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California Policy and Politics Monday
Carvalho resigns as LAUSD superintendent amid federal investigation -- Los Angeles Unified schools Supt. Alberto Carvalho, who has been under FBI investigation for four months, resigned Sunday night as leader of the nation’s second-largest school system, bringing a breathtaking end to one of the district’s most consequential and high-profile tenures. Howard Blume in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 6/22/26
Boyle Heights fire enters sixth day with air quality warnings, schools relocating activities -- Several schools on Los Angeles’ east side will temporarily relocate to other locations this week due to the ongoing structure fire in the 1400 block of Los Palos Street that is spewing smoke and fumes into the surrounding community. Joseph Serna in the Los Angeles Times$ Erika I. Ritchie, Nathaniel Percy in the LA Daily News -- 6/22/26
In L.A., as in other U.S. cities, democratic socialists are poised to expand power at City Hall -- L.A. mayoral candidate Nithya Raman and city attorney hopeful Marissa Roy, both democratic socialists, are heading into the Nov. 3 general election on the heels of strong showings in the June 2 primary. If Raman and Roy win in November, it would underscore L.A.’s tilt to the left and the growing influence of the Democratic Socialists of America, which has four members on the City Council. Sandra McDonald in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 6/22/26
‘I got crushed’: AI giants are funding ad wars in races across the country -- One network of super PACs is linked to Anthropic, the other to OpenAI. The millions of dollars these groups have spent so far could be just a fraction of what they ultimately shell out to influence the 2026 midterm elections. Ben Wieder in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 6/22/26
New commission takes aim at California’s broken public defense system -- California is one of just two states that provides no money for the basic defense of poor people accused of crimes. Anat Rubin Calmatters -- 6/22/26
Bill to limit prison off-ramp for the mentally ill could soon head to Newsom -- A bill to tighten California’s rules on mental health diversion — a process that allows certain criminal defendants to avoid prison for arrests linked to mental illness — is now on the verge of being signed into law by Gov. Gavin Newsom. James Queally in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 6/22/26
Inside the revolving door: At San Diego County, staff turn to lobbying for private clients amid lax rules and limited bans -- Former employees are allowed to immediately start lobbying any part of the county. Other jurisdictions have far stricter rules. Lucas Robinson in the San Diego Union Tribune -- 6/22/26
Skelton: Politician behind ‘top two’ primary has second thoughts -- The man who brought California the top-two open primary now thinks it needs a drastic overhaul. In fact, he says the “top-two” part should be trashed. George Skelton in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 6/22/26
Barabak: Federal probe of Newsom creates lots of smoke. Is there any fire? -- The investigation by Trump’s corrupted Department of ‘Justice’ presents more questions than answers. Some suggest the targeting of Newsom and his wife will boost the governor’s presidential prospects. But it’s too soon to say. Mark Z. Barabak in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 6/22/26
Chabria: Behested payments aren’t illegal, but they are a problem. Especially for Newsom -- After Gov. Gavin Newsom announced this week that the U.S. Department of Justice may be investigating his wife, Jennifer Siebel Newsom, media and pundits pounced on millions in charity payments he has solicited for nonprofits, including ones she is involved in. Anita Chabria in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 6/22/26
Workplace
Bay Area companies want employees back in the office. Remote work isn’t budging -- Despite numerous Bay Area companies implementing return-to-office policies, work-from-home numbers in the region have shifted little in the last year. Darryl Laiu in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 6/22/26
From YouTube to the multiplex: How low-budget horror films are beating big-budget studio bets -- Two of the biggest box-office standouts of 2026 so far were not made by established studio directors or built on franchise IP. Cerys Davies in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 6/22/26
Inside the S.F. tower where biotech hackers and AI founders are trying to build our future -- San Francisco’s Frontier Tower turned a vacant building into a “vertical village” for post-pandemic urbanism. But inside the self-governing tech hub, the future is still being negotiated. Laura Waxmann in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 6/22/26
Hollywood Is Having Its Best Box Office Since Before the Pandemic -- Total domestic box office so far this year is an estimated $4.46 billion, the highest since 2019, according to Rentrak. Inflation has played a role, but not as much as growing attendance. The average adult ticket price has risen 3% from last year to $13.44 and the number of tickets sold is up 7% to 312 million, according to research firm EntTelligence. Ben Fritz in the Wall Street Journal$ -- 6/22/26
HSR
High-Speed Rail wants ‘temporary’ non-downtown Bakersfield station. What about permanent one? -- The California High-Speed Rail Authority’s latest business plan, approved by the agency at the beginning of the month, suggests building a “temporary” Bakersfield station that would be several miles northwest of downtown. Erik Galicia in the Fresno Bee -- 6/22/26
Kratom
This plant extract can make a lethal drug cocktail. Can it also treat opioid addiction? -- National Institutes of Health announced that the agency, along with researchers from the University of Florida, would begin clinical trials on mitragynine, the primary psychoactive compound in kratom, to evaluate its potential as a treatment for opioid use disorder. Medical professionals who specialize in addiction medicine say research that provides a clear understanding of kratom is beneficial. Karen Garcia in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 6/22/26
AI
Microsoft’s Satya Nadella: We Can’t Let AI Giants Eat the Economy -- Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella criticized the concentration of AI power and articulated a strategy for cheaper, more user-controlled models. Microsoft rolled out low-cost AI models and is weighing hosting DeepSeek, a Chinese provider, to drive down prices for customers. Bradley Olson and Tina Li in the Wall Street Journal$ -- 6/22/26
POTUS 47
US-Iran talks strained as Trump threats spark Iranian walkout -- High-stakes talks between the US and Iran are expected to continue for the rest of the week in Switzerland, after a tense start that saw Iranian negotiators walk out in protest at a stream of threats issued by Donald Trump on social media. Patrick Wintour in The Guardian -- 6/22/26
What Changed After Almost Four Months of War? Analysts Say Not Much -- By Saturday, even the most significant immediate result of the deal — Iran’s reopening of the Strait of Hormuz, which Mr. Trump had identified as essential — seemed at risk. Iran’s military said it was closing the waterway again, because the United States had failed to stop the fighting in Lebanon. The U.S. military contested that, saying the strait remained open as the agreement stipulated. Neil MacFarquhar in the New York Times$ -- 6/22/26
Long list of U.S. concessions to Iran raises specter of a ‘lost war’ -- Vice President JD Vance, who helped negotiate the deal, told reporters Thursday that the deal was structured to reward Iran for good behavior. But the text of the agreement suggests otherwise. Michael Wilner in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 6/22/26
As War With U.S. Eases, Iran Steps Up Hangings of Dissidents -- Most of those death sentences have been carried out in the past three months, as the authorities have hurried to send a message to a restless population: The regime is still firmly in charge, and dissent won’t be tolerated. Henna Moussavi in the Wall Street Journal$ -- 6/22/26
FEC filings confirm GOP meddling in Dem primaries -- A Republican-linked group was the sole funded of two pop-up super PACs that spent more than $4.3 million across a swath of Democratic congressional primaries to support candidates seen as less electable. Jessica Piper Politico -- 6/22/26
California Policy and Politics Sunday
In one of California’s Trumpiest counties, the MAGA backlash has begun -- Shasta County, known for its homegrown militias, dueling secessionists, influential megachurch and enduring devotion to Trump-style politics, is having another bellwether moment. Raheem Hosseini in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 6/21/26
Newsom’s stance on controversial data centers about to be tested. Again. -- Fueled by the AI boom, supersized data centers are drawing fierce community backlash over pollution, noise, water use and land threats, with Monterey Park voters banning them outright. With federal regulators punting, California’s fights over tariffs, CEQA reviews and strict reporting rules for data centers could set the national playbook for AI infrastructures. Katie King in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 6/21/26
This startup wants to bring driverless freight trucks to California’s roads, but drivers are pushing back -- San Francisco startup Humble Robotics has raised $24 million to build an electric, self-driving freight truck designed to cut costs and emissions. Caroline Petrow-Cohen in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 6/21/26
Newsom and L.A. declare state of emergency as Boyle Heights fire continues spewing smoke across region -- Firefighters confront a stubborn blaze inside a 500,000-square-foot frozen-food warehouse built like a giant cooler, with burning foam insulation, solar panels and ammonia lines complicating the multi-day battle. Hayley Smith and Laurence Darmiento in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 6/21/26
Burning Boyle Heights warehouse is part of world’s largest cold-storage food company -- Lineage, formerly known as Lineage Logistics, employs 23,000 and has 22 facilities in Southern California — and 500 in 19 countries, including Canada and the Netherlands, according to the company website. Tony Saavedra in the Orange County Register$ -- 6/21/26
A gentrification battle in Boyle Heights over a proposed tax to clean streets -- Property owners in Boyle Heights’ industrial corridor want a new tax-funded district to pay for private security, daily street cleaning and landscaping near the 6th Street Bridge. Supporters portray the Business Improvement District as a fix for years of neglect and crime, while opponents fear gentrification, over-policing and businesses gaining control over public space. Alejandra Molina in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 6/21/26
Want faster election results? California Democrats won’t clamp down on late voters -- Democratic leaders in California agree that speeding up the vote count would be nice. But they refuse to pursue any changes that would decrease voter access or despite voter frustration with the slow trickle of results. Maya C. Miller Calmatters -- 6/21/26
These are the new laws that Californians must start following in July -- A slate of new laws is set to go into effect on July 1. Among the changes coming are new rules impacting school restrooms, food labeling and restaurants, firearm sales and a minimum wage bump for scores of California workers. Kathryn Palmer in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 6/21/26
After nearly two decades, this massive New Mexico wind project is now powering California -- Spanning 916 turbines and a 550-mile high-voltage line, the project can power 1 million homes and already has helped drive record wind generation on California’s grid. The project arrives as the Trump administration doubles down on fossil fuel investments and works to slow the development of offshore wind. Hayley Smith in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 6/21/26
Ford sues L.A. lemon law firm alleging ‘utter fabrications’ inflated fees by 7,000% -- Ford Motor Co. is suing a prominent Los Angeles lemon law firm for allegedly inflating their fees by as much as 7,000%, the company’s latest attempt to crack down on California attorneys who it says are exploiting the state’s unique law to protect consumers from defective cars. Rebecca Ellis in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 6/21/26
Lopez: They found a new park hiding in plain sight in the middle of Los Angeles -- Just past noon, a young man appeared on the north side of San Vicente Boulevard, a block west of Hauser, and eyeballed the flow of westbound traffic. Steve Lopez in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 6/21/26
Also
Though World Cup opponent for USMNT is unknown, tickets for match at Levi’s being offered at Super Bowl prices -- The Chronicle reviewed ticket options via FIFA resale and several third-party ticketing sites. The cheapest single ticket available as of Saturday afternoon cost $3,312 on TickPick for a seat in Section 401 and Row 28, aka the very last row at the top level of the venue. Spare some change for good binoculars. Noah Furtado in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 6/21/26
This downtown S.F. tower promised a new kind of tech community. Then came the power struggle -- San Francisco’s Frontier Tower turned a vacant building into a “vertical village” for post-pandemic urbanism. But inside the self-governing tech hub, the future is still being negotiated. Laura Waxmann in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 6/21/26
POTUS 47
Trump Threatens to Strike Iran Over Hezbollah as Lebanon Snarls Talks -- The fighting between Israel and Hezbollah was supposed to end under the President Trump’s deal with Iran. Benoit Faucon in the Wall Street Journal$ -- 6/21/26
The U.S. Is Ramping Up Economic Warfare. Its Enemies Aren’t Blinking -- Iran, Russia and North Korea master the art of evading U.S. sanctions. Rory Jones, Patricia Kowsmann and Thomas Grove in the Wall Street Journal$ -- 6/21/26
Trump tries to blame Reflecting Pool woes on vandalism, without offering substantiation -- The $14-million makeover, intended to showcase a bright ‘American flag blue’ basin, instead produced algae-choked green water and flaking paint now exposing the rocky bottom. Associated Press -- 6/21/26
Trump’s DC makeover frenzy bewilders locals and visitors: ‘It’s like we’re under occupation’ -- From East Wing demolition and ‘restoration’ of reflecting pool to bridge and fountain renovations, US capital is ‘a different city right now’ Robert Tait in The Guardian -- 6/21/26












