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Updating . . .
California Policy and Politics Monday
California Lottery confirms $1 million winner was homeless man -- The California Lottery has identified a homeless man who once lived in the Bay Area as the winner of a $1 million prize from a scratcher purchased in San Luis Obispo earlier this year. The winner, Armando Vidal, said he bought two $10 Triple Red 777 Scratchers in April at Sandy’s Deli & Liquor, where he is a regular customer. Aidin Vaziri in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 07/14/25
California, other states sue Trump for withholding $6.8 billion in critical education funds -- California officials on Monday announced that the state is suing the Trump administration for holding back an estimated $939 million in education funds from the state — and about $6.8 billion nationwide — that school districts had expected to begin receiving on July 1, calling the action “unconstitutional, unlawful and arbitrary.” Howard Blume in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 07/14/25
ICE arrested her selling tamales at Lowes. Then she suffered a heart attack. ‘I told them: I can’t breathe’ -- An immigration sweep on June 19, in which a woman had a heart attack, is one of many that have taken place in Southern California and encapsulates the chaotic methods employed to detain people over the last month. Ruben Vives in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 07/14/25
Details emerge about pot-farm immigration raid as worker dies -- Trump administration officials defended the aggressive campaign to find and deport unauthorized immigrants even as a cannabis farmworker was taken off life support two days after he plunged from a roof amid the mayhem of a Ventura County raid. Dakota Smith, Christopher Goffard and Jeanette Marantos in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 07/13/25
Local police, increasingly present at ICE raids, walk tightrope to stay out of immigration enforcement -- Distaste for the federal arrests rubs off on local officers called on to keep the peace. Alexandra Mendoza, Teri Figueroa in the San Diego Union Tribune$ -- 07/13/25
Troops, terror and tears in Los Angeles as Ice raids show no sign of slowing -- Raids have left residents of LA’s MacArthur Park scared to go to trusted local businesses – and outside in general. Helen Li and Maanvi Singh The Guardian -- 07/13/25
‘What if we stay in Mexico?’ With chances in the U.S. dashed, migrants make new lives south of border -- The plan wasn't to stay in Mexico, but many asylum seekers have decided to make a go of it as legal avenues to immigrating to the U.S. have been closed by the Trump administration. Alexandra Mendoza in the San Diego Union Tribune$ -- 07/14/25
Living ‘A Day Without a Mexican’ in L.A., 21 Years Later -- The 2004 indie film imagined an absurd, Latino-less California. As fears of immigration raids empty out parts of Los Angeles, the film’s premise feels all too real, its creators say. Matt Stevens in the New York Times$ -- 07/14/25
Climate
California reaches new record clean energy milestone -- California has hit a new record for clean energy. Solar, wind, hydropower and other carbon-free sources made up 67% of the state’s retail electricity supply in 2023, the most recent year that data is available, according to new statistics released Monday by the California Energy Commission. Paul Rogers in the San Jose Mercury$ -- 07/14/25
California’s wind and solar projects face new federal hurdles -- Clean-energy projects have new deadlines for federal tax credits and limits on foreign parts, taking aim at California’s climate agenda. Eleven major solar projects and one onshore wind project now face potential delays or cancellation. Alejandro Lazo Calmatters -- 07/14/25
Savings
Trump’s tariff threats are back. What should you do about your 401(k) and investments? -- Wall Street seems to be shrugging off President Donald Trump’s latest round of tariff threats. Should you? Jessica Roy in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 07/13/25
Reparations
Reparations bill, amid headwinds, could skirt California’s affirmative action ban -- With diversity programs under full assault by the Trump administration, California lawmakers are considering a measure that would allow state colleges to consider whether applicants are descendants of African Americans who were enslaved in the United States. Sandra McDonald in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 07/14/25
Housing
Developer building ‘micro-studios,’ and yes, people are renting them -- The size of a typical studio apartment is 500 to 600 square feet. The studios that Riaz Capital is building around the Bay Area measure on average 300 square feet — which is on the small side, even for a standard hotel room. But the Oakland-based developer sees micro-studios as a way to provide “affordability by design” in a state where the cost of housing is a major financial burden for many residents. Kate Talerico in the San Jose Mercury$ -- 07/14/25
Homeless
San Jose has just as many homeless people as it did two years ago, despite sheltering many of them -- Two years into an aggressive push to address homelessness, San Jose has managed to bring more people indoors — but the total number of unhoused residents remains stubbornly unchanged. Kate Talerico in the San Jose Mercury$ -- 07/14/25
Demographics
The Bay Area is getting old — fast. It will change everything -- Combined with rising housing costs and growing hostility toward immigration, the graying of cities and towns means the region’s continued prosperity is in doubt. Dan Kopf, Roland Li and Nami Sumida in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 07/14/25
Education
UC Berkeley chancellor heads to D.C. for congressional grilling on campus antisemitism -- UC Berkeley’s top leader on Tuesday will face an influential congressional committee that is aligned with President Trump’s political goal of reshaping higher education by punishing campuses he sees both as bastions of leftist ideologies and as institutions that have tolerated anti-Jewish hate. Jaweed Kaleem in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 07/14/25
The Federal Government Is Retreating From Student Lending -- New tax-and-spending law could push as many as half of graduate student borrowers into private loans. Dalvin Brown and Oyin Adedoyin in the Wall Street Journal$ -- 07/14/25
Buffeted by change, California charter schools continue to grow amid scrutiny -- State lawmakers are pushing for stricter financial oversight following high-profile fraud cases. Kathryn Baron Edsource -- 07/14/25
Street
Deputies beat her son bloody. Why is L.A. County keeping parts of the case secret? -- Five years after her son was beaten so badly by Los Angeles County sheriff’s deputies that he needed more than 30 stitches and staples to his face and head, Vanessa Perez is still looking for answers. So are county officials tasked with holding the department accountable for misconduct. Connor Sheets in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 07/14/25
Southern California trash pileup spreads as workers stand with East Coast strikers -- In one corner is Republic Services, the nation’s second-largest trash and recycling company. In the other stands the International Brotherhood of Teamsters, the large and tenacious labor union that represents thousands of Republic employees. Matt Hamilton in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 07/14/25
Public asked to help after deputies lose assault rifle. It may have fallen out of squad car -- The Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department is investigating how an assault rifle went missing from — and potentially fell out of — the trunk of a squad car in South L.A. Matt Hamilton in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 07/13/25
Steffes
Straight-shooting advisor George Steffes always had Reagan’s ear -- If there were more people like George Steffes in politics, the public wouldn’t hold the institution in such low esteem. There’d be a lot less bull and much more thoughtful debate. Paralytic polarization would give way to problem solving. George Skelton in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 07/14/25
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Trump threatens Russia with tariffs if war on Ukraine isn’t resolved -- President Donald Trump said Monday he would punish Russia with tariffs if there isn’t a deal to end the war in Ukraine within 50 days, the latest example of his growing anger with Russian President Vladimir Putin. Trump made the announcement during an Oval Office meeting with NATO Secretary-General Mark Rutte. Michael Warren and Curtis Yee Associated Press -- 07/14/25
Patriot System Will Be Sent to Ukraine, Trump Says -- President Trump said Sunday the U.S. will send Patriot air-defense systems to Ukraine that will be paid for by the European Union, and he again criticized Russian leader Vladimir Putin. Tarini Parti and Brett Forrest in the Wall Street Journal$ -- 07/14/25
Trump to announce "aggressive" Ukraine weapons plan -- President Trump will announce a new plan to arm Ukraine on Monday that is expected to include offensive weapons, two sources with knowledge of the plans tell Axios. Sending offensive weapons would be a major shift for Trump, who had until recently been at pains to say he would provide only defensive weapons to avoid escalating the conflict. Barak Ravid, Marc Caputo Axios -- 07/14/25
It’s No Bluff: The Tariff Rate Is Soaring Under Trump -- The president has earned a reputation for bluffing on tariffs. But he has steadily and dramatically raised U.S. tariffs, transforming global trade. Ana Swanson in the New York Times$ -- 07/14/25
The megabill’s Medicaid cuts shocked hospitals, but they may never happen -- The most painful health care provisions in the new Republican law don’t take effect for years, giving lobbyists plenty of time to undo them. Robert King, Amanda Chu and David Lim Politico -- 07/14/25
Trump gets mixed reception at soccer final, a test run for the World Cup -- In one indication of the mixed relationship the “America First” president has with the global game, some on Sunday cheered his attendance, chanted “USA! USA!” and turned to take photos. But when he appeared on the jumbo screen during the national anthem, boos rose up before the camera quickly turned elsewhere. Matt Viser in the Washington Post$ -- 07/14/25
How the Trump shooting supercharged beliefs in a divine right of MAGA -- On the road from Pittsburgh to Butler, past the cornfields and farm stands, before the fairgrounds where a shooter nearly killed Donald Trump a year ago Sunday, billboards quote 1 Corinthians and Psalm 27. Another sign advertises a local church with a photo of an American flag twisted into the shape of a Y. Isaac Arnsdorf in the Washington Post$ -- 07/13/25
Under Trump, the government mobilizes in response to fringe theories -- Trump officials have assigned government workers and spent taxpayer dollars to address conspiracy theories and easily disproven assertions. Naftali Bendavid in the Washington Post$ -- 07/14/25
Biden Says He Made the Clemency Decisions That Were Recorded With Autopen -- Donald J. Trump and his allies have begun investigations to support their claims that Joseph R. Biden Jr. was incapacitated and his staff conspired to take presidential actions in his name. Charlie Savage and Tyler Pager in the New York Times$ -- 07/13/25s
Balz: Musk says he wants a new political party, and many agree. Can he pull it off? -- Would-be independent candidates have been searching for what they say is a sensible center of the electorate for a long time. No one has found it. Dan Balz in the Washington Post$ -- 07/13/25
California Policy and Politics Sunday
Man who fled immigration agents at cannabis operation has died -- Trump administration officials Saturday defended the aggressive campaign to find and deport unauthorized immigrants even as a cannabis farmworker was pulled from life support Saturday, two days after he plunged from a roof amid the mayhem of a Ventura County raid. Dakota Smith and Christopher Goffard in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 07/13/25
Trump administration allegedly deported previously separated families despite court order -- San Diego judge ordered government to provide answers about multiple removals, including one days after judge ordered temporary halt to such deportations. Alex Riggins in the San Diego Union Tribune$ -- 07/13/25
How the nation’s first Asian American legal organization in S.F. is taking on Trump -- The Asian Law Caucus office on Columbus Avenue in San Francisco sits a few blocks from where Wong Kim Ark — the man whose Supreme Court case cemented birthright citizenship for people born to foreign parents in the U.S. — grew up in the late 19th century. Jerry Wu in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 07/13/25
ICE Set to Vastly Expand Its Reach With New Funds -- The annual budget of Immigration and Customs Enforcement alone will spike from about $8 billion to roughly $28 billion, making it the highest funded law enforcement agency in the federal government. Zolan Kanno-Youngs and Hamed Aleaziz in the New York Times$ -- 07/12/25
ICE memo outlines plan to deport migrants to countries where they are not citizens -- The dramatic shift in policy could result in thousands of people being sent to places where they lack family ties or even a common language. Maria Sacchetti, Carol D. Leonnig and Marianne LeVine in the Washington Post$ -- 07/13/25
Republicans and Democrats visited ‘Alligator Alcatraz’ for the first time. Here’s what they saw. -- While Republicans insisted that the facility was appropriate and clean, and staffed similar to any detention facility, Democratic lawmakers raised concerns about food quantity, drinking water and high temperatures, with Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz calling the facility an “internment camp.” Kimberly Leonard and Nicole Markus Politico -- 07/12/25
Trend at San Diego-Tijuana border crossing sees ambulances involved in human smuggling -- At least four foreign nationals have tried within the last month to unlawfully enter the U.S. through the San Ysidro Port of Entry using ambulances as cover and posing as patients in need of urgent medical attention, according to court documents in four federal criminal cases. Alex Riggins in the San Diego Union Tribune$ -- 07/13/25
Newton: ‘I’m in one of his TV shows’ — Trump uses L.A. to stage political theater -- Soldiers stand guard with nothing to do, except serve as extras in this administration’s scurrilous playhouse of power. Jim Newton CalMatters via the San Jose Mercury$ -- 07/13/25
Smolens: GOP lawmakers, veterans push back on immigration enforcement excess -- State GOP leader Brian Jones, Assemblymember Laurie Davies and others ask Trump to refocus on criminal immigrants, not everyday workers. Michael Smolens in the San Diego Union Tribune$ -- 07/13/25
Joe Garofoli: Bonta’s bad bet: Fantasy sports ban could further alienate young male voters -- Even as Democrats spend $20 million to help them effectively court the young male voters deserting them in droves, they’re continuing to make moves that risk alienating them. Joe Garofoli in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 07/13/25
VP Vance visits Disneyland as protesters gather nearby -- Vance’s presence sparked protests. Around 100 to 150 demonstrators gathered on Harbor Boulevard near the Disneyland entrance on Friday evening, and a crowd of protesters formed again on Saturday. Kaitlyn Schallhorn, Brady Macdonald in the San Diego Union Tribune$ -- 07/13/25
Workplace
Why are A-list Hollywood stars trying to lure film productions to Texas? -- The opening scene unfolds onto a bird’s-eye view of a sedan making its way down a stretch of unmarked highway, as Woody Harrelson’s unmistakable drawl is heard off-camera. “You ever wonder if this industry of ours is just chasing its own tail?” he asks. Stacy Perman in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 07/13/25
Stay or go? For some transgender San Diego sailors and Marines, Trump’s ban leaves one option: ‘Come and find me’ -- Some who spoke with The San Diego Union-Tribune wonder how their own military community will be impacted, especially if people leave the region once they’re forced out of the service. Maura Fox in the San Diego Union Tribune$ -- 07/13/25
Develop
Big buildout begins at Port of Long Beach amid global trade uncertainty -- A major terminal operator at the Port of Long Beach broke ground on a $365-million expansion project Friday, even as activity at the port has cooled recently in response to rising tariffs. Caroline Petrow-Cohen in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 07/13/25
Housing
Nvidia’s stock price is soaring. Could Silicon Valley home prices follow? -- But the wealth of its workers and investors, which has helped make the region one of the hottest housing markets in the Bay Area, no longer appears to be translating to home sales as smoothly as it once did. Christian Leonard in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 07/12/25
Esparto explosion
California ‘loophole’ helped man behind Esparto fireworks land explosives permits -- A fireworks executive and longtime pyrotechnician appears to have operated in the margins dividing local, state and federal agencies charged with permitting and regulating businesses dealing in explosives, before the deadly series of blasts that killed seven people July 1 at a fireworks facility in Esparto. Jake Goodrick and Daniel Lempres in the Sacramento Bee$ -- 07/13/25
Cannabis
California weed sales are down — but these counties still have sky-high numbers -- After a billowing rise during the pandemic, legal cannabis sales in California have been in steady decline since the summer of 2021 thanks to high-as-a-kite taxes for consumers and retailers, the decline of wholesale cannabis prices, oversupply from big operators in the state, changing consumer preferences and competition with the illicit market. Julie Zhu in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 07/13/25
Wildfire
Lopez: Six months after the fires: ‘We have lost a lot. We never lost each other.’ -- On Lake Avenue, in the heart of Altadena, two things stood out as I roamed the neighborhood the other day. There were still a few lots of uncleared rubble on the commercial strip, like frozen images from a lingering nightmare, but there was music as well — a buzz-saw symphony of new construction. Altadena is scarred and grieving. Altadena is healing and rebuilding. Steve Lopez in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 07/13/25
Street
After a decade of law enforcement using drones in the Bay Area, Alameda County embraces a next-gen technology -- Police say added safety and intel is critical; privacy experts worry about data security. Chase Hunter in the San Jose Mercury$ -- 07/13/25
Also
State blasts Orange County Global for troubling practices that endangered patients -- Orange County Global Medical Center, one of three trauma centers serving a county of 3.2 million people, was castigated by state regulators for substandard care and practices that led to at least one patient death and put hundreds of others at grave risk, the Southern California News Group has learned. Scott Schwebke and Tony Saavedra in the Orange County Register$ -- 07/13/25
‘Tragic and sudden death’: UC Berkeley professor slain in Greece while visiting family -- A UC Berkeley business professor was shot and killed in Greece this month while visiting family, according to his brother and international media reports. Przemysław Jeziorski, 43, was slain on July 4 in Agia Paraskevi, a suburb of Athens, as he approached the home where his children live. St. John Barned-Smith in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 07/13/25
POTUS 47
GOP warning sign in new poll: Trump’s voters don’t love his tariffs -- President Donald Trump’s disruptive trade policies are threatening to alienate a significant tranche of his own voters, a major red flag for Republicans going into 2026. Cheyanne M. Daniels Politico -- 07/13/25
Economists See Lower Recession Risk and Stronger Job Growth: WSJ Survey -- The economic fallout from President Trump’s policies may prove less dire than feared. Economists expect stronger growth and job creation, lower risk of recession and cooler inflation than they did three months ago, according to The Wall Street Journal’s quarterly survey of professional forecasters. Paul Kiernan and Anthony DeBarros in the Wall Street Journal$ -- 07/13/25
How the Trump shooting supercharged beliefs in a divine right of MAGA -- Donald Trump and many of his followers have described the rally as a mass spiritual awakening, promoting the belief that Trump enacts God’s will. Isaac Arnsdorf in the Washington Post$ -- 07/13/25
Trump Is Gutting Weather Science and Reducing Disaster Response -- As a warming planet delivers more extreme weather, experts warn that the Trump administration is dismantling the government’s disaster capabilities. Lisa Friedman, Maxine Joselow, Coral Davenport and Megan Mineiro in the New York Times$ -- 07/13/25
American Allies Want to Redraw the World’s Trade Map, Minus the U.S. -- Facing growing chaos, the European Union and numerous other countries are seeking to forge a global trading nexus that is less vulnerable to American tariffs. Jeanna Smialek in the New York Times$ -- 07/13/25
China Gets More Airtime Around the World as Voice of America Signs Off -- Chinese state media has expanded its reach from Indonesia to Nigeria after Trump’s March order to dismantle U.S. government-funded outlets. Aruna Viswanatha, Alexandra Wexler and Clarence Leong in the Wall Street Journal$ -- 07/13/25
Trump Says 200% Pharma Tariffs Are Coming. Wall Street Shrugs -- When a U.S. president threatens your industry with a 200% tariff, that’s not typically good news. David Wainer in the Wall Street Journal$ -- 07/13/25
Trump threatens to revoke US citizenship of longtime critic Rosie O’Donnell -- President Donald Trump on Saturday said he is considering revoking the citizenship of one of his longtime foes — actor and comedian Rosie O’Donnell — something he has no clear legal pathway to do. Giselle Ruhiyyih Ewing Politico -- 07/13/25