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California Policy and Politics Tuesday
Updating . . .
Newsom to review if TikTok is censoring Trump-critical content -- The review comes amid wider accusations that content criticizing ICE is being flagged for review or throttled, just days after the platform closed a Trump-backed deal to avoid facing a U.S. ban. Tyler Katzenberger Politico Sara DiNatale in the San Francisco Chronicle$ Clara Harter in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 1/27/26
California lawmakers ignore most state audit warnings, costing billions -- For more than a decade, the California State Auditor has issued warnings to lawmakers about government waste, fraud, cost overruns, and broken oversight systems across state government. Again and again, audits called for changes in state law meant to fix those problems. In many cases, those fixes did not happen. Julie Watts CBS News California -- 1/27/26
Spencer Pratt knows you love to hate him. Now he wants to lead Los Angeles -- Reality TV star Spencer Pratt announces his run for Los Angeles mayor following the loss of his Pacific Palisades home to last year’s devastating wildfire. In his new memoir, the former “Hills” villain reflects on his multiple reinventions and the manufactured nature of early 2000s reality television. Rachel Brodsky in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 1/27/26
Garofoli: California’s next governor isn’t likely to push reparations effort forward -- Advocates for reparations, who have struggled to enact key pieces of their agenda following a landmark report and recommendations from a state task force in 2023, don’t appear likely to have a strong champion in California’s next governor. Joe Garofoli in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 1/27/26
California Democrats urge government shutdown after federal agents kill Minnesota nurse -- More than half of California’s Democratic legislative caucus called for a government shutdown and introduced bills to hold federal agents accountable. Maya C. Miller Calmatters Andrew Graham in the Sacramento Bee$ -- 1/27/26
Health care workers join Oakland vigil to protest ICE fatal shooting of Minneapolis ICU nurse -- Protesters fear the Bay Area, home to nearly 500,000 undocumented immigrants, could become the next ICE target. Julia Prodis Sulek in the San Jose Mercury$ -- 1/27/26
Man’s infected finger burst after Adelanto staff waited months to give him antibiotics: Lawsuit -- A man suffering a seizure went without oxygen as guards watched him convulse on the floor, and another was not given antibiotics for a severe staph infection that led his finger to burst — allegations that civil rights attorneys and immigration advocates say reveal just how inhumane and unconstitutional conditions have become for people at the Adelanto detention center in San Bernardino County. Marina Peña The LA Local -- 1/27/26
CA Senator Padilla, after visit to immigrant detention center, wants big changes -- Sen. Alex Padilla and Democratic colleagues proposed Monday overhauling what he called a “cruel” immigrant detention system. David Lightman in the Sacramento Bee$ -- 1/27/26
What to know about pepper spray and its effects, as federal agents’ tactics spur outrage -- The fatal shooting of Alex Pretti by federal Border Patrol agents in Minnesota on Saturday has prompted outrage and mass protests across the country, including in San Francisco, where hundreds marched against ICE and the Trump administration. Catherine Ho in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 1/27/26
Bay Area assemblyman introduces bill that would tax 50% of profits from private ICE detention centers in California -- Haney’s bill, AB1633, is aimed at limiting the profits of the detention centers, which take in hundreds of millions of dollars annually throughout the state. Kyle Martin in the San Jose Mercury$ -- 1/27/26
Sacramento to bulk up immigrant protections, preparing for ICE escalations -- Sacramento City Council will consider an expansion of the city’s sanctuary city ordinance on Tuesday afternoon. The proposal includes reaffirming the right to protest outside the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement office in downtown Sacramento and record interactions with immigration officers. Felicia Alvarez KVIE Abridged -- 01/27/26
Fallout From Minnesota: Citizen-Watchdog Claims of ICE Retaliation -- For weeks, thousands of federal immigration authorities and thousands of citizen observers have faced off on the cold streets of Minneapolis. Jared Mitovich and Kris Maher in the Wall Street Journal$ -- 1/27/26
Social Media
Landmark Trial Tests Claims That Social Media Harms Teens -- A Los Angeles jury is poised to consider a central question in the debate over social media and teenage welfare: Are platforms such as Instagram and TikTok causing mental-health disorders? Erin Mulvaney in the Wall Street Journal$ Tyler Katzenberger and Christine Mui Politico Barbara Ortutay Associated Press -- 1/27/26
Workplace
Independent studios scramble to stay afloat as film and TV production lags -- After years of aggressive sound stage development across Southern California — fueled by a surge in TV production and low interest rates — the writing was on the wall as filming activity dropped to historic lows. Roger Vincent and Samantha Masunaga in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 1/27/26
Homeless
Super Bowl festivities are taking over downtown. What does that mean for S.F.’s homeless residents? -- Over the next two weeks, San Francisco will welcome tens of thousands of football fans into neighborhoods that have been strained by homelessness and open air drug use in recent years. Lucy Hodgman in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 1/27/26
Can AI help make homeless Californians healthier? -- A California company is using AI to help diagnose homeless Californians. The technology promises better access to health care, but it also raises questions. Marisa Kendall Calmatters -- 1/27/26
Housing
CA launches portal to expedite conversion of state buildings to housing, businesses -- The state’s property manager unveiled a new dashboard Monday designed to speed up California’s efforts to sell excess government property that can be turned into commercial projects. William Melhado in the Sacramento Bee$ -- 1/27/26
Vaccine
Pediatricians urge Americans to stick with previous vaccine schedule despite CDC’s changes -- For decades, the American Academy of Pediatrics and the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention spoke with a single voice when advising the nation’s families on when to vaccinate their children. Corinne Purtill in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 1/27/26
Education
Sacramento City trustee asks for school financial help in ‘Hail Mary’ to community -- Sacramento City Unified could run out of cash as soon as this summer. One board member is turning to parents and the community for help. Trustee Taylor Kayatta said he is not looking for individual donations, but rather ideas that district staff and leaders may not have considered. Savannah Kuchar KVIE Abridged -- 01/27/26
A playground replaced this preschool’s empty asphalt lot. It’s a game-changer for learning -- A $3.3-million interactive learning garden at Normont Early Education Center replaces the school’s asphalt lot. Parents say the outdoor classroom is crucial for their children in industrial Harbor City, where green space is limited. Christopher Buchanan in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 1/27/26
Environment
Residents of a polluted California town pinned hopes on new state rules. They’re still waiting -- A 2015 law required the state Department of Toxic Substances Control to overhaul its permitting process to consider how multiple sources of pollution impacts health. Advocates now say the overdue rules aren’t protective enough. Alejandra Reyes-Velarde Calmatters -- 1/27/26
County supervisors to vote on $4.75M plan to address Tijuana River pollution -- The proposal, presented by the Ad Hoc Subcommittee on the Tijuana River Sewage Crisis, includes funding for epidemiological studies and a temporary infrastructure fix at Saturn Boulevard, identified as a major hotspot for airborne pollutants. Walker Armstrong in the San Diego Union Tribune -- 1/27/26
Climate
California’s iconic Highway 1 is fighting a losing battle against climate change. Can it survive? -- Scientists warn that climate change intensifies hazards that affect this roadway — stronger storms, higher seas and more intense wildfires — making future closures more likely along California’s iconic, 650-mile highway. Grace Toohey in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 1/27/26
Street
A 100-foot tunnel, secret bunker and weapons stash found at MAGA activist’s California home -- Shasta County authorities started out investigating a suspected illegal marijuana farm but ended up making a far more unsettling discovery: a massive stash of illegal firearms and a secret underground bunker at the base of a 100-foot tunnel on a MAGA activist’s property. Clara Harter in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 1/27/26
Also
Walters: Cracks between Newsom and frustrated lawmakers show in first budget hearings -- Gavin Newsom is officially a lame-duck governor, and his final year in office seems increasingly focused on an almost certain campaign for the White House. Dan Walters Calmatters -- 1/27/26
POTUS 47
Judge Orders ICE Chief to Appear in Court Over Immigration Crackdown -- The top federal judge in Minnesota has summoned the head of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement to personally explain this week why he should not be held in contempt of court as judicial scrutiny of the Trump administration’s aggressive immigration crackdown grows. Hamed Aleaziz, Ernesto Londoño, David E. Sanger, Mitch Smith and Alan Feuer in the New York Times$ Jeremy Roebuck in the Washington Post$ -- 1/27/26
New Video Analysis Reveals Flawed and Fatal Decisions in Shooting of Pretti -- A frame-by-frame assessment of actions by Alex Pretti and the two officers who fired 10 times shows how lethal force came to be used against a target who didn’t pose a threat. Devon Lum, Haley Willis, Alexander Cardia, Dmitriy Khavin and Ainara Tiefenthäler in the New York Times$ -- 1/27/26
Policing Experts Question Agents’ Conduct in Lead-Up to Shooting of Alex Pretti -- Law enforcement experts say federal agents deviated from standard practice before and during the shooting of Alex Pretti in Minneapolis, based on videos. Reis Thebault and Maia Coleman in the New York Times$ -- 1/27/26
Trump aides declared 16 DHS shootings since July justified before probes completed -- The Trump administration’s rush to defend the officers and accuse the victims of attacking them has sparked widespread outrage and demands for accountability. David Nakamura and Olivia George in the Washington Post$ -- 1/27/26
White House Wobbles, Distancing Trump From Initial Response to Minnesota Killing -- Faced with broad outcry over the killing of a protester on Saturday in Minneapolis, the White House on Monday pulled a top border official from the city and tried to distance President Trump from the response of his most senior officials, who had immediately characterized the man fatally shot by federal agents as a “domestic terrorist” who was “brandishing” a gun, before video evidence undercut their charges. Luke Broadwater and David E. Sanger in the New York Times$ Isaac Arnsdorf and Natalie Allison in the Washington Post$ -- 1/27/26
Democrats Embrace a Shutdown Fight They Wanted to Avoid -- After a second fatal shooting of a U.S. citizen in Minneapolis, Democrats say public opinion is on their side and they are willing to risk a backlash to counter what they see as police-state tactics. Carl Hulse in the New York Times$ -- 1/27/26
Trump Holds 2-Hour Meeting With Noem Amid Backlash to Minneapolis Shooting -- President Trump met Monday evening in the Oval Office with Kristi Noem, the homeland security secretary, and Corey Lewandowski, her top aide, for nearly two hours, as his administration tries to shift its strategy after federal agents killed a second Minneapolis resident over the weekend, according to two people briefed on the meeting. Tyler Pager and Hamed Aleaziz in the New York Times$ -- 1/27/26
Administration Social Media Posts Echo White Supremacist Messaging -- A flurry of posts from the White House, Department of Labor and Department of Homeland Security have included images, slogans and even a song used by the white nationalist right. Evan Gorelick in the New York Times$ -- 1/27/26
Families of Two Men Killed in Boat Strikes Sue U.S. -- The families of two Trinidadian men killed in a U.S. military strike on a boat off the coast of Venezuela are suing the U.S., the first legal challenge to the Trump administration’s campaign against alleged drug-smuggling boats coming from Latin America. Lara Seligman and ShelbyHolliday in the Wall Street Journal$ Charlie Savage in the New York Times$ -- 1/27/26
California Policy and Politics Monday
Lockheed Martin, PG&E, Salesforce and Wells Fargo team up to help battle wildfires -- The companies announced a new venture on Monday to help firefighters prevent, detect and respond more quickly to wildfires. Queenie Wong in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 1/26/26
Another shutdown likely after ICE killings in Minnesota prompt revolt by Democrats -- The killing of a second U.S. citizen by federal agents in Minneapolis is deeply complicating efforts to avert another government shutdown in Washington as Democrats — and some Republicans — view the episode as a tipping point in the debate over the Trump administration’s immigration enforcement policies. Ana Ceballos and Gavin J. Quinton in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 1/26/26
San Francisco’s top cop says blue cities must draw a line with Trump after killings -- Months ago, District Attorney Brooke Jenkins warned she would consider prosecuting Trump's immigration agents if they broke the law. Now, she sees the fatal shootings in Minneapolis as a call to action. Dustin Gardiner Politico -- 1/26/26
Angry protesters spill into streets of L.A., decry second killing by U.S. agents in Minnesota -- Protesters in Southern California and elsewhere in the nation on Sunday angrily denounced the fatal shooting over the weekend of a 37-year-old man in Minneapolis. Jack Flemming and Suhauna Hussain in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 1/26/26
Sacramento ICE protesters ‘stand in solidarity’ after attack, Minneapolis killings -- A man who was assaulted two weeks ago while protesting outside the federal building where Immigration and Customs Enforcement operates in Sacramento continued to demonstrate Sunday, the day after the killing of a second Minneapolis protester. Camryn Dadey in the Sacramento Bee$ -- 1/26/26
California sues the Trump administration over plans to restart oil pipelines along the coast -- California sued the federal government Friday for approving a Texas-based company’s plans to restart two oil pipelines along the state’s coast, escalating a fight over the Trump administration’s removal of regulatory barriers to offshore oil drilling for the first time in decades. Sophie Austin Associated Press -- 1/26/26
Is California’s proposed billionaire tax smart policy? History holds lessons -- In the roiling debate over California’s proposed billionaire tax, supporters and critics agree that such policies haven’t always worked in the past. But the lessons they’ve drawn from that history are wildly different. Kevin Rector in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 1/26/26
Feds move on after $1.1M pilot program to clean Tijuana River washed away -- The federal government awarded a $1.1 million contract to an Ohio company to conduct a pilot project deploying a technology to kill bacteria and eliminate odors in the sewage-tainted Tijuana River. It failed, in large part because the company had never used the technology in an environment with such a large amount of solid waste pollution and with unpredictable changes in water flow. Walker Armstrong in the San Diego Union Tribune -- 1/26/26
Workplace
Thousands of Kaiser workers walk out as labor dispute escalates -- More than 31,000 Kaiser Permanente nurses and other health care workers walked off the job early Monday, launching an open-ended strike across California and Hawaii that could disrupt operations at dozens of hospitals and hundreds of clinics. Aidin Vaziri in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 1/26/26
CA departments lacked thousands of workstations before RTO order, documents show -- California state departments were short thousands of workstations needed to accommodate returning government employees ahead of Gov. Gavin Newsom’s return-to-office directive last spring, documents show. William Melhado in the Sacramento Bee$ -- 1/26/26
Housing
Housing costs are crippling many Americans. Here’s how the two parties propose to fix that -- California says it needs to add 180,000 housing units annually to keep up with demand. President Trump has endorsed a $200-billion mortgage bond stimulus, which he said would drive down mortgage rates and monthly payments. Gavin J. Quinton in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 1/26/26
Airbnb rules have literally split this Bay Area beach town in two -- Many California towns are divided over how to regulate short-term rentals like Airbnb, but few more so than Pacifica. Anna Bauman in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 1/26/26
Homeless
Officials believe San Diego is well positioned as cities compete for dwindling state homeless dollars -- Municipalities must adopt strong encampment policies and show they are ‘pro-housing’ to qualify for a shrinking pool of state money. Kelly Davis in the San Diego Union Tribune -- 1/26/26
Education
California lawmakers weigh reforms to child abuse law amid costly litigation -- In what’s likely to be one of the most contentious issues facing the California Legislature in 2026, lawmakers are again debating whether to reform a 2020 law that lifted the statute of limitations on childhood sexual abuse lawsuits. Thomas Peele EdSource -- 1/26/26
Street
California cities just saw their lowest homicide rates in decades. It’s not clear why -- Homicides in California surged during the COVID-19 pandemic. Now, killings are down to historic lows in Los Angeles, Oakland, San Francisco and many other cities. Nigel Duara Calmatters -- 1/26/26
Also
Skelton: Newsom tried to punch over his weight class in the Alps -- When a California governor goes to Europe and lectures world leaders that they must “grow a spine” and “stand tall” against the American president, I wince. Not that they shouldn’t, nor that President Trump doesn’t deserve almost any nasty thing said about him. It just seems a tad arrogant. George Skelton in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 1/26/26
Arellano: Under Trump, the bootlickers have come out in force. Minneapolis cements it -- President Trump has an army of bootlickers that seems to stretch to the sunset. Many of them creep around on social media and almost certainly legions of them come from bot accounts on X. Then there’s Bill Essayli. Gustavo Arellano in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 1/26/26
California Post brings brash New York-style tabloid news to the West Coast -- Aiming to shake up the Golden State’s media landscape, the California Post launched on Monday with a new tabloid newspaper and news site that brings a brash, cheeky and conservative-friendly fixture of the Big Apple to the West Coast. Christopher Weber Associated Press -- 1/26/26
POTUS 47
Trump Says Administration Is ‘Reviewing Everything’ About Minneapolis Shooting --In a five-minute telephone interview with The Wall Street Journal on Sunday, Trump didn’t directly answer when asked twice whether the officer who shot Alex Pretti had done the right thing. Pressed further, the president said, “We’re looking, we’re reviewing everything and will come out with a determination.” Administration officials have publicly defended the officer. Josh Dawsey in the Wall Street Journal$ -- 1/26/26
Trump sends border czar Homan to Minneapolis amid shooting scrutiny -- Sending Homan, who has backed a more targeted approach to deportations, suggests a shift in the administration’s strategy. Eric Bazail-Eimil Politico -- 1/26/26
A battle over the truth erupts after deadly Minneapolis shooting -- In the wake of another fatal shooting involving immigration agents, Trump administration and Minnesota officials are locked in a heated dispute over what exactly transpired and who’s to blame for the death of 37-year-old Alex Pretti. And they don’t just disagree in their interpretation of the events — they fundamentally differ on what exactly took place and what triggered it. Cheyanne M. Daniels and Jacob Wendler Politico -- 1/26/26
How the Trump Administration Rushed to Judgment in Minneapolis Shooting -- The administration was in a race to control the narrative around the killing of Alex Pretti, even as videos emerged that contradicted the government’s account. Tyler Pager and Hamed Aleaziz in the New York Times$ -- 1/26/26
Killing Prompts Only a Defiant Response From Trump -- Even as the second death of a protester in Minnesota brought demands for accountability, the president, insulated from dissenting voices, stuck to his pattern of reflexively blaming opponents. Katie Rogers in the New York Times$ -- 1/26/26
Minneapolis police chief says it appears more than one agent fired on Pretti -- “I know the initial responding officers on the scene believe that there was at least, there was more than one agent who fired,” O’Hara told The Washington Post in an interview Sunday. “I’m not sure if the video necessarily corroborates that. My understanding is that it does.” Molly Hennessy-Fiske in the Washington Post$ -- 1/26/26
Border Patrol sidesteps questions about fatal shooting; police chief criticizes agents -- The head of the U.S. Border Patrol sidestepped key questions about the fatal shooting of Alex Pretti, a 37-year-old intensive care nurse, including how many shots were fired and whether the victim brandished a weapon, as other Trump officials have alleged. Minneapolis Police Chief Brian O’Hara noted that Pretti appeared to be exercising his First and Second Amendment rights. O’Hara told The Washington Post that “it’s very obvious from a lot of these videos that this is not what professional policing looks like in this country today.” The item is in the Washington Post$ -- 1/26/26
Alex Pretti’s Friends and Family Denounce ‘Sickening Lies’ About His Life --People who knew a man fatally shot by federal agents pushed back against what they called a smear campaign by federal officials. “He was a good man,” his family said. Talya Minsberg, Corina Knoll and Julie Bosman in the New York Times$ -- 1/26/26
Trump’s playbook falters in crisis response to Minneapolis shooting -- The Trump administration has blamed the death of an American citizen at the hands of immigration agents in Minnesota on the victim within hours of their killing for the second time this month, calling Alex Jeffrey Pretti an “assassin” and “domestic terrorist” without opening an independent investigation. Michael Wilner in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 1/26/26
Obamas condemn federal immigration agents’ conduct: ‘This has to stop’ -- “The killing of Alex Pretti is a heartbreaking tragedy,” the Obamas wrote in a lengthy statement posted on social media. “It should also be a wake up call to every American, regardless of party, that many of our core values as a nation are increasingly under assault.” Meg James in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 1/26/26





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