Do you have firsthand info you want others to know too? Talk to a reporter.

If you're ready to share something important, reach out to an outlet you respect and trust.

Do you have firsthand info you want others to know too? Talk to a reporter.
Reporter by Vlad Vasnetsov from Pixabay

If you have information on what's happening in government during the presidential transition, or what you expect will happen soon, many journalists will want to speak with you.

The reporter may agree not to print your name. It depends on how their newsroom wants to run the story.

If you're ready to share something important, reach out to an outlet you respect and trust. That may be more effective than blogging it yourself.

For example, Molly Redden, who writes for ProPublica, wants to speak with people who work in the federal government, especially in health, education, or civil rights.

Do you work at HHS? The Education Department? The DOJ's civil rights division? I'm reporting on the Trump administration's sweeping cultural agenda and I want to hear from you! See below for how to reach me securely.

Molly Redden (@mtredden.bsky.social) 2024-11-14T22:07:37.183Z

By the way, everyone may read ProPublica and support it with a donation.