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

California Policy and Politics Monday

‘Our own doing’: California Democrats try to figure out how to win elections again -- In the aftermath of Democrats’ widespread electoral failures last year, party activists in California who gathered for their annual convention this weekend struggled with balancing how to stick to their values while also reconnecting with voters who were traditionally part of their base — notably working-class Americans. Seema Mehta and Hannah Fry in the Los Angeles Times Nicole Nixon and Lia Russell in the Sacramento Bee -- 06/02/25

Young Democrats offer lessons for their leaders at party convention -- Young Californians were disillusioned with Democrats last November. The solution? A simple message, a focus on cost-of-living and progressive causes, and a reckoning with the party’s age problem, say young Democrats. Yue Stella Yu Calmatters -- 06/02/25

Garofoli: California governor candidates going anti-Newsom: ‘Never stepped foot in the French Laundry’-- Nearly all the Democrats running to replace California Gov. Gavin Newsom share a common trait: They are defining themselves as the anti-Newsom. Joe Garofoli in the San Francisco Chronicle -- 06/02/25

Barabak: Yelling, finger-pointing and cursing galore as California Democrats gather near Disneyland -- Thousands of party faithful gathered in Anaheim to sift the ashes of 2024 and plot Democrats’ way forward. There were nearly as many prescriptions as there were delegates inside the convention hall. Mark Z. Barabak in the Los Angeles Times -- 06/02/25

Party Activists in California Aren’t Sold on a Harris Run for Governor -- Kamala Harris did not appear in person at a California state Democratic convention, leaving delegates to wonder how seriously she is considering running and whether it would be wise. Laurel Rosenhall in the New York Times -- 06/02/25

As Kamala Harris weighs a run for governor, some Dems are moving on -- As hundreds of California Democrats gathered at their party’s convention this weekend, a half-dozen gubernatorial candidates hustled from room to room courting them. The main potential contender who could upend the race — Kamala Harris — was nowhere to be seen. Maeve Reston in the Washington Post -- 06/02/25

Skelton: Newsom insults California voters by not funding Proposition 36 -- This just seems wrong: Californians overwhelmingly approved an anti-crime ballot measure in November. But our governor strongly opposed the proposition. So he’s not funding it. Gov. Gavin Newsom and Democratic legislative leaders, however, are now under pressure to fund the measure in a new state budget that’s being negotiated and must pass the Legislature by June 15. George Skelton in the Los Angeles Times -- 06/02/25

Zombie bills: Why California lawmakers bring back legislation governors kill -- CalMatters found dozens of examples of previously vetoed legislation returning in subsequent years. A twice-killed bill about driverless trucks exemplifies why. Ryan Sabalow Calmatters -- 06/02/25

‘Modest’ psychedelic research bill dies in California Senate committee -- It’s the latest setback in a series of failures for psychedelic decriminalization, legalization and research plans in California. Grant Stringer in the San Jose Mercury -- 06/02/25

 

California AG says federal cuts are actually helping legal fight with Trump: ‘They can’t keep up’ -- Democratic attorneys general fighting the Trump administration on an array of policy issues are seizing on the widespread cuts and resignations of federal employees, an effort that may be coming back to bite the White House. Shira Stein in the San Francisco Chronicle -- 06/02/25

Despite pro-Trump past, trans state champ’s mom gives daughter unwavering support -- Nereyda Hernandez, the mother of transgender track and field athlete AB Hernandez, 16, who was recently crowned a California state champion in girls triple jump and high jump, told the Chronicle in an exclusive interview that she used to be a supporter of President Donald Trump Noah Furtado in the San Francisco Chronicle -- 06/02/25

Street

‘A night of tragedy’: A young officer who loved Dodgers, snowboarding killed in Baldwin Park shootout -- A young Baldwin Park police officer who loved the Dodgers and was an avid snowboarder was killed in a shooting late Saturday that also left a civilian dead and another officer injured. Grace Toohey, Richard Winton, Matthew Ormseth, Ruben Vives and Roger Vincent in the Los Angeles Times -- 06/02/25

Guns

Supreme Court turns away a 2nd Amendment challenge to blue-state bans on assault weapons -- Justice Brett M. Kavanaugh refused for now to cast the key fourth vote, which was needed for the Supreme Court to hear the case. The case tested the reach of the 2nd Amendment and its “right to keep and bear arms.” David G. Savage in the Los Angeles Times Adam Liptak in the New York Times -- 06/02/25

Climate

Could this major California city see mass ‘abandonment’? New risk model predicts just that -- The flood plains of Sacramento are a geologic world away from the more cinematic California of coastal crags and lofty peaks. Yet that sometimes overlooked region could be home to one of California’s great disasters waiting to happen, according to a February report from First Street, a prominent climate risk prediction firm. Aseem Shukla in the San Francisco Chronicle -- 06/02/25

CEQA

After half a century, California legislators on the verge of overhauling a landmark environmental law -- Long celebrated and derided, the California Environmental Quality Act is facing its strongest overhaul in generations. Buoyed by national criticism that the state can no longer build sufficient housing and public infrastructure, Gov. Gavin Newsom and lawmakers said now is the time for major changes. Liam Dillon in the Los Angeles Times -- 06/02/25

Workplace

Disney to cut hundreds of employees in latest round of layoffs -- Walt Disney Co. launched another deep round of layoffs on Monday, notifying several hundred Disney employees in the U.S. and abroad that their jobs were being eliminated amid an increasingly difficult economic environment for traditional television. Meg James in the Los Angeles Times -- 06/02/25

Will Trump’s ‘no tax on tips’ plan help or hurt restaurants? -- A federal proposal to eliminate income taxes on tips is dividing restaurants around the country, portending a potential boon for the industry’s more than two million tipped workers but a blow for their non-tipped counterparts. Elena Kadvany in the San Francisco Chronicle -- 06/02/25

Rep. Ro Khanna, local labor unions denounce federal layoffs -- Khanna says many workers are afraid to publicly talk about their situation. Stephanie Lam in the San Jose Mercury -- 06/02/25

HIV

Feds’ abrupt cutoff of HIV prevention funds threatens decades of progress, S.F. providers say -- Leaders in HIV care in San Francisco and across the country say their critical efforts to stop new infections are under attack by a Trump administration that already has cut several key federal programs and now appears to be withholding money meant to go specifically toward prevention. Erin Allday in the San Francisco Chronicle -- 06/02/25

Wildfire

Millions of Californians will need to change how they landscape their homes -- Californians living in fire-prone areas can expect to make radical changes to the landscaping surrounding their homes in the coming years. Impending state rules will focus on what's called Zone Zero, which is the defensible space that extends 5 feet from the outer walls of a house or from the edge of an attached wood deck. Julie Johnson and Stephanie Zhu in the San Francisco Chronicle -- 06/02/25

‘Crisis’: S.F. fire chief says city’s aging fleet could limit capacity to fight major blazes -- San Francisco’s aging and limited fleet of fire trucks and engines could restrict firefighters’ ability to quell the blazes that could rip through the city after a major earthquake, the city’s fire chief said. Maliya Ellis in the San Francisco Chronicle -- 06/02/25

Rooftop Solar

Groups head to CA Supreme Court, seeking to upend solar rules -- In a few days, three environmental groups — including one from San Diego — get their chance to try to persuade the California Supreme Court to overturn a controversial rooftop solar policy issued by the California Public Utilities Commission nearly three years ago. Rob Nikolewski in the San Diego Union Tribune -- 06/02/25

Education

Could phonics solve California’s reading crisis? Inside the push for sweeping changes -- California’s reading wars may finally be over. After decades of debate over how to teach reading, a new bill aims to use phonics to solve the state’s literacy crisis. Jenny Gold, Kate Sequeira, Allen J. Schaben in the Los Angeles Times -- 06/02/25

State’s school awards dinner at Disneyland comes with hefty price tag -- California schools that have significantly improved student achievement will be honored in a ceremony hosted by the California Department of Education at Disneyland on Friday, but the $500 per person ticket price has some superintendents fuming. Diana Lambert EdSource -- 06/02/25

At Cal State LA’s newest college campus in Chino, incarcerated men find a second chance -- An inaugural cohort of over 60 students will work towards their bachelor's degrees at a new, first-of-its-kind college campus inside the California Institution for Men in Chino. Victoria Ivie in the Orange County Register -- 06/02/25

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Trump and Allies Sell Domestic Policy Bill With Falsehoods -- President Trump has sought to assuage some lawmakers’ concerns over the bill’s price tag and cuts to Medicaid with inaccurate claims. Linda Qiu, Jamie Leventhal in the New York Times Glenn Kessler in the Washington Post -- 06/02/25

DHS removes list of 'sanctuary' cities after sheriffs push back on non-compliant label -- The U.S. Department of Homeland Security removed a list of "sanctuary" states, cities and counties from its website following sharp criticism from a sheriffs' association that said a list of "non-compliant" sheriffs could severely damage the relationship between the Trump administration and law enforcement. Ted Hesson Reuters Ginger Adams Otis in the Wall Street Journal -- 06/02/25

Trump Aides Insist That Tariffs Will Remain, Even After Court Ruling -- One official said that the president is unlikely to delay his initial 90-day pause on some of his highest rates. Tony Romm and Alan Rappeport in the New York Times -- 06/02/25

Trump Amplifies Outlandish Robot Biden Conspiracy Theory -- President Trump reposted another user’s false claim that the former president had been “executed” in 2020 and replaced by a robotic clone. Zolan Kanno-Youngs in the New York Times -- 06/02/25

Musk and DOGE are a metaphor for early months of Trump’s administration -- Trump’s initial weeks have featured big promises, lots of drama, disruption, mistakes, directional shifts and business far from finished. Dan Balz in the Washington Post -- 06/02/25

Why Trump is really going after Harvard -- If the US’s oldest university bends the knee, the door to authoritarianism opens and democracy fades, experts warn. David Smith The Guardian -- 06/02/25

Can the ‘Abundance Agenda’ Save the Democrats? -- A raging political fad has taken over the Democratic Party, coalescing politicians, activists and rank-and-file partisans around an unlikely message: The government is broken. Molly Ball in the Wall Street Journal -- 06/02/25

Budget head Vought floats impoundment to sidestep Congress on DOGE cuts -- The White House is weighing options like impoundment to formalize DOGE's spending cuts without going through Congress, Office of Management and Budget Director Russell Vought said Sunday. Avery Lotz Axios -- 06/02/25

DOGE vowed to make government more ‘efficient’ — but it’s doing the opposite -- New procedures and requirements — some implemented in the name of improving operations — are slowing down federal agencies. Hannah Natanson in the Washington Post -- 06/02/25

Critics warn of loyalty test in new White House hiring guidelines -- New White House hiring guidelines sent out to federal agencies last week include what looks like a presidential loyalty test, say current and former federal employees and Trump administration critics. Emily Peck Axios -- 06/02/25

 

California Policy and Politics Sunday

Baldwin Park shooting: 1 officer killed, another wounded -- At a news conference early Sunday morning, the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department said they were investigating a double homicide after a man fatally shot both a Baldwin Park police officer and another man. The second victim, who was not identified, was found dead from apparent gunshot wounds. The suspect was wounded and has been taken into custody. Rebecca Ellis, Matthew Ormseth, Ruben Vives and Richard Winton in the Los Angeles Times -- 06/01/25

 

Tim Walz tells Harris’ home-state Dems that 2024 was a ‘primal scream’ -- Tim Walz on Saturday delivered blunt advice to fellow Democrats in an address to party activists and officials: “We’ve got to find some goddamn guts to fight for working people.” Blake Jones Politico -- 06/01/25

Sen. Cory Booker fires up crowd at California Democratic Party Convention -- The New Jersey senator delivered a truncated speech that mirrored many points he made during his April record-setting 25-hour speech on the U.S. Senate floor. Linh Tat in the Orange County Register -- 06/01/25

CA 120: For California Dems, will the past be prologue? -- While nationally we have heard that Democratic voters are frustrated with the Democratic party, and we have found dissatisfaction in California, the voters surveyed still seemed strongly supportive of Democrats in the upcoming midterm elections, with results that closely match what we saw heading into the 2018 election. Paul Mitchell Capitol Weekly -- 06/01/25

There will soon be a ‘mayor of L.A. County.’ How much power should come with the job? -- Soon, the most powerful Los Angeles County politician won’t be the mayor of L.A. It won’t be a county supervisor. It will be the elected chief executive. Rebecca Ellis and David Zahniser in the Los Angeles Times -- 06/01/25

Smolens: California gas prices could be big election issue in 2026 -- The price of gasoline in California is regularly the highest in the nation, as it was last week. That makes pain at the pump a ready-made, high-profile election issue, though sometimes more so than others. The 2026 election may be one of those times. Michael Smolens in the San Diego Union Tribune -- 06/01/25

 

After nearly 6,000 California prisoners falsely tested positive for opioids, officials launch sweeping review -- The California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation is reviewing hundreds of state parole hearings to see if any inmates who were denied parole were rejected because of faulty drug tests. Salvador Hernandez in the Los Angeles Times -- 06/01/25

‘Prove the haters wrong’: How one California community college student strives to overcome homelessness -- Jakob Conry is the type of college student who always takes a seat at the front of the class. He’s eager to answer professors’ questions and lead discussions, especially during courses for his political science degree at San Jose City College. Ethan Varian in the San Jose Mercury -- 06/01/25

L.A. wildfire victims uncertain about returning to their burned neighborhoods -- A new survey of victims of the Palisades and Eaton fires shows most would like to return to their old neighborhoods, but they’re worried that government officials can’t make it happen soon enough. Roger Vincent in the Los Angeles Times -- 06/01/25

Damaged engines didn’t affect Palisades firefight. But they point to a larger problem -- After the Palisades fire ignited, top brass at the Los Angeles Fire Department were quick to say that they were hampered by broken fire engines and a lack of mechanics to fix them. Alene Tchekmedyian in the Los Angeles Times -- 06/01/25

In areas near January’s fires, rent is climbing faster than in rest of county -- In ZIP codes within three miles of the Palisades fire, rent increased 4.8% from December to April, according to the analysis. Within three miles of the Eaton fire that destroyed swaths of Altadena, rent jumped 5.2%. Phi Do and Andrew Khouri in the Los Angeles Times -- 06/01/25

Wildfire smoke exposure may shorten lung cancer survival -- Exposure to wildfire smoke may increase lung cancer patients' risk of dying from their disease, particularly among non-smokers, but the effect may be mitigated by certain cancer treatments, according to a large California study presented at a major medical meeting on Saturday. Nancy Lapid Reuters -- 06/01/25

Air quality advisory after flaring, smoke at Richmond Chevron refinery -- Chevron’s Richmond refinery flared again Saturday afternoon, the third time in May, sending a plume of smoke into the air. Chevron said on social media around 3 p.m. that it was working to stop the flaring, but that no emergency response was needed. The fuel company had acknowledged flaring just over a week earlier, on May 22, and also on May 5. Christian Leonard in the San Francisco Chronicle -- 06/01/25

 

Angry San Francisco parents push back on SFUSD ethnic studies: ‘Ideology over education’ -- Angry parents and a national education organization are pushing back on the San Francisco school district’s ethnic studies curriculum, which they argue is divisive and promotes progressive activism. Jill Tucker in the San Francisco Chronicle -- 06/01/25

Transgender track athlete wins gold in California state championships despite Trump threat -- AB Hernandez, a 16-year-old junior at Jurupa Valley High School, won gold in girls’ triple jump and high jump, and silver in girls’ long jump. President Trump had ordered state officials to block Hernandez from competing and said he would cut off federal funding to California if they did not. Kevin Rector and Steve Galluzzo in the Los Angeles Times -- 06/01/25

 

California pioneered modern gang surveillance. Trump may be exploiting it --Six years before he was wrongly deported to a foreign prison over unproven gang ties, Kilmar Abrego Garcia got a firsthand lesson in American gang intelligence. Raheem Hosseini in the San Francisco Chronicle -- 06/01/25

Trump administration adds Huntington Beach to its list of ‘sanctuary jurisdictions defying federal immigration law’ -- ncluded on the Trump administration’s list of jurisdictions it alleges are violating federal immigration law is a bit of a head-scratcher: Huntington Beach. Kaitlyn Schallhorn, Michael Slaten, Hanna Kang in the Orange County Register -- 06/01/25

COVID

The last COVID surge ended eight months ago. Is a summer spike coming? -- “COVID is well behind us,” Gov. Gavin Newsom declared at a news conference in late May while discussing his return-to-office mandate for state workers. But recent data tells a different story. Area doctors and experts say another COVID surge is likely on the way this summer. Harriet Blair Rowan in the San Jose Mercury Angela Rodriguez in the Sacramento Bee -- 06/01/25

Stan the Man

To Sacramento, Stan Atkinson was the face of news. To his daughter, he was ‘Pop’ -- Stan Atkinson was seemingly larger than life. Sacramento Bee reporter Bob Sylva called the longtime Sacramento news anchor “the man who owns Sacramento” in a 1986 profile. It stuck. Sean Campbell in the Sacramento Bee -- 06/01/25

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Travel disruptions fueled by Trump policies may culminate at peak summer season -- International visits to California are expected to drop by 9.2% through the year, according to one estimate. Reported bookings around Yosemite National Park were down 50% leading into Memorial Day weekend. Michael Wilner in the Los Angeles Times -- 06/01/25

It’s Summer Vacation Time. Tourists Are Saying No to America -- Overseas travelers are demonstrating their ire at the U.S. by taking their tourism dollars elsewhere. Chelsey Dulaney and Chao Deng in the Wall Street Journal -- 06/01/25

It’s called the Library of Congress. But Trump claims it’s his -- The Trump White House has a new target in its campaign to expand executive power: the Library of Congress. Never mind the name — administration lawyers are now arguing that the main research library of the legislative branch doesn’t actually belong to Congress at all. Meryl Kornfield and Hannah Natanson in the Washington Post -- 06/01/25

Wall Street warns Trump aides the GOP tax bill could jolt bond markets -- Wall Street bankers and executives are privately warning the Trump administration that the tax bill moving through Congress could stoke investor anxiety about rising deficits, push up U.S. borrowing costs and damage the broader economy, according to more than a dozen people familiar with the matter. Andrew Ackerman and Jeff Stein in the Washington Post -- 06/01/25

How the Supreme Court Made Legal Immigrants Vulnerable to Deportation -- The government knows their names. Their fingerprints have been scanned into government computers. The Department of Homeland Security knows where most of them live, because the immigrants in question — more than 500,000 of them — reside in the United States legally. Hamed Aleaziz in the New York Times -- 06/01/25

Trump’s Proposed Budget Would Cut a Major Ecology Program -- From bee science to understanding the impact of a warming world on plant life, here’s what the Ecosystems Mission Area does. Rebecca Dzombak in the New York Times -- 06/01/25

Democratic Party is at risk of becoming ‘roadkill,’ warns Tim Walz -- The Minnesota governor unleashed harsh language during appearances this weekend, in the clearest signs yet that he is weighing a bid for the Democratic presidential nomination in 2028. Maeve Reston and Sabrina Rodriguez in the Washington Post -- 06/01/25

In South Carolina, Wes Moore urges Democrats to be ‘impatient’ amid 2028 buzz -- Moore, a potential 2028 presidential contender, told party leaders in this early primary state to mimic how quickly Trump implemented his agenda to score Democratic wins. Erin Cox and Sabrina Rodriguez in the Washington Post -- 06/01/25

Migrants criminally charged after failing to register with U.S. government -- The first prosecutions came just days after authorities on April 11 resurrected a federal registration requirement, used during World War II, to meet the goals of an executive order from President Donald Trump. Jeremy Roebuck and Marianne LeVine in the Washington Post -- 06/01/25

"White With Fear" film examines the "white fear industrial complex" -- "White With Fear," set to begin streaming on Tuesday (June 3), examines the origins of white grievance in the U.S. and how it contributed to the rollback of decades of civil rights gains. Russell Contreras Axios -- 06/01/25

‘Going to increase prices on everybody’: US energy department workers sound alarm over cuts -- Workers at the US Department of Energy say cuts and deregulations are undermining the ability for the department to function and will result in significant energy cost hikes for consumers. Michael Sainato The Guardian -- 06/01/25

Want to see where Trump’s tariffs are leading US business? Look at Georgia -- The political swing state has a $900bn economy, with hospitality, industrial manufacturing – and movies. George Chidi The Guardian -- 06/01/25