City Cast DC with Michael Schaffer

City Cast DC with Michael Schaffer

City Cast hosts predict 2026’s biggest national stories

January 5, 2026 · 💌 Kaela

Hey D.C.! The official annual Golden Haiku competition is underway! Submit a haiku inspired by “The Joy of Nature,” and it could win a spot on signs all over Downtown. Plus, there’s a cash prize of $75 to $500 💸 Submissions are due Jan. 11.

2026's Biggest Stories, According to City Cast's Hosts

City Cast hosts and CEO David Plotz (top left) eager to share their predictions for their city in 2026. (City Cast)

Nobody understands a city’s pulse quite like a City Cast host — their knack for spotting what matters proved them to be a reliable voice for 2025’s biggest local stories. Now, we’re turning to them to forecast what’s in store for 2026. From political shifts to data centers, their perspectives offer a candid preview of the issues and surprises that could shape our hometowns.

Curious what’s around the corner? Catch their unique insights on our latest podcast episode, where all 13 hosts predicted this year’s biggest stories. Here’s a preview of that conversation:

“What’s D.C.’s big story of [2026]?” shared City Cast DC co-host Michael Schaffer. “It’s the same as the big story of [2025]. Will the main industry of this city survive in a way that continues to enable whatever prosperity we’ve had?”

Only this year, the struggle to maintain D.C. autonomy and the weakened federal workforce will be set amid the backdrop of D.C.’s craziest election cycles in decades. Will the same problems with different players mean a different outcome?

Local Politics

Zohran Mamdani’s election in New York has energized Democratic Socialists across the U.S., including D.C.’s own Janeese Lewis George who announced she is running for mayor last month. Seattle also got a taste of that with the election of Katie Wilson, but it’s yet to be seen if she has the same star power or sway inside City Hall.

City Cast Seattle host Jane C. Hu says the linchpin of Wilson’s election is likely to come with this summer’s FIFA World Cup, as advocates for the city’s unhoused population watch whether Wilson will sweep encampments as previous mayors have.

“It’s going to be interesting to see what she decides there, because there's going to be tension between what people elected her for and what action she’s actually able to take,” Hu says.

Data Centers

D.C. isn't the only City Cast city seeing a surge in data center development. “It’s going to be a doozy” of a conversation in 2026, as our CEO David Plotz pointed out.

In Madison, the mayor and much of the City Council last year proposed a one-year moratorium on zoning certificates for new data centers while they try to better understand how data centers could impact the electric grid and energy bills. City Cast Madison host Bianca Martin says Madisonians are “up in arms.”

“Folks are concerned that this might be a bubble, that this could be another dot-com bubble where Silicon Valley folks rush in, move to scale, and then they’re like, let’s abandon ship,” Martin says.

But aren’t data centers great for the economy? Plotz posed that question to the group, suggesting that data centers contributed to the tech economy in Washington, D.C. Well, that got the group fired up.

“We’re also talking about doing it in really beautiful green spaces that we don’t want to be cluttered with this kind of nonsense,” says City Cast Pittsburgh host, Megan Harris.

What To Do

Monday, Jan. 5

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