California Policy and Politics Saturday

Trump prosecutor in L.A. pushing unusual public search for voter fraud before count is in -- Essayli’s actions conflict with formal Justice Department guidance that says federal prosecutors should not publicly weigh in on allegations of election fraud while an election count is still occurring. Kevin Rector, James Queally and Brittny Mejia in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 6/13/26

Justice Department approves Paramount’s acquisition of Warner Bros. -- The deal, which would upend the Hollywood ecosystem by combining two historic rival studios, is opposed by many in the entertainment industry who fear it could lead to mass layoffs, among other concerns. Yasmin Khorram Politico Meg James in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 6/13/26

California Legislature in standoff with DMV over sharing driver license data with other states -- California lawmakers are holding up money the Newsom administration requested for a nationwide driver license database over concerns that the information could lead to deportations. Khari Johnson and Wendy Fry Calmatters -- 6/13/26

Democrats blame the party, each other and themselves in CA-40 June primary shutout -- GOP Reps. Ken Calvert and Young Kim are set to advance in a district designed to be a stronghold for Republicans. But Democratic voters and candidates say CA-40 isn't a lost cause. Kaitlyn Schallhorn, Jeff Horseman in the Orange County Register$ -- 6/13/26

Gov. Gavin Newsom fined $31,500 by state watchdog for late reporting of $5.5 million in behested payments tied to LA wildfires -- Gov. Gavin Newsom has agreed to pay a $31,500 fine after California’s political watchdog agency found he’d missed deadlines to report more than $5.5 million in donations made by major corporations at his behest, largely tied to recovery efforts for the 2025 Los Angeles wildfires. Grace Hase in the San Jose Mercury$ -- 6/13/26

As World Cup crowds descend on Bay Area, health officials watch for outbreaks -- Biggest health risks may be stomach bugs and respiratory viruses, not ebola or hantavirus. Grant Stringer in the San Jose Mercury$ -- 6/13/26

Gas

San Francisco is about to roll out a far-reaching new rule for major home renovations -- Starting July 1, most property owners seeking permits for gut-level renovations that also replace major mechanical systems, such as water heaters and furnaces, will be required to ditch natural gas and install fully electric systems. Brooke Park in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 6/13/26

Workplace

ServiceNow’s CEO said no layoffs. Then fired 63 employees in San Diego -- Under pressure from shareholders, the company announced it would lay off workers and replace jobs with AI. Noelle Harff in the San Diego Union Tribune -- 6/13/26

DGA’s board throws support behind tentative contract with major studios -- The Directors Guild of America’s national board on Friday unanimously recommended its membership vote in favor of a four-year contract with the major studios that would increase wages, boost contributions to its health plan and establish guardrails surrounding AI technology. Wendy Lee in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 6/13/26

Tahoe

Tahoe’s famously clear water is getting cloudier each summer — and scientists aren’t sure why -- To the throngs of visitors who’ll flock to Lake Tahoe’s shores this summer, the famously crystalline waters may not appear as clear as they remember. That’s because the lake is getting cloudier this time of year. Gregory Thomas in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 6/13/26

Education

Inside college AI cheating wars: extreme surveillance, false accusations, jarring confusion -- In one UCLA professor’s classes, students say they took finals on camera with mirrors behind them and arms crossed or hands behind their heads under strict anti-AI rules. Jaweed Kaleem in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 6/13/26

Also

Carl Nolte: After 65 years of covering the world, a Native Son says goodbye -- This weekend marks the 65th anniversary of my first day at the San Francisco Chronicle. It has been a lifetime of newspapering, but now it’s time to step away. This is my last column. Carl Nolte in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 6/13/26

Lopez: From the scene of South L.A.’s erupting sidewalks, 5 questions for Bass and Raman -- Spencer Pratt tapped into a lack of faith in elected officials and simmering frustration with City Hall. The city is fixing about 600 sidewalks each year, the backlog of requested repairs stands at about 30,000. Steve Lopez in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 6/13/26

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Trump’s name is gone from the Kennedy Center’s facade, according to a top official at the arts venue -- The letters spelling out President Donald Trump’s name on the facade of the Kennedy Center are now gone, the executive director of the performing arts venue said in a legal filing Saturday with the court that had ordered the removal. Steven Sloan Associated Press -- 6/13/26

What to know about a possible deal to end the Iran war -- Pakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif said Saturday that a deal aimed at ending the war in the Middle East is closer than ever before and expected to be finalized within 24 hours. Pakistan is preparing for the electronic signing of the agreement, followed by technical-level talks next week. Munir Ahmed, Will Weissert, Sam Mednick Associated Press -- 6/13/26

Judge Blocks Trump’s ‘Anti-Weaponization’ Fund, Seeks Assurances It’s Dead -- A federal judge on Friday stopped the Trump administration from proceeding with a $1.8 billion “anti-weaponization fund,” saying she wasn’t satisfied with the government’s assurances that the fund has been abandoned. Louise Radnofsky in the Wall Street Journal$ -- 6/13/26

Judge orders Trump administration to restore national park signage on climate change, slavery -- A federal judge has ordered the Trump administration to restore signs related to topics such as climate change, slavery and Indigenous and LGBTQ+ history that were removed under an executive order to purge language at national parks that allegedly cast America in a negative light. Clara Harter in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 6/13/26

Trump’s inexperienced federal prosecutors are running into trouble in court -- A handful of the president’s picks for U.S. attorney posts have been disqualified, reprimanded or seen their cases fall apart. Erica Orden Politico -- 6/13/26

At 80, Trump Is Everywhere and Showing Signs of Age -- By making the president an omnipresent figure, White House advisers are surfacing both vigor and flubs. Annie Linskey in the Wall Street Journal$ -- 6/13/26

 

California Policy and Politics Friday

Spencer Pratt appears to concede election in aggressive video threatening Bass and Raman -- In a three-minute video, Pratt said that the “campaign portion of my mission to save Los Angeles is coming to a close.” The video has the first extended comments Pratt has made publicly since AP declared Karen Bass and Nithya Raman would be in the Nov. 3 runoff for mayor. Noah Goldberg in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 6/12/26

SpaceX’s IPO delivers a windfall for California tech titans, workers — and could juice state coffers -- SpaceX shares surged as much as 30% on Friday, reaching over $2.25 trillion in market capitalization and making Elon Musk the world’s first trillionaire. Though it’s now headquartered in Texas, SpaceX still has many ties to California and the Bay Area. Roland Li in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 6/12/26

 

California Democrats threaten to block Newsom priorities over imperiled climate deal -- Gov. Gavin Newsom endorsed new carbon market rules that could drastically shrink the state’s funding for climate projects, threatening the spending deal he struck with legislators last year. Senate Democrats aren’t having it. Alejandro Lazo and Yue Stella Yu Calmatters Stephen Hobbs and Andrew Graham in the Sacramento Bee$ -- 6/12/26

Poll shows Becerra with big early advantage over Hilton in California governor’s race -- Republican Steve Hilton advanced this week to California’s November governor’s race, but the first public look at his matchup with Democrat Xavier Becerra shows the former political commentator starting the general election at a steep disadvantage. John Woolfolk in the San Jose Mercury$ -- 6/12/26

Primary election results show Prop 50 is boosting Democrats in California races -- Months after California Democrats redrew congressional boundaries through Proposition 50 to win more House seats, the state’s primary election has offered an early verdict. The strategy is paying off. Mathew Miranda in the Sacramento Bee$ -- 6/12/26

Gavin Newsom’s race to block a billionaire tax -- Gavin Newsom and powerful Democratic-aligned groups are racing to kill a proposed wealth tax on California billionaires, including going to extraordinary lengths to isolate the union leader championing one of the nation’s most controversial ballot measures. Jeremy B. White Politico -- 6/12/26

Hunter Biden defends Graham Platner on Newsom podcast -- Hunter Biden thinks Graham Platner is getting a raw deal. Jeremy B. White Politico Lia Russell in the Sacramento Bee$ -- 6/12/26

Bass carried more Latino neighborhoods than Raman and Pratt combined, precinct data show -- Karen Bass carried 35 Latino-majority neighborhoods in the June 2 election, compared to seven for Nithya Raman and just one for Spencer Pratt. Bass and Raman both courted the Latino vote, with Bass carrying 46% more precincts this year than in the 2022 mayoral primary. Noah Goldberg, Melissa Gomez and Sandhya Kambhampati in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 6/12/26

LA Dems are nursing a post-Spencer Pratt hangover -- Democrats are bracing for a bruising race between Nithya Raman and Karen Bass. Daniel Miller and Melanie Mason Politico -- 6/12/26

Unfounded claims of homeless voter fraud roil L.A. We went to Skid Row for answers -- After Spencer Pratt fell out of the L.A. mayor’s race, unfounded claims that homeless Angelenos’ ballots were used to rig the race have spread widely on social media. The Times interviewed election experts — and 20 residents on Skid Row who said they had not heard of anyone offering money to vote for a specific candidate. Andrew Khouri and Alene Tchekmedyian in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 6/12/26

Warning of cuts to medical services, L.A. health officials ask state for emergency funds -- The Los Angeles County Department of Health Services has joined a chorus of California hospitals and health systems lobbying the state for a $500-million emergency payment to public hospitals bracing for massive financial losses. Corinne Purtill in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 6/12/26

Officials warn a California ballot proposal changing voting thresholds on local tax initiatives could cost San Jose millions -- San Jose officials warn a statewide initiative could void the city’s Measure E property transfer tax, threatening a critical funding source for housing and homelessness. Ryan Macasero in the San Jose Mercury$ -- 6/12/26

Walters: California has a top-ranked economy. It’s also one of the nation’s most unequal -- California’s next governor — most likely former Attorney General Xavier Becerra — will inherit a raft of knotty, unresolved issues. Dan Walters Calmatters -- 6/12/26

 

In Cesar Chavez’s Labor Union, Women Often Worked in Fear -- Many of the women who helped lead the fight for Latino civil rights say they were quietly waging their own battles with harassment, misogyny and sexual assault inside the powerful United Farm Workers union. Sarah Hurtes and Manny Fernandez in the New York Times$ -- 6/12/26

ICE

A year after ICE swept L.A., fewer raids but harsher rules squeeze immigrants nationwide -- A year after launching immigration raids across Los Angeles, the Trump administration has shifted to a quieter strategy: using rules and red tape to push immigrants to leave the country. The tactics employed by the administration target not just undocumented immigrants, but those who are in the country legally. Andrea Castillo in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 6/12/26

Workplace

Video game giant Ubisoft cuts more jobs in San Francisco -- Video game company Ubisoft plans to permanently lay off 93 workers at its San Francisco office, according to a state filing. Aidin Vaziri in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 6/12/26

ServiceNow, Salesforce, other tech firms reveal more Bay Area job cuts -- Several tech firms disclosed plans to chop hundreds of jobs in the Bay Area in fresh disclosures that show the pace of layoffs this year is running ahead of last year’s totals. George Avalos in the San Jose Mercury$ -- 6/12/26

As Paramount chases $111-billion Warner Bros. acquisition, David Ellison sheds his theater chain -- The Ellison family-controlled Harbor Lights Entertainment has sold its Showcase Cinemas theater chain to a major European cinema group in a $30-million deal. Cerys Davies in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 6/12/26

AI

AI is cutting hours of office work, but also creating a new kind of busywork -- A new survey of individuals using AI found it made them more productive, saving each roughly 11 hours per week. But at the same time, the workers on average have to spend more than six hours “botsitting,” checking the AI output, fixing mistakes and rerunning the prompt. Nilesh Christopher in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 6/12/26

Housing

Mayor Lurie drops plan meant to kick-start housing in favor of taxing foreclosed real estate -- Mayor Daniel Lurie and Supervisor Bilal Mahmood are dropping a controversial proposal that would have cut transfer taxes on high-end real estate transactions and instead will focus on a previously planned part of the plan that would tax foreclosures. J.K. Dineen in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 6/12/26

Street

Pasadena police officer shoots colleague during ‘horseplay’ in department parking lot, chief says -- A Pasadena police officer shot and wounded a colleague in the shoulder inside the department’s parking garage last September during an incident the police chief described as “unsafe, out-of-policy horseplay.” Richard Winton in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 6/12/26

Also

Tide sweeps 2 sleeping beachgoers into ocean near Santa Cruz -- Two sleeping beachgoers were rescued from the water near Bonny Doon Beach after they were swept out by the tide, authorities said. Aidin Vaziri in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 6/12/26

Massive Tracy warehouse fire could take four days to put out, chief says -- The fire destroyed the 1 million-square-foot facility and sent embers downwind that started several smaller fires in the area and threatened a nearby FedEx facility. Aldo Toledo, Lucy Hodgman, Megan Fan Munce in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 6/12/26

S.F. to see highest-ever summer high tide, flooding — and the forecast just got worse -- The highest summer tide on record is predicted in San Francisco Bay this weekend — a direct consequence of global warming and a surging El Niño — prompting the National Weather Service to tell residents to expect coastal flooding that’s unusual for this time of year. Anthony Edwards in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 6/12/26

Would you like gummies with that? Drive-thru marijuana proposal moves forward -- In certain parts of the U.S., you can buy a surprising number of things other than food from a drive-thru window: Guns in Texas, weddings in Nevada and margaritas in Florida, to name a few. Lynn La Calmatters -- 6/12/26

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Trump’s Iran Deal Still Has to Get Past the Revolutionary Guard -- Iran’s hard-line security officials are more concerned with denying the U.S. a victory than with ending the war. Summer Said, Benoit Faucon and Jared Malsin in the Wall Street Journal$ -- 6/12/26

Trump’s missile diplomacy strategy backfires -- Four months into the war — with oil held hostage in the Strait of Hormuz and Tehran refusing to make key concessions on its nuclear program — the president upped the ante with two days of back-and forth air strikes with the country. He threatened to take “total control” of Iran’s oil industry on Thursday and then canceled the scheduled attacks — all before lunch ended in Washington. Paul McLeary, Nahal Toosi and Jack Detsch Politico -- 6/12/26

How Senate Democrats are planning to push back on potential election interference -- Senate Democrats are war-gaming legal maneuvers and messaging strategies to thwart potential efforts by President Donald Trump or foreign actors to influence the results of the midterms. Lisa Kashinsky Politico -- 6/12/26

Trump and Allies Are Working on Plan to ‘Expunge’ Impeachments -- President Trump and his allies have discussed pushing lawmakers to pass a resolution aimed at voiding his first-term impeachments, according to people familiar with the matter. Annie Linskey, Olivia Beavers and Natalie Andrews in the Wall Street Journal$ -- 6/12/26

Justice Dept. Pushes Limits of Its Power Over State Elections -- Speaking to a conservative radio host on Monday, the top federal prosecutor in Los Angeles made an unusually pointed prediction that cast doubt on the results of California’s primary races, even as votes were still being counted. Devlin Barrett in the New York Times$ -- 6/12/26

Postal Service Seeks to Block Mail Ballots in States Resisting Trump Demands -- The U.S. Postal Service has proposed a new rule that would allow it to refuse to deliver mail ballots in states that don’t turn over voter rolls to the federal government. Adam Sella and Nick Corasaniti in the New York Times$ -- 6/12/26