Rough & Tumble ®
A Realtime Snapshot of California Public Policy and Politics
 
 
   
       
 
 

California Policy and Politics Wednesday

Garden Grove crisis exposes Southern California’s hidden industrial risks -- The near-disaster in Garden Grove serves as a reminder of the widespread but overlooked industrial risks embedded in Southern California neighborhoods. Experts warn that fast-tracked housing development near industrial sites is raising the odds of more chemical emergencies, often in low-income communities already burdened by pollution. Hayley Smith in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 5/27/26

Industry knew about chemical ‘runaway’ dangers for years. Then came near-catastrophe in O.C. -- The chemical industry has been well aware of the risks of the type of thermal runaway reaction that forced 50,000 people from their homes in Orange County last weekend, reviving years of warnings from researchers about the potential dangers. Hannah Fry and Rong-Gong Lin II in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 5/27/26

Community frustrations, concerns about lack of preparation aired at contentious Garden Grove meeting -- Having endured a turbulent weekend of evacuations prompted by a chemical scare, hundreds of Garden Grove residents packed the City’s Council Chambers Tuesday night, May 26, to make clear their mounting outrage and concerns and to demand answers from elected officials and the company at the center of it all. Victoria Le and Claire Wang in the Orange County Register$ -- 5/27/26

 

Billionaire Tom Steyer’s ad spending breaks records in California governor’s race -- Win or lose, billionaire Democrat Tom Steyer will leave a mark in the history books in his bid to become California’s next governor — he’s running the most expensive political advertising campaign in the country this year. Michael R. Blood Associated Press -- 5/27/26

PG&E goes after gubernatorial candidate Tom Steyer. He welcomes the fight -- PG&E is backing a committee that’s attacking Tom Steyer, while propping up Xavier Becerra. Steyer, a billionaire climate activist, frames the attacks as proof of his plans to reform the utilities. The California Chamber of Commerce PAC is also spending money to support the anti-Steyer campaign after receiving millions from the three major utilities. Dakota Smith in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 5/27/26

Mayor Karen Bass is in the toughest reelection fight of her career. She says she intends to win it -- Mayor Karen Bass’ campaign has acknowledged she will be pushed into a runoff. She says she will ultimately win the race. Elected on a promise to tackle street homelessness, Bass now faces criticism that her Inside Safe program is too costly and not effective. David Zahniser in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 5/27/26

In San Francisco's bruising House race, even Pelosi is a target -- Democrats in San Francisco have talked about Nancy Pelosi with a sense of reverence for the better part of 40 years. Saikat Chakrabarti is testing whether he can win a primary by flaming her instead. Dustin Gardiner Politico -- 5/27/26

Big name Democrats steer clear of endorsements in messy governor’s race -- Democratic consultant Steven Maviglio said there’s a simple reason they’re not weighing in: “They don’t want to be a loser.” For Newsom in particular, backing a losing candidate could be a mark against him as he ramps up a probable run for president in 2028, Maviglio said. Ben Paviour in the Sacramento Bee$ -- 5/27/26

Workplace

Meta plans to cut more than 600 Bay Area jobs; NetApp will eliminate dozens -- Meta Platforms revealed plans to slash well over 600 jobs in the Bay Area, while NetApp will trim dozens more positions, as downsizing in the Bay Area tech sector continues. George Avalos in the San Jose Mercury$ -- 5/27/26

Supreme Court Rejects Lawsuit Over Commercial Driver’s Licenses for Migrants -- The Supreme Court on Tuesday rejected a bid by officials in Florida to sue California and Washington over claims that those states have allowed undocumented immigrants to receive commercial trucking licenses. Officials in the two states deny the allegation. Abbie VanSickle in the New York Times$ -- 5/27/26

‘Easily discarded’: Processing delays leave DACA recipients jobless and fearing deportation -- Recipients of Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, or DACA, are facing months-long delays for work permit renewals. The immigrants who were brought to the U.S. as children are losing paychecks and bracing for possible deportation. Andrea Castillo and Brittny Mejia in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 5/27/26

Go Ask Alice Why Tech Start-Ups Are Spending Big on Hype Videos -- A Mad Hatter and a giant rabbit sit around a table discussing an A.I. start-up. This is normal behavior around the Bay Area these days. Natallie Rocha, Mike Kai Chen in the New York Times$ -- 5/27/26

Housing

San Jose launches workforce housing effort at downtown housing tower -- A program designed to bring middle-income households into a prominent San Jose housing tower is officially underway, an effort that could lead to hundreds more residents downtown. George Avalos in the San Jose Mercury$ -- 5/27/26

Homeless

San Francisco faces a budget crisis. Its homelessness fund is flush with cash -- The Our City, Our Home Fund — financed by a voter-approved tax on large businesses — has exceeded forecasts and is expected to bring in more than $900 million over the next two years. That’s in addition to a $450 million fund balance. Maggie Angst in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 5/27/26

Education

Justice Department sues UCLA for the third time, alleges antisemitism against students -- The complaint centers on a 2024 pro-Palestinian encampment and pro-Palestinian rallies through the current year. Federal officials seek repayment of potentially hundreds of millions in grant dollars, as well as outside monitoring and policy reforms. Jaweed Kaleem in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 5/27/26

California education groups demand state legislature reject Newsom’s plan to withhold school funding -- Newsom’s plan, included in his revised 2026-27 budget proposal, would temporarily withhold $3.9 billion in school funding. Molly Gibbs in the San Jose Mercury$ -- 5/27/26

AI

At the Epicenter of A.I., Pope Leo’s Warnings Are Dismissed -- Pope Leo XIV’s spiritual message on artificial intelligence arrived as Silicon Valley’s A.I. enthusiasts pursue their own spirituality through technology. Cade Metz in the New York Times$ -- 5/27/26

Privacy

The form asked my permission to share my health data. Then it wouldn’t let me say no -- To experience what patients have to do to opt-out of having their data shared, I went to doctor’s appointments in seven states. One clinic showed me how easily dark patterns force patients to share their data with big healthcare networks, even when the privacy form they’re signing explicitly says they can opt-out. Alex Rosenblat Calmatters -- 5/27/26

Tijuana River

A small fix could make a big difference in Tijuana River pollution: When will it happen? -- As the U.S. and Mexico pursue $800 million in upgrades to wastewater facilities on the border, local officials are working on a smaller fix to improve conditions as soon as next year. Deborah Brennan Calmatters -- 5/27/26

Also

The $400 Million Showdown Between a Billionaire and a California Mayor -- The owner of the Los Angeles Rams and the City of Inglewood are in a dispute over Hollywood Park and SoFi Stadium, which is about to host World Cup matches. Matt Stevens, Ken Belson and Emmanuel Morgan in the New York Times$ -- 5/27/26

Walters: Newsom’s unbalanced budget faces strong pushback for spending cuts. Will lawmakers back him? -- Gavin Newsom is trying to finish his governorship on a high note, claiming he has written “a balanced budget structurally for 18 months” that would give his successor some breathing room. Dan Walters Calmatters -- 5/27/26

Heading to the Sierra? Leaving food unsecured could cost you $5,000 -- Campers and backpackers heading into the Sierra National Forest this summer have a new reason to double-check where they stash their snacks, trash and toothpaste: Leaving them where a bear can get them could carry a hefty fine. Aidin Vaziri in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 5/27/26

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Iran Pursues Deal That Brings Economic Relief Without Handing Trump Victory -- Iran is pursuing two intertwining goals in its negotiating strategy with the U.S., say Iranian officials and Arab mediators: securing financial relief for an economy that is under severe strain without giving enough ground on its nuclear program to allow President Trump to claim victory. Summer Said, Benoit Faucon and Alexander Ward in the Wall Street Journal$ -- 5/27/26

Trump Declares Himself in Good Health After Physical Exam at Walter Reed -- President Trump, the oldest man to be inaugurated as president, had a physical exam at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center on Tuesday, and said that his doctors had given him a clean bill of health. Karoun Demirjian in the New York Times$ -- 5/27/26

Cornyn’s Defeat Fuels Tensions With President Trump in Senate G.O.P. -- Senators are angry President Trump turned on a respected former leader whom they consider a loyal Republican. Now Mr. Trump faces resistance from his own embittered ranks. Carl Hulse in the New York Times$ -- 5/27/26

Barabak: Texas is where Democratic dreams die. Did Trump change that with his Senate pick? -- Ken Paxton’s primary win has buoyed Democratic hopes of an upset by the viral sensation James Talarico. But touted Democrats have a history of falling flat. Mark Z. Barabak in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 5/27/26

 

California Policy and Politics Tuesday

Record-setting outside money pouring into California governor’s race -- Outside groups have poured $79.6 million into the California governor’s race ahead of the June 2 primary, shattering past spending records. Billionaire Tom Steyer is the prime target, facing $32.3 million in attacks in the face of the $212 million he has donated to his campaign. Former Biden Cabinet member Xavier Becerra has seen growing outside support. Seema Mehta in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 5/26/26

PG&E goes after gubernatorial candidate Tom Steyer. He welcomes the fight -- PG&E is backing a committee that’s attacking Tom Steyer, while propping up Xavier Becerra. Steyer, a billionaire climate activist, frames the attacks as proof of his plans to reform the utilities. Dakota Smith in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 5/26/26

Why Silicon Valley’s big bet on Matt Mahan went bust -- But his underwhelming campaign has become a cautionary tale about an untested candidate and inexperienced donors chasing a vision that has failed to materialize with a week left — a humbling experience for some of Mahan’s backers in tech, many of them relative newcomers to state politics who are working to build enduring political power in California. Jeremy B. White and Christine Mui Politico -- 5/26/26

Raman says she’s running for mayor because L.A. is headed in wrong direction -- Raman’s mayoral campaign platform includes expanding new housing, cutting red tape for developers and introducing “gentle density” into single-family zoned neighborhoods. Noah Goldberg in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 5/26/26

California’s overseas voters face new barriers after Trump administration cut key program -- It’s never been easy to cast an absentee ballot from inside a military submarine. But now that the Trump administration has eliminated a crucial mechanism to return absentee ballots, overseas voting requires even more of a herculean effort. Sara DiNatale in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 5/26/26

No shame: A last-minute election guide for undecided CA voters -- With just a week until Election Day and only 8% of ballots returned so far, millions of California voters are still making up their minds about the election. But here at CalMatters, we listen, we don’t judge — so we have a last-minute voter guide to catch you up on what you need to know.. Lynn La Calmatters -- 5/26/26

The United Farm Workers built its political power around Chavez. Now it faces a reckoning -- Long before findings that Cesar Chavez sexually abused women and minors for years, the California-based labor union he co-founded had already endured a long and painful decline in its organizing power. Mathew Miranda in the Sacramento Bee$ -- 5/26/26

Tax to bail out struggling Bay Area transit agencies appears headed to voters -- Backers of a new sales tax measure to bail out the Bay Area’s struggling public transit systems say they have gathered enough signatures to place the proposal on the November ballot. Ethan Varian in the San Jose Mercury$ -- 5/26/26

 

O.C. communities hit by chemical crisis are safe for return, officials say -- The vast majority of the 50,000 people evacuated because of a damaged chemical tank officials feared would explode began returning home, and officials said conditions in the area is safe. Sandra McDonald in the Los Angeles Times$ Sean Emery, Rachel Fobar, Sydney Barragan, Todd Harmonson and Brian Rokos in the Orange County Register$ Reis Thebault, Heather Knight, Shawn Hubler and Christina Morales in the New York Times$ -- 5/26/26

Threat of massive explosion in Garden Grove ‘eliminated’ but danger remains, officials say -- The threat of a massive explosion from a ruptured tank in Garden Grove was eliminated Monday, but Orange County Fire Authority officials stopped short of allowing thousands of evacuated residents to return home due to lingering fears of a toxic chemical release. Meg James, Christopher Goffard and Eric Licas in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 5/26/26

 

Downtown L.A. businesses are in crisis. Owners want politicians to deal with it -- Downtown L.A. business owners say crime and neglect are driving away customers as the June mayoral primary looms — and they’re demanding that candidates prioritize the once-bustling region’s problems. Roger Vincent and Itzel Luna in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 5/26/26

L.A. is safer than it’s been in decades, but crime is an issue dominating the mayor’s race -- Homicides in Los Angeles are down to levels not seen since the 1960s. Neighborhoods once awash in gang violence now sometimes go weeks, even months, without a shooting. And the follow-home robberies and street takeovers that captured the public’s attention in recent years have largely subsided. Libor Jany in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 5/26/26

Housing

Plan to build more than 12,000 homes in this Bay Area community faces crucial vote -- After years of delays and failed attempts, Concord could finally move ahead with a plan to build one of the Bay Area’s biggest housing projects on a former naval station. Sarah Ravani in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 5/26/26

Hunger

Bay Area braces for Trump’s tougher CalFresh rules -- Tens of thousands of CalFresh recipients in the Bay Area — including veterans and homeless people — will soon have to comply with federal work requirements to keep their food assistance, as officials project 665,000 Californians will lose eligibility and food banks brace for longer lines. Grant Stringer in the San Jose Mercury$ -- 5/26/26

ICE

Those caught in Trump immigration dragnet seek millions for raids, shootings, trauma -- U.S. citizens and immigrants alleging brutal encounters with federal immigration agents are now demanding financial compensation. People across the country are seeking millions through federal tort claims, precursors to possible lawsuits. Andrea Castillo in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 5/26/26

ICE tried to separate a San Francisco mom from her baby. She fought back -- Yulisa Alvarado Ambrocio joined fellow asylum-seekers in blocking arrests at San Francisco’s immigration courthouses. They’re on the cusp of a bigger victory. Raheem Hosseini in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 5/26/26

Health Care

UCSF doctor has bold plan to achieve universal primary care in California -- An article published in JAMA last week, co–authored by a UCSF physician, proposes one way the state could move toward a single-payer system: Make primary care a public utility, like electricity or clean water, and create a “common fund” financed by public and private sources that would directly pay primary care doctors to treat patients. Catherine Ho in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 5/26/26

Education

California colleges are seeing a rise of conservative voices. Some classes are tense -- Charlie Kirk’s 2025 killing has galvanized conservative students, fueling an expansion of Turning Point USA chapters on California campuses. In classrooms, some professors report anxious, combative discussions while others deliberately stage structured debates to expose students to opposing viewpoints. Kahani Malhotra in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 5/26/26

Out-of-state students should pay more for UC Berkeley, UCLA, state analyst says -- If the University of California wants to raise some quick cash — say, $80 million over four years — it should consider charging non-Californians thousands of dollars more to attend its three most popular campuses, says a new report from the state’s Legislative Analyst’s office. Nanette Asimov in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 5/26/26

San Diego Islamic Center

Despite millions in spending, experts say zero-risk security at houses of worship not possible -- Experts say no level of spending can guarantee public safety. The very nature of shopping centers, schools, churches and other soft targets leaves them vulnerable to attacks from people committed to hate crimes and political violence. Jeff McDonald, Alex Riggins in the San Diego Union Tribune -- 5/26/26

AI

California judges are testing a new AI clerk, and you won’t know if it’s looking at your case -- Courts in Los Angeles and Riverside counties are testing an artificial intelligence tool and deciding whether it can be used in high-stakes criminal cases. Cayla Mihalovich and Khari Johnson Calmatters -- 5/26/26

Clean Energy

Clean energy boom spurs pushback. ‘Cumulative impacts are being ignored.’ -- As San Diego County races to meet green energy targets, sprawling developments are transforming backcountry communities — and residents of those areas want a voice in the process before their homes are reshaped by solar, wind and battery storage projects. Hannah Elsmore in the San Diego Union Tribune -- 5/26/26

Also

Their meteoric rise reshaped the Bay Area and powered Silicon Valley. Is it at an end? -- Just a few decades ago, Fremont was as white as any other middle-class East Bay suburb. Today, 30% of residents are of Indian ancestry, the highest share of any city in the Bay Area. Silicon Valley’s hunger for talent, India’s deep bench of tech workers and the immigration liberalization of the 1990s reshaped Fremont — and much of the Bay Area with it. Ko Lyn Cheang, Sarah Ravani and Sriharsha Devulapalli in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 5/26/26

Inside U.S. soccer’s World Cup camp at Orange County Great Park -- The Orange County Soccer Club has moved out of its home stadium, allowing crews to renovate Orange County Great Park for U.S. soccer’s World Cup camp. Kevin Baxter in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 5/26/26

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Iran threatens retaliation after U.S. strikes in southern Iran -- The attacks prompted Tehran to warn that it would “leave no act of hostility unanswered,” complicating negotiations to end the war. Dan Lamothe and John Hudson in the Washington Post$ -- 5/26/26

U.S. Carries Out Renewed Strikes in Southern Iran -- American military forces conducted what U.S. Central Command said were “self-defense strikes” in southern Iran on Monday “to protect our troops from threats posed by Iranian forces.” Eric Schmitt in the New York Times$ -- 5/26/26

‘Rabbit holes all over the place’: How hard it would be for Trump to rebuild Cuba --Any effort to open Cuba comes with the heavy burden of history, ranging from an expatriate community looking to recoup seized property to layers of U.S. policy that would need to be unwound to promote business development. Daniel Desrochers and Nahal Toosi Politico -- 5/26/26

Heavy caseloads, regrets and surprises: 5 judges who embody the courts’ rebuke of Trump’s ICE detentions -- Hundreds of judges have rejected the Trump administration’s unprecedented expansion of ICE detentions, fueling nearly 10,800 rulings against the administration as of May 15. Kyle Cheney and Jessie Blaeser Politico -- 5/26/26

As Trump Politicizes Justice Dept., Prosecutors Struggle With Grand Juries -- Judges and grand juries have increasingly lost faith in the Justice Department as the president uses it to reward his friends and go after his opponents. Alan Feuer in the New York Times$ -- 5/26/26