with four-star WRs Andrew Marsh and Phillip Bell. Most recruiting folks have Bell as a contest between Ohio State and USC but he has been high on the Huskies. Meanwhile, Marsh has recently been viewed as a heavy Michigan lean but was on campus at Washington this week and told Dawgman that UW is likely in his top-2 right now. Either would be a massive pull for the Huskies but the smart money is for the reigning Big Ten powers (Ohio State and Michigan) to win out for the pair.

Both Washington and USC were able to win out when they did battle for offensive linemen with the Huskies getting a commitment from Champ Taulealea and USC for Elijah Vaikona. USC already had a commitment from four-star linebacker Matai Togia’i but he opted to take a visit to the Huskies anyways. It doesn’t look like that got him to change his mind but it showed the coaching staff was willing to take a shot by getting him on campus. The other prospect was WR Donovan Olugbode who ended up committing to Missouri with the Huskies seemingly finishing second.

Alabama: -25.0% (4 prospects: 1 to UW, 2 to Bama)

Mutual players: S Rylon Dillard-Allen, CB Dijon Lee, TE Kaleb Edwards, DL Josiah Sharma

Given that Alabama just stole away Washington’s head coach and most of their staff, it’s not a surprise that this matchup has gone in the Tide’s favor. Husky fans will no doubt be irked to see that DeBoer and company have been on fire recruiting at Alabama and that includes winning battles for California four-stars Dijon Lee and Kaleb Edwards. Both were looking like potentially elite pickups with heavy interest in Washington before the coaching changes but instead are following DeBoer to Tuscaloosa.

Washington did manage to get a commitment from Rylon Dillard-Allen who had Alabama in his final five and did take a visit there. It’s worth noting that Alabama currently has 0 committed safeties in their class of 2025 so it’s not as if the Tide already had multiple higher rated safeties in the boat and didn’t have room for RDA. Both schools missed out on Sharma as he flipped from UW to Oregon to Texas.

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Texas: -42.9% (7 prospects: 0 to UW, 3 to Texas)

Mutual players: ED Smith Orogbo, DL Josiah Sharma, OL John Mills, WR Andrew Marsh, LB Madden Faraimo, TE Kaleb Edwards, CB Dijon Lee

Now we get to the only school that has been a complete sweep going against Washington. It’s not a completely foregone conclusion. The aforementioned WR Andrew Marsh as well as four-star LB Madden Faraimo haven’t committed anywhere yet. There’s still a chance that the Huskies win out for one of them. But despite having beaten Texas on the field in consecutive seasons, Sark has been whipping UW on the recruiting trail.

It was no surprise that they were able to get in-state four-star edge rusher Smith Orogbo to stay home. It would be a shock if UW beat the Longhorns for a priority recruit from the state of Texas. They were able to go into California though and win battles for both Josiah Sharma and OL John Mills who were both three-star prospects at the time. You might expect Texas to not need to come into California for that caliber of prospect but this year they did and it dented UW’s class potentially.

Conclusion

The results from this aren’t particularly surprising. Washington was able to win almost every time that they went head-to-head with any former Pac-12 school other than Oregon or USC. That includes against UCLA who is headed to the Big Ten with a bigger financial share but obviously has had a lot less recent on-field success.

Things have been tilted in Oregon and USC’s favor but this cycle when they’ve gone head-to-head the Huskies have been able to beat each school once for a four-star player. It’s not a given that Washington will win any given battle against either program but it shows that there are going to be isolated contests for very good players that UW can win against them.

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We’ll see whether Kalen DeBoer continues to recruit the west coast as heavily at Alabama as we move along and his ties become stronger in the Southeast. But this year the connection between the coaching staff meant the two schools went head-to-head more often than they normally do and it isn’t a shock that the Tide won more than they lost.

The big thorn in Washington’s side has been Texas who overlap with Washington in both California and Texas and who UW hasn’t had success against in recruiting in a long time, not just this year. No school had more mutual targets against the Huskies this year and no team has beaten them off the field more consistently. If you ever want an indication that recruiting isn’t about on-field head-to-head results (2-0 for UW in the last 20 months), you’re looking at it.



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Washington Lands QB From Stanford

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Washington Lands QB From Stanford


On Monday, On3 Sports insider, Hayes Fawcett, was first to report that former Stanford quarterback Elijah Brown transferred to Washington, officially ending his tenure on The Farm. This comes nearly two weeks after Brown entered the transfer portal, and he will head to Seattle with three years of eligibility remaining.

Brown will presumably to be the backup to Demond Williams at Washington. Williams, who signed a $4 million deal to play for the Huskies at the end of the season, initially entered the transfer portal himself on Jan. 8.

But after backlash and threatened legal action by the university, he ultimately decided to stay with the program for the ’26 season. As a result, Brown will likely use this season to continue to develop and compete for the starting job in 2027 after Williams’ presumed departure for the NFL.

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A former four-star recruit, Brown started for parts of two seasons at Stanford, playing in three games with one start as a true freshman, which was limited due to an early season injury.

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As a redshirt freshman in 2025, Brown played in six games with three starts, finishing the season with 829 pass yards, four touchdowns and two interceptions. His best game of the season came against North Carolina on Nov. 8, where he threw for 284 yards, one touchdown and one interception in a 20-15 loss.

A star at Mater Dei High School in Santa Ana, California, Brown started all four of his years at the school and became only the fourth player in school history to earn the starting quarterback job as a freshman.

In his sophomore season, after throwing for 2,581 yards and 30 touchdowns, Brown led Mater Dei to a perfect 12-0 record and the CIF Open Division Title. As a junior, Brown once again shined for Mater Dei, throwing for 2,785 yards, 31 touchdowns and four interceptions as the program went 12-1.

After another dominant season that saw Brown throw for over 2,900 yards and nearly 40 touchdowns while winning another state title, he committed to Stanford over offers from several other big name schools including Alabama, UCLA, Arizona, Georgia and Michigan. After signing with the Cardinal, he became the highest rated quarterback to commit to the school since Tanner McKee in 2018.

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But Brown’s college career has been far from what was expected. After a promising college debut against Cal Poly in his true freshman season, Brown injured his hand and missed basically the whole season, playing in only two other games where he struggled.

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In 2025, Brown lost the starting job in training camp to Ben Gulbranson and even after replacing Gulbranson late in the season, he never was able to get Stanford’s offense to that next level. When he found success, it was typically late in games once the outcome was more or less decided.

New head coach Tavita Pritchard has a strong reputation for developing quarterbacks which could have benefitted Brown, but after Stanford signed Davis Warren from Michigan, in addition to bringing in new recruits such as Michael Mitchell Jr., the QB room got too crowded for Brown.

Now, Brown will be coached by another elite offensive mind in Jedd Fisch, a coach he hopes will bring out the best in him and have him playing like the four-star recruit he came into college as.

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Our reporting showed Washington ranks last in green energy growth. Now the state is working to speed it up

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Our reporting showed Washington ranks last in green energy growth. Now the state is working to speed it up


FILE – In this Feb. 10, 2010, file photo, power lines from Bonneville Dam head in all directions in North Bonneville, Wash. (AP Photo/Don Ryan)

Don Ryan / AP

This article was produced for ProPublica’s Local Reporting Network in partnership with Oregon Public Broadcasting. Sign up for First Look to get OPB stories in your inbox six days a week.

Washington state has launched a sweeping effort to speed up construction of renewable energy projects, prompted by reporting from Oregon Public Broadcasting and ProPublica that chronicled how the state came to rank dead last in the nation for renewable energy growth.

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Washington’s Department of Commerce, which works on state energy policy, has offered up state employees to help the federal Bonneville Power Administration process its backlog of renewable energy projects — though it remains uncertain whether the agency will accept the offer.

Bonneville, which owns 75% of the Northwest’s power grid, must sign off before wind and solar developers who wish to connect to its grid can break ground.

Meanwhile, four state agencies have recommended that Washington’s Legislature provide incentives for utilities to upgrade transmission lines, plan “microgrid” energy projects that don’t need to connect to Bonneville’s power lines, and create a new state agency to plan and potentially pay for major new transmission corridors. A bill to create such an authority had a hearing on Jan 21.

The Commerce Department, the Department of Ecology, the Energy Facility Site Evaluation Council, and the Utilities and Transportation Commission are also meeting regularly to diagnose what’s holding up more than a dozen high-priority wind, solar, and energy storage projects that could make an outsized difference.

Joe Nguyễn, who recently stepped down as the state’s commerce director, said there’s added urgency to get the work done since OPB and ProPublica last year showed that other states like Iowa and Texas have made far more progress than Washington.

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“We’re forcing these tough conversations that have never been done before,” Nguyễn, a former state senator who helped pass Washington’s law setting a deadline to go carbon-free, said during a recent public forum. He spoke at the panel just before leaving the state Commerce Department in January to take a job as head of the Seattle Chamber of Commerce.

“We probably have to modify some policies, we’re going to amend some things, we have to make strategic investments, but I think that’s a good thing,” Nguyễn said at the forum. “I’m not daunted by the task.”

Under Bonneville, projects face longer odds of successfully connecting to the electrical grid than anywhere else in the country, OPB and ProPublica found.

The federal agency weighs how many new transmission lines and substations will be needed to carry the added load, and it has historically been slow to pay for such upgrades, renewable energy advocates have said. Often, the burden falls on the builders of the wind and solar projects.

Washington and Oregon lawmakers failed to account for this obstacle when they required electric utilities to phase out fossil fuels. Combined with rapid growth in electricity demand from new data centers powering artificial intelligence, studies now predict rolling blackouts in the Pacific Northwest within the next five years.

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Inspired by OPB and ProPublica’s reporting, the Seattle nonprofit Clean & Prosperous published a report this month identifying energy high-potential projects that could generate enough power for 7 million homes and contribute $195 billion to the state’s economy if built by 2030. Kevin Tempest, research director for Clean & Prosperous, said the fact that Washington ranked 50th nationally for green power growth was poorly understood until the recent news coverage.

“I don’t think that we were aware of just how stark it was,” said Tempest, whose group advocates for “entrepreneurial approaches” to eliminating fossil fuels and promoting economic growth. “So that really opened our eyes and, I think, accelerated a lot of conversations.”

Separately, in Oregon, Gov. Tina Kotek recently signed two executive orders intended to speed up the construction of energy projects. Kotek, too, said the news reports helped galvanize policymakers.

Nguyễn told OPB and ProPublica their reporting made him realize “the people who talk about clean energy are not actually doing it.” But now, he said, “Washington state’s desperately trying.”

‘Things that we can control’

Most of the high-priority projects identified by the state and by Clean & Prosperous are waiting for approval to connect to Bonneville’s substations and transmission lines so that developers move toward construction.

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The federal agency’s review process historically has been sluggish and often puts the onus on a single energy developer to invest tens of millions of dollars in upgrades or else wait until another developer comes along to shoulder some of the cost. In addition, state officials in Oregon and Washington must also sign off on the location planned for new power lines and wind or solar farms — a process with its own bottlenecks.

“There are a myriad of reasons why projects are not happening,” Tempest said. “It’s different for each case.”

But he said across all projects, Bonneville is “a common feature for some of the new facilities not breaking ground.”

Bonneville spokesperson Kevin Wingert said in an email that the agency has implemented several reforms over the past year to enable faster connections to its grid. For example, the agency began studying clusters of projects collectively, based on their readiness, and expects its first study to be done at the end of the month.

Wingert said the agency has identified 7 gigawatts worth of projects — roughly the capacity of Grand Coulee hydroelectric dam, Washington’s largest power plant — that it says it’s on pace to have online within five years. It expects to have more than double that amount connected and energized by 2035.

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In the near term, the state is focusing on grid improvements to the transmission system it can make without Bonneville, according to Casey Sixkiller, director of the Washington Department of Ecology.

He said Washington will work to help projects connect to some part of the roughly 25% of the region’s grid that is operated by investor-owned and public utilities.

“I think the point is for us in Washington, trying to find, as we wait for BPA, who’s years behind, what are the other things that we can control that we should be prioritizing and trying to move forward?” Sixkiller said.

Kurt Beckett, chair of Washington’s Energy Facility Site Evaluation Council, which issues site permits for energy projects, said localized improvements that can be made outside of Bonneville’s grid are cheaper and will have tangible, immediate results. They also have the benefit of “buying time for the bigger, harder upgrades that Bonneville’s in charge of.”

Bonneville says it plans to spend $5 billion on nearly two dozen transmission lines and substation improvements, but many of those projects are years away with no firm deadline.

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What’s within Washington’s control in the near term is to streamline state permitting of projects that have received or don’t need Bonneville’s approval.

The need was highlighted by the passage last year of President Donald Trump’s so-called One Big Beautiful Bill Act, which will phase out key federal energy tax credits and set a July 4 deadline for projects to break ground. The credits cover as much as 50% of construction costs for most solar and wind farms.

More than 200 wind, solar and battery storage projects theoretically could meet the deadline “should development processes improve,” Clean & Prosperous concluded in its report. The group said it was a reference to both Bonneville’s role and the state’s.

Sixkiller said Washington leaders are prioritizing a smaller list of 19 proposed projects they think have the best chance of beating the July deadline. In some cases, the developers already have a connection agreement with Bonneville in place. In two, the projects will connect to power lines run by a utility.

An offer of help

In addition to actions taken by state agencies, Washington lawmakers are considering a bill that would ease the state’s reliance on Bonneville to build new power lines. That would come in the form of a state transmission authority — a new state agency in charge of planning transmission routes, acquiring land and working with developers to build new lines.

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It could also eventually pay for projects. Washington lawmakers are calling for a report on what financing tools, such as the ability to issue bonds, the new transmission authority will need.

The bill has support from environmental groups, labor unions and energy developers. However, lobbyists for large industrial energy consumers and for Bonneville’s public utility customers opposed the bill, saying they supported the intention to build more transmission but wanted the state to focus on relaxing its permitting requirements to let utilities solve the problem.

For the time being, state officials told OPB and ProPublica they are working to shore up Bonneville’s ability to do the work that the region’s grid needs.

Beckett said he hopes the state can help Bonneville with the agency’s self-imposed goal of cutting the average time a project spends in the queue from 15 years down to five or six.

Agencies have offered Bonneville some of their staff to help its analysts complete grid connection studies, which Washington officials said makes sense because the state, in many cases, is already reviewing the same projects that are awaiting the federal agency’s permission to connect.

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Bonneville hasn’t said yes yet. Wingert said Bonneville’s interconnection studies have “numerous technical and regulatory requirements” that make them “inappropriate or infeasible” for the state to conduct on BPA’s behalf.

But, he said, the agency was open to working with the state to speed projects up at some point.

“There may be opportunities to coordinate efficiencies between state policies and BPA’s interconnection processes in the future,” Wingert said.

Nguyễn said that technical requirements shouldn’t keep Bonneville from accepting the state’s help in vetting projects or analyzing their impact on the grid, and that state employees could help with the less technical aspects of the report if needed.

“If you want us to bring you lunch so your analysts can go faster, we will do it,” he said. “That’s the level of seriousness I have about getting transmission built.”

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Southwest Washington’s Gluesenkamp Perez calls for Noem to step down

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Southwest Washington’s Gluesenkamp Perez calls for Noem to step down


U.S. Rep. Marie Gluesenkamp Perez, D-Southwest Washington, on Saturday called for Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem to step down following the shooting death of a man in Minneapolis by a federal agent.

“It’s unacceptable to have another needless death in Minnesota, and it’s unacceptable to have elected officials, candidates, and administration officials continue to throw gas on this fire, or tacitly encourage assaults on law enforcement and anyone else,” Gluesenkamp Perez said. “The situation is un-American and Secretary Noem needs to step down.”

A Border Patrol agent shot and killed 37-year-old Alex Pretti, a protester in Minneapolis, on Saturday.

Gluesenkamp Perez’s call that Noem step down came after Gluesenkamp Perez voted to fund DHS on Thursday amid concerns from other Democrats that the legislation did not limit President Donald Trump’s mass deportation efforts.

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“When fishermen in Pacific County get in trouble out on the water, the Coast Guard makes sure they’re safe. When there’s flooding or landslides in Southwest Washington, FEMA helps our families get back on their feet. The Department of Homeland Security is extremely important to my community. I could not in good conscience vote to shut it down,” Gluesenkamp Perez said in a statement on Thursday.

Meanwhile, on Sunday, Democratic Sen. Jacky Rosen called for the impeachment of Noem, saying that she believes Noem is attempting to “mislead the American public” about the fatal shooting of Pretti.

The call from Rosen, a moderate who was part of the group that helped Republicans end the 43-day government shutdown last year, comes amid a growing fury from congressional Democrats who have also vowed to block funding for the Homeland Security Department. A House resolution to launch impeachment proceedings against Noem has the support of more than 100 Democrats, but few Senate Democrats have so far weighed in. Oregon Democratic U.S. Reps. Maxine Dexter and Suzanne Bonamici also support impeaching Noem.

“Kristi Noem has been an abject failure leading the Department of Homeland Security for the last year — and the abuses of power we’re seeing from ICE are the latest proof that she has lost control over her own department and staff,” Rosen said in a statement to The Associated Press.

Rosen said Noem’s conduct is “deeply shameful” and she “must be impeached and removed from office immediately.”

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Impeachment proceedings are unlikely in the GOP-controlled Congress, but mounting Democratic outrage over the violence in the streets of Minneapolis is certain to disrupt Senate Republican leaders’ hopes this week to quickly approve a wide-ranging spending bill and avoid a partial government shutdown on Jan. 30.

And while some moderate Democrats have been wary over the last year of criticizing the Trump administration on border and immigration issues, the fatal shootings in Minneapolis of Pretti on Saturday and Renee Good on Jan. 7 have transformed the debate, even among moderates like Rosen.

Noem defends fatal shooting

The Nevada senator’s call for impeachment followed Noem’s quick defense, without a full investigation, of the fatal shooting of Pretti by a Border Patrol agent. Videos of the scene reviewed by The Associated Press appear to contradict statements by the Trump administration that the shots were fired “defensively” against Pretti as he “approached” them with a gun. Pretti was licensed to carry a concealed weapon, but he appears to be seen with only a phone in his hand in the videos.

During the scuffle, agents discovered that he was carrying a 9 mm semiautomatic handgun and opened fire with several shots, including into his back. Officials did not say if Pretti brandished the weapon.

Noem said Pretti showed up to “impede a law enforcement operation.”

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“This looks like a situation where an individual arrived at the scene to inflict maximum damage on individuals and to kill law enforcement,” Noem said Sunday.

In her call for Noem’s impeachment, Rosen cited other issues beyond the current ICE operations. She said Noem has also “violated the public trust by wasting millions in taxpayer dollars” on self-promotion and cited reports that the Coast Guard purchased her two luxury jets worth $172 million.



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