JB

Jacob Bogage

Congressional Economic Correspondent at The Washington Post

Education: University of Missouri, BA in history; University of Missouri, BA in journalism

Jacob Bogage writes about business and technology for The Washington Post, where he's worked since 2015. He's previously covered the automotive and manufacturing industries and wrote for the Sports section. He has previously reported for the Columbia Missourian, Columbia (Mo.) Daily Tribune, Bethesda Magazine and the Montgomery County Gazette. He is a Maryland native and a graduate of the University of Missouri.

Publications

  • The Washington Post
    104 articles
  • The Washington Post
    104 articles
  • adn.com
    8 articles
  • bostonglobe.com
    8 articles
  • smh.com.au
    6 articles
  • pressherald.com
    4 articles
  • inquirer.com
    4 articles

Writes Most On

CoronavirusTheWashingtonPostPandemicDonaldTrumpMailUnitedStatesPostalServiceTwitterUSPSUnitedStatesPostmasterGeneralNationalFootballLeagueThePostalServiceUnitedStatesSenateNewYorkUnitedStatesCongressWashingtonWorldSeriesAssociationFootballWhiteHouseBaseballAmazonStevenMnuchinUnitedStatesSecretaryOfTheTreasuryQuarterbackJeffBezosESPNUnitedStatesDepartmentOfTheTreasuryLogisticsOvertimeBillUnitedParcelServiceUPSVirusMajorLeagueBaseballFedExNFLSocialMediaPitchPresidencyOfDonaldTrumpManagerRecessionRepublicanPartyCaliforniaFirstclassCricketPartyLeadersOfTheUnitedStatesSenateMichiganEcommerceThePostCollegeFootballAtmosphereOfEarthFlorida
  • JPMorgan kept Epstein as client for years after warnings, deposition shows
    26 May 2023—The Washington Post
    When the banker learned a court had affirmed Jeffrey Epstein’s status as a sex offender likely to harm more victims, she had a terse response. “Oh boy,” Mary Erdoes wrote in a 2011 email to a fellow executive at JPMorgan Chase, where Epstein was a client for 15 years. It was at least the sixth time Erdoes, who leads the bank’s asset and wealth management division, had been alerted to Epstein’s criminal or civil legal trouble for sex crimes. She had also been informed as early as 2006 that...
  • Gunmaker Remington files for bankruptcy again
    28 Jul 2020—spokesman.com
    Remington Arms, the nation’s oldest gunmaker, declared bankruptcy late Monday for the second time in as many years at a time when U.S. firearms sales are soaring. Founded in 1816, the privately held ma...Thank you for visiting Spokesman.com. To continue reading this story and enjoying local journalism please subscribe or log in... We've notice that you are using a private browser. OUR JOURNALISM IS SUPPORTED BY ADVERTISERS AND SUBSCRIBERS. Please visit our website in a regular browser or...
  • Remington Arms files for bankruptcy
    29 Jul 2020—bostonglobe.com
    WASHINGTON — Remington Arms, the nation’s oldest gunmaker, declared bankruptcy late Monday for the second time in as many years at a time when US firearms sales are soaring. Founded in 1816, the privately held maker of rifles, pistols, and shotguns listed assets of $100 million to $500 million, according to its filing in US Bankruptcy Court in the Northern District of Alabama. It put its liabilities in the same range, and said it had from 1,000 to 5,000 creditors. It said it owes its two...
  • America's oldest gunmaker files for bankruptcy as firearms sales soar
    28 Jul 2020—smh.com.au
    Remington Arms, the nation's oldest gunmaker, declared bankruptcy late Monday (US time) for the second time in as many years at a time when US firearms sales are soaring. Founded in 1816, the privately held maker of rifles, pistols and shotguns listed assets of $US100 million to $US500 million ($139 million to $698 million), according to its filing in US Bankruptcy Court in the Northern District of Alabama. It put its liabilities in the same range, and said it had from 1000 to 5000...
  • Treasury agrees to loan Postal Service $10 billion in trade for rivals’ shipping contracts
    31 Jul 2020—pressherald.com
    The Treasury Department agreed to loan the U.S. Postal Service $10 billion in emergency coronavirus relief funding on Wednesday in exchange for proprietary information about the mail service’s most lucrative private-sector contracts. The Postal Service, subject to confidentiality restrictions, will provide Treasury copies of its 10 largest “negotiated service agreements,” or contracts with high-volume third-party shippers such as Amazon, FedEx and UPS, and receive a crucial injection of cash...

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