![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
|
California Policy and Politics Friday
Trump announces new coal export terminal in Oakland -- Trump is invoking the Defense Production Act, a Cold War-era emergency law, to pour nearly $700 million into coal plants and a new Oakland export terminal he calls vital to national security. Hayley Smith in the Los Angeles Times$ Kate Talerico in the San Francisco Chronicle$ Shomik Mukherjee in the East Bay Times -- 6/5/26
‘Like Two Cats Circling’: Kamala Harris and Gavin Newsom Weigh a 2028 Showdown -- They claim to be friends, but many expect a gloves-off brawl should the two California Democrats decide to run for president. Tarini Parti and Eliza Collins in the Wall Street Journal$ -- 6/5/26
Why Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass Has to Fight for Her Job -- Karen Bass will likely be the first incumbent mayor of Los Angeles since 2005 to have to fight for her job in a runoff. It’s a sign that, despite a rebound from the depths of the pandemic, voters remain dissatisfied with life in the nation’s second most populous city. Jill Cowan in the New York Times$ -- 6/5/26
The top-two primary was supposed to change California politics. Did it flop? -- California voters approved a top-two primary election designed to encourage moderation. But in most races, it ends in a conventional Democrat vs. Republican. Some are ready to scrap the top two. Ben Christopher and Jeanne Kuang Calmatters -- 6/5/26
Spencer Pratt claims L.A.’s homeless will move to Seattle if he’s elected. That city’s mayor responds -- Seattle Mayor Katie Wilson pushed back against a claim by Los Angeles mayoral candidate Spencer Pratt that if he’s elected, L.A.’s homeless population would move to Seattle to take advantage of that city’s drug laws. Salvador Hernandez in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 6/5/26
Orange County health officials walk back claim that there was ‘no leak’ in chemical tank crisis -- Orange County health officials are walking back a claim that no vapor or fumes were released during a chemical tank crisis at a Garden Grove aerospace company two weeks ago, but state officials maintain that any leak did not pose a major health risk to the public. Rong-Gong Lin II and Tony Briscoe in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 6/5/26
Amazon data center rises in Gilroy. Residents say they were left in the dark -- A massive Amazon data center already being built on Gilroy’s eastern edge has become a flashpoint over how much say residents get before Silicon Valley’s next wave of tech infrastructure arrives in their backyards. Luis Melecio-Zambrano in the San Jose Mercury$ -- 6/5/26
O.C. immigration attorneys suspended for filing briefs filled with AI-hallucinated errors -- Attorneys Mike Singh Sethi and William Rounds, both part of Sethi Law Group in Orange County, were fined $2,500 each and suspended from practicing in the U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals for six months, according to an opinion from the court issued Wednesday. A request for comment from the firm was not immediately answered. Grace Toohey in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 6/5/26
Lawyers at L.A. firm involved in $4-billion sex abuse settlement face State Bar charges -- The State Bar of California has charged three attorneys at Downtown LA Law Group with signing up clients in states where they were not licensed to practice. The firm was already under investigation by the state bar and the L.A. County district attorney’s office over allegations they paid clients to file sex abuse lawsuits. The firm has denied all wrongdoing. Rebecca Ellis in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 6/5/26
LA28
LA28 chair Casey Wasserman says he will not resign over Epstein fallout -- Casey Wasserman, says he will not resign from his role as chairman of the Los Angeles Olympic organizing committee despite his past ties to Ghislaine Maxwell. Wasserman’s email exchanges with Maxwell were revealed when some of the Epstein files were released in February. Thuc Nhi Nguyen in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 6/5/26
Also
It’s official: Clint Eastwood, 96, has retired, his son says -- When Clint Eastwood released his last movie, “Juror No. 2,” in 2024, the longtime Carmel-by-the-Sea resident, four-time Oscar winner and mainstay of American cinema skipped the premiere, raising speculation that he was finally ready to retire. After all, he was 94. Martha Ross in the Orange County Register$ -- 6/5/26
Mule deer become first animals to use California’s first wildlife crossing -- Three mule deer have become the first animals to cross California’s inaugural wildlife overpass. The crossing spans a deadly stretch of State Route 97 in Siskiyou County where dozens of animals have been killed. Alex Wigglesworth in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 6/5/26
In a First, Scientists Precisely Edit Human Embryo Genes -- Scientists at Columbia University have edited the DNA of early human embryos with unprecedented accuracy, an achievement that could open the way to babies engineered with particular characteristics. Carl Zimmer in the New York Times$ -- 6/5/26
POTUS 47
Oil industry warns Trump administration of price spikes within weeks -- The oil industry is warning the Trump administration that a Hormuz-sized hole in the world’s petroleum market is steadily draining inventories to levels that are likely to send global energy prices surging in the next several weeks, according to four executives. Ben Lefebvre and James Bikales Politico -- 6/5/26
Ballroom donors won $50B in contracts after giving to Trump project, watchdog group finds -- More than half of the publicly identified donors to President Donald Trump’s White House ballroom project have won new or expanded federal contracts worth more than $50 billion during the past six months, according to a report released Thursday by a government watchdog group. Jonathan Edwards in the Washington Post$ -- 6/5/26
Jan. 6 Rioter Is Hired to Work in Sensitive Pentagon Office -- It was not clear who hired Elias Irizarry, who pleaded guilty to various offenses at the Capitol and was later pardoned by President Trump. Helene Cooper and Alan Feuer in the New York Times$ -- 6/5/26
How Trump’s Proposed Arch Could Complicate D.C.’s Congested Airspace -- The mammoth triumphal arch President Trump wants to build would sit under one of the most complex sections of the national airspace — directly in the paths of flights in and out of Ronald Reagan National Airport and just a few miles from the site of a catastrophic midair collision last year. Anushka Patil, Marco Hernandez, Junho Lee and Karoun Demirjian in the New York Times$ -- 6/5/26
Trump eyes his next DC renovation: The Lincoln Memorial -- Trump told reporters at the White House on Thursday he wants to build a promenade that would allow pedestrians to easily walk from the rear of the monument to the east bank of the Potomac River. “They want to call it the Trump Promenade,” he said. “It’s a beautiful project, and it’s gonna take the Lincoln Memorial right down to the Potomac.” Aaron Pellish Politico Luke Broadwater in the New York Times$ -- 6/5/26
Vanilla Ice Is In, Bret Michaels Is Out: Trump’s Battle for Celebrity Validation -- President Trump has pursued fame his entire adult life. Now in his second term in the White House, he is finding how little power he has to force cultural figures to fall in line. Shawn McCreesh in the New York Times$ -- 6/5/26
California Policy and Politics Thursday
Trump, without proof, claims ‘cheating’ in California vote, says federal probe underway -- To the surprise of few, President Trump has once again claimed without evidence that Democrats are somehow cheating to win California’s primary elections — writing on social media late Wednesday that federal prosecutors in Los Angeles are investigating the matter. Kevin Rector in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 6/4/26
Federal judge orders immigrant detention center to allow San Diego County health inspection -- A federal judge on Wednesday ordered the Otay Mesa Detention Center to allow San Diego County health inspectors access to the 1,400-bed facility, siding with local officials over the federal government in an ongoing legal feud. Wendy Fry Calmatters -- 6/4/26
5 things to know about the Trump administration’s new green card policy -- If the goal was to confuse everyone, the mission was accomplished. Just before Memorial Day, the Trump administration issued a sweeping new policy directive that took aim at legal immigration. It would have required most temporary visa holders and humanitarian parolees living in the U.S. to return to their home countries to await their green cards. Wendy Fry Calmatters -- 6/4/26
Immigrant-founded startups are worth $5 trillion. Will Trump’s visa policies threaten the next boom? -- Alex Gallego grew up in a small mountain city in Colombia at the height of armed conflict in the 1980s and 90s. When he immigrated to Stamford, Connecticut, aged 14, in 2001, on a green card sponsored by his father, he didn’t speak a word of English. Today he’s the CEO and founder of a billion-dollar startup, Redpanda Data, one of many immigrant startup founders in the Bay Area. Ko Lyn Cheang in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 6/4/26
California voters had their first chance to be heard on data centers. They didn’t hold back -- California’s first-ever anti-data center ballot measure is shaping up to be an absolute shellacking for the tech industry — part of a wave of opposition rising across the country, as communities and lawmakers grapple with the frenzied push to build AI infrastructure. Noah Baustin Politico -- 6/4/26
Democrats redrew this California congressional district, but they could lose it anyway -- Democrats woke up Wednesday to find none of their five candidates seeking to oust Rep. Kevin Kiley from his House seat is currently positioned to advance from the primary. Alexei Koseff in the San Francisco Chronicle$ Andrew Graham and Mathew Miranda in the Sacramento Bee$ -- 6/4/26
Desmond, von Wilpert claim victory in pivotal North County congressional race -- The open 48th Congressional District, redrawn to favor Democrats, could be key to both parties’ hopes of controlling Congress. Lucas Robinson in the San Diego Union Tribune Ben Fox Politico -- 6/4/26
Election denier likely loses job in Shasta County. But voters back hand-counting ballots -- Shasta County voters appear to have ousted a controversial elections chief who promotes conspiracy theories about voter fraud, even as they approved a ballot measure that would require hand-counting ballots and voter ID, conflicting with California election law. Ryan Sabalow Calmatters -- 6/4/26
Does Tom Steyer still have a path to the November runoff? -- As California continues to count mail ballots over the coming days, political analysts predict late-counted ballots from Democratic voters could swing in favor of billionaire philanthropist Tom Steyer, who trailed in third on election night. But whether it will be enough to propel the progressive Democrat into the November runoff by making up a several hundred thousand vote gap remains to be seen. Grace Hase in the San Jose Mercury$ -- 6/4/26
Bay Area voters rejected new taxes Tuesday. Can transit funding survive in November? -- Bay Area voters made one thing resoundingly clear during Tuesday’s election: They do not like new taxes. This does not bode well for BART and Muni in November. Rachel Swan in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 6/4/26
BART’s fare gates were built to stop evasion. Now they’ll sell ads -- Planners had in fact realized, back when BART was choosing a fare gate design in 2019, that plexiglass panels could be a perfect ad canvas. That was well before the pandemic and subsequent rise of remote work that tanked ridership and sent Bay Area transit operators into a death spiral. Rachel Swan in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 6/4/26
Two Democrats lead California insurance commissioner primary -- Progressive former San Francisco city supervisor Jane Kim and state Sen. Ben Allen of Santa Monica took the lead early Tuesday night. Republican insurance agent Stacy Korsgaden was in third place. Megan Fan Munce in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 6/4/26
Democrats could be locked out with Ken Calvert, Young Kim leading in 40th Congressional District -- Democrats were in danger Wednesday, June 3, of being locked out of a Southern California congressional race as two GOP incumbents, who waged a vitriolic campaign for the seat in the primary, were on track to continue their rancor into November. Jeff Horseman in the Orange County Register$ -- 6/4/26
San Diego voters rejecting measure that would heavily tax second homes -- A highly divisive measure that would impose a hefty tax on the owners of second homes that lack a full-time resident was failing to garner majority support from San Diego voters as of Wednesday morning. Lori Weisberg in the San Diego Union Tribune -- 6/4/26
Billionaires go bust in California: Wealthy candidates and donors had a rough night -- What can $200 million buy you? Perhaps not the California governor’s office. Alexei Koseff in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 6/4/26
Arellano: One thing was clear on election night: Angelenos want change -- A huge, waning moon glimmered over Los Angeles on election night, a metaphor for a trend that emerged in early returns. The city’s political establishment seemed to be on the retreat in favor of populist insurgents from both the left and the right. Gustavo Arellano in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 6/4/26
Lopez: Bass clears first hurdle, but if Pratt holds off Raman, the mayoral race could be a holy war -- We could be in for one of the more remarkable electoral adventures in city history. I don’t recall ever hearing a nun or a priest drop God’s name as often as Pratt does. Steve Lopez in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 6/4/26
AI
Sloppy AI use gets two California lawyers suspended for six months, fined -- A federal appeals court fined two Southern California lawyers $2,500 each and suspended them from practice in the court for six months Wednesday after finding that they used artificial intelligence to cite nonexistent cases to the court and then claimed they hadn’t knowingly done so. Bob Egelko in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 6/4/26
Housing
A California housing bill would raise wages to $28. Why do some unions hate it? -- When is a minimum wage hike of more than $11 per hour actually a pay cut? Ben Christopher Calmatters -- 6/4/26
CalFresh change
CalFresh eligibility is changing. Here’s what you need to know -- Some Californians will now have to clear an additional hurdle to maintain their eligibility for food assistance, courtesy of Republicans’ One Big Beautiful Bill Act. Karen Garcia in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 6/4/26
Street
Get-a-Waymo: How a burglar used a robotaxi to flee the scene in a first-of-its kind S.F. case -- The getaway car was parked just outside the Marina yoga studio, idling in the January night air as the burglar made his move. Megan Cassidy in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 6/4/26
An LAPD gang? Internal report says police unit had ‘rampant culture of misconduct’ -- The LAPD internal investigation leveled a troubling allegation: Officers in a specialized unit tasked with combating street gangs had themselves behaved like a gang. Libor Jany in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 6/4/26
Also
In a first, California Supreme Court reverses a death sentence under new racial justice law -- The California Supreme Court this week reversed the death sentence of a Los Angeles Bloods gang member convicted of killing a rival Crip in the early 1990s because a prosecutor compared him to a dangerous animal, the first time a death sentence has been overturned under the 2020 Racial Justice Act. Nigel Duara Calmatters -- 6/4/26
Walters: Medi-Cal cuts, tax increases loom as Capitol lawmakers dicker over the budget -- The primary election has come and gone. Votes are still being counted and the eventual results in close contests might not be known for weeks. However, it’s back to work for those already in office, including Gov. Gavin Newsom, and the biggest issue on their agenda is writing a budget for the 2026-27 fiscal year. Dan Walters Calmatters -- 6/4/26
Barabak: Youth, money, gender and other takeaways from California’s crazy gubernatorial primary -- After all the buildup, fear and uncertainty, the most wide-open and unpredictable California gubernatorial primary in decades appears to have ended in the most consistent and predictable of ways. California has never elected a female governor. That won’t change in November. Mark Z. Barabak in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 6/4/26
Why Google wants to release 32 million mosquitoes in California -- Google is seeking permission from federal regulators to release up to 32 million sterile mosquitoes in California — a pest control technique meant to quell the spread of an invasive mosquito species that’s been expanding to many parts of the state, including the Bay Area. Catherine Ho in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 6/4/26
POTUS 47
Video shows Pentagon counterterrorism hire clambering into Capitol on Jan. 6 -- A recent appointee to a sensitive counterterrorism job in the Defense Department was filmed for more than five minutes during the Jan. 6, 2021, riot as he moved through restricted grounds and climbed through a broken window, holding a metal pole, to enter the U.S. Capitol, according to a Washington Post analysis. Joyce Sohyun Lee, Andrew Ba Tran and Salvador Rizzo in the Washington Post$ -- 6/4/26
Iran vote caps Trump’s congressional losing streak -- House Republicans for the first time failed to block an effort to halt the Iran war, the latest sign that members of the president’s own party are willing to buck him on key aspects of his agenda. Connor O'Brien and Leo Shane III Politico Terell Wright, Lindsay Wise and Olivia Beavers in the Wall Street Journal$ Robert Jimison and Megan Mineiro in the New York Times$ Theodoric Meyer and Mariana Alfaro in the Washington Post$ -- 6/4/26
Republicans Begin to Test the Limits of Trump’s Power by Flexing Their Own -- The president’s unilateral and retributive style of governing is starting to hit a wall in both chambers of Congress. Katie Rogers in the New York Times$ -- 6/4/26
Trump says he doesn’t know whether the $1.8 billion payout fund is dead -- President Donald Trump said Wednesday that he was not sure whether a proposed $1.8 billion fund for people claiming political persecution was dead, a departure from acting attorney general Todd Blanche’s more definitive assurance of the fund’s demise a day earlier. Cat Zakrzewski in the Washington Post$ -- 6/4/26
Fight to Kill ‘Anti-Weaponization’ Fund Risks GOP Blowup in Senate -- GOP senators headed toward an intraparty showdown over the Trump administration’s $1.8 billion “anti-weaponization” fund, as some Republicans sought guarantees in law that it was truly dead. Siobhan Hughes, Lindsay Wise and Richard Rubin in the Wall Street Journal$ -- 6/4/26
Americans’ national parks passes will pay for Trump’s July 4 plans, documents show -- The Trump administration is diverting at least $90 million from entry fees to national parks such as Yellowstone and Yosemite to D.C. to fund a $1.6 million fireworks display — more than five times as much as what is usually spent on the Fourth of July pyrotechnics display — and $76 million to repair fountains including the Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool, according to internal agency documents reviewed by The Washington Post. Jake Spring, Dan Diamond and Naema Ahmed in the Washington Post$ -- 6/4/26
The Kennedy Who Says She Left the White House Over Concerns About CIA Spending -- Amaryllis Fox Kennedy says in an interview that there wasn’t enough oversight of the intelligence community’s use of taxpayer funds. Philip Wegmann in the Wall Street Journal$ -- 6/4/26


.gif)









