Carrie Levine is a federal politics reporter investigating the influence of money in politics for the Center For Public Integrity.
Carrie Levine joined the Center for Public Integrity in October 2014 as a federal politics reporter investigating the influence of money in politics. For four years before joining the Center, she worked as research director at Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington, where she managed a five-person staff that exposed the activities of politically active “dark money” nonprofits and uncovered instances of congressional self-dealing. Carrie previously worked as a reporter and associate editor for The National Law Journal, where she covered the inner workings of lobbying firms and lobbyists’ strategies. Carrie also previously reported for The Charlotte Observer, The Patriot Ledger of Quincy, Massachusetts, and The Sun (Lowell, Massachusetts). She is a graduate of Boston University and the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism.
The Center for Public Integrity’s reporters crunched a lot of numbers during 2018 — a year that distinguished itself for record election spending and extreme political turbulence.
How will the Federal Election Commission apply the new decision?
The president and his representatives have offered sometimes contradictory narratives about the payments, what the president knew and when and the circumstances surrounding them.
Special interest dollars may have paid rent in Trump Tower.
We crunched a lot of numbers this year. Here are a few that stand out.
The president previously decried the influence of foreign lobbyists.
Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross's controversial asset was the focus of a Center for Public Integrity investigation.
Many won’t commit to cutting off funding for Trump-related committees
Richard Hohlt also works on behalf of oil giant Chevron, the Motion Picture Association of America and a division of tobacco giant Altria, among others.
At least six justices — and potentially all nine — are worth seven figures
Commerce chief invests in fleet that flies Chinese flag, visits Iran and Russia