Axios D.C.

May 18, 2026
Welcome back, Monday. It's gonna be a hot one.
☀️ Today's weather: Sunny. High 96, low 72.
🎂 Happy birthday to our members Jeff Joseph and Trishla Jain!
Today's newsletter is 1,048 words — a 4-minute read.
1 big thing: ⭐️ Randy Clarke has a golden project for Trump
👋🏼 Cuneyt here, after a wideranging interview with Metro's boss, Randy Clarke:
Randy Clarke sees Metro's future in the Gold Line: A zippy, dedicated bus route from Georgetown to the new Commanders stadium.
- And he has a message for a powerful man who loves gold:
- "President Trump and the entire administration say they want to build," Clarke says, "and they want to build faster."
- "Metro wants to build stuff, and we want to build faster."
🔑 Why it matters: The Gold Line is more ambitious than just a bus lane. It tries to solve a new problem (stadium transit) and a very old problem (no Georgetown metro) — and fix K Street.
- In fact, at least three D.C. mayors have tried and failed at building an east-west connection, as witnessed with the H Street streetcar. To start, the Gold Line will link Union Station and RFK.
- And, Clarke tells me on the latest "Dream City Podcast" out this morning, it'll be "a lot better than the streetcar ever was."
The big picture: There's a power vacuum right now in D.C. The mayor is a lame duck. The feds are downsizing. Downtown is adrift.
- Clarke has a rare, fleeting window to set the city's agenda. And he's more about realistic ideas (a fast bus that works) than waiting decades for the perfect rail line.
- If Clarke convinces the next mayor to fund Metro's bus lanes on congested K Street, Metro could help spur new investment in Washington's old office core.
🔮 Between the lines: Who knows if Trump will set his developer eyes on the Gold Line (the name appears to be a coincidence), but Clarke's leaning into diplomacy on many fronts.
- Clarke compliments Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy's push to make Metro "clean and safe," as he courts lucrative federal grants for a big modernization project: automating the Red Line.
- "We'll be looking for hundreds of millions of dollars in partnership with [the Trump administration]," Clarke says.
👇 Continues...
2. 🥊 Metro's challenges
Yes, but: Metro is catching flak this month, previewing friction ahead.
- First, the Washington Post editorial board argues Metro's dependence on regional funding is unsustainable, and that the agency needs cuts.
- Clarke disagrees, seeing Metro as an essential public good, and defends his staffing: "This idea that we have 3,000 extra employees is like one of the stupidest things I've ever heard," Clarke said on the podcast.
👀 Last week, the Metro union "condemned" Clarke for beginning to require bus drivers to intervene with fare evaders, lest those disputes lead to assaults.
- It's on top of a bigger worry of the union, which is train automation leading to job losses.
- "I never said that we're doing automation to get rid of people," Clarke says. Expect more tensions ahead.
The latest: Fares are probably going up next year for inflation, Clarke says, three years after the last increase.
🤝 Zoom out: Clarke wants a more unified DMV.
- Case in point: Even though it's not his project, he says Maryland's Purple Line — connecting Bethesda to New Carrollton — will be added to the Metro map, which he hopes one day will also include the MARC and VRE lines.
"We need to be thinking about that way more," Clarke says.
- Trump's federal workforce cuts were a shock to the system: "It's going to force us to diversify our economy, be less reliant on the federal government, and maybe work closer as a region."
🤔 What's ahead: Clarke, 49, is on contract to run Metro through 2029.
- He's been talked about as a future Secretary of Transportation.
To which, he says: "If someone called you from a president and said, 'Would you be willing to serve your country at that type of role?' There's no way you wouldn't say, 'Let's have a conversation about that.'"
3. 👨⚖️ SCOTUS ends Virginia redistricting push
The Supreme Court denied an emergency effort from Virginia Democrats to revive their chances of redrawing the state's congressional maps before the November midterms.
Why it matters: Virginia's redistricting push is officially dead.
Driving the news: In a brief order on Friday, the justices declined state Democrats' emergency request to pause the Virginia Supreme Court's ruling — which struck down the voter-approved redistricting plan — to buy time to craft an appeal.
- The justices didn't give a reason for the denial.
State of play: Friday's decision marks another Republican victory in a growing redistricting fight nationwide, and cements a difficult path ahead for Democrats to flip a closely divided U.S. House in the midterms.
- Virginia's now-rejected map would have favored Democrats in 10 of the state's 11 districts and potentially helped them pick up four additional seats in Congress.
- But after a slew of legal challenges, the state high court this month overturned the redistricting referendum results, saying the amendment process led by Democrats violated the state constitution.
4. Around the Beltway: 🏁 Get your tickets
🏎️ Free tickets for D.C.'s first IndyCar race (Aug. 22-23) around the National Mall go live May 29. Tickets will be distributed through a random Ticketmaster drawing after the request window closes in early June.
- Each person is eligible for up to four general admission tickets per day.
❌ Senate Democrats blocked Republicans' attempt to include $1 billion for security upgrades tied to President Trump's ballroom in an immigration funding bill, after the Senate parliamentarian said the proposal failed to meet procedural rules.
- Republicans say they'll revise the measure, while Dems are framing the ballroom fight as a misuse of taxpayer dollars. (WTOP)
🌳 President Trump wants his "Garden of American Heroes" built in West Potomac Park near the Jefferson and MLK memorials. The proposal could require congressional approval under federal memorial laws, while preservation advocates and residents are raising concerns about losing public park space. (WaPo)
5. ⛲️ We're so back

Meridian Hill/Malcom X Park's iconic fountain is flowing after seven years.
- The park's lower section reopened after repairs, while work continues on the upper portion.
🌊 Sound on
⚽️ Cuneyt is looking at these fantasty redesigns of East Potomac Park (a run club version, or this mini-Manhattan one) and thinking his would be a soccer field takeover.
🛟 Anna is thinking an East Potomac Park lazy river is in the cards.
Today's newsletter was edited by Alexa Mencia Orozco.
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