Vermont’s three members of Congress have served a combined 93 years in the U.S. House and Senate. They’ve accrued an unusual amount of power and influence for one small-state delegation. But they won’t remain in Washington, D.C., forever. Whenever the next vacancy occurs, it could represent a once-in-a-generation chance to reshape Vermont’s congressional representation.
Recorded live at a VTDigger virtual event this week, veteran political professionals Liz Bankowski, Dennise Casey and Julia Barnes, as well as VTDigger political reporter Lola Duffort and managing editor Paul Heintz, discuss the future of the state’s delegation.
The fate of the "country doctor"
The high court's hydro decision
When Vermonters struggle with social isolation
How the DMV sells your data
Beyond the zinger: Welch and impeachment
Sweeping opioid litigation lands in Vermont
A.I. is out there. Can the state catch up?
An Amish enclave in the Northeast Kingdom [10/26/18]
How the trade war with China is costing Vermont businesses
Peter Galbraith on the 'catastrophe' in Syria
Where migrating Vermonters are going — and why
BONUS: David Sanger talks cyber warfare and national security in Manchester
Vermont officials and the Trump impeachment inquiry
Why Bill McKibben keeps fighting after 30 years
With F-35 landing scheduled, protesters press on
What Opportunity Zones mean for Vermont communities
Pollution victims bring Bennington's PFOA crisis to court
What changes after the church abuse report
James Adomian on being Bernie
Telcos face state scrutiny after Huawei expose
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