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A Snapshot of California Public Policy and Politics
   
 
 
 

California Policy and Politics Tuesday

Updating . . .

Oakland begins sweep of homeless from pristine beach in first high-profile eviction since SCOTUS ruling -- The much-anticipated sweep of a bayfront homeless encampment near the Bay Bridge began Tuesday morning with doughnuts, a few flat tires being fixed, and a handful of police officers and city cleanup workers nonchalantly watching. Kevin Fagan in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 7/23/24

Former LA Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa makes another run for California governor -- Former Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa is making a second run for California governor, a 2026 comeback bid in which the Democrat is staking out a pragmatic lane, contending the state needs someone willing to make difficult — and even unpopular — decisions. Christopher Cadelago and Melanie Mason Politico Laura J. Nelson in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 7/23/24

Elon Musk’s messy divorce with California leaves ugly grievances all around -- Like many before him, Elon Musk came to California to make his name and fortune. James Rainey in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 7/23/24

What Joe Biden’s decision means for Gavin Newsom -- Gov. Gavin Newsom’s endorsement of Vice President Kamala Harris for the Democratic presidential nomination confirmed a foregone conclusion: Anyone hoping to see the governor in the White House should put those dreams on ice. Taryn Luna in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 7/23/24

Widespread evacuations in Plumas County fires; towering cloud visible from S.F. -- A rash of wildfires erupted Monday afternoon in Plumas County, forcing evacuations and road closures. The infernos, dubbed the Gold Complex, sparked just after 2:30 p.m., Cal Fire said. It was 700 acres as of 9 p.m., according to the agency. Jordan Parker in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 7/23/24

Desalination plant proposed for San Francisco Bay -- Santa Clara Valley Water District studying San Jose, Palo Alto, Mountain View as possible locations. Paul Rogers in the San Jose Mercury$ -- 7/23/24

Democrats are salivating over Kamala Harris’ resume as a prosecutor. So are Republicans -- Democrats believe Vice President Kamala Harris’ background as a prosecutor sets up a strong contrast with former president and convicted felon Donald Trump. Sophia Bollag, Joe Garofoli in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 7/23/24

Silicon Valley billionaires put plans for new California city on hold -- The tech billionaires backing a proposal to raise a brand-new city on the rolling prairie northeast of San Francisco Bay have agreed to pull their measure off the November ballot and will first fund a full environmental review of the project, officials announced Monday. Jessica Garrison and Hannah Wiley in the Los Angeles Times$ Will McCarthy Politico -- 7/23/24

California governor hopefuls solicit donations for Kamala Harris — and themselves -- State Sen. Toni Atkins and former Controller Betty Yee, both Democrats, have taken the somewhat unusual step of simultaneously fundraising for a state and federal campaign. Blake Jones Politico -- 7/23/24

One of nation’s largest corporate landlords to pay Calif. cities $20 million -- Invitation Homes, one of the nation’s largest corporate landlords, will pay $20 million to a whistleblower and 35 California cities to settle a lawsuit charging that the company made unapproved renovations to its portfolio of 12,000 homes in the state. Peter Whoriskey in the Washington Post$ -- 7/23/24

Walters: California’s image will be a weapon if Kamala Harris faces Donald Trump this year -- If Vice President Kamala Harris becomes the Democratic nominee for president, former President Donald Trump will use images of homelessness, illegal immigration and other California problems against her in the swing states. Dan Walters CalMatters -- 7/23/24

What VP Kamala Harris likely leading Democratic ticket means for women in California -- The country is ready for a woman to lead it, local activists say, but a woman from Oakland and with a house in L.A., now that's just a bonus. Kaitlyn Schallhorn in the Orange County Register -- 7/23/24

Workplace

What if AI puts everyone out of work? This software company funded research on universal basic income -- San Francisco software company OpenAI spent the last three years quietly helping fund a program that handed out up to $1,000 a month to low-income Americans, one of the largest studies ever conducted on the impact of universal basic income. Chase DiFeliciantonio in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 7/23/24

Judge: Meta unlawfully forced laid off employees to sign confidentiality agreements -- Facebook owner Meta unlawfully forced more than 7,000 former employees to sign confidentiality agreements in order to receive severance payments, a National Labor Relations Board judge found. Chase DiFeliciantonio in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 7/23/24

Downtown SF

Struggling downtown S.F. tower signs a flurry of leases for office space -- A 33-story downtown San Francisco office tower that last year was part of one of the largest office loan defaults seen since the pandemic is seeing a rarity in the city’s struggling office sector — new leases for space. Laura Waxmann in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 7/23/24

Tax

San Diego puts 1-cent sales tax hike on November ballot -- City voters will also weigh in this fall on a countywide half-cent sales tax increase for transportation projects. David Garrick in the San Diego Union-Tribune$ -- 7/23/24

Street

Frustrated Californians May Be Ready for a Tougher Approach to Crime -- Shoplifting and fentanyl use have tested the patience of California voters, who will decide in November whether to impose stricter laws that would lead to more incarceration. Tim Arango in the New York Times$ -- 7/23/24

Top of the Ticket

Harris’s campaign will have to contend with DEI, culture war attacks -- In the wake of Biden’s announcement that he would not run for a second term, attacks based on Harris’s racial identity were the most common form of criticism of her on X, according to recent data. Emmanuel Felton in the Washington Post$ -- 7/23/24

Trump Says He Is Willing to Debate Harris Multiple Times -- But for the second time since President Biden dropped out of the race, he indicated he didn’t want the debate to be held by ABC News. Michael Gold in the New York Times$ -- 7/23/24

Kamala Harris had an unusual donor to her earlier campaigns: Donald Trump -- “Wise investment,” a Democratic lawmaker joked. Trump’s campaign said donations to Harris as California attorney general were because he “knew how to play the game.” Victoria Bisset in the Washington Post$ -- 7/23/24

Trump’s New Rival May Bring Out His Harshest Instincts -- After years planning to face President Biden, Donald J. Trump and his team will be campaigning against Kamala Harris. He has attacked female rivals and critics in brutal and personal terms. Maggie Haberman and Jonathan Swan in the New York Times$ -- 7/23/24

George Clooney Endorses Kamala Harris, Says Biden Is ‘Saving Democracy’ -- In a statement, the actor and Democratic donor praised the president for stepping aside and vowed to do “whatever we can” to support Vice President Kamala Harris’s presidential campaign. Maya King in the New York Times$ -- 7/23/24

Harris Clinches Majority of Delegates as She Closes In on Nomination -- On her first full day in the race, Kamala Harris drew endorsements from her final possible rivals, hauled in record sums of cash and attacked Donald Trump. Shane Goldmacher and Reid J. Epstein in the New York Times$ Colby Itkowitz in the Washington Post$ Faith E. Pinho, Seema Mehta and Noah Bierman in the Los Angeles Times$ Ken Thomas in the Wall Street Journal$ Sophia Bollag, Shira Stein in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 7/23/24

Harris raises record-breaking $81 million for presidential bid -- Vice President Kamala Harris raised $81 million for her White House bid in the first 24 hours after President Biden announced he would not seek reelection — the largest campaign haul over such a period in history. Seema Mehta in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 7/23/24

How Kamala Harris Will Try to Put Trump on Defense -- Democrats are eager for her to deploy lines of attack that come more naturally than they did for President Biden, including on issues like abortion rights and the rule of law. Nicholas Nehamas and Katie Glueck in the New York Times$ -- 7/23/24

A Lot Has Changed for Women Since 2016. What Does That Mean for Kamala Harris? -- Voters eager to elect the first female president pointed to anger over a loss of abortion rights, but also acknowledged a fear that sexism would remain difficult for Ms. Harris to overcome. Patricia Mazzei, Jenna Russell, Richard Fausset and Christina Morales in the New York Times$ -- 7/23/24

Vance Criticizes Harris in First Solo Campaign Stops as Trump’s Running Mate -- In JD Vance’s first solo day of campaigning as the Republican vice-presidential nominee, the Ohio senator questioned Vice President Kamala Harris’s appreciation for the United States and chastised her fellow Democrats for supporting President Biden “until he became political deadweight.” Michael C. Bender in the New York Times$ -- 7/23/24

Trump’s age and health under renewed scrutiny after Biden’s exit -- As president, Donald Trump released a report that experts said showed he had heart disease and was obese. But as a candidate, he has refused to release bloodwork results, his weight or other key information. Michael Kranish in the Washington Post$ -- 7/23/24

AFL-CIO, major labor unions rush to embrace Harris -- Endorsements for Vice President Kamala Harris flowed in early this week from major unions but some major labor organizations that backed Biden are still weighing their decisions. Lauren Kaori Gurley in the Washington Post$ -- 7/23/24

Harris plans private meeting with Netanyahu as she skips congressional address -- Vice President Kamala Harris will not attend Benjamin Netanyahu’s joint address to Congress but will conduct a separate bilateral meeting with the Israeli prime minister this week at the White House, according to a Harris aide who was granted anonymity to discuss internal plans. Eugene Daniels, Daniella Diaz and Ursula Perano Politico -- 7/23/24

Vance attacks Harris over Biden’s abilities: She ‘lied about it’ -- He said he welcomed Democratic voters who are “disgusted” by the “smoke-filled” process to “come on in, the water is warm.” Meridith McGraw and Natalie Allison Politico -- 7/23/24

Here’s what happened to California Gov. Newsom’s quiet quest for the presidency -- With longtime ally Kamala Harris the heir apparent, “it was never going to happen,” analysts say. Julia Prodis Sulek in the San Jose Mercury$ -- 7/23/24

Education

Education has been a central interest of Kamala Harris since early in her career -- Likely Democratic presidential candidate made fighting school truancy a priority starting long ago. Louis Freedberg EdSource -- 7/23/24

Also

How the coconut tree meme became the symbol of support for Kamala Harris -- Ahead of President Biden’s decision to forgo a reelection bid, an unusual emblem of support for Vice President Kamala Harris’ presidential campaign began trending on social media: the coconut tree emoji. Aidin Vaziri in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 7/23/24

Patricia Howard vanished 44 years ago, a long time for a family to hope -- Her remains got home to L.A. thanks to DNA testing, FBI, and a portrait based on a skeleton. Delilah Brumer in the Los Angeles Daily News$ -- 7/23/24

 

California Policy and Politics Monday

Updating . . .

Billionaires’ utopia company California Forever scraps plan for ballot initiative in wake of damning report -- Days after a Solano County report slammed a plan backed by Silicon Valley billionaires to build a utopian new city from scratch near Fairfield, the company behind the “California Forever” project has scrapped the ballot initiative it was to put to county voters in November. Ethan Baron in the San Jose Mercury$ Conor Dougherty in the New York Times$ -- 7/22/24

Authorities saw gunman on roof 18 minutes before Trump stepped on stage, Secret Service chief admits -- In a stunning admission, the embattled director of the U.S. Secret Service said Monday that local authorities observed and photographed the man who shot at former President Trump 18 minutes before he took the stage at a rally in Pennsylvania. Richard Winton and Nathan Solis in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 7/22/24

‘Long-duration’ heat wave again cooking California, raising health and wildfire concerns -- July’s second major heat wave isn’t forecast to be as extreme as the last event, which set several all-time records for high temperatures. Nevertheless, the National Weather Service predicted that it will be a “long-duration heat wave,” which creates uniquely dangerous conditions — especially when temperatures barely drop at night. Grace Toohey in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 7/22/24

Devastating ransomware attack shuts down L.A. County courts -- The Los Angeles County Superior Court, the biggest trial court in the country, remained closed Monday as it sought to recover from a ransomware attack on its systems, officials said. Summer Lin in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 7/22/24

Democrats run the California Capitol. When the party backs a bill, lawmakers pay attention -- The California Democratic Party’s primary function is electing candidates. Lately, it’s become a lobbying powerhouse, taking positions on dozens of bills. The party usually gets its way. Ryan Sabalow CalMatters -- 7/22/24

California lawmakers continue push to regulate social media despite legal hurdles -- California lawmakers are pursuing legislation aimed at protecting children from the dangers of social media, one of many efforts around the country to confront what U.S. Surgeon General Vivek Murthy and other public health experts say is a mental health emergency among young people. Mark Kreidler KFF Health News in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 7/22/24

One S.F. police officer made $456,000 in overtime alone amid a record overtime year -- As a sergeant at the San Francisco Police Department, Dennis Lai makes just under $180,000 a year, a salary comfortably above the city’s median income for a family of four. But that’s only a quarter of what he actually earned last fiscal year. Danielle Echeverria in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 7/22/24

Coronavirus in California keeps rising: Wastewater levels worse than last summer -- Coronavirus levels in California’s wastewater now exceed last summer’s peak, an indication of the rapid spread of the super-contagious new FLiRT strains. Rong-Gong Lin II in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 7/22/24

Rep. Ken Calvert has secured millions for his Riverside County district. Do his own properties benefit? -- Since Congress brought back the legislative process known as earmarking in 2022, few lawmakers have been as successful at securing funds for their district as Rep. Ken Calvert. Laura J. Nelson in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 7/22/24

An Unfinished Skyscraper Complex Covered With Graffiti Finds a Lifeline -- A Los Angeles developer is in talks to buy Oceanwide Plaza after its Chinese owner stopped work in 2019. Kate King in the Wall Street Journal$ -- 7/22/24

Wildfire

Hawarden fire burns structures, forces residents to flee in Riverside County -- A pair of fast-burning vegetation fires ignited Sunday in Riverside County, rapidly scorching hundreds of acres of brush, causing evacuations and reportedly burning several structures. Amy Hubbard in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 7/22/24

Progress on Ridge Fire in Lake and Colusa counties amid favorable weather -- The Ridge Fire, which started Saturday afternoon at Walker Ridge Road and Highway 20, held at more than 2,600 acres Sunday evening, according to Cal Fire. Favorable weather conditions and night operations helped crews make progress, bringing the containment to 15%, officials said. Jessica Flores in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 7/22/24

Education

Broken trust: Cal State is mending how it handles sexual discrimination cases -- Changes are underway one year after scathing audits showed how the California State University system failed to handle reports of sexual discrimination, harassment and assault in its Title IX offices. Elizabeth Wilson CalMatters -- 7/22/24

West Contra Costa sued over poor building conditions, teacher vacancies -- The lawsuit comes months after 48 complaints were filed. Monica Velez EdSource -- 7/22/24

Street

Crime is rising at L.A. Metro. Is a new police force the answer? -- California public transit agencies are trying to lure back riders by improving safety. Metro’s decision to create its own public safety department is a major test. Jenna Peterson CalMatters -- 7/22/24

Golden Gate Bridge suicides drastically decline after barrier installation -- There has been an annual average of about 30 confirmed suicides at the Golden Gate Bridge over the last 20 years, but since the installation of a lifesaving barrier, that rate has significantly declined, officials said. Adrian Rodriguez in the San Jose Mercury$ -- 7/22/24

 

Top of the Ticket

Skelton: California’s Kamala Harris was the necessary choice but not the best candidate -- Please pardon me for being a skunk at the picnic where California Democrats are celebrating Vice President Kamala Harris’ expected ascension to replace President Biden as the party’s nominee to battle Donald Trump. George Skelton in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 7/22/24

Pelosi endorses Harris, who gains quick support among leading Democrats -- Less than 24 hours after President Biden ended his reelection bid, a slew of Democratic leaders threw their support behind Vice President Kamala Harris — including her highly influential Bay Area colleague, San Francisco Rep. Nancy Pelosi. Faith E. Pinho, Seema Mehta and Noah Bierman in the Los Angeles Times$ Shira Stein in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 7/22/24

Biden Is Out of the Race. Trump Is Still Attacking Him -- IShortly after President Biden announced he was ending his re-election campaign, former President Donald J. Trump on Sunday afternoon posted on social media a forceful attack denouncing him. Over the next hours, he posted several more. Michael Gold in the New York Times$ -- 7/22/24

RFK Jr. sought job in a Trump White House as he weighed endorsing Trump -- The independent candidate suggested being given a senior job overseeing a portfolio of health and medical issues, an idea that the Trump campaign rejected. Josh Dawsey and Michael Scherer in the Washington Post$ -- 7/22/24

The remarkable contrast between Kamala Harris and Donald Trump -- On nearly every measure, the likely presidential opponents diverge. Philip Bump in the Washington Post$ -- 7/22/24

In Silicon Valley, Where Trump Made Inroads, Democrats Are Now Invigorated -- Elon Musk, Marc Andreessen and others have endorsed Donald J. Trump. But President Biden’s withdrawal has re-energized Democrats across the tech industry and may blunt that momentum. Erin Griffith in the New York Times$ -- 7/22/24

Why Biden finally quit -- For 23 days, President Joe Biden insisted on pushing forward with his reelection bid in the face of calls from Democratic lawmakers and donors for him to step aside. And then, almost on a dime, things changed. Eli Stokols, Jonathan Lemire, Elena Schneider and Sarah Ferris Politico -- 7/22/24

The Promise, and Risks, in Turning to Kamala Harris -- In a sprint of a race, Ms. Harris is poised to attack Donald Trump on his felonies and, in a 2024 twist, his age, but Republicans will be galvanized to fight her, too. Shane Goldmacher in the New York Times$ -- 7/22/24

How Kamala Harris Rose as a California Moderate -- In her home state of California, however, Vice President Kamala Harris has been viewed as center-left by California standards, an ambitious prosecutor with conventional values shaped as much by the state’s tough-on-crime 1990s as by the Bay Area’s progressive politics. Shawn Hubler in the New York Times$ -- 7/22/24

Democrats Donate More Than $50 Million Online After Biden’s Exit -- Sunday was the single biggest day for online Democratic donations in years — a significant show of enthusiasm after weeks of sluggish fund-raising. Shane Goldmacher in the New York Times$ -- 7/22/24

A presidential campaign is ‘a $2-billion startup.’ If she gets the nod, Harris has 3½ months -- They will be facing an opponent, former President Trump, who has been running since 2022, secured his party’s nomination in March and staged a highly choreographed convention last week. There’s “no template for it,” said David Axelrod, former President Obama’s lead strategist. Noah Bierman in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 7/22/24

GOP eyes legal challenges as Harris assumes control of Biden’s war chest -- The issue, involving tens of millions of dollars, could get tied up in the Federal Election Commission and then in court. Maeve Reston in the Washington Post$ -- 7/22/24

A Harris-Trump race would pit ex-prosecutor vs. recently convicted felon -- The vice president leaned into her past as a prosecutor in attacking Trump in the 2020 primary. Will she do the same now? Ashley Parker in the Washington Post$ -- 7/22/24

What to know about the Democratic convention now that Biden’s out of race -- Although many Democrats quickly endorsed Vice President Harris, they must make a formal nomination through a virtual vote or an “open” convention in Chicago. Andrew Jeong and Niha Masih in the Washington Post$ -- 7/22/24

Gaza, abortion, immigration: where Kamala Harris stands on key issues -- The first Black person, the first person of South Asian descent and the first female vice-president in US history versus a white man. The oldest presidential candidate in US history versus someone almost 20 years younger than him. The property mogul who inherited a fortune from his father versus the daughter of a biologist and a university professor in economics, both of whom are immigrants. Helen Sullivan The Guardian -- 7/22/24

Gavin Newsom backs Kamala Harris, ending speculation that he would challenge her -- “With our democracy at stake and our future on the line, no one is better to prosecute the case against Donald Trump’s dark vision and guide our country in a healthier direction than America’s Vice President, @KamalaHarris,” Newsom wrote on X. Sophia Bollag in the San Francisco Chronicle$ Faith E. Pinho in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 7/22/24

California Democratic delegates prepare to back VP Kamala Harris at upcoming convention -- The California Democratic Party already is asking delegates to officially endorse her nomination at the Chicago convention. Kaitlyn Schallhorn in the San Jose Mercury$ -- 7/22/24

Can Kamala Harris unite Democrats? Here’s what’s working in her favor — and what’s not -- With the abrupt end to President Joe Biden’s presidential campaign, Vice President Kamala Harris could become the first Black and Indian American woman to lead a major party ticket. First, she must convince naysayers in her party that she has learned from her past mistakes and can unite voters behind her candidacy. Shira Stein, Joe Garofoli in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 7/22/24

Kamala Harris has a career of comebacks. She has 107 days to do it again -- Unprecedented battles are not new to Harris, who has defied expectations, for good and ill, since her earliest days in politics. Peter Jamison and Cleve R. Wootson Jr. in the Washington Post$ -- 7/22/24

What a Kamala Harris foreign policy could look like -- She would likely stay tough on Russia and China, and has rebuked Israel’s handling of aid into Gaza. Eric Bazail-Eimil, Joe Gould, Miles J. Herszenhorn and Phelim Kine Politico -- 7/22/24

Who could replace Harris as the next vice presidential candidate? Meet her potential choices -- Conventional wisdom suggests the choice of a swing state candidate would be wise, but such a pick is no guarantee the Democrats would carry the state. That thought could open the door to other politicians who have simply shown an ability to appeal to voters across the country’s sharp ideological divide. James Rainey in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 7/22/24

Some Black Voters Say They Wonder if a Black Woman Can Win -- In interviews, some Black voters expressed concern about whether Americans were ready to elect Kamala Harris, who has the backing of President Biden. Jeremy W. Peters and Clyde McGrady in the New York Times$ -- 7/22/24

Congressional Republicans call for Biden to resign -- “If Joe Biden is not fit to run for President, he is not fit to serve as President,” House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) said in a statement. Mariana Alfaro, Marianna Sotomayor and Leigh Ann Caldwell in the Washington Post$ -- 7/22/24

Joe Manchin Says He ‘Not Going to be a Candidate for President’ -- Senator Joseph Manchin, independent of West Virginia, said on Monday that he would not launch his own presidential bid, a rapid shift in tone after a TV appearance earlier in the morning in which he appeared to be flirting with pursuit of the Democratic nomination. Jazmine Ulloa in the New York Times$ -- 7/22/24

Also

Drinkable exhaust makes a splash as hydrogen-powered ferry premieres on S.F. Bay -- Cookie Huss and Ed Simon boarded the 10:30 Sunday morning ferry at Fisherman’s Wharf and went straight to the back of the cabin, nearest the water fountain. They wanted to drink the cool, pure exhaust from the world’s first hydrogen cell commercial passenger ferry. Sam Whiting in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 7/22/24