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California Policy and Politics Friday
This is the major question at the heart of California’s tariff challenge -- California’s lawsuit challenging the tariffs President Donald Trump has imposed on goods from nations around the world clearly raises a major legal question: whether a president can impose such taxes without explicit approval from Congress. Bob Egelko in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 4/18/25
Newsom sues DOGE over AmeriCorps cuts, saying it ‘gives the middle finger to volunteers’ -- The California governor announced the legal challenge late Thursday and vowed to accelerate recruitment for the California Service Corps program. Blake Jones Politico Lia Russell in the Sacramento Bee$ -- 4/18/25
More immigrants opt to self-deport rather than risk being marched out like criminals -- Even in liberal-leaning California, undocumented immigrants who have worked here for decades are making plans to leave, choosing to depart on their own terms rather than risk being forced out with nothing. Rebecca Plevin in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 4/18/25
UCLA international student detained at U.S.-Mexico border amid Trump visa cancellations -- A UCLA international graduate student has been detained at the U.S.-Mexico border and is being held by Customs and Border Protection, the school confirmed late Thursday. Jaweed Kaleem in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 4/18/25
California students and faculty join national protest of Trump’s crackdown on higher education -- As part of a larger, national day of action, thousands of students, faculty and community members rallied at campuses across the state, with events taking place at Stanford University, CSU East Bay, UC Santa Cruz, UC Berkeley and San Jose State University Molly Gibbs, Sierra Lopez in the San Jose Mercury$ -- 4/18/25
Trouble with Social Security? California opens new complaint portal -- Amid a wave of reported disruptions to Social Security services, California Attorney General Rob Bonta has launched a new online portal for residents to report issues related to accessing their benefits. Aidin Vaziri in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 4/18/25
Popular Mexican band gets visas revoked ahead of Bay Area concert -- Los Alegres del Barranco has had its work and tourism visas revoked by the Trump administration weeks before the Regional Mexican band was meant to headline a South Bay concert. Zara Irshad in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 4/18/25
California’s frustration with homelessness is boiling over, poll finds -- California voters have grown so frustrated with the blue state’s failure to reduce homelessness that well over a third of the electorate now supports local laws that allow police to arrest people camping outside if they refuse shelter. Dustin Gardiner Politico -- 4/18/25
Californians oppose trans athletes in women’s sports -- Sixty-five percent of the state’s likely voters — and nearly half of Democrats — support such rules, according to a poll released Thursday by the nonpartisan Public Policy Institute of California. Blake Jones Politico -- 4/18/25
California Republicans want to get tougher on crime. Are Democrats shifting their way? -- A California Republican state senator finds his crime bills getting a warmer welcome this year. Democrats say they’re just responding to their voters. Jeanne Kuang CalMatters -- 4/18/25
Should California drivers get charged by the mile? A pilot program is looking into it -- Revenue from the gasoline excise tax that drivers currently pay at the pump is declining because of better fuel mileage and EV adoption. Rob Nikolewski in the San Diego Union Tribune -- 4/18/25
‘These clowns are screwing us over,’ says former rocker challenging GOP incumbent in California -- Grammy-nominated musician Tim Myers, best known as a former bassist for the pop band OneRepublic, has announced his candidacy for Congress in California’s 41st District. He’s trying to unseat longtime Republican Rep. Ken Calvert of Corona (Riverside County) in what Democrats view as a crucial race to reclaim control of the House. Aidin Vaziri in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 4/18/25
Nevada County Supervisor is challenging Kevin Kiley for Congress. Who is she? -- Nevada County Supervisor Heidi Hall will challenge Rep. Kevin Kiley, a two-term Republican, for the 3rd U.S. Congressional District seat in Congress. Hall, a Democrat and supervisor for the last eight years, is taking on a congressman who has won both his House races fairly easily. David Lightman in the Sacramento Bee$ -- 4/18/25
‘The anti-trust tides have turned.’ What a judge’s ruling over Google’s ‘monopoly’ on ad-tech means -- The highly anticipated decision could reconfigure the online advertising business that website publishers rely on to fund the creation of content. It also underscores how the U.S. government has been trying to rein in the power of Big Tech, which collects a trove of data on its users to fuel its advertising businesses. Queenie Wong in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 4/18/25
LAX drops down the list of the world’s busiest airports by passenger count -- Los Angeles International Airport fell from a global ranking of the world’s busiest airports following a drop in domestic travel and ongoing struggles to rebound from the pandemic. Colleen Shalby in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 4/18/25
Workplace
S.F. car-sharing platform Turo cuts 15% of workforce after IPO plans collapse -- Turo, the peer-to-peer car-sharing company, is laying off approximately 15% of its workforce, roughly 150 employees, after scrapping its long-anticipated plans to go public. Aidin Vaziri in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 4/18/25
Hundreds of Southern California Edison planners, technicians file for union election -- The move jump-starts a long-simmering unionization effort that comes amid scrutiny of the electric utility for potential mishandling of the devastating Eaton fire. Suhauna Hussain in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 4/18/25
Wildfire
Eaton fire victims call for investigation into State Farm for delays, violations -- Eaton fire victims on Thursday petitioned officials to reject State Farm’s proposed rate hikes and investigate alleged service delays following the Jan. 7 fires. Malia Mendez in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 4/18/25
Californians in Congress push for break on mortgage payments after natural disasters -- Members of Congress who represent Altadena, Pacific Palisades and Malibu are pushing for a federal law that would require mortgage lenders to give some borrowers a break on their mortgages after natural disasters. Laura J. Nelson in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 4/18/25
Education
Visa revocations create ‘climate of fear’ for UC Berkeley, Stanford international students -- They would not give their names. “We’re definitely afraid,” said one UC Berkeley law student, 28, who would reveal only that she came to the U.S. from “Asia.” Of 10 international students at UC Berkeley and Stanford who spoke with the Chronicle this week, just one, a global studies student born in India but with a Belgian passport, was willing to be identified. The others said they felt too “vulnerable,” “unsafe,” “helpless” and “scared” to say who they were. Nanette Asimov in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 4/18/25
Californians ding Newsom’s, lawmakers’ handling of schools in survey -- Californians’ confidence in their public schools and approval of how Gov. Gavin Newsom and the Legislature are handling public education have fallen sharply since the Covid pandemic, according to an annual survey on K-12 education released Thursday by the Public Policy Institute of California. John Fensterwald EdSource -- 4/18/25
23andMe
Congressmen sound alarm over data privacy following 23andMe bankruptcy -- Three congressmen from the House Committee on Energy and Commerce are raising concerns over data privacy weeks after the genetic testing company 23andMe filed for bankruptcy, putting millions of customers’ personal information up for sale. Caroline Petrow-Cohen in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 4/18/25
Street
What happens after a homeless person is arrested for camping? Often, not much -- Wickey Two Hands was supposed to be the first person tried for camping in Fresno. Instead, after the city and county poured resources into his case, it was dismissed at the last minute. Marisa Kendall CalMatters -- 4/18/25
Stanislaus County settles notorious malicious prosecution case for $22.5 million -- Six years after a jury acquitted a Modesto defense attorney and his codefendants in an alleged murder conspiracy, Stanislaus County has agreed to settle a malicious prosecution lawsuit for $22.5 million, one of the largest payouts of its kind in the history of the California courts. Christopher Goffard in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 4/18/25
‘There is nothing left’: Burglars cut alarms and cameras before downtown L.A. jewelry heist -- On Sunday night, police say a group of determined thieves drilled, hammered and climbed through multiple walls in and around the old Roxie theater downtown and broke into Love Jewels, Reina de Oro, and stole an estimated $10 million in merchandise. Nathan Solis, Richard Winton in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 4/18/25
Also
Arellano: Trump threatened Vietnam with a huge tariff. How’s that going over in Little Saigon? -- ABC Supermarket in the heart of Little Saigon is like a Donald Trump tariff rant come to fragrant, tasty life. Sorghum liquors from China. Frozen seafood from Malaysia. Thai fish sauce. Japanese candies. A galaxy of products from Vietnam, of course. Gustavo Arellano in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 4/18/25
Record prices are triggering a gold rush of customers looking to melt old jewelry for cash -- Jewelers are seeing a gold rush of customers eager to melt family heirlooms and other pieces as prices spike. Andrea Chang in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 4/18/25
Wedge surfers chased out of water by sea lion, the latest in a string of aggressive behavior at beaches -- The situation at first seemed comical – a cute little sea lion ruling the line up at the wild Wedge in Newport Beach, where wave riders showed up earlier this week to take on beefy waves from the first south swell of the season. Mona Darwish, Laylan Connelly in the Orange County Register$ -- 4/18/25
Championship blues: Dodgers games used to be affordable family entertainment. No more -- If tickets to sporting events have gotten too expensive for the average fan, then Dodger Stadium is a flash point in the debate over whether teams should pursue every dollar they can. Bill Shaikin in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 4/18/25
POTUS 47
Under Trump, National Security Guardrails Vanish -- This month, a network of pro-Russian websites began a campaign aimed at undermining confidence in the U.S. defense industry, according to disinformation analysts. Helene Cooper and Julian E. Barnes in the New York Times$ -- 4/18/25
With Harvard Threat, Trump Tries to Bend the I.R.S. to His Will -- Since the post-Nixon era, the Internal Revenue Service has had a degree of independence from the White House. President Trump is seeking to change that. Andrew Duehren, Alan Rappeport and Russ Buettner in the New York Times$ -- 4/18/25
Travel to the U.S. from almost everywhere is falling under Trump -- Industry experts say some of the reasons are plain to see: Reports of detentions and deportations, including the weeks-long lockup of European tourists, have sowed fears of bad experiences at the border. Anumita Kaur and Adrián Blanco Ramos in the Washington Post$ -- 4/18/25
Sen. Van Hollen secures visit with Maryland man mistakenly deported to El Salvador -- Both the Maryland senator and El Salvador President Nayib Bukele posted photos on social media showing Van Hollen meeting with Kilmar Abrego Garcia. Gregory Svirnovskiy Politico Theodoric Meyer, María Luisa Paúl and Maria Sacchetti in the Washington Post$ Ginger Adams Otis and Vera Bergengruen in the Wall Street Journal$ Robert Jimison in the New York Times$ -- 4/18/25
White House ramps up defense of Abrego Garcia’s deportation -- The White House is aggressively building a case against the native Salvadoran the U.S. illegally deported last month as part of a messaging effort designed to combat an onslaught of criticism from Democrats and intensifying scrutiny from the courts. Myah Ward Politico -- 4/18/25
U.S. intelligence contradicts Trump’s justification for mass deportations -- The National Intelligence Council, drawing on the acumen of the United States’ 18 intelligence agencies, determined in a secret assessment early this month that the Venezuelan government is not directing an invasion of the United States by the prison gang Tren de Aragua, a judgment that contradicts President Donald Trump’s public statements, according to people familiar with the matter. John Hudson and Warren P. Strobel in the Washington Post$ -- 4/18/25
Trump and Powell on Collision Course Without Easy Escape -- The problem is twofold. It isn’t clear the president has the legal authority to dismiss Powell before his term ends next year. And Trump’s trade war has made rate cuts more difficult for now because the Fed fears acting to shore up the economy could worsen inflation. Nick Timiraos in the Wall Street Journal$ -- 4/18/25
Dual Orders From Judges Edge Courts Closer to Confrontation With White House -- The threat of investigations into whether the administration violated the judges’ orders comes as President Trump and his advisers are increasingly butting heads with the courts. Alan Feuer in the New York Times$ -- 4/18/25
Consumer financial watchdog lays off most of its employees, defying a court order -- The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau on Thursday moved to fire more than 1,000 of its remaining employees, according to two people familiar with the matter, defying a court order barring the Trump administration from terminating employees at the watchdog agency except for cause related to their individual performance. Hannah Ziegler in the Washington Post$ Declan Harty Politico -- 4/18/25
DOGE begins to freeze health-care payments for extra review -- DOGE is putting new curbs on billions of dollars in federal grants, requiring officials to manually review and approve payments that were previously routine. Dan Diamond, Carolyn Y. Johnson and Hannah Natanson in the Washington Post$ -- 4/18/25
GOP Accused Democrats of Politicizing IRS. Now Trump Wants It to Punish Harvard -- Republicans have contended for years that the Internal Revenue Service has been weaponized against conservatives. This week, it was President Trump who publicly raised the prospect of the agency removing a valuable tax benefit from a perceived opponent. Richard Rubin in the Wall Street Journal$ -- 4/18/25
A Startling Admission From a G.O.P. Senator: ‘We Are All Afraid’ -- Lisa Murkowski, a longtime senator from Alaska and an independent voice in an increasingly tribal party, has been the rare Republican on Capitol Hill willing to criticize President Trump’s actions. Annie Karni in the New York Times$ -- 4/18/25
Democrats Step Up Trump Resistance as Base Hungers for More of a Fight -- Out of power in Congress, Democrats who were slow to fight back against President Trump are increasingly finding ways to do so. But activists want much more. Annie Karni in the New York Times$ -- 4/18/25
California Policy and Politics Thursday
Google Is a Monopolist in Online Advertising Tech, Judge Says -- Google acted illegally to maintain a monopoly in some online advertising technology, a federal judge ruled on Thursday, adding to legal troubles that could reshape the $1.88 trillion company and alter its power over the internet. David McCabe in the New York Times$ -- 4/17/25
California’s lawsuit puts West Coast business leaders to the test -- California Attorney General Rob Bonta on Wednesday presented himself as a defender of the state’s formidable economy while unveiling a lawsuit challenging President Donald Trump’s authority to impose tariffs. Eric He, Blanca Begert, Emily Schultheis and Tyler Katzenberger Politico Taryn Luna in the Los Angeles Times$ Nicholas Hatcher in the Wall Street Journal$ Maeve Reston and Mariana Alfaro in the Washington Post$ Shawn Hubler and Soumya Karlamangla in the New York Times$ Sophie Austin Associated Press Alexei Koseff CalMatters -- 4/17/25
The U.S. Exports a Lot of Stuff to China. Here’s a Breakdown -- While overshadowed, the U.S. still sent $143.5 billion worth of energy, agricultural and other goods the other way. Nearly half that amount came from products like energy supplies and produce flowing from just five states: Texas, California, Washington, Louisiana and North Carolina. Harriet Torry and Alana Pipe in the Wall Street Journal$ -- 4/17/25
Long before El Salvador’s president cozied up to Trump, Gavin Newsom paid him a visit -- Newsom’s 2019 trip and his meetings with Bukele and then-President Salvador Sánchez Cerén were part of an effort to draw contrast with Trump. Then, as now, Trump was cutting foreign aid to El Salvador and other foreign countries. Sophia Bollag in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 4/17/25
What is stopping Trump from exiling you to a foreign prison? -- Trump’s plans to forcibly remove U.S. citizens abroad — under any circumstances — is the bright red line constitutional scholars have been waiting for. In a separate case, U.S. District Judge James Boasberg ruled that ‘probably cause exists’ to find Trump administration officials are in criminal contempt over their refusal to follow his orders. Michael Wilner in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 4/17/25
A cloud over L.A. home builders: How tariffs are tormenting contractors and developers -- Uncertainty about which imports will be socked with new tariffs and when they’ll go into effect has thrown a cloud over home builders and other real estate developers trying to pay for new construction throughout Southern California. Roger Vincent and Liam Dillon in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 4/17/25
Disney’s parks are its economic engine. Tariffs could put a damper on it -- Already facing a new rival theme park in Orlando, Fla., Disney must now contend with a more difficult economic environment that could dampen attendance. Samantha Masunaga in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 4/17/25
Valero announces possible closure of its Benicia refinery -- Valero Energy Corp. announced Wednesday that the company may close its Bay Area facility in Benicia, six months after California air quality regulators handed the facility a record-setting fine for unlawful toxic emissions. Julie Johnson in the San Francisco Chronicle$ George Avalos in the San Jose Mercury$ -- 4/17/25
National Weather Service buyouts will leave gaps as storm season ramps up -- At least 300 National Weather Service employees are expected to take the latest federal buyout offer by a Thursday deadline, departures the agency’s top official told employees could leave many forecast offices around the country with half the meteorologists they need to properly monitor extreme weather threats. Scott Dance in the Washington Post$ -- 4/17/25
California weather service office will no longer answer public phone calls amid staffing cuts -- The National Weather Service office in Sacramento, which serves as a hub in California and forecasts weather in areas including Redding, Modesto, Vallejo and the Sierra Nevada, has been forced to cut down its operations and services due to “critically reduced staffing,” triggered by Department of Government Efficiency layoffs. Anthony Edwards in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 4/17/25
When will voters know who Oakland’s next mayor is? It’s complicated, officials say -- Alameda County’s relatively slow vote-counting process came under fire Wednesday — as it has in the past — as former Rep. Barbara Lee and ex-Oakland Council Member Loren Taylor were locked in a tight race to be Oakland’s next mayor that won’t be settled before Friday and could take far longer. Sarah Ravani in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 4/17/25
Democrats plan to back some young challengers — but not Nancy Pelosi’s -- He cited two Democrats who the group would not target: Pelosi, D-San Francisco, and 80-year-old Rep. Jan Schakowsky, D-Illinois. He described them as “fighters who are delivering.” Joe Garofoli in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 4/17/25
Forget Trump. Democrats are still high-speed rail’s biggest threat -- President Donald Trump and Elon Musk have California’s $100 billion high-speed rail project in their crosshairs — but Democrats are the biggest threat to its future. Alex Nieves Politico -- 4/17/25
Is Folsom actually ‘Trump Country’? Election data says otherwise -- As progressive leaders Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., and Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., rallied supporters in Folsom Tuesday evening, a small airplane circled above trailing a banner that read “Folsom is Trump Country!” In an Instagram post later that evening, Sanders said the city of nearly 85,000 is “in a Republican county.” Neither are true. Nicole Nixon in the Sacramento Bee$ -- 4/17/25
Once-secret records show how S.F. Archdiocese handled priests accused of child sex abuse -- A panel that reviews abuse allegations against priests returned more than half of accused clergy to ministerial duties, including a priest who faced five complaints, documents show. Matthias Gafni, Susie Neilson in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 4/17/25
Education
California ed officials find bias in Bay Area district’s ethnic studies classes -- Two Silicon Valley ethnic studies teachers violated California law when they included content related to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict that was biased and discriminated against Jewish students, state education officials concluded in a recent investigation. Jill Tucker in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 4/17/25
Dozens more UC San Diego student visas canceled -- Faculty warn the situation could lead to a big decline in enrollment of the scholars needed to help run the school’s huge research enterprise. Gary Robbins in the San Diego Union Tribune -- 4/17/25
Trump policy targeting immigrants shuts California students out of federal programs -- Federal programs offer financial aid and counseling to low-income and first-generation college students. California was allowed to include students without legal status, which the Trump administration is now ending. Adam Echelman CalMatters -- 4/17/25
L.A.’s Schools Chief Knows What It’s Like to Be Undocumented -- For the superintendent of the Los Angeles Unified School District, the visit by federal agents was something more. It was personal. Alberto Carvalho, the leader of the second-largest public school system in the country, was once undocumented, too. Jesus Jiménez in the New York Times$ -- 4/17/25
Bill would make California schools ‘safe havens’ from immigration enforcement -- Introduced by Assemblymember Al Muratsuchi, a Democrat who represents Torrance, AB 49 — the California Safe Haven Schools Act — would prohibit school employees from allowing immigration officers on campuses without a warrant or approval from school officials. Molly Gibbs in the San Jose Mercury$ -- 4/17/25
Amid deadly measles outbreak, California’s childhood vaccination rates are falling -- Sixteen California counties have fallen below the herd immunity marker against measles, one of the world’s most contagious diseases, amid a sprawling outbreak. A rise in vaccine skepticism stemming from pandemic discord, experts warn, may be driving the decline. Karen D'Souza EdSource -- 4/17/25
Majority of Sacramento County children do not read at grade level, report shows -- Only 38% of third graders in Sacramento County are reading at grade level, according to a report from the nonprofit Sacramento Literacy Foundation. These rates, researchers said, is a “crisis.” Emma Hall in the Sacramento Bee$ -- 4/17/25
Workplace
Oakland teachers union calls on members to authorize strike -- The Oakland teachers union Wednesday called for a strike vote, asking its members to approve a one-day walkout set for May 1 to protest what labor leaders say is a lack of transparency about district finances. Jill Tucker in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 4/17/25
Street
S.F. drug overdose death average is up for fourth straight month -- Sixty-five people fatally overdosed in March, bringing the monthly average to 64 over the past three months — up from 59 in February, 50 in January, 43 in December and 39 in November. Catherine Ho in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 4/17/25
Bipped economy? S.F. auto glass shops suffering as car break-ins drop -- At the height of San Francisco’s car break-in epidemic, phones were ringing non-stop at glass repair shops, and business was booming. Rachel Swan in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 4/17/25
Deputies beat and tased unarmed Rancho Cucamonga man to death, lawsuit claims -- A lawsuit alleges Mohd Hijaz died after San Bernardino County Sheriff’s deputies deployed tasers and baton strikes during an encounter that began when an individual reported he was acting erratically. Cerys Davies in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 4/17/25
Prop 36 is supposed to force drug offenders into treatment. That’s yet to happen in these Bay Area counties -- Officials say a shortage of treatment options is holding back the new law. Ethan Varian in the San Jose Mercury$ -- 4/17/25
Also
To keep Canadians coming, Palm Springs hangs love letters in its streets -- Officials in Palm Springs, California, hope the signage makes the desert resort city’s position clear amid tension between the United States and its northern neighbor: It stands with Canadians. Kyle Melnick in the Washington Post$ -- 4/17/25
POTUS 47
Trump’s freeze on $2.2 billion to Harvard provided no proof of wrongdoing -- The Trump administration skipped over requirements, including offering to hold a hearing, when applying financial penalties related to civil rights violations. Ben Brasch and Danielle Douglas-Gabriel in the Washington Post$ -- 4/17/25
DHS demands records of Harvard’s foreign students, threatens enrollment -- The Department of Homeland Security threatened to revoke Harvard’s certification to admit foreign students if the school did not hand over some student records. Andrew Jeong in the New York Times$ -- 4/17/25
Trump brushes aside courts’ attempts to limit his power -- Trump’s moves are the culmination of a decades-long conservative movement to expand the power of the executive branch. Cat Zakrzewski in the Washington Post$ -- 4/17/25
U.S. Tries to Crush China’s AI Ambitions With Chips Crackdown -- New chip restrictions for Nvidia and AMD show administration’s determination to battle China on tech advances as well as trade. Liza Lin and Amrith Ramkumar in the Wall Street Journal$ -- 4/17/25
Powell Warns of ‘Challenging Scenario’ for Fed as Trade War Rages -- Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell warned that the central bank could have less flexibility to quickly cushion the economy from the fallout of President Trump’s trade war, sending stocks down on Wednesday. Nick Timiraos in the Wall Street Journal$ Rachel Siegel in the Washington Post$ Colby Smith in the New York Times$ -- 4/17/25
Judge Threatens Contempt Proceedings Over Deportation Flights to El Salvador -- The move was a remarkable attempt by a jurist to hold the White House accountable for its apparent willingness to flout court orders. Alan Feuer in the New York Times$ Mariah Timms and Jacob Gershman in the Wall Street Journal$ Marianne LeVine, Spencer S. Hsu, Salvador Rizzo and Jeremy Roebuck in the Washington Post$ -- 4/17/25
Internal budget document reveals extent of Trump’s proposed health cuts -- The Trump administration is seeking to deeply slash budgets for federal health programs, a roughly one-third cut in discretionary spending by the Department of Health and Human Services, according to a preliminary budget document obtained by The Washington Post. Lena H. Sun, Carolyn Y. Johnson, Rachel Roubein, Joel Achenbach and Lauren Weber in the Washington Post$ -- 4/17/25
Elon Musk focuses donations on GOP lawmakers targeting judges -- The off-year spending pattern reflects the billionaire’s increasing criticism of judges who rule against the Trump administration. Clara Ence Morse and Trisha Thadani in the Washington Post$ -- 4/17/25
The ideological twist in Elon Musk’s tariff opposition -- To flood the world with robotaxis and humanoid robots, Elon Musk needs open markets — and the kind of globalized trade Donald Trump’s tariff war is closing off. Christine Mui and Alex Nieves Politico -- 4/17/25