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Friday, July 3, 2026
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Issue №33
Friday, July 3, 2026 · Global Edition
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Independent· Source-cited· Premium editorial standard· 8-editor team· pqrnews.com
Latest What NATO’s Article 5 Means, and Its Limits

David Okonkwo

Politics Editor · PQR News

politics, elections, and how government works

David Okonkwo is the Politics Editor at PQR News, responsible for the publication's coverage of government, elections, and the institutions that shape public life. His desk handles the questions readers most often bring to political news but rarely see answered plainly: how a legislature actually passes a law, what a particular court's ruling means in practice, how an electoral system translates votes into seats, and why a governing body is structured the way it is.

Okonkwo approaches politics as a subject to be explained rather than a contest to be refereed. He is wary of the tendency to cover government as sport — winners, losers, and daily scorekeeping — and steers his writers toward the machinery underneath. An article on his desk is more likely to unpack how ranked-choice voting works, or what powers a particular office genuinely holds, than to hand readers a verdict on who is up and who is down.

Even-handedness is the standard he enforces most strictly. On divisive issues he insists the newsroom lay out the real positions of each side accurately and fairly, without smuggling in a preferred conclusion. He treats the reader as capable of weighing competing arguments once the facts are set out clearly, and he regards it as a failure when a political explainer tilts the scales. Explain the debate, he tells his writers, and let people make up their own minds.

Accuracy on his desk means getting the names, bodies, dates, and mechanisms right, because in political coverage small errors travel fast and undermine everything around them. He is careful about attribution, resistant to invented figures or manufactured quotes, and firm that every claim about how a system operates should be genuinely true and checkable against the record. Each piece closes with real, verifiable sources so readers can follow the trail themselves.

Okonkwo favours evergreen framing over the churn of the news cycle, building durable backgrounders on how institutions function that stay useful long after a given vote or ruling has faded. His guidance to writers is practical and consistent: answer one clear question, define terms the first time they appear, resist jargon, and remember that a well-informed citizen is the whole point of the work.

electionspolicy and governanceinstitutionslaw and courts

3 articles · editorial@pqrnews.com

Latest from David Okonkwo

Politics EXPLAINER

How the Electoral College Works, Explained

Americans do not directly elect their president. Instead they vote for electors, and the winner is decided by a tally of electoral…

David Okonkwo · May 22