Feb. 13, 2026 — Remapping Debate is looking for a highly experienced reporter to join us on a full-time basis. You would be writing deeply reported (typically 2,500 to 3,500 word) stories on national and NYC-based issues. You would not be on the mind-destroying, soul-destroying, body-destroying treadmill of cranking out multiple pieces a day. The position is fully remote, but you’d have to be able to come to New York easily for when in-person interview are needed. (Necessary travel other than that is employer-paid.)
Compensation and benefits
$90,000 to start.
Six weeks of paid vacation.
Full employer reimbursement of healthcare premiums (up to the level of the “New York State of Health” Marketplace Platinum Plan we’ve benchmarked). That’s not just for you; it’s for you and, as applicable, spouse or domestic partner, and children.
What we’re looking for
You must be willing to push interviewees hard (though that might make them less willing to talk to you next time), slog through documents in some cases, and deal with an editor whose sins include saying things like, “I know that’s interesting and newsworthy, but it’s not the specific story we want probed.” Plus which, the editor title is not nominal: I would be closely editing your work notwithstanding all your years of experience.
The stories will be on domestic public policy only, across a wide range of topics, including housing, health care, education, taxation, market failures and successes, regulatory failures and successes, identarianism, immigration, law, justice, civil rights, and public safety.
We will often be looking to reframe a question from “what is adequate?” to “what is optimal?” Or from a universe of current and practices to an exploration of alternatives (those tried in the U.S. in the past; those tried elsewhere, past or present; and those that have so far only been imagined).
You have to be sufficiently heterodox to be comfortable asking the kind of questions many outlets find taboo (discussions of education policy come immediately to mind). Likewise, if, political pretending, demonizing, fetishizing, and romanticizing, whether on right or left,1doesn’t drive you crazy, we’re unlikely to be a good fit.
As you can see here, for example, our site is configured to allow for inline boxes, annotations, section or chapter jump-links, footnotes, and document tables. Pop-ups and bottom boxes, too. Sidebars as well.
See sidebar for how to get in touch.
- 1.
So, for example, market fundamentalism on the right. Or the demonization of immigrants on the right (and its mirror image on the left: failing to see people, but rather Perfect Heroic Beings who must be treated in a fawning and adulatory manner). Or essentialism of different flavors on left and right.