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Bill Garner cartoon

Editorial cartoons deliver insightful artistry

- The Washington Times

The Washington Times was conceived as a strongly visual paper for a strongly visual world. For 40 years, that sensibility has not wavered.

The Reverand Sun Myung Moon accepts an award from a special committee of clergy after he addressed The Inaugural Prayer Luncheon for Unity and Renewal at The Hyatt regency Hotel in Washington, DC, January 19, 2001. ( J.M. Eddins Jr. / The Washington Times )

Upstart newspaper proves skeptics wrong

- The Washington Times

If there is a signature image of the impact and influence The Washington Times has had over its four decades chronicling the city, the nation and the world, it came on the night of April 29, 1995, in a Washington ballroom packed with politicos, bureaucrats, journalists and celebrities.

Washington Times’ only agenda is the agenda of its readers

- The Washington Times

For 40 years, The Washington Times has stood sentinel along the banks of the Potomac River, shining a bright light into all corners of the federal government.

President Bill Clinton

35th Anniversary: President Bill Clinton

The Washington Times distinguished itself in its coverage of Bill Clinton, even before he declared his presidential candidacy, by first reporting widespread accusations of marital infidelities by the then-governor in his home state of Arkansas.

A man is detained by Border Patrol officials after breaching border fencing separating San Diego from Tijuana, Mexico, Tuesday, Sept. 26, 2017, in San Diego. The man, who said he was from Chiapas, Mexico, was detained by agents as they prepared for a news conference to announce that contractors have begun building eight prototypes of President Donald Trump's proposed border wall with Mexico. (AP Photo/Gregory Bull)

35th Anniversary: A voice of reason on the border

The Washington Times devoted its pages to immigration coverage long before it was the raging national debate, giving policymakers in Washington and readers across the country an in-depth view of the conflict that has arisen between being a nation of immigrants and also a nation of laws.

Vote chads

35th Anniversary: An undecided vote

For its Nov. 8, 2000, publication, The Washington Times tore up its front page four times to report that the presidential election was too close to call, that George W. Bush had won, that Al Gore had won (in an unpublished edition) and that, finally, the presidential election was too close to call.