
David Mastio
David Mastio has worked for newspaper opinion sections since starting as letters editor of USA Today in 1995. Since then he has been the most conservative member of the liberal editorial board at both USA Today and The Virginian-Pilot, the most liberal member of the conservative editorial board at the Washington Times and founding editorial page editor at the conservative Washington Examiner. As an editorial writer, he has covered the environment, tech, science, local business and national economic policy and politics. Outside of the opinion pages, he has been a Washington correspondent for The Detroit News where he covered the intersection of the environment, regulatory policy and the car industry, California editor of the Center Square and a speech writer on trade and economics for the George W. Bush administration. He also founded his own web company called BlogNetNews, which aggregated and reported on the blog conversations across the political aisle focused on local news and politics in all 50 states.
Covers
Publications
- The Kansas City Star1 article
- Kansas City Star1 article
Writes Most On
- Immigrant status, homelessness or prison ties to TB outbreak should be made public | Opinion19 Feb—The Kansas City StarFor more than a year, local, state and federal public health officials have been tracking one of the nation’s largest outbreaks of tuberculosis in decades. So far, 67 communicable active cases of the world’s deadliest airborne pathogen have been found in Kansas along with 79 of the less serious latent cases where the patient is infected, but not actively spreading the disease. We still don’t know anything about who is getting sick. “Tuberculosis outbreaks are often indications of weakness in...
- Joe Biden’s bungled clemency is why we need to investigate his age | Opinion29 Jan—Kansas City StarLeroy Brown was 8 when he was shot in the back of the head as he lay in the hallway of his home. His mom was slaughtered in a bedroom. The two were targeted because they were set to testify against a notorious Bridgeport drug dealer in 1999. As outrage over the deaths grew in Connecticut, the state reformed its witness protection laws even before Adrian Peeler was convicted for his role in the conspiracy to murder the second-grader. For some reason, in a flurry of last-minute clemencies...