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California Policy and Politics Friday
Coded messages, ‘red boxing’ and other allegations in California’s testy race for governor -- Democratic gubernatorial candidate Xavier Becerra’s campaign posted criticism of billionaire rival Tom Steyer on its website, a potential signal to independent expenditure committees that highlights messaging to use in their communications with voters. The practice, called “red boxing,” is a tactic to skirt a campaign finance prohibition on communication between campaign committees and outside groups. Seema Mehta in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 5/1/26
They tracked California hate groups. Now, Trump’s DOJ charges donors were defrauded -- The Southern Poverty Law Center, a nonprofit that tracks far-right extremism, faces federal fraud and money laundering charges. The SPLC is among the few organizations that has tracked the activities of hate groups in California. Some legal experts have questioned the merits of the Trump administration’s case, calling the charges “absurd” and “irresponsible.” Sonja Sharp in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 5/1/26
Trump administration investigates Stanford University for racial discrimination -- The investigation will determine whether Stanford violated racial discrimination laws under Title VI of the 1964 Civil Rights Act’s Equal Protection Clause. Molly Gibbs in the San Jose Mercury$ -- 5/1/26
Gavin Newsom fires back at Joe Rogan after ‘cardboard cutout’ jab -- Gov. Gavin Newsom escalated his long-running feud with Joe Rogan, firing back after the podcaster described him as a “cardboard cutout of a person” and questioned whether voters see him as authentic. Aidin Vaziri in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 5/1/26
Who’s running for Congress in California? These races could determine the majority -- The fight for control of the U.S. House runs through California’s 52 congressional districts, many of which were dramatically restructured by Proposition 50 last year. Democrats especially are jockeying for position in several races pitting them against each other. Maya C. Miller Calmatters -- 5/1/26
Behind the Trump administration’s detentions of L.A. Iranians -- The U.S. State Department has detained five L.A. area-based Iranian nationals, all of whom are green card holders, and moved to strip them of their residency. In L.A., a vocal segment has joined forces with Trump-aligned far-right conservatives, including Laura Loomer, to wage campaigns against other Iranians. Suhauna Hussain in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 5/1/26
A lack of trusted information might keep Californians from the polls in June -- Registered voters who say they might not make it to the polls this June mostly point to a lack of information about candidates and a feeling that special interests are calling the shots anyway. That’s according to a new survey from UC Berkeley’s Institute of Governmental Studies. Kate Wolffe in the Sacramento Bee$ -- 5/1/26
Candidate interview: Katie Porter admits she’s ‘tough.’ Here’s why she says that’s necessary -- The former member of Congress answers the questions that matter most to Bay Area voters. Sophia Bollag in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 5/1/26
Arellano: The future of Latino politics just played out in Whittier -- Whittier elected a Latino-majority council for the first time in the city’s history. But for the three winning Latino candidates, their ethnicity was an afterthought. Gustavo Arellano in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 5/1/26
Legal battle to halt Nexstar-Tegna TV station merger expands with five new states -- With the addition of the five new states, California Atty. Gen. Rob Bonta’s battle to block the merger is now bipartisan. Meg James in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 5/1/26
Workplace
Should a California union dictate how clinics spend money? Employers sue to block ballot measure -- The California Primary Care Association, which represents more than 2,300 community health clinics, and Open Door Community Health Centers filed a lawsuit Thursday to stop Service Employees International Union-United Healthcare Workers West from placing an initiative on the November ballot that would dictate how clinics spend money. Kristen Hwang Calmatters -- 5/1/26
AI is coming for jobs, and ‘We’re not ready,’ labor expert says -- William Gould, one of the nation’s leading experts on employment, sees artificial intelligence as a “locomotive coming down the tracks” with countless jobs in its path. He offers one major takeaway: “We’re not ready.” Ethan Baron in the San Jose Mercury$ -- 5/1/26
Marketplace
This Rivian spinoff is reinventing e-bikes in California with screens, software and swappable seats -- Rivian’s e-bike spinoff Also is making $3,500 customizable bikes with touchscreens and software updates that mimic the tech experience of electric cars. Caroline Petrow-Cohen in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 5/1/26
Water
For the first time, California growers have to say how much groundwater they’re taking -- Some California farmers must start reporting to the state how much groundwater they pump. The state water board is requiring growers in the Tule and Tulare Lake areas to submit water usage data. Ian James in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 5/1/26
Will California ever build the Delta tunnel? Major battles ahead as Newsom era nears end -- California's Delta tunnel largely cleared a key hurdle last week — but far bigger obstacles still stand in the way. Among the next battlegrounds: the state’s largest agricultural recycled water project and a cattleman’s pasture. Rachel Becker Calmatters -- 5/1/26
Education
Cal State struck a deal with OpenAI. Some students and faculty refuse to use it -- Some students and faculty say equal access to AI is important for preparing students for the workforce. Others say the implementation of AI tools has been confusing and opens the door to cheating. Some faculty have banned AI from their classes altogether and even started a petition to end the contract deal. Angel Corzo Calmatters -- 5/1/26
SFUSD sets new plan: School closures by 2030, fix loathed lottery system next year -- San Francisco schools will revamp its loathed student assignment lottery system and consider closures by fall 2030 under a new plan to address two of the district’s most contentious issues. Jill Tucker in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 5/1/26
L.A. Unified payouts reach $200 million in Mark Berndt student abuse claims after latest settlement -- LA Unified to pay $30 million to victims of teacher Mark Berndt, a convicted serial child molester, bringing payouts to $200 million. Richard Winton in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 5/1/26
Report: Quality trailing expansion of early education in California -- California’s expansion of transitional kindergarten is helping slow enrollment declines, but a new national report raises concerns about the quality of the state’s early education programs. Betty Márquez Rosales, Mallika Seshadri EdSource -- 5/1/26
Street
Mayor Lurie’s drug crackdown sends S.F. arrests soaring. Dealer cases aren’t driving the surge -- Mayor Daniel Lurie’s crackdown on San Francisco’s open-air drug markets has delivered one clear result so far: a sharp rise in arrests and citations for low-level drug crimes. What remains far less clear is whether the enforcement is disrupting drug dealing and leading more people off the streets and into treatment. David Hernandez, Maggie Angst, Danielle Echeverria in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 5/1/26
Bail must be ‘reasonably attainable’ for nonviolent offenders, California Supreme Court rules -- People charged with crimes in California must be granted bail in amounts they can afford unless they are accused of capital offenses, or face serious charges and pose a threat of violence if released, the state Supreme Court ruled unanimously Thursday. Lawyers said the decision could affect thousands of cases. Bob Egelko in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 5/1/26
Were the Zodiac killer and the Black Dahlia the same person? The devil is in the details -- The woman known as the Black Dahlia had not been dead long before the smears began. Two months after her mutilated, bisected body was found in a South Los Angeles lot on Jan. 15, 1947, a newspaper headline asked: “‘Dahlia’ to Blame?” Christopher Goffard in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 5/1/26
Also
Robot passenger delays flight from Oakland to San Diego -- A flight leaving Oakland was delayed an hour Thursday afternoon as flight crews discussed how to accommodate a high-maintenance traveler: “Bebop,” a 4-foot tall humanoid robot. Lucy Hodgman in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 5/1/26
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Americans remain deeply skeptical of war in Iran, poll shows -- Sixty-one percent of U.S. adults said it was a mistake for the U.S. to use military force against Iran in a Washington Post-ABC News-Ipsos poll released Friday. Gregory Svirnovskiy Politico -- 5/1/26
Iran Is Grasping for a Solution to an American Blockade It Can’t Break -- For almost five decades, Iran’s Islamic government has survived financial pressure from the U.S. by selling oil to China. It confronted American military might with guerrilla tactics. But with the U.S. Navy’s blockade, that strategy might have met its match, analysts said. Benoit Faucon in the Wall Street Journal$ -- 5/1/26
Iran’s supreme leader vows to protect nuclear and missile capabilities -- Iran’s supreme leader defiantly vowed Thursday to protect the Islamic Republic’s nuclear and missile capabilities, which U.S. President Donald Trump has sought to curtail through airstrikes and as part of a wider deal to cement the war’s shaky ceasefire. Jon Gambrell, Aamer Madhani Associated Press -- 5/1/26
Trump administration says its war in Iran has been ‘terminated’ before 60-day deadline -- The Trump administration is arguing that the war in Iran has already ended because of the ceasefire that began in early April, an interpretation that would allow the White House to avoid the need to seek congressional approval. Seung Min Kim Associated Press -- 5/1/26
Iran Is Grasping for a Solution to an American Blockade It Can’t Break -- For almost five decades, Iran’s Islamic government has survived financial pressure from the U.S. by selling oil to China. It confronted American military might with guerrilla tactics. But with the U.S. Navy’s blockade, that strategy might have met its match, analysts said. Benoit Faucon in the Wall Street Journal$ -- 5/1/26
Trump bets on quick Iran oil crunch. Experts see prolonged pain and rising costs -- Administration officials say Tehran is days from crisis, but analysts see a slower squeeze with global price shocks already hitting U.S. consumers and reshaping the political fight. Scott Waldman Politico -- 5/1/26
Why U.S. Oil Companies Are Not Plugging the World’s Energy Gap --American producers are under pressure from investors to keep spending in check, and they are wary of drilling more wells because they are not sure oil prices will stay high. Rebecca F. Elliott in the New York Times$ -- 5/1/26
Jeffrey Epstein’s Possible Suicide Note Hidden From Public View -- An inmate said he discovered the note after Mr. Epstein was found injured in his jail cell, weeks before his death. It’s now locked in a courthouse. Benjamin Weiser, Steve Eder and Jan Ransom in the New York Times$ -- 5/1/26
California Policy and Politics Thursday
What Alex Padilla says Democrats should do about the Voting Rights Act ruling -- Sen. Alex Padilla was in the Library of Congress with several dozen other senators when their phones all buzzed with the news of the Supreme Court’s ruling on the Voting Rights Act. He was dismayed, but not shocked, to read the landmark law had been gutted. Melanie Mason Politico -- 4/30/26
Supreme Court ruling on voting won’t change California districts, but could hurt Democrats -- Wednesday’s Supreme Court ruling narrowing the Voting Rights Act undermines legal protections that have helped Latinos gain representation in politics, California Democrats and activists say. Nigel Duara and Maya C. Miller Calmatters -- 4/30/26
What the Supreme Court did to the Voting Rights Act -- Southern lawmakers can now draw congressional maps to break up minority voters, as the conservative majority continues to roll back decades-old civil rights protections. Amber Phillips in the Washington Post$ -- 4/30/26
Huntington Beach ordered to pay nearly $1 million in legal fees for ACLU lawsuit -- An Orange County Superior Court judge has ordered the city of Huntington Beach to pay nearly $1 million in legal fees, after it was sued for moving books deemed to contain sexual content to a restricted section of the library. Matt Szabo in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 4/30/26
Billionaire Tom Steyer wants to take on the rich in run for California governor -- “I’m the billionaire who wants to tax other billionaires,” he’s fond of saying, though he’s given only tenuous backing to a billionaires’ tax proposal likely to appear before California voters in November. Sophie Austin Associated Press -- 4/30/26
Candidate interview: Tom Steyer has never held office. Here’s why he says voters should trust him -- Billionaire Tom Steyer aims to succeed where other self-funding politicians before him have failed: using his personal fortune to win the most powerful job in California. Sophia Bollag in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 4/30/26
California billionaire tax proposal attracts 1.5 million signatures. Here’s what happens next -- The proposal would impose a one-time tax of up to 5% on taxpayers and trusts with assets valued at more than $1 billion, with some exclusions, such as property. Queenie Wong in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 4/30/26
Should California tax retirement accounts? Campaign wants voters to block any new efforts -- The effort, though, may have an impact on a dueling campaign to tax California’s billionaires to offset federal healthcare cuts. Kaitlyn Schallhorn in the San Jose Mercury$ -- 4/30/26
California’s race for secretary of state shows partisan divide over how to count ballots -- California’s top vote-counter, Secretary of State Shirley Weber, faces a challenge from Republican Don Wagner in the 2026 election. Yue Stella Yu Calmatters -- 4/30/26
California gubernatorial candidates divided over education funding and social issues -- Education is not a central issue in California’s crowded governor’s race, but the candidates addressing it offer sharply different visions, from expanding school funding and free college, to stricter teacher accountability and restrictions on transgender students in sports. Diana Lambert EdSource -- 4/30/26
Bay Area neighbors are turning their blocks into Trump resistance networks -- President Donald Trump’s most sustained resistance has been at the neighborhood level. Here’s what everyday Bay Area residents are building. Raheem Hosseini in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 4/30/26
Failed plane and bus trips: How ICE can’t bring back man wrongfully deported to Mexico -- The U.S. government had no trouble deporting Lazaro Romero León to Mexico in February, despite a California federal judge’s order that the Cuban national stay in this country. The problem now, government officials claim, is getting him back. Brittny Mejia in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 4/30/26
L.A. council member pushes plan to let noncitizens vote in city elections -- Councilmember Hugo Soto-Martínez wants to place a measure on the Nov. 3 ballot giving the council the power to let noncitizens vote in L.A.’s local elections. Backers say noncitizens already pay taxes and deserve representation. One opponent said the idea “undermines the whole concept of citizenship.” David Zahniser in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 4/30/26
Workplace
The prolonged Little Lake teachers strike takes on outsize, statewide significance -- The small Little Lake school district, which serves mainly low-income families in southeast Los Angeles County has become the setting for one of the longest teacher strikes in state history — reaching the the 10-day mark on Wednesday — as its 200-member union takes on significant issues straining districts throughout California. Howard Blume and Cierra Morgan in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 4/30/26
Marketplace
How tariffs and war are hurting California small businesses -- Higher prices hit small businesses — defined as those with fewer than 500 employees — harder than big ones, and some wonder how long they can survive. Levi Sumagaysay Calmatters -- 4/30/26
These California bills take aim at soaring ticket resale prices. But will they really help? -- Fed up with sky-high resale ticket markups? Two California bills aim to crack down on a market that many believe has spiraled out of control. But how much they’d actually help consumers remains an open question. Kathleen Pender in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 4/30/26
AI
Victims’ families sue OpenAI over school shooting that ChatGPT failed to flag -- In seven separate lawsuits filed Wednesday, lawyers said the artificial intelligence giant encouraged the shooter’s violent tendencies, then decided to protect its profits by remaining silent. Bob Egelko in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 4/30/26
Education
How Silicon Valley’s Brightest Parents Broke Their Own School -- Tech executives built the ‘it’ school for their gifted kids. Lawsuits, internal feuding and a breakaway followed. Zusha Elinson in the Wall Street Journal$ -- 4/30/26
Street
Will cameras actually curb speeding in L.A.? San Francisco offers a clue -- A year after the installation of speed cameras in San Francisco, drivers in the city are slowing down, data shows, and experts say the technology could have a similar effect once cameras are installed in Los Angeles. Karen Garcia in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 4/30/26
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Oil Hits Wartime High Above $120 a Barrel as Standoff Shows No End in Sight -- The longer the disruption to Middle East fuel supplies lasts, the risk grows that higher energy costs will feed into broader inflation that could dent economic growth. Gregory Schmidt and Joe Rennison in the Wall Street Journal$ -- 4/30/26
Economy picked up in early 2026, but inflation jumped, too -- The U.S. economy grew at a 2 percent pace in the first three months of the year, as higher investment and a rebound in government spending buoyed business activity while consumers showed signs of fatigue amid rising prices. David J. Lynch in the Washington Post$ -- 4/30/26
Supreme Court leans in favor of Trump’s bid to end protections for Syrian, Haitian migrants -- The Supreme Court’s conservative majority sounded ready Wednesday to rule that the Trump administration may end the temporary protection that has been granted to more than 1.3 million immigrants from troubled countries. David G. Savage in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 4/30/26
Cole Allen case reveals Secret Service failures that could have led to tragedy at D.C. gala -- However, according to a detailed accounting filed Wednesday by federal prosecutors in the criminal case against suspect Cole Tomas Allen, the performance of the nation’s preeminent protection agency was marred by inattentiveness and misfires and saved by “extraordinary good fortune” and the gunman falling to the ground. Kevin Rector and Richard Winton in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 4/30/26
Prosecutors Say Suspect Planned Attack Weeks Before Press Gala -- Around 2 p.m. on April 6, officials say, Cole Tomas Allen opened the browser on his cellphone and searched: “white house correspondents dinner 2026.” Campbell Robertson in the New York Times$ -- 4/30/26
How Trump’s Proposed Arch Would Change D.C. -- The Times created a 3-D model of the 250-foot monument to show how it would affect a symbolic sightline. Junho Lee, Doug Mills, Karthik Patanjali, Anushka Patil and Charlie Smart in the New York Times$ -- 4/30/26
Amazon Discusses ‘Apprentice’ Reboot—With Don Jr. as a Potential Host -- First it bought the “Melania” documentary. Now Amazon AMZN 1.29%increase; green up pointing triangle is discussing a potential reboot of “The Apprentice,” the reality TV show that once starred Donald Trump and propelled him to national fame. Jessica Toonkel and Dana Mattioli in the Wall Street Journal$ -- 4/30/26















