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A Snapshot of California Public Policy and Politics
 
 
 
 
 

California Policy and Politics Friday

President Appeals to Supreme Court After Losing Bid to Curtail Food Stamp Aid -- In its appeal to the Supreme Court, the Trump administration said that the lower court order forcing it to send full food stamp payments “makes a mockery of the separation of powers.” Tony Romm in the New York Times$ David A. Lieb, Michael Casey, Scott Bauer and Mike Catalini Associated Press -- 11/07/25

‘I’m wary about this president’: California AG sounds warning about midterm security -- California’s top law enforcement official warned Thursday that President Donald Trump could wield federal power to manipulate the 2026 midterm elections, describing a “disturbing pattern” of efforts to sow distrust about ballot security and interfere with states’ voting procedures. Kyle Cheney Politico -- 11/07/25

How Gavin Newsom built an online influencer machine --When Gavin Newsom needed to hype his redistricting ballot measure, he did it not through MSNBC hits, but livestreamed sit-downs with Substack sensation Heather Cox Richardson, YouTube star Brian Tyler Cohen and TikTok celebrity Mrs. Frazzled. Melanie Mason Politico -- 11/07/25

Poll: Here’s who Democrats think is their leader -- The top response was “I don’t know,” or some similar variation. It made up over one-fifth (21 percent) of responses. “Nobody” garnered an additional 11 percent. Samuel Benson and Anna Wiederkehr Politico -- 11/07/25

 

FBI urges ICE agents to identify themselves after string of impersonators commit crimes -- Ever since the Trump immigration raids began in Los Angeles in June, local leaders and community activists have criticized agents for sometimes making it difficult to identify them as federal law enforcement officials or refusing to identify themselves at all. Now, an unexpected new group has expressed its own concerns: the FBI. Nathan Solis and Ruben Vives in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 11/07/25

What it’s like to visit the ICE detention center in Adelanto -- The facility, roughly 85 miles northeast of Los Angeles, is on a road splintered with cracks and potholes. Once there, some wait for hours to see their loved ones. Ryanne Mena in the LA Daily News -- 11/07/25

 

Up to 1,800 flights a day could be disrupted by airport cuts; California to be hard hit -- Five of the state’s airports — Los Angeles International Airport, Ontario International Airport, San Diego International Airport, Oakland San Francisco Bay Airport and San Francisco International Airport — will be targeted for cuts, according to a list reviewed by news outlets. Jenny Jarvie in the Los Angeles Times$ Aidin Vaziri, Rachel Swan in the San Francisco Chronicle$ George Avalos, Caelyn Pender in the San Jose Mercury$ Lori Weisberg in the San Diego Union Tribune$ -- 11/07/25

What Travelers Need to Know About the Coming Flight Reductions -- A day after the Trump administration announced it would cut 10 percent of air traffic at 40 of the busiest airports in the country, airlines, airports and travelers are scrambling to adjust their plans. Christine Chung, Claire Fahy and Gabe Castro-Root in the New York Times$ -- 11/07/25

 

California prepares for life without Nancy Pelosi -- There was a time, not too long ago, when California enjoyed power in Washington, D.C., befitting its status as the largest, most economically prosperous state in the country. Alexei Koseff in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 11/07/25

Pelosi had two announcement videos ready. Only one saw daylight -- Nancy Pelosi’s decision to retire was such a closely-held secret that she filmed two versions of the video she released on Thursday — one to tee up a reelection campaign and the other that she ultimately posted. Dustin Gardiner and Nicholas Wu Politico -- 11/07/25

Why Nancy Pelosi Stands Alone -- Rahm Emanuel on the political genius of the retiring former House speaker. Nicholas Wu Politico -- 11/07/25

Garofoli: Nancy Pelosi was no soaring communicator but a potent one. Six ‘Pelosi-isms’ explain why -- “She was always focused on the fact that you had to sell the American people on what you’re doing, and you needed effective messaging,” John Lawrence, her former chief of staff and the author of “Arc of Power: Inside Nancy Pelosi’s Speakership, 2005-2010,” told me. Joe Garofoli in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 11/07/25

Challenging Trump, Pelosi Made History -- The first and only woman to be speaker of the House also was the most powerful and prominent woman in Washington to effectively confront President Trump. Annie Karni in the New York Times$ -- 11/07/25

Barabak: Nancy Pelosi prided herself on cold calculation. She knew it was time -- Pelosi not only made history, becoming the first female speaker of the House. She became the party’s spine and its sinew, holding together the Democrats’ many warring factions and standing firm at times the more timorous were prepared to back down. Mark Z. Barabak in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 11/07/25

 

Republicans, including ‘cowardly’ Schwarzenegger, take heat for lopsided loss on Prop. 50 -- The state GOP chairwoman was urged to resign and former Republican Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger, who championed the creation of the state’s independent redistricting commission, was called “cowardly” by one top GOP leader for not being more involved in the campaign. Seema Mehta in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 11/07/25

Increasingly irrelevant, California’s Republican Party is even more isolated after Prop. 50 -- In recent years, California Republicans wielded far more influence in Congress than in the state Legislature, thanks to House Speaker Kevin McCarthy. But since his ouster, and now under Prop. 50 maps, the GOP is increasingly isolated. Maya C. Miller Calmatters -- 11/07/25

Could California’s Prop. 50 be scaled back? There’s already an effort to ask voters to limit the new maps to 2026 -- Orange County attorney James V. Lacy filed a proposal with the California attorney general’s office this week for an initiative that would scale back the mid-cycle congressional redistricting plan approved by voters this week. Kaitlyn Schallhorn in the Orange County Register$ -- 11/07/25

Senate rejects Schiff bid to force Trump to consult with Congress on Venezuela -- The Senate voted 51 to 49 Thursday against requiring President Donald Trump to get congressional consent to use U.S. military forces for what Sen. Adam Schiff called “an unauthorized war against Venezuela.” David Lightman in the Sacramento Bee$ -- 11/07/25

California lawmakers found money for these pet projects even as they slashed the budget -- Some of the earmarks raise concerns about legislative priorities in a difficult budget year, such as lawmakers spending millions from the general fund on museums, trails, parks and other amenities in wealthy communities. Ryan Sabalow Calmatters -- 11/07/25

Workplace

‘UC workers are going to end up homeless’: 86,000 University of California employees plan massive strike -- In what could become one of the largest labor actions in the University of California’s history, more than 86,000 nurses, health care professionals and campus workers — including those at UC San Francisco and UC Berkeley — plan to walk off the job this month, accusing the university of neglecting its lowest-paid employees while rewarding those at the top. Aidin Vaziri in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 11/07/25

 

Bad Bunny, ICE presence at Super Bowl spark dueling petitions topping 180,000 signatures -- More than 80,000 signatures have been collected for a petition to keep U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement out of Santa Clara during Super Bowl LX, amid controversy over halftime show headliner Bad Bunny. Zara Irshad in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 11/07/25

Waymo, Alphabet Sued for Bias After AI Allegedly Mislabels SF Doctor as Terrorist -- After two years of trying and failing to sign up for Waymo, friends inside the company told Dr. Nasser Mohamed his Middle Eastern Muslim name set off the AI identity screening. But Dr. Mohamed alleges he couldn’t get a human to correct the error. So now he’s suing the company and its corporate parent, Alphabet. Rachael Myrow KQED Rachel Swan in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 11/07/25

Wildfire

Federal prosecutors subpoena L.A. firefighter text messages -- A federal grand jury subpoena has been served on the Los Angeles Fire Department for firefighters’ text messages and other communications about smoke or hot spots in the area of the Jan. 1 Lachman brushfire, which reignited six days later into the massive Palisades fire, according to an internal department memo. Alene Tchekmedyian and Paul Pringle in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 11/07/25

California Fire Victims Urge State to Hold Insurers Accountable -- “We thought we could trust the system,” said a homeowner in Altadena whose insurance policy was canceled only months before the January fires destroyed his home. Katie Benner in the New York Times$ -- 11/07/25

Guaranteed income

Sacramento income program may guarantee $1K monthly to foster youth -- The funding stems from Measure L, a 2022 ballot initiative that allocates some revenue from taxes on cannabis operations to child and youth services. Mathew Miranda in the Sacramento Bee$ -- 11/07/25

Homeless

What veto drama and a Texas trip tell us about a potential shift in California’s homelessness strategy -- California is under pressure to embrace more temporary homeless shelters and programs that require sobriety, at the potential expense of long-term housing. Marisa Kendall Calmatters -- 11/07/25

HSR

Fed up with CA High-Speed Rail, Central Valley city says train can just ‘go around’ -- Frustrated by a proposed change that would keep high-speed rail running through Shafter at ground-level, the town’s leaders voted to reject the new plan with the mayor saying he’d rather see the train just “go around the city” than rip up local streets to create a series of underpasses and overpasses. Erik Galicia in the Fresno Bee -- 11/07/25

Climate

If Trump’s EPA abandons climate policy, could California take over on greenhouse gases? -- Legal experts, including a former federal official and UCLA professor, say California could go it alone if the federal government stops regulating greenhouse gases. One reason to try is to protect the state’s clean-car economy. Alejandro Lazo Calmatters -- 11/07/25

Education

Two words in UC Berkeley grant application have led to defunding of 50-year-old program -- The presence of two words — “equity” and “inclusion” — on page 50 of a 5-year-old grant application just killed a program at UC Berkeley that for half a century helped thousands of East Bay teens recognize that they could go to college and even pay for it. Nanette Asimov in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 11/07/25

Inflation

‘Do I need it?’ Groceries cost 20% to 40% more than before the pandemic. How San Diegans are making do -- Some have the resources to turn frugal shopping into a sport of sorts — a car that lets them buy in bulk, time to shop for deals, storage space, multiple grocery stores close to home. For others, strapped for space or time, the path to eating adequately while not overspending is more challenging. Roxana Popescu in the San Diego Union Tribune$ -- 11/07/25

Street

His insulin pump ran dry in a San Diego jail. Review board investigators find no misconduct in his death -- A year after the county medical examiner ruled Keith Bach’s death in the San Diego Central Jail a homicide due to neglect, questions persist over how the 63-year-old’s insulin pump — which he relied on to control his Type 1 diabetes — ran dry. Kelly Davis in the San Diego Union Tribune$ -- 11/07/25

Also

Walters: California’s pro-housing laws have failed to raise new home numbers -- California YIMBY, an organization founded eight years ago to promote housing construction in response to an ever-increasing gap between demand and supply, held a victory party in San Francisco recently. Dan Walters Calmatters -- 11/07/25

Mark Zuckerberg and Priscilla Chan are rethinking how they give -- Mark Zuckerberg and Dr. Priscilla Chan announced Thursday that they are restructuring their Chan Zuckerberg Initiative to direct most of its resources toward Biohub, their network of research centers focused on using artificial intelligence to accelerate breakthroughs in biology and medicine. Aidin Vaziri in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 11/07/25

Musk could become history's first trillionaire as Tesla shareholders approve giant pay package -- The vote is a resounding victory for Musk showing investors still have faith in him as Tesla struggles with plunging sales, market share and profits in no small part due to Musk himself. Bernard Condon Associated Press Becky Peterson in the Wall Street Journal$ Rebecca F. Elliott, Jack Ewing and Reid J. Epstein in the New York Times$ Faiz Siddiqui in the Washington Post$ -- 11/07/25

Supreme Court strips gender self-identification from U.S. passports -- Ruling means new documents, including renewals, will list name and gender at birth instead of current identity. Bob Egelko in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 11/07/25

POTUS 47

Emboldened Democrats Set to Block New GOP Proposal to End Shutdown -- Senate Democrats were expected to block a new GOP proposal aimed at ending a record-long government shutdown, digging in on their demands for extended healthcare subsidies after election wins this week emboldened the party. Siobhan Hughes in the Wall Street Journal$ -- 11/07/25

U.S. Consumer Confidence Slides in November -- Consumers’ moods dropped further in November, according to a monthly survey from the University of Michigan, continuing a slide that has worsened amid persistent price increases and an extended government shutdown. Matt Grossman in the Wall Street Journal$ -- 11/07/25

Trump, stung by Republican losses, stands his ground on affordability -- President Donald Trump on Thursday did not appear chastened by Tuesday’s election results, dismissing the cost-of-living concerns that appear to have animated voters across the country. Irie Sentner Politico -- 11/07/25

Here’s Where Trump’s Multiracial, Working-Class Coalition Is Fraying -- Across Virginia and New Jersey in their recent gubernatorial elections, the working-class, Hispanic and Black neighborhoods that helped return Donald Trump to the White House a year ago moved back toward the Democratic Party—even in areas that had swung heavily for him, a Wall Street Journal analysis found. Jack Gillum, John West and Peter Champelli in the Wall Street Journal$ -- 11/07/25

Trump blasts Pelosi after retirement announcement -- President calls former speaker ‘highly overrated,’ ‘evil,’ ‘corrupt’ as others praise her legacy. Sara DiNatale in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 11/07/25

Trump administration seeks emergency stay of court's order to fund SNAP -- U.S. District Court Judge John McConnell Jr. ordered the Trump administration to pay full SNAP benefits by Friday. Marcia Brown Politico -- 11/07/25

Judge orders Trump administration to pay full SNAP benefits -- The Trump administration is appealing the decision, which requires officials to send the money to millions of food stamp recipients by Friday. Marcia Brown and Hassan Ali Kanu Politico Lydia Wheeler and Sabrina Siddiqui in the Wall Street Journal$ Tony Romm in the New York Times$ Mariana Alfaro in the Washington Post$ -- 11/07/25

Canada’s Economy Starts to Buckle Under Trump’s Tariffs -- America’s second-largest trading partner is flirting with a recession and grappling with rising unemployment. Vipal Monga in the Wall Street Journal$ -- 11/07/25

Ford Considers Scrapping Electric Version of F-150 Truck -- Once hyped as a ‘smartphone that can tow,’ production of the money-losing EV pickup may be shut down for good. Sharon Terlep in the Wall Street Journal$ -- 11/07/25

Why Trump’s cuts to scientific research are a big win for China -- China is attracting American scientific talent, especially in STEM fields, partly due to funding cuts and immigration restrictions under President Donald Trump. Katrina Northrop and Rudy Lu in the Washington Post$ -- 11/07/25

Vance is the frontrunner for 2028, Rubio privately confides -- Secretary of State Marco Rubio is privately telling confidants that JD Vance is the frontrunner for the 2028 Republican nomination and that he’d support the vice president if he chose to run, according to two people close to the administration. Diana Nerozzi and Adam Wren Politico -- 11/07/25

 

California Policy and Politics Thursday

Nancy Pelosi will retire after historic 20-term career in Congress -- Nancy Pelosi — the first female speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives, the architect of the Affordable Care Act, and a top leader of the Democratic Party during some of its most stirring victories and darkest moments — will not seek reelection in 2026, she said Thursday. Joe Garofoli, Alexei Koseff in the San Francisco Chronicle$ Maya C. Miller Calmatters Kevin Rector in the Los Angeles Times$ David Lightman in the Sacramento Bee$ Dustin Gardiner and Nicholas Wu Politico Olivia Beavers and Natalie Andrews in the Wall Street Journal$ Heather Knight in the New York Times$ Paul Kane in the Washington Post$ -- 11/06/25

These are the top contenders to replace Nancy Pelosi in Congress -- The contest to replace Speaker Emerita Nancy Pelosi had begun before she announced her decision to retire Thursday. Now it’s likely to intensify quickly, becoming one of the highest-profile battles heading into the critical 2026 midterm election. Joe Garofoli, J.D. Morris in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 11/06/25

Newsom describes climate leadership plans, blasts Trump after Prop 50 win -- Gov. Gavin Newsom said Wednesday he’ll attend this month’s climate summit in Belém, Brazil, to demonstrate U.S. leadership as the Trump administration retreats from the fight against climate change. Kurtis Alexander in the San Francisco Chronicle$ Camille von Kaenel Politico -- 11/06/25

Gavin Newsom ‘light years ahead’ in 2028 Democratic field after Prop. 50 win -- Gov. Gavin Newsom has been looking for a way to win national attention. Proposition 50 puts him “light-years ahead.” Jeanne Kuang Calmatters -- 11/06/25

Republicans take stock of Newsom, a ‘Tier 1 Democrat’ after Prop 50 -- One Republican strategist said Newsom’s winning redistricting campaign in California transformed him into a top rival of Donald Trump,” while another conceded it had cemented him as a “Tier 1 Democrat.” Alex Gangitano and Alec Hernandez Politico -- 11/06/25

Redistricting pressure heats up after Prop 50’s passage: ‘All Democratic elected officials should take note’ -- The Democrats’ thumping victories Tuesday are piling new pressure on blue states to redraw their congressional maps to strengthen the party’s position ahead of the 2026 elections. Already, several states are forging ahead. Andrew Howard and Brakkton Booker Politico -- 11/06/25

California Republicans vow to continue fighting Prop 50 -- A grab bag of strategies for mitigating the Democratic gerrymander includes a federal lawsuit and a return to the ballot. Will McCarthy Politico -- 11/06/25

Gavin Newsom’s Proposition 50 just passed. Here’s what happens next -- California voters passed Gov. Gavin Newsom’s Proposition 50, which will tilt the state’s congressional districts toward Democrats in the 2026 election. Now comes the scramble: Who runs where? Maya C. Miller Calmatters -- 11/06/25

Will these six California GOP House members survive new districts? -- The new maps target areas held by Reps. Kevin Kiley and Doug LaMalfa in Northern California, Rep. David Valadao in the Central Valley, and Reps. Ken Calvert, Young Kim and Darrell Issa in Southern California. Dakota Smith, Hailey Wang in the Los Angeles Times$ Alexei Koseff in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 11/06/25

Proposition 50 wiped out Rep. Calvert’s district. He’ll run elsewhere -- Rep. Ken Calvert, a Republican whose current district was virtually eliminated in the new California redistricting map, said Wednesday he’ll seek re-election and run in the GOP-dominated 40th District. David Lightman in the Sacramento Bee$ Kaitlyn Schallhorn in the Orange County Register$ -- 11/06/25

Kevin Kiley says he’s running for re-election. He’s not sure where -- Reps. Kevin Kiley and Ami Bera slugging it out to win the Third District congressional seat? Maybe not. David Lightman in the Sacramento Bee$ -- 11/06/25

4 takeaways after Proposition 50’s big win in California -- Proposition 50’s big win Tuesday night is a political earthquake that is being felt nationally. Hannah Fry, Alex Wigglesworth, Connor Sheets and Jessica Garrison in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 11/06/25

Workplace

California backs down on AI laws so more tech leaders don’t flee the state -- The tactic appeared to have worked, activists said, because some politicians weakened or scrapped guardrails to mitigate AI’s biggest risks. Queenie Wong in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 11/06/25

Tech companies chop 100-plus more Bay Area jobs in new layoff rounds -- Two tech companies have decided to eliminate a combined 180 Bay Area jobs, adding to a growing tally of layoffs affecting the region, new state labor reports show. George Avalos in the San Jose Mercury$ -- 11/06/25

Unionized Starbucks baristas prepared to go on strike next week amid long contract standoff -- Unionized Starbucks baristas have voted overwhelmingly to authorize their leaders to call a strike as soon as next week if the coffee giant doesn’t make new proposals or they don’t see real progress in contract talks. Suhauna Hussain in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 11/06/25

ETS, once the SAT’s administrator, to lay off 757 workers in California -- Educational Testing Service, the company best known for developing the GRE and formerly administering the SAT, plans to lay off 757 employees in California by the end of the year, according to a state filing. Aidin Vaziri in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 11/06/25

Silicon Valley layoffs deepen as three more tech companies announce job cuts -- The wave of tech layoffs sweeping the Bay Area shows little sign of slowing, with new filings revealing job cuts at two major technology firms — Hewlett Packard Enterprise and Hitachi Vantara — along with smaller reductions at biotech firm Cepheid. Aidin Vaziri in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 11/06/25

Layoffs rise to recession-like levels through October, new report says -- Layoffs accelerated in October, pushing 2025 job cuts to levels typically seen in recessions, according to newly released data from Challenger, Gray & Christmas, a private firm that tracks workplace reductions. Abha Bhattarai in the Washington Post$ -- 11/06/25

Shutdown

SFO travel could worsen as U.S. plans 10% air traffic cut amid shutdown -- Travel through San Francisco International Airport could become even more chaotic this weekend as federal officials plan to cut nationwide air traffic by 10% if Congress fails to reach a deal to end the ongoing federal shutdown. Aidin Vaziri, Rachel Swan in the San Francisco Chronicle$ Karoun Demirjian in the New York Times$ Lori Aratani in the Washington Post$ -- 11/06/25

Wilfdire

Edison blacks out more customers to stop utility-sparked fires -- The massive outages have caused traffic accidents, disrupted medical care, disabled emergency communications and prompted state regulators to demand improved oversight. Melody Petersen in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 11/06/25

Education

State finds Oakland Unified created ‘discriminatory environment’ for Jewish students -- California’s Department of Education found merit in complaints of discrimination against Jewish students in the district. The attorney filing the complaints claims discrimination is rampant in the district; pro-Palestinian groups say the complaints conflate criticism of Israel with antisemitism. John Fensterwald EdSource -- 11/06/25

Street

As Bay Area tech companies rake in billions, brazen and sophisticated crews of bandits are taking a piece of the action -- Since at least 2020, police in the Bay Area have been attempting to stop a brazen Southern California heist crew that has made millions from dozens of nighttime burglaries and highway robberies, targeting shipments of tech industry hardware. Nate Gartrell in the San Jose Mercury$ -- 11/06/25

After injections kill an actor, ‘butt lady’ is sentenced for murder --Libby Adame was convicted in October of second-degree murder in the death of Cindyana Santangelo, whose credited television appearances included “Married ... With Children,” “ER” and “CSI: Miami.” Salvador Hernandez in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 11/06/25

Mexico’s president was groped on the street. Now she’s waging a war against rampant sexual harassment -- Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum was strolling through her city’s capital this week, heading from one government office to another, when she stopped to take selfies with a crowd of admirers. Kate Linthicum in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 11/06/25

Also

San Francisco residents could vote twice in 2026 on hiking ‘overpaid CEO’ tax -- San Francisco’s top business leaders could see their taxes increase under two potential 2026 ballot measures, one proposed by progressive supervisors and the other by a group of left-leaning organizations working with the city’s most powerful labor unions. Aldo Toledo in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 11/06/25

Meet the McOskers: How one South Bay family wields power at City Hall -- As Los Angeles city officials worked on an agreement to modernize the Convention Center, more than one member of the McOsker family was playing a key role. Noah Goldberg in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 11/06/25

He fell 40 feet on Yosemite’s El Capitan and dangled unconscious from a rope. A high-risk rescue began -- The injured climber would have to be airlifted off the cliff face via a risky helicopter extraction using special gear and techniques developed by Yosemite National Park’s heralded rescue team — YOSAR, for short — that are precisely orchestrated but rarely deployed. Gregory Thomas in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 11/06/25

POTUS 47

Is this the beginning of the end of the Trump era? -- The Democrats have been in crisis this year. Now the Republican Party appears to be fracturing as well as it prepares for Trump’s departure from the national stage. Michael Wilner in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 11/06/25

Donald Trump enters his lame duck era -- Republicans are starting to contend with the fact that the president will soon be gone, and they'll be fending for themselves. Meredith Lee Hill and Jennifer Scholtes Politico -- 11/06/25

What’s really concerning Republicans after Tuesday’s romp -- Trump’s former political adviser told Politico in an exclusive interview that the president plans to talk a lot more about about the cost of living as we turn in the new year. Dasha Burns and Diana Nerozzi Politico -- 11/06/25

Trump’s Tough Day at Supreme Court Puts Tariffs in Jeopardy -- President Trump’s global tariffs ran headlong into a skeptical Supreme Court on Wednesday, with justices across the spectrum expressing doubt that a 1970s emergency-powers law could be read to provide the president unilateral authority to remake the international economy and collect billions of dollars in import taxes without explicit congressional approval. Jess Bravin and Gavin Bade in the Wall Street Journal$ Josh Gerstein Politico Justin Jouvenal in the Washington Post$ -- 11/06/25

Trump’s Tariffs Are a Massive Money Grab. That’s Why They Are in Trouble -- The president has exercised tax and spending powers that belong to Congress. The Supreme Court might be ready to say ‘enough.’ Greg Ip in the Wall Street Journal$ -- 11/06/25