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California Policy and Politics Friday
Trump seeks $1-billion fine against UCLA. Newsom says ‘we’ll sue,’ calling it extortion -- Hours after the Trump administration demanded that the University of California pay a $1-billion fine to settle federal accusations of antisemitism in exchange for restoring frozen grant funding to UCLA, Gov. Gavin Newsom called the proposal “extortion” and said the state will go to court to protect the nation’s premier university system. Jaweed Kaleem and Michael Wilner in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 08/08/25
Canyon fire explodes to nearly 5,000 acres; thousands evacuated in L.A., Ventura counties -- Firefighters Friday were trying to make progress after the Canyon fire exploded to nearly 5,000 acres, forcing residents in northern Los Angeles and Ventura counties to evacuate. Clara Harter and Grace Toohey in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 08/08/25
Large number of voters undecided in governor’s race and about congressional redistricting, new poll finds -- Former Rep. Katie Porter and conservative commentator Steve Hilton are the only candidates in the 2026 governor’s race to have double-digit support among voters in a new poll. Voters are split about a Democratic proposal to redraw the state’s congressional districts that could appear on the ballot in November. Large numbers of voters are undecided. Seema Mehta in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 08/08/25
Lt. Gov. Eleni Kounalakis drops bid for California governor, will run for treasurer -- Kounalakis, a San Francisco resident who is the first woman to serve as lieutenant governor, said in a statement she felt she could make the greatest impact on “California’s financial future” in the treasurer’s office. Joe Garofoli in the San Francisco Chronicle$ Nicole Nixon in the Sacramento Bee$ Dustin Gardiner Politico -- 08/08/25
Democrats make a Trump-inspired U-turn on redistricting -- Former Speaker Nancy Pelosi, who pushed for national reforms, now says her party "cannot and will not unilaterally disarm." Nicholas Wu and Andrew Howard Politico -- 08/08/25
Trump orders colleges to prove they don’t consider race in admissions as three UCs face probe -- The order comes as the government accuses UCLA and other selective California campuses of illegally considering race in admissions. The issue of admissions is among the charges federal agencies made against UCLA when pulling $584 million in grant funding. Jaweed Kaleem in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 08/08/25
UCLA should not bend ‘on their knees’ to Trump in grant negotiations, Newsom says -- “We’re not Brown, we’re not Columbia, and I’m not going to be governor if we act like that,” Newsom said, referring to settlements the universities announced last month. “Period. Full stop, I will fight like hell to make sure that doesn’t happen.” Jaweed Kaleem in the Los Angeles Times$ Joe Garofoli in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 08/08/25
Fearing deportation, international students go silent at California’s universities -- After hundreds of international students lost their status this spring, then regained it following lawsuits, the uncertainty of it happening again has created fear. Some students say they’ve changed the routes they take on campus, the topics they research, and what they post on social media. Emewodesh Eshete Calmatters -- 08/08/25
Trump administration asks Supreme Court to lift temporary ban on roving immigration stops in L.A. -- The federal government on Thursday filed an emergency appeal with the U.S. Supreme Court seeking to lift a temporary ban on “roving” immigration sweeps. Wendy Fry and Sergio Olmos Calmatters Sonja Sharp in the Los Angeles Times$ Josh Gerstein and Kyle Cheney Politico Bob Egelko in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 08/08/25
California’s redrawn congressional districts could be bad news for these Republicans -- Newsom has said California’s redistricting plan will have a “trigger,” meaning a redrawn map would not take effect unless Texas moved forward with its own. Laura J. Nelson in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 08/08/25
Newsom brushed off the price of a special election. Experts say it’ll cost $200M -- Gov. Gavin Newsom has said a special redistricting election in November — his answer to Texas Republicans redrawing their congressional districts to favor their party — would require “significantly less resources” than a typical statewide special election because “many” local elections are happening at the same time. Kate Wolffe in the Sacramento Bee$ -- 08/08/25
Republicans push to redraw election maps in multiple states -- The GOP seeks to create new red seats in Missouri, Indiana, Ohio and Florida ahead of next year’s midterms, even as legal hurdles await. Kadia Goba, Natalie Allison and Hannah Knowles in the Washington Post$ Adam Wren and Andrew Howard Politico -- 08/08/25
Not running for president (yet), Ro Khanna visits the fire zone -- U.S. Rep. Ro Khanna came to Altadena last week to hear about fire recovery challenges. He got an earful: about balky insurance companies, charred businesses still not cleared away and how President Trump’s tariffs on Canada will drive up the price of lumber for rebuilding. James Rainey in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 08/08/25
Pelosi won’t discuss her political future — or endorse Zohran Mamdani -- Speaker Emerita Nancy Pelosi said Thursday her priority is helping Democrats win back the House in 2026 but declined to discuss whether she will be among the candidates. Sara DiNatale in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 08/08/25
In tentative ruling, judge dismisses sexual harassment lawsuit against Nathan Fletcher -- The sexual harassment lawsuit that pushed former San Diego County Supervisor Nathan Fletcher from his career in public office appears likely to be terminated in its entirety, if a tentative ruling issued late Thursday stands. Jeff McDonald in the San Diego Union Tribune$ -- 08/08/25
Climate
Energy secretary says Trump administration may alter past National Climate Assessments -- His statements came after the Trump administration in April dismissed more than 400 experts who had already started work on the sixth National Climate Assessment, due for publication in late 2027 or early 2028. The administration in July also removed the website of the U.S. Global Change Research Program, which housed the reports. Hayley Smith in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 08/08/25
The start of California’s fire season has moved up 6 weeks since 1990 thanks to climate change -- You are not imagining it. Fire season in California is indeed starting earlier and lasting longer in virtually every region of California than it did two decades ago, researchers have found, thanks largely to human-caused climate change. Corinne Purtill in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 08/08/25
EPA eliminates $7-billion rooftop solar grant program -- The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency on Thursday announced that it will eliminate a $7-billion grant program designed to help low-income households install solar panels on their homes. Hayley Smith in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 08/08/25
Develop
Tech companies are taking over this S.F. neighborhood as OpenAI closes in on new space -- OpenAI is reportedly close to taking space in a fourth building in San Francisco’s Mission Bay that would add to its growing campus in the neighborhood that stretches along the city’s waterfront. Laura Waxmann in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 08/08/25
Medicaid
Bay Area county could raise taxes to offset Trump Medicaid cuts -- In response to recent federal legislation that cuts billions of dollars to Medicaid, Santa Clara County supervisors on Thursday unanimously voted to add a ballot measure to November’s special election that would increase local sales tax by five-eighth cent (0.625%) for five years to try to backfill some of the projected lost federal revenue. Catherine Ho in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 08/08/25
Workplace
Stater Bros. reaches tentative deal with union after months-long dispute -- Grocery store chain Stater Bros. and the union representing 12,000 workers across Southern California have reached an agreement on a new contract, averting a possible strike. Piper Heath in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 08/08/25
Trump says Intel CEO is ‘highly conflicted,’ calls for his resignation -- Chipmaker Intel is the latest tech company facing political pressure from President Trump. On Thursday, Trump called for the immediate resignation of Intel Chief Executive Lip-Bu Tan, who took the helm in March to turn around the beleaguered company. Queenie Wong in the Washington Post$ -- 08/08/25
How Intel’s CEO Helped Create China’s Chip Industry -- Lip-Bu Tan’s U.S.-based venture-capital firm supported some of the biggest names in China’s chip industry. Stu Woo and Yang Jie in the Wall Street Journal$ -- 08/08/25
Education
Newsom announces agreements to embed AI products from Big Tech into state colleges, high schools -- Gov. Gavin Newsom on Thursday stood atop Google’s waterfront offices in San Francisco beside higher-education officials and technology-industry leaders to announce a new partnership to embed cutting-edge artificial intelligence products into the California State University and California Community College systems. Ethan Baron in the San Jose Mercury$ -- 08/08/25
How S.F. schools are changing the way they teach math -- Adults raised on the drill-and-kill math of the past might not use the word “fun” for long division or algebra. But school officials want to ensure they teach math that’s relevant to the world. Jill Tucker in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 08/08/25
Parents favor four-year college for children — but Republicans show more skepticism -- Six out of 10 parents hope their child will attend college, according to a new survey by Gallup and the Lumina Foundation. The survey, conducted in June, comes out at a time when the value of a college degree is the subject of public debate. Emma Gallegos EdSource -- 08/08/25
Street
Law firm in L.A. homelessness case bills the city $1.8 million for two weeks’ work -- A high-profile law firm representing the city of Los Angeles in a sweeping homelessness case submitted an $1.8-million invoice for two weeks of work in May, according to records reviewed by The Times. Andrew Khouri and David Zahniser in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 08/08/25
Two more Dublin prison guards plead guilty in sexual abuse scandal -- Two more former officers at the federal women’s prison in Dublin pleaded guilty Thursday to sexually abusing inmates, prosecutors said. They are the eighth and ninth officers at the now-shuttered prison, including a former warden, who have admitted to or been convicted of sex crimes against inmates. Bob Egelko in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 08/08/25
Also
Rat infestation wreaks havoc on California almonds, industry suffers $300M in damage -- A massive rat infestation is wreaking havoc on almond orchards across California’s San Joaquin Valley, with crop losses and infrastructure damage now estimated to exceed $300 million, according to a new report from the Almond Board of California. Aidin Vaziri in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 08/08/25
The Rise of Silicon Valley’s Techno-Religion -- The Rationalists, a community focused on the risks of artificial intelligence, regularly gather with tech figures and other like-minded people in a complex that covers much of a city block. Cade Metz in the New York Times$ -- 08/08/25
Russian superyacht, with helideck and marble fireplace, was seized. Now you can bid on it -- The $300-million-plus Amadea is currently sitting in a San Diego harbor. The superyacht is being auctioned; the bid deposit is $10 million. Andrew J. Campa in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 08/08/25
POTUS 47
Trump announces federal law enforcement will patrol DC -- The move comes one day after President Donald Trump threatened to take over the city’s police force in response to an attempted hijacking that left one Trump administration staffer injured. Ben Johansen Politico -- 08/08/25
Trump Turns the Screws on the Fortune 500 -- Trump has systematically taken on every institution he’s come across — academia, government, the legal system, and the media — and bent them to his will. Now the Fortune 500 is being put through the wringer. Charlie Mahtesian Politico Chip Cutter and Amrith Ramkumar in the Wall Street Journal$ -- 08/08/25
Trump says he’s ordering new census -- The attempt would likely face a flurry of legal and logistical challenges should the administration move ahead with it. Nicole Markus Politico -- 08/08/25
Here’s What Could Get More Expensive Under Trump’s Tariffs -- The tariffs are driving up prices on everyday goods as businesses warn they can no longer absorb costs, leaving consumers to foot the bill. Kailyn Rhone in the New York Times$ Abha Bhattarai and Jaclyn Peiser in the Washington Post$ -- 08/08/25
‘This is sending a message’: DOJ moves to sanction lawyer who took pro bono deportation case -- The move comes after Trump directed the department to seek to sanction lawyers “who engage in frivolous, unreasonable, and vexatious litigation.” Josh Gerstein Politico -- 08/08/25
Justice Department Subpoenas Office of Letitia James, a Trump Nemesis -- Ms. James, New York’s attorney general, won a civil fraud case against President Trump that is on appeal. One of the two subpoenas is related to that case. Jonah E. Bromwich, Devlin Barrett and Santul Nerkar in the New York Times$ -- 08/08/25
Epstein victims speak out: This ‘smacks of a cover up’ -- Several victims have sent letters to the judges who will decide whether to grant DOJ’s request to unseal the grand jury materials in their cases. Erica Orden Politico -- 08/08/25
California Policy and Politics Thursday
Powerful labor coalition backs redrawing California’s congressional map in fight with Texas and Trump -- The California Federation of Labor Unions endorsed Democrats’ efforts to call for a special election in November to redraw California’s congressional districts. The influential group said it would spend several million dollars to support the effort, which is in response to Texas potentially redrawing its maps to boost GOP numbers in Congress at President Trump’s behest. Seema Mehta in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 08/07/25
California Supreme Court hands victory to rooftop solar panel owners -- The California Supreme Court today sided with environmental groups in a case seen as pivotal for the proliferation of rooftop solar power in California. Malena Carollo Calmatters Bob Egelko in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 08/07/2
Millions of Californians may lose health coverage because of new Medicaid work requirements -- The nation’s first mandated work requirement for Medicaid recipients, approved by the Republican-led Congress and signed by President Trump, is expected to have a seismic effect in California. Laura J. Nelson in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 08/07/25
Did immigration agents violate court order during L.A. Home Depot raid? -- A raid by U.S. Customs and Border Protection agents of a Home Depot in Los Angeles on Wednesday morning sparked fears and outrage that the federal government could be violating a court order blocking widespread immigration sweeps in Southern California. Sarah Ravani in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 08/07/25
ICE arrests in L.A. plummeted in July, new data show -- Experts suggest the drop is the result of a federal court ruling that bars federal agents from arresting people without probable cause to believe they are in the U.S. illegally. Jenny Jarvie in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 08/07/25
Migrants Vanish Into Opaque ICE Detention System -- Frequent long-distance moves leave families and lawyers struggling to keep track of people facing deportation—and undermine their legal defense. Ruth Simon, Elizabeth Findell and Tarini Parti in the Wall Street Journal$ -- 08/07/25
Stanford Daily sues Trump administration over deportation threats -- Stanford’s student newspaper sued the Trump administration on Wednesday for threatening to deport any noncitizen who criticizes Israel or U.S. foreign policy, saying the government is violating freedom of speech and intimidating campus journalists into censoring their own articles. Bob Egelko in the San Francisco Chronicle$ Ryan Macasero in the San Jose Mercury$ Angie Orellana Hernandez in the Washington Post$ -- 08/06/25
At Sacramento’s immigration court, these volunteers have their eyes on ICE -- Phipps, 39, leads a group of volunteers that has provided the most reliable account of immigration enforcement in the Sacramento area. Stephen Hobbs in the Sacramento Bee$ -- 08/07/25
CA elections officials head to battle stations, anticipating redistricting vote -- Elections officials across California are preparing a speed run toward a possible special election on November 4, as the state considers a response to Texas’ efforts to redraw congressional maps to benefit Republicans. Kate Wolffe in the Sacramento Bee$ -- 08/07/25
Gavin Newsom says he’s always supported nonpartisan redistricting. Has he? -- Newsom has proposed that voters approve temporary new congressional maps, drawn up by state lawmakers, in a special Nov. 4 election, which would be in effect for the 2026, 2028 and 2030 elections, before reverting redistricting power back to the commission. Lia Russell in the Sacramento Bee$ -- 08/07/25
Climate
Scientists confirm that climate change is behind California’s earlier wildfire seasons -- In a study published Wednesday in the journal Science Advances, researchers said hotter, drier conditions over the last three decades had gradually elevated the state’s fire risk. Lucy Hodgman in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 08/07/25
How California missed its chance to protect solar funding from Trump -- The Trump administration wants to cancel solar programs that let everyday people tap into nearby panels. In California, the technology never even got off the ground. Noah Baustin and Camille von Kaenel Politico -- 08/07/25
Wildfire
Homeowners say the Army Corps and its contractors mishandled L.A. fire debris cleanup -- Contaminated pool water has been sprayed onto a neighbor’s yard; fire debris has been left behind; and contractors have not consistently adhered to their own cleanup guidelines. Tony Briscoe in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 08/07/25
Insurer of last resort faces questions over smoke damage claims -- State regulators have taken legal action against California’s home insurer of last resort over its alleged denial and limiting of smoke damage claims stemming from the Jan. 7 and prior fires — a move critics say is overdue and may not amount to much. Laurence Darmiento in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 08/07/25
Workplace
The Insider’s Guide to San Francisco’s A.I. Boom -- There is one obvious reason that the tech industry’s ground zero for big ideas has moved north from Silicon Valley to San Francisco: OpenAI, the company that created the ChatGPT chatbot that started the A.I. craze, has its offices in a neighborhood that people in the tech industry have started calling the Arena. Eli Tan, Loren Elliott in the New York Times$ -- 08/07/25
The 20-Somethings Are Swarming San Francisco’s A.I. Boom -- Some dropped out of M.I.T., Georgetown and Stanford. Others decided not to go to college. They all say they could not afford to wait to build their own artificial intelligence start-ups. Natallie Rocha in the New York Times$ -- 08/07/25
California higher education layoffs: UC, Stanford and Cal State universities cut, freeze jobs -- Federal funding cuts, inflation and drops in enrollment are among the reasons cited for the pink slips. Tina Chen in the San Jose Mercury$ -- 08/07/25
California court rules UC hiring practice is discriminatory -- A California court ruled UC must reconsider its policy barring the hiring of students living in the country illegally from on-campus jobs. Molly Gibbs in the San Jose Mercury$ -- 08/07/25
Skydance Takes Over Paramount, and a New Era Begins -- The merger catapults new power players to the top of Hollywood and ends a tortuous process that has lasted well over a year. John Koblin and Benjamin Mullin in the New York Times$ -- 08/07/25
Education
UCLA has more than half a billion dollars in funding suspended by Trump administration -- UCLA is at risk of losing more than half a billion dollars in federal research funds as the Trump administration continues to pressure the school to address allegations of antisemitism on campus. Nicole Norman Politico Sara Randazzo in the Wall Street Journal$ -- 08/07/25
Santa Ana Unified, OC School of the Arts settle special ed lawsuit for $8.55 million -- The dispute, which began in 2019, centered on whether OCSA, then a charter school under SAUSD, owed the district for districtwide special education costs under state law — initially, the district said $16 million was due. Hanna Kang in the Orange County Register$ -- 08/07/25
California inmates can take college classes, but often with no internet and limited tech -- Even in California, where prison access to technology and research resources is better than average, students regularly face dead ends. Tara García Mathewson Calmatters -- 08/07/25
Analysis: California community colleges offer quick return on tuition investment -- In the best examples, students who finish relatively low-cost programs at 26 California community colleges earn back their education costs at new jobs in six months or less, according to the analysis. Michael Burke EdSource -- 08/07/25
These are the best California community colleges for return on investment -- Some institutions see graduates able to recoup their costs within months, according to a new ranking. But at others, it could take a decade or longer. In some programs, students may never earn enough to offset the cost of attending. Jessica Roy in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 08/07/25
Street
No charges for L.A. County deputy who shot man in back as he lay on pavement -- Los Angeles County prosecutors found there was “insufficient evidence” to prove Deputy Yen Liu was not acting in lawful self-defense when he shot Adrian Abelar at a Rosemead auto body shop four years ago, firing a round that fractured several vertebrae and nearly paralyzed him, according to court records and Abelar’s attorney. James Queally in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 08/07/25
Also
Lopez: My bathroom scale is rigged, and so are my book sales. Lawsuits and pink slips to follow -- I stepped on my bathroom scale the other morning and could not believe the three digits staring up at me. And I mean that literally — the scale was rigged. Steve Lopez in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 08/07/25
Newton: Jerry Garcia wasn’t political. But the Grateful Dead symbolized defiance in a deeply political moment -- It is frequently the case that cultural and political movements emerge, thrive for a while and then produce backlash. Jim Newton Calmatters -- 08/07/25
Arellano: L.A. never needed the Olympics. With Trump wanting in, it's time to pull out -- The latest embarrassment is LA28 chair Casey Wasserman, the man tasked with making sure the 2028 Summer Olympics are a massive success. At a news conference this week announcing that President Trump will head a federal Olympics task force, Wasserman offered L.A. a giant whoopie cushion. Gustavo Arellano in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 08/07/25
Walters: Deepfakes pose an obvious peril in politics, but California’s bans amount to censorship -- A few weeks ago, a video popped up on YouTube, purporting to be a verbal clash between Sen. Josh Hawley, a Missouri Republican, and Gov. Gavin Newsom during a congressional hearing. Dan Walters Calmatters -- 08/07/25
POTUS 47
Trump demands a new U.S. census that excludes undocumented immigrants -- Historically, the census has counted all U.S. residents regardless of their immigration status, a process that helps determine both the allotment of congressional seats and billions of dollars in federal money sent to states. Tyler Pager in the New York Times$ -- 08/07/25
Trump Delayed a Medicare Change After Health Companies’ Donations -- Oliver Burckhardt came prepared for the dinner that President Trump hosted for a small group of major donors at his private Mar-a-Lago resort in South Florida on March 1. A week earlier, one of Mr. Burckhardt’s biotech companies had donated $5 million to MAGA Inc., a pro-Trump political committee, that paved the way for him to attend the event. Kenneth P. Vogel, Sarah Kliff and Katie Thomas in the New York Times$ -- 08/07/25
Trump Pledged to Bring Back Manufacturing. The Sector Is Sputtering -- President Trump has claimed that his sweeping tariff regime will reshore American companies and revive manufacturing in the U.S. So far, that hasn’t happened. Economic activity tied to manufacturing has shrunk for most of Trump’s second term. Chao Deng and John Keilman in the Wall Street Journal$ -- 08/07/25
Auto Industry Takes $12 Billion Hit From Trade War -- The obvious responses to tariffs are to raise prices and move production to the U.S. Neither would be an easy fix. Stephen Wilmot in the Wall Street Journal$ -- 08/07/25
Trump says he will put 100 percent tariff on semiconductors -- President Donald Trump said Wednesday that he plans to impose 100 percent tariffs on tens of billions of dollars of imported semiconductors used in consumer electronics and other products, but indicated he would not charge companies that commit to making chips in the U.S. Doug Palmer Politico Amrith Ramkumar, Natalie Andrews and Rolfe Winkler in the Wall Street Journal$ Tripp Mickle and Ana Swanson in the New York Times$ -- 08/07/25
‘This is sending a message’: DOJ moves to sanction lawyer who took pro bono deportation case -- The move comes after Trump directed the department to seek to sanction lawyers “who engage in frivolous, unreasonable, and vexatious litigation.” Josh Gerstein Politico -- 08/07/25
Putin suggests meeting Trump in UAE as Kremlin senses advantage -- The Kremlin confirmed a meeting would take place between Vladimir Putin and Donald Trump but said it was at Washington’s request, contradicting the White House. Robyn Dixon, Siobhán O'Grady, Catherine Belton and Francesca Ebel in the Washington Post$ -- 08/07/25