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Essential Politics July archives

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Welcome to our July Essential Politics news feed. Find current news on California politics here.

Be sure to follow us on Twitter for more, or subscribe to our free daily newsletter and the California Politics Podcast

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Feinstein skips Democratic convention because of husband’s cancer treament

In this 2011 photo, Sen. Dianne Feinstein and Richard Blum (center) watch Gov. Jerry Brown's inauguration with other California political figures.
(Robert Gauthier/Los Angeles Times)

Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.) skipped the Democratic National Convention in Philadelphia because she was caring for her husband, who has been diagnosed with lung cancer, according to her spokesman.

Richard Blum, 80, went to the doctor thinking he had pneumonia, but learned he has lung cancer, spokesman Tom Mentzer told The Times.

“It was caught early, he’s receiving treatment and expects to fully recover,” Mentzer said.

Blum is being treated at UC San Francisco and is responding well to the treatment, according to a source who did not want to be identified discussing the matter. Blum is a wealthy investment banker and University of California regent.

When Feinstein announced earlier this week she would not attend her party’s nominating convention because of a family illness, rumors swirled among California delegates that the 83-year-old senator was ill.

That was put to rest when Feinstein, the ranking Democrat on the Senate Select Intelligence Committee, appeared on CNN Friday to discuss the hacking of the Democratic Party’s email system.

For the record: This story has been updated to clarify Blum is currently a UC Regent.

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Californians seem ready to extend the state’s landmark climate change law

A high-profile effort to extend and expand California’s decade-old climate change law may face an uncertain future next month in the state Capitol, but it has broad conceptual support in a statewide poll released Wednesday night.

About 68% of adults surveyed by the nonpartisan Public Policy Institute of California said they supported a proposal that would require the state’s greenhouse gas emissions to be 40% below 1990 levels by the year 2040.

The current law, signed by Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger in 2006, mandates a reduction down to the 1990 greenhouse gas levels by 2020.

And the poll finds a sizeable number who also accept the possibility of paying more for gas and electricity as a result.

“The commitment to help reduce global warming includes a surprising willingness on the part of majorities of Californians to pay higher prices,” said Mark Baldassare, PPIC’s president and chief pollster.

The proposal in question, by state Sen. Fran Pavley (D-Agoura Hills), has seemed to languish in the Legislature since last year but is expected to be at the center of one of the biggest political debates when lawmakers return to Sacramento next week for the final month of the 2016 session.

Though Republicans are split in the poll over a new statewide climate law, just about every other subset of Californians strongly supports it -- including 58% of those polled who describe themselves as conservative.

The survey found similar numbers when asked about the willingness to pay more for electricity if it comes from renewable sources, though African Americans joined Republicans in opposition to the idea.

Results were more mixed when asked about the estimated increase in state gasoline prices by expanding the cap on greenhouse gases to fuels.

Even so, the law signed by Schwarzenegger a decade ago this fall has remained popular in PPIC’s polling over the years. And 81% of Californians surveyed this time said that climate change is either somewhat or very much a threat to the state’s future.

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Republican voters taking a pass on California’s U.S. Senate race, poll finds

Half of California’s likely Republican voters and a third of independents said they wouldn’t vote for either candidate in the state’s U.S. Senate race this November, according to a new poll by the Public Policy Institute of California.

The survey found that 28% of all likely California voters said they didn’t support state Atty. Gen. Kamala Harris or Orange County Rep. Loretta Sanchez, and 14% said they were undecided. Harris and Sanchez are Democrats.

Among those backing a candidate, 38% of likely voters supported Harris, compared with 20% for Sanchez.

The two Democrats will face off in the November election, setting the stage for the highest-profile contest between two members of the same party since California adopted a top-two primary election system.

In the June 6 primary, Harris received 40% of the vote and Sanchez nabbed 19% among the 34 candidates on the Senate ballot. Duf Sundheim, a former chairman of the California Republican Party, landed in third place with 8%.

Bill Carrick, a political consultant for the Sanchez campaign, has said the congresswoman is trying to build a coalition that will “cross party lines, cross regional lines — every kind of line you can imagine” to overtake Harris before November.

To do so, Sanchez will likely need support from Republicans and independents because, according to the PPIC poll, Harris leads Sanchez by a 2-to-1 margin among Democratic voters.

Harris also leads among independents. Sanchez leads Harris among likely Latino voters.

Among likely Republican voters, 50% said they would not support either candidate and 19% said they were undecided.

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Activist launches referendum on ‘ghost guns’ law

A Carlsbad businessman has launched a referendum drive aimed at overturning a law signed last week that would require anyone building homemade firearms to obtain a serial number for the gun and undergo a background check.

Arthur Aguilar, one of several activists who opposed the bill, filed papers with the state attorney general’s office to obtain a title and summary for a referendum petition to be circulated during the next two months. He could not be immediately reached for comment.

Gov. Jerry Brown on Friday signed AB 857, a bill by Assemblyman Jim Cooper (D-Elk Grove) that is aimed at allowing the state to track so-called ghost guns, those made at home without any serial number or registration.

The National Rifle Assn. was among the groups that opposed the bill, which NRA lobbyist Ed Worley said recently would “take hobbyists who enjoy making guns and … make them criminals.”

The latest referendum comes a week after other activists filed papers to seek referenda to overturn half a dozen other new gun laws.

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‘We will get it,’ says Gov. Jerry Brown of his effort to extend California climate programs

Gov. Jerry Brown isn’t saying how he plans to pull it off, but on Tuesday, he emphasized his dedication to extending California’s landmark climate efforts.

“We will get it one way or another,” he told reporters on a sidewalk in Philadelphia, where he’s attending the Democratic National Convention.

Brown is facing political headwinds to protect California’s cap-and-trade program, the centerpiece of its efforts to battle global warming. His administration also has been talking with oil companies in hopes of clearing a path to resolving the issue.

Asked whether he hoped to reach a deal by the end of the legislative session in August, Brown demurred.

“I don’t want to handicap that,” he said.

Brown added, “I’m not telling you my whole plan. I’m still working on it. I’m committed, and I will do everything I can to make it happen.”

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Tom Torlakson gets his first task as acting governor: Responding to fires

One of two homes destroyed on North Canyon Road, where one person died.
(Irfan Khan/Los Angeles Times)

Less than a day after starting his first stint as California’s acting governor, state Supt. of Public Instruction Tom Torlakson declared states of emergency on Tuesday in two counties dealt a huge blow by devastating wildfires.

The proclamations in response to the Sand fire in Los Angeles County and the Soberanes fire in Monterey County enable quicker response by state and local officials to the residents affected by the blazes.

Torlakson is the sole statewide elected official in California this week. His fellow Democrats are in Philadelphia for the Democratic National Convention. It is the first time in state history that the job of chief executive has fallen to the schools chief.

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Energy funded PAC accused of inserting ‘racially divisive’ ad into state San Bernardino Assembly race

A political committee funded by oil companies has launched ads on the Internet attacking state Sen. Connie Leyva of Chino for opposing the reelection of Assemblywoman Cheryl Brown of San Bernardino, a fellow Democrat, and questioning Levya’s party loyalty.

A spokesman for Leyva shot back that the ads are “racially divisive” and “reprehensible.”

The advertisements on YouTube are the latest episode in a skirmish that has divided Democrats in the state over Brown, a moderate who helped stall a provision of last year’s climate change bill that would have cut petroleum use significantly in California.

Leyva has endorsed Democrat Eloise Reyes against Brown, while the incumbent is backed by other prominent Democrats including Senate President Pro Tem Kevin de León of Los Angeles and Sens. Bill Monning of Carmel, Mike McGuire of Healdsburg and Holly Mitchell of Los Angeles.

The ads, put up without coordination with Brown’s campaign, were paid for by the Coalition to Restore California’s Middle Class, which is funded by energy companies including Chevron Corp., Valero Energy Corp. and Tesoro Corp.

“California State Sen. Connie Leyva is leading a campaign to defeat Cheryl Brown, an African American candidate endorsed by the California Democratic Party and Cesar Chavez’s United Farm Workers,” says one of the Internet ads.

“Sen. Connie Leyva should leave her personal politics aside or leave our national convention,” conclude the ads, which have drawn about 10,000 hits each.

Douglas Herman, a political consultant for Leyva, was harshly critical of the ads.

“Chevron’s racially divisive attack ads are reprehensible and exactly what we’ve come to expect from Cheryl Brown’s top Sacramento backer,” Herman said.

He said the ads are based on incorrect information.

“Once again Chevron is wrong on facts and long on trying to divide our communities,” Herman said. “Connie is not a delegate and therefore [is] not at the convention. She’s also not leading the campaign for Eloise Reyes, but will continue to strongly support her for state Assembly.”

A Brown representative could not immediately be reached for comment.

The political coalition involving oil firms has previously spent money to support Brown’s primary campaign, leading some environmental activists to call her “Chevron Cheryl.”

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The small solution to California’s housing shortage

With Gov. Jerry Brown’s plan to speed approval for developments that include units for low-income Californians facing stiff opposition, state lawmakers’ answer to the housing crisis this year might turn out to be a very small one.

Multiple bills with Brown’s endorsement are working their way through the Legislature to make it easier for homeowners to build a second unit in their backyards. It’s a way, proponents say, to add housing quickly and cheaply compared to big projects, and the measures have so far received broad support among lawmakers.

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Senate candidate Rep. Loretta Sanchez crashes stage at the Democratic National Convention

U.S. Senate candidate Loretta Sanchez didn’t have a speaking slot at the Democratic National Convention in Philadelphia, but that didn’t stop her from crashing the stage Monday.

The Orange County congresswoman stood silently on stage as her sister, Rep. Linda Sanchez of Norwalk, addressed the raucous crowd Monday evening.

The two clasped their hands in triumph when Linda Sanchez reminded everyone that they are the only sisters in history to serve in Congress together.

Linda also gave her sister Loretta a nice plug for her Senate campaign.

“We will elect a Latina to the U.S. Senate,” Linda Sanchez declared.

Neither Loretta Sanchez nor her rival in California’s Senate race, state Atty. Gen. Kamala Harris, were scheduled to address the national convention.

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California Gov. Brown vetoes measure that would have allowed cancellation of uncontested elections

California Gov. Jerry Brown vetoed a measure aimed at avoiding costly, uncontested elections.
( (Michel Euler / Associated Press))

California Gov. Jerry Brown on Monday vetoed a bill by the late Sen. Sharon Runner (R-Lancaster) that would have allowed him to cancel an election to fill a vacancy in the Legislature if only one candidate makes the ballot. That candidate would have been declared the elected legislator, under the bill.

Runner, who died earlier this month after complications from lung disease, was seeking to streamline the process for filling a legislative vacancy to save taxpayers money.

She noted it cost counties $1.6 million to hold one recent special election. Runner was elected to the Senate in 2015 in a special election in which she was the only candidate on the ballot.

“Elections are a vital part of our democratic process, but it is not always necessary to spend taxpayer dollars on an election when a single name appears on the ballot,” she said in a statement when the Legislature first approved the bill earlier this year.

However, Brown said the change could disenfranchise some potential candidates.

“In the situation envisioned by this bill, the potential write-in candidates would be excluded from participation in the election,” Brown wrote in his veto message. “This doesn’t seem consistent with democratic principles that call for choice and robust debate.”

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White House spokesman: It’s hard to know the intent of Loretta Sanchez’s racial comment

President Barack Obama walks with California Attorney General Kamala Harris, center, and California Lt. Gov. Gavin Newsom, after arriving at San Francisco International Airport in San Francisco in 2012.
(Eric Risberg / Associated Press)

White House Press Secretary Josh Earnest said it’s unclear what Orange County Rep. Loretta Sanchez was trying to imply last week when asked about President Obama’s endorsement of rival Kamala Harris in California’s U.S. Senate race and she mentioned that that both are black.

Sanchez made the comment during a taped interview for the public affairs show “Conexión” that aired Friday on Univision 19 in Sacramento. When asked about the endorsement, the congresswoman noted that Obama and Harris have long been friends, but suggested that race was also a factor in his endorsement.

“I’m not really sure what she intended to imply,” Earnest said Monday.

Earnest noted that Sanchez issued a statement Friday evening saying that she did not mean to suggest that race played a role in the president’s endorsement of Harris, California’s two-term state attorney general. Harris is the daughter of immigrants from Jamaica and India and is the highest-ranking black politician in California.

During the Spanish-language interview on Friday, Sanchez said this about Obama’s endorsement of Harris: “I think they have, what he said they have, is a friendship of many years. She is African American, as is he. They know each other through meetings.”

Shortly after the president announced his endorsement of Harris last week, Sanchez also accused Obama of being part of the nation’s “entrenched political establishment.”

Earnest said that Obama stands by Harris and thinks she would be an excellent member of the Senate.

Harris, who is in Philadelphia for the Democratic National Convention, on Monday said that Sanchez should apologize to the president for her remark.

“The more you think about what she said the more clear it becomes that that is not the perspective or the voice of a leader, especially in these times,” Harris told the Sacramento Bee.

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Gov. Jerry Brown signs new laws boosting the humane treatment of animals

Gov. Jerry Brown on Monday signed two new laws aimed at more humane treatment of unclaimed stray animals and fighting dogs facing euthanasia.

In all, Brown signed 28 bills Monday, including one banning the use of carbon dioxide to euthanize animals that go unclaimed in animal shelters. The proposal expands an existing law outlawing the use of carbon monoxide gas chambers.

The bill was supported by groups including the American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals that said animals are terrified when placed in the gas chambers and often take minutes to lose consciousness as their organs shut down.

“Gas chambers are inhumane and unnecessary,” the society said in a letter to lawmakers in support of AB 2505 by Assemblyman Bill Quirk (D-Hayward).

Brown also signed AB 1825, giving dogs seized in criminal dog fighting rings a second chance at life.

Fighting dogs that are seized have been automatically labeled “vicious,” and are usually euthanized, according to Assemblyman Rich Gordon (D-Menlo Park), author of the bill.

The new law will require that professionals evaluate each dog on a case-by-case basis to determine whether it can be rehabilitated to safely re-enter society or be placed in a sanctuary.

“This law gives abused dogs a chance to live a peaceful life in a loving home,” Gordon said.

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Another California Republican running for Congress struggles with questions about Donald Trump

San Fernando Valley Republican Mark Reed is running an uphill campaign against Rep. Brad Sherman in the safe Democratic district.

Thursday night Reed struggled with the same hurdle many down ballot Republicans are confronted with: to what degree are you aligned with GOP presidential nominee Donald Trump?

Reed showed up at a Los Angeles Times convention viewing party Thursday night. He touted his candidacy when taking the microphone to ask a question of Times journalists. As part of a long-winded question about voter participation rates, Reed called Trump “arrogant ... brash ... bold ... nasty.” (Around the 24-minute mark in the video above.)

That prompted an audience member to take the microphone a few minutes later to pose Reed a question. Does he agree with Trump’s proposal to build a border wall with Mexico and ban some Muslims from entering the country?

Reed responded by saying he pledged allegiance “to this great nation, not to a political party,” which provoked another member of the audience to shout “Yes or no?” The crowd got a little rowdy before Reed ultimately said he would not be endorsing Trump or Hillary Clinton.

Ed. note: The audience member who asked the question is married to a Times employee.

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California Politics Podcast: A Philadelphia preview

No state has a larger presence at this week’s Democratic National Convention than California. And for the state party’s powerhouse politicians, that means a chance to shine on the biggest stage of all.

This week’s California Politics Podcast offers a preview of what California Democrats might be talking about as they descend on Philadelphia, from Gov. Jerry Brown to his would-be successors and beyond.

We also discuss President Obama’s endorsement of Atty. Gen. Kamala Harris’ bid for the U.S. Senate, yet another sign of the party establishment closing ranks around Harris instead of fellow Democrat Rep. Loretta Sanchez.

I’m joined by Marisa Lagos of KQED News.

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Watch: Loretta Sanchez implies President Obama endorsed Kamala Harris because they are both black

Orange County congresswoman Loretta Sanchez, in an interview on a Spanish-language television station in Sacramento, implied that President Obama endorsed her rival in the U.S. Senate race because both are black.

The president endorsed state Atty. Gen. Kamala Harris on Tuesday, praising her record as California’s top law enforcement official.

In the taped interview on Univision 19, which aired Friday evening, the congresswoman noted that Obama and Harris have been longtime friends, but said that race was also a factor in his decision:

“I think they have, what he said they have, is a friendship of many years. She is African American, as is he. They know each other through meetings,” Sanchez said in Spanish during the interview.

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State Atty. Gen. Kamala Harris: Stay safe while playing ‘Pokemon Go’

Atty. Gen. Kamala Harris is telling consumers they should Poke Stop and think before playing the wildly popular “Pokemon Go” game app.

The game, which has attracted legions of fans since it was introduced earlier this month, allows players to find virtual characters in the real world using the app on their phones.

Libraries, parks and other public places have become gathering spots for players, and many have been designated Poke Stops, or places to collect virtual currency.

Harris said recent experience shows people need to take care while playing the game.

“Consumers should be aware that the virtual experience in ‘Pokemon Go’ can expose players to physical danger,” said the release from Harris’ office, citing two men who fell off a cliff in northern San Diego County because they were distracted and another man in Anaheim who was stabbed late at night while playing the game alone.

Harris is advising people to turn off the app’s location access when they’re not using it, review privacy settings and to refrain from using it while driving.

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Gov. Brown signs law requiring registration of homemade guns

(Rich Pedroncelli / Associated Press)

Californians who assemble their own weapons from parts they’ve bought or gathered will have to apply for a state-issued serial number under a law signed Friday by Gov. Jerry Brown.

Brown signed Assembly Bill 857, which imposes a new mandate on anyone who buys components that can be made into a fully functional firearm. Those weapons are not currently traceable in the same way as buying a fully operating firearm.

Democrats pushed through the bill last month as part of a sweeping package of proposals inspired by recent shootings. Several of those bills, including an effort to impose new rules on the purchase and use of ammunition, were signed by Brown earlier this month and are now the focus of an effort to overturn them by a statewide ballot referendum.

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Jimmy and Rosalynn Carter express support for anti-death penalty proposition

(Gina Ferazzi / Los Angeles Times)

Former President Jimmy Carter and First Lady Rosalynn Carter on Thursday endorsed a November ballot measure that would abolish the death penalty in California.

Proposition 62 would replace capital punishment for first-degree murder with life in prison without the possibility of parole. It is one of two competing measures on the future of the death penalty that voters will weigh on Nov. 8.

“We believe that the attempt to administer the death penalty in a fair and efficient manner has failed, and note that a number of states have chosen to abandon this policy for this reason,” the couple said in a statement. “It is our hope that California will also lead the nation in adopting a more effective and fiscally responsible law enforcement approach.”

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Gov. Jerry Brown, L.A. Mayor Eric Garcetti among 10 California Democrats who’ll speak at the convention

Ten Californians will speak at the Democratic National Convention in Philadelphia next week, including Gov. Jerry Brown, Sen. Barbara Boxer and Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti.

Several of the speakers have been longtime Clinton boosters and have addressed delegates at previous conventions. California’s delegation of 475 pledged delegates and 76 unpledged delegates is the largest of any state.

Other California speakers include House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (San Francisco), House Democratic Caucus Chairman Xavier Becerra (Los Angeles), Lt. Gov. Gavin Newsom, former Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa, Rep. Ted Lieu (Torrance), Rep. Adam Schiff (Burbank) and Rep. Maxine Waters (Los Angeles).

Newsom has announced a bid for governor in 2018. Villaraigosa is said to be considering jumping into the race after the November election.

Missing from the schedule at this point are either of California’s U.S. Senate candidates. Normally the party highlights up-and-coming candidates, but with two Democrats on the ticket in November — Atty. Gen. Kamala Harris and Rep. Loretta Sanchez — it isn’t clear whether the national party will highlight one, both or neither woman.

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Memorial service for State Sen. Sharon Runner set July 29

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State Senate leader’s daughter lands job with his campaign consulting firm

California Senate President Pro Tem Kevin de León’s daughter Lluvia Carrasco has landed a job with Encino-based political firm Shallman Communications, which counts De León and a number of other prominent California Democrats as clients.

Carrasco will join the firm as an account coordinator, according to an email from vice president Morty Shallman announcing the hiring of five new employees.

Carrasco made news last year after it was revealed De León called the Berkeley-based nonprofit Greenlining Institute and asked if his daughter could apply for a position there.

De León had introduced a bill proposed by the institute and four other nonprofits and was steering it through legislative committees when his daughter started working there, The Times reported last year.

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Gov. Jerry Brown softens stance on construction worker pay in housing proposal

Gov. Jerry Brown’s administration now says it will consider requiring homebuilders to pay construction workers at rates equivalent to union wages as part of its effort to streamline housing development across California.

Ben Metcalf, the governor’s director of Housing and Community Development, said on Wednesday that Brown was open to including the pay rules, known as prevailing wage, as part of a package to allow homebuilders to bypass some local approvals if they reserve a percentage of their developments for low-income Californians and follow existing zoning.

“Nothing at this point is off the table,” Metcalf said at a news conference to drum up support for the plan in San Francisco.

Metcalf’s comments followed a Times story published Wednesday morning that quoted him saying prevailing wage — a key requirement of the labor group representing construction workers — was a deal breaker in the housing plan, one of the major debates facing lawmakers before the end of the legislative session in August.

Metcalf said Wednesday he meant that broad prevailing wage standards, as currently proposed by the State Building and Construction Trades Council, wouldn’t work. But he emphasized that the administration was open to narrower requirements that could vary by the kind of development proposed.

Metcalf said the governor is concerned about prevailing wage because the housing streamlining is voluntary for developers, who need a financial incentive to take advantage.

Construction worker pay has become a central issue in the debate over Brown’s housing plan, which has strong opposition from labor groups and environmentalists who are also upset that it would allow projects to bypass some review under the state’s main environmental law governing development.

No lawmaker is currently championing Brown’s effort, which is intended to help control soaring home prices, and the Democratic-controlled Legislature is especially attuned to concerns from labor and environmental groups.

Representatives from both the State Building and Construction Trades Council and the California Labor Federation were on hand for the San Francisco event on Wednesday.

Also there was San Francisco Mayor Ed Lee, who expressed support for the governor’s plan. The measure would have an especially large effect on how housing gets built in San Francisco because the city currently requires multiple reviews for all housing developments.

Even though the measure would take away significant authority from the city in regulating development, Lee said the city should rely more, as the governor’s plan does, on existing zoning to plan for housing.

Lee compared the city’s often slow approval for new housing to the relatively speedy sign-off elected officials gave a new professional basketball arena for the Golden State Warriors.

“We can certainly approve housing for the very people who will be working there every day,” Lee said.

Lee does want some changes to Brown’s housing plan, including further assurances it won’t give developers an incentive to demolish existing low-income units to build largely market-rate, more expensive, projects. Lee also said the measure should require homebuilders to pay prevailing wages to construction workers statewide.

Wednesday’s meeting was the first in a series of events held by Brown’s administration across the state to try to garner support for the package before legislators return from summer vacation.

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Loretta Sanchez unloads on President Obama for endorsing her rival for Senate

Rep. Loretta Sanchez.
(Jae C. Hong / Associated Press)

Orange County congresswoman Loretta Sanchez let loose on President Obama for endorsing her rival in California’s U.S. Senate race, accusing him of being part of the “entrenched political establishment” that has failed California voters.

Obama and Vice President Joe Biden announced their support for U.S. Senate candidate Kamala Harris early Tuesday morning, praising her record as California’s attorney general and a prosecutor. Harris has been a longtime political ally of the president.

Sanchez said she was “disappointed” that Obama would intervene in a Senate race between two Democrats, saying his time would be better spent trying to defeat Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump and GOP candidates for Senate.

“I believe that California voters are deeply concerned about the entrenched political establishment which has failed to work for them. Yet, it has been clear for some time that the same political establishment would rather have a coronation instead of an election for California’s next U.S. Senator,” Sanchez said in a statement released by her campaign Tuesday evening.

Sanchez has said for months that the party has favored Harris since she jumped into the race in early 2015, when Sen. Barbara Boxer announced she was retiring. Gov. Jerry Brown and the California Democratic Party already have endorsed Harris.

“California’s Senate seat does not belong to the political establishment — it belongs to the People of California, and I believe California voters will make their own independent choice for U.S. Senate in November,” Sanchez’s statement said.

The Harris campaign responded by saying that Sanchez’s criticism of Obama was misguided.

“It’s disappointing to see Congresswoman Sanchez attack President Obama, claim he has failed to work hard and win results for our families, and question his commitment to defeating Donald Trump,” Harris campaign manager Juan Rodriguez said in a statement. “That’s not the perspective Californians want from their next U.S. Senator.”

In her statement, Sanchez also called Harris’ record as attorney general “troubling” and unleashed her most pointed criticism of her opponent in the campaign.

“Her glaring lack of experience on national security and federal issues may explain her notorious inability to take a timely stand on important federal issues, but that does not explain her failure to lead on a whole array of issues including a state investigation of officer-involved shootings,” Sanchez said. “Troubling increases in crime rates during her tenure, including a 10 percent increase in violent crimes including rape, reveal an Attorney General who says little and does even less.”

Sanchez also criticized Harris’ role in the nationwide $25-billion mortgage settlement with five major financial institutions for improper foreclosure practices during the recent housing market crash.

Harris has highlighted that settlement as one of her major accomplishments as attorney general, saying she delivered $20 billion in mortgage relief to Californians.

But Sanchez said in her statement that just a “small fraction of people got any meaningful relief,” and tens of thousands of Californians still lost their homes.

The two Democrats will face off in the November election, setting the stage for the highest-profile contest between two members of the same party since California adopted a top-two primary election system.

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Lt. Gov. Gavin Newsom endorses proposition to abolish the death penalty in California

Gavin Newsom
(Rich Pedroncelli / Associated Press)

California Lt. Gov. Gavin Newsom on Tuesday threw his support behind a ballot measure that would repeal the death penalty in California, saying the criminal justice policy did not deter crime and was fundamentally immoral.

In a statement, he said Proposition 62 would abolish a system “that is administered with troubling racial disparities.” Newsom, who publicly supported a 2012 failed measure seeking to end capital punishment, said the initiative would also save the state millions of dollars. He cited statistics showing that California has spent $5 billion to execute 13 people since 1978.

Proposition 62 would replace capital punishment for first-degree murder with life in prison without the possibility of parole. It is one of two competing measures on the future of the death penalty that voters will weigh on Nov. 8.

“I realize that this is a controversial issue that raises deeply felt passions on all sides,” Newsom said. “But I also believe that decades from now, like with so many other once-contentious issues, America will look back at the death penalty as an archaic mistake. On issues such as this, elected leaders owe it to themselves and to their constituents to speak up and speak out — regardless of political consequences.”

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New Democratic poll shows tightening race for Los Angeles County congressional seat

Bryan Caforio, left, candidate for the 25th Congressional District, gives his opening statement in a debate with Rep. Steve Knight (R-Lancaster), center, and LAPD Lt. Lou Vince, right, in May.
Bryan Caforio, left, candidate for the 25th Congressional District, gives his opening statement in a debate with Rep. Steve Knight (R-Lancaster), center, and LAPD Lt. Lou Vince, right, in May.
(Gina Ferrazzi / Los Angeles Times)

The race to between first-term Rep. Steve Knight (R-Lancaster) and his Democratic challenger Bryan Caforio is tightening according to a new poll by the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee.

Knight, considered one of the most vulnerable congressional incumbents in California, had the backing of 46% of the 400 likely general election voters polled, while Caforio had 40% and 14% remained undecided, according to a DCCC memo provided to The Times.

The poll shows Caforio, an attorney, with an eight-point lead over Knight among decline-to-state voters (40% to 32%) and an 25-point lead among Latino voters (53% to 28%).

Knight has deep roots in the district from serving in local office. He is the son of the late William J. “Pete” Knight, a former Air Force test pilot and well known Republican state senator in the Antelope Valley.

Caforio is a first-time candidate and new to the district.

Democrats are making an aggressive play for Knight’s seat, betting that they can tie the incumbent closely to his party’s presumptive nominee, Donald Trump.

The poll showed Democrat Hillary Clinton leading Trump 41% to 36% in the district, which extends from the edge of the Mojave Desert in Lancaster to the suburban cities of Santa Clarita and Simi Valley.

Once a Republican stronghold, the district is trending more and more in Democrats’ favor. They now have a slim advantage of less than a percentage point among registered voters in the district.

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Obama, Biden endorse Kamala Harris for U.S. Senate

President Obama with California Atty. Gen. Kamala Harris and Lt. Gov. Gavin Newsom, left, in 2012.
President Obama with California Atty. Gen. Kamala Harris and Lt. Gov. Gavin Newsom, left, in 2012.
(Eric Risberg / Associated Press)

President Obama and Vice President Joe Biden on Tuesday announced they are backing state Atty. Gen. Kamala Harris, a longtime political ally of the president, in California’s historic Democrat-on-Democrat U.S. Senate race.

The president praised Harris as a “lifelong courtroom prosecutor” who fought international gangs, oil companies and the big banks responsible for the mortgage crisis.

“Kamala Harris fights for us. That’s why I’m so proud to endorse her for United States senator,” the president said in a statement released by the Harris campaign and Democratic National Committee. “And if you send her to the Senate, she’ll be a fearless fighter for the people of California — all the people of California — every single day.”

For Harris’ rival, Orange County congresswoman Loretta Sanchez, the endorsements are a stinging rebuke and add another political obstacle to the many she must overcome by the November election.

Sanchez, who has served in Congress for two decades, said in a statement released by her campaign Tuesday evening that she was “disappointed” that Obama picked sides in a race between two Democrats. Instead, she said, he should be focused on defeating Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump.

“I believe that California voters are deeply concerned about the entrenched political establishment which has failed to work for them. Yet, it has been clear for some time that the same political establishment would rather have a coronation instead of an election for California’s next U.S. Senator,” Sanchez said.

“California’s Senate seat does not belong to the political establishment — it belongs to the People of California, and I believe California voters will make their own independent choice for U.S. Senate in November,” she said.

The president’s nod caps a string of major endorsements for Harris, the candidate of choice among the Democratic Party’s power barons and some of the left’s most influential interest groups. It also sends a clear signal to Democratic donors, many of whom have stayed on the sidelines this election.

Harris already has won the support of Gov. Jerry Brown and the California Democratic Party, along with Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.), a favorite of the left.

Sanchez supporters expressed dismay that the administration would attempt to tip the scales in this intra-party contest.

“In this historic Democrat versus Democrat race, we have two strong, qualified women of color and it is unfortunate that instead of letting the voters decide, the Democratic party along with President Obama are picking sides,” said Martín Diego Garcia, director of the Campaign for Latino Victory Fund, a political action committee that supports Latino candidates.

Lori Cox Han, a political science professor at Chapman University in Orange, said the endorsements by Obama and Biden solidified the message that Harris was the Democratic Party’s chosen one from the get-go.

“It just kind of says that it’s really not going to be that competitive going forward,” she said.

If Sanchez had the ability to mount a serious challenge, that would have become apparent in the June primary, Cox Han said. Sanchez finished a distant second with 19% of the vote, compared to the 40% nabbed by Harris.

Sanchez supporter John Harris, the Republican owner of Harris Farms in Coalinga, still thinks the congresswoman has a chance if she can stitch together support among enough Southern California Democrats, Latinos, moderates and Republicans.

“Loretta Sanchez has a path to victory, if she can get there,” said John Harris, whose farm was home to 2014 Kentucky Derby and the Preakness Stakes winner California Chrome.

He thinks the impact of Obama’s endorsement will be “neutral” in the Central Valley. Kamala Harris is largely perceived as part of the “elite San Francisco establishment,” and along with the president has been unsympathetic to the water issues faced by California’s farmers and ranchers, he said.

Harris has more than a 3-to-1 edge over Sanchez in fundraising and easily topped a crowded field of Senate candidates in the June primary. The attorney general also held a 15-percentage-point lead over Sanchez in the latest Field poll.

The two Democrats will face off in the November election, setting the stage for the highest profile contest between two members of the same party since California adopted a top-two primary election system.

Harris’ ties to Obama and his administration stretch back more than a decade, even before he burst onto the national political scene. While she was still the San Francisco district attorney, Harris supported and raised money for Obama when he ran for the U.S. Senate in Illinois. She later served as the California co-chair of his upstart 2008 presidential campaign.

Obama reciprocated by helping to launch Harris into the national spotlight when he gave her a speaking role at the 2012 Democratic National Convention in North Carolina.

The next year, the president landed in hot water when he called Harris the “best-looking attorney general” in the country during a Democratic fundraiser in the Bay Area.

The president called Harris the next day to apologize for the remark and the distraction it caused.

Because of that political allegiance, it would have been more surprising if Obama hadn’t endorsed Harris, said John Hanna of Southwest Regional Council of Carpenters, which supports Sanchez.

The Orange County congresswoman also backed Hillary Clinton in her 2008 campaign against Obama for the Democratic presidential nomination, so that also could be a factor, Hanna said.

“The president and vice president are stand-up guys,” Hanna said. “They reward royalty.”

Hanna said he was thankful that the endorsement was announced this week, predicting that it would get lost in the blizzard of news coverage of Donald Trump and the Republican National Convention in Cleveland.

Harris and Biden have largely operated in separate political spheres, with Harris spending her career in local and state office in California and Biden reigning as a formidable Democratic heavyweight in Washington.

Still, Harris was able to talk Biden into delivering the keynote speech at the California Democratic Party’s convention in San Jose in February,

Harris also worked extensively with Biden’s son, Beau Biden, when he served as Delaware’s attorney general. Beau Biden died at 46 in May 2015 after being diagnosed with brain cancer. Harris attended his memorial service.

“Beau always supported her, and I’m proud to support her candidacy for the United States Senate,” Biden said in a statement.

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Big money rolls in against campaign to increase tobacco taxes

(Gerald Herbert / Associated Press)

Opponents of a ballot measure to increase California’s tobacco taxes by $2 a pack have poured $16.9 million into the campaign over the last week.

The funding comes from cigarette makers R.J. Reynolds and Philip Morris, which are against the measure, Proposition 56, and was disclosed on state filings.

The big dollar contributions point to an expensive fight in November. Supporters of the measure include the American Cancer Society, American Heart Assn. and billionaire Tom Steyer.

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Leader of effort to overturn gun control laws is enlisting firearms shops for help

A San Diego-area businessman who filed papers seeking referenda to overturn six gun control laws said Saturday that he is part of a group of up to 100 activists who feel the measures were rushed through without considering public opinion.

Barry Bahrami said he realizes it will be difficult to collect 365,000 signatures on each of the six referendum petitions in the next two and a half months, but said opponents of the laws are serious about trying.

“The only certainty is that it’s an impossible challenge if we don’t at least try,” Bahrami wrote in an email to reporters. “By my math we can do it if we hustle. We have more than two thousand gun stores in this state. We will be leveraging these gun stores and numerous volunteers from the communities to get the petitions signed.”

If the referenda qualify, the new gun laws, including background checks for people buying ammo, will be put on hold until the voters act. While it’s possible the measures could qualify for the Nov. 8 statewide ballot, the lateness of the effort might mean the laws would be put on hold until the fall of 2018.

But Bahrami, the chief executive of tech firm Commercial Network Services, said his group is not just stalling.

“I assure you this is not a delay tactic,” he wrote. “We intend to veto these measures and at the same time we are exploring recalling public servants who have lost the integrity required to serve as a representative of the people of California.”

He predicted the courts would overturn the laws as unconstitutional but said going to the ballot could save time and legal costs. He said the Legislature ignored those who opposed the bills.

“They have an agenda to pass laws that are downright dangerous to public safety and nullifies our constitutional rights,” he said. “Today it is feel-good gun laws, but what will it be tomorrow? The people of California deserve representatives who will not ditch their own integrity in order to push an agenda.”

The ammo bill was authored by Senate Leader Kevin de León (D-Los Angeles), whose chief of staff, Dan Reeves, said Californians support the gun control efforts.

Referenda, he said, are “nothing more than a cynical standard-issue delay tactic designed to further postpone common-sense gun laws.”

He noted an initiative on the November ballot, Proposition 63, will also allow voters to ratify many of the gun control proposals.

“Fortunately, voters will have the final say this November whether dangerous criminals should be allowed to buy ammo in our state.”

Bahrami said that just in the last day, support for the referenda has poured in.

“Groups of Californians from all over the state have been coming forward to assist in this effort since your stories were filed. It is quite refreshing to see people coming together to fix this,” he said.

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Issa challenger came out of nowhere, raised more money

One of the more peculiar stories to come out of California’s primary was the relative success of first-time Democratic candidate Doug Applegate, a lawyer and retired Marine colonel who launched an uphill campaign against Rep. Darrell Issa (R-Vista).

Issa outspent the political newcomer by more than $700,000 but Applegate still managed to claim 45.5% of the vote in the 49th Congressional District while Issa finished with 50.8%.

Issa walloped his 2012 and 2014 primary rivals by 30 and 33 percentage points, respectively.

Applegate’s showing was enough for the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee to take notice. The group put him in its “Red to Blue” program aimed at knocking off Republican incumbents this week and has begun drumming up support for him. Last month it commissioned and released a poll that showed the candidates tied with 43% of the vote while 14% of voters said they were undecided.

Applegate’s fundraising dramatically improved after his June 7 primary showing. He raised $53,000 in the run-up to the primary. From May 19 through June 30, he raised $130,000 to Issa’s $99,000, according to the latest filings with the Federal Elections Commission.

Applegate has a lot of ground to make up. Issa already has $3.7 million in the bank for the November election. And, of course, he happens to be the richest member of Congress.

Democrats are trying to use Issa’s support of Republican nominee Donald Trump against him while touting Applegate’s military credentials. They will have to overcome a GOP voter registration advantage of 8.5 points and do well among the one-quarter of voters who are registered with no party preference.

The money will have to flow to make this a competitive race, especially if you believe Applegate’s claim that Issa told him as much in person at a July 4 parade.

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California congressman on Turkey coup tweet: ‘I’m not pro-coup, but I’m not pro-Erdogan either’

Facing criticism over a tweet some read as sympathetic to the military officials who launched a coup attempt in Turkey, U.S. Rep. Brad Sherman (D-Porter Ranch) told The Times he was trying to express his view that the Turkish government and its leader Recep Tayyip Erdogan don’t reflect democratic ideals.

“It’s hard to be as nuanced as you want to be about foreign policy in 140 characters,” Sherman said. “I’m not pro-coup, but I’m not pro-Erdogan either.”

Amid the chaotic coup attempt on Friday night, Sherman sent this tweet:

Sherman said Saturday his original message could have been more nuanced. It has since been shared and commented on hundreds on times. Many who responded were critical and wondered why Sherman seemed to be supporting the overthrow of a democratically elected government.

Among them was the Turkish ambassador to the United States, Serdar Kilic:

Sherman, whose district is home to large Assyrian, Chaldean, Syriac and Armenian communities, told The Times on Saturday that he and the ambassador have disagreed in the past over Sherman’s criticism of the controversial Erdogan.

Sherman followed up on his original tweet Friday night:

He also responded to Kilic:

President Obama and Secretary of State John F. Kerry have both stated that the U.S. government stands with the Turkish government.

The U.S. has launched many airstrikes against the Islamic State from southern Turkey, and considers Turkey be a critical ally in the fight against the terrorist group.

Sherman said he wasn’t surprised that he and Obama took different positions.

“The president plays a different role. We have military bases in Turkey, he wants to get along with whatever government is in power and has never really criticized the Turks for the role they played in [supporting the Islamic State] when they were in their heyday,” Sherman said. “What a president says matters; members of the House can say something just because it’s true.”

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Almost 48% of registered California voters cast ballots in the June primary

More than 8.5 million ballots were cast and counted in the June 7 statewide primary, a turnout that while better than most presidential years over the past two decades was not as high as some expected.

Secretary of State Alex Padilla formally certified the primary results on Friday, more than five weeks after election day. In all, almost six of every 10 ballots in California were cast by mail. The raw total of votes cast was the second largest in state history, just behind the votes cast in the February 2008 presidential primary.

By percentage of registered voters, the June election’s 47.72% turnout fell behind both the 2008 and 2000 presidential primaries. In Los Angeles County, only 41.26% of registered voters cast ballots.

“This was the fifth straight statewide election in which a majority of ballots cast were vote-by-mail ballots,” said Padilla in a written statement.

Alpine County, the sparsely populated north state county, cast all of its ballots by mail. Its turnout was also tops in the state, with almost three of every four registered voters participating in the election.

Hillary Clinton won California’s Democratic presidential primary over Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders by 363,580 votes in the final tally. Donald Trump, meantime, won almost 75% of the Republican votes cast.

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Businessman wants voters to overturn six gun control laws

A San Diego-area businessman has taken the first step toward launching a petition drive to qualify referenda on a batch of six gun control laws signed this month by Gov. Jerry Brown.

Barry Bahrami, the CEO of Commercial Network Services, has filed paperwork with the state Attorney General’s Office to approve a title and summary for referenda petitions that would overturn six bills, including a measure requiring background checks for those buying ammunition.

Bahrami could not immediately be reached for comment on what kind of resources he has to collect 365,000 signatures in 90 days to qualify each one for the ballot. If the referenda qualify, the law they seek to overturn would be put on hold until voters make a decision.

The letter to the Attorney General seeking a title and summary includes an email address that includes the phrase: “VetoGunmageddon,” and his Facebook page includes the statement: “Oh no, they passed a new gun control law, I need to go and turn in all my guns--- said no criminal ever.”

The ammunition law was authored by Sen. Kevin De Leon (D-Los Angeles). His chief of staff, Dan Reeves, said the threatened referendum on the law “is nothing more than a cynical standard-issue delay tactic designed to further postpone common-sense gun laws.”

He noted there is already an initiative on the November ballot that would also put a background check requirement for ammo buyers into state law.

“Fortunately, voters will have the final say this November whether dangerous criminals should be allowed to buy ammo in our state,” Reeves said.

The bills facing potential ballot measures are:

--SB 880 by Sen. Isadore Hall (D-Compton) and AB 1135 by Assemblyman Marc Levine (D-San Rafael), which together ban the sale of semiautomatic guns with “bullet buttons” allowing easy replacement of the ammunition magazine.

--AB 1695 by Assemblyman Rob Bonta (D-Oakland), which makes it a crime to fail to report a gun lost or stolen.

-- SB 1235 by De León requires those buying ammunition to undergo a background check to make sure they are not a felon.

--SB 1446 by Sen. Loni Hancock (D-Berkeley), which outlaws the possession of ammunition magazines that hold more than ten bullets.

--AB 1511 by Assemblyman Miguel Santiago (D-Los Angeles), which prohibits short-term loans of firearms to people other than immediate family members.

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U.S. Senate candidate Loretta Sanchez has less than $1 million cash on hand

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California Politics Podcast: Cleveland calling

(Angelo Merendino / Getty Images)

California’s supersized delegation to the Republican National Convention heads east this weekend, no doubt wondering how much of the national campaign’s rhetoric will follow the delegates back home.

On this week’s California Politics Podcast, we assess what the convention in Cleveland means for the California GOP and how state party leaders sit when it comes to Donald Trump.

We also discuss the decision by San Diego Mayor Kevin Faulconer to lead the opposition to Gov. Jerry Brown’s prison parole initiative, Proposition 57.

And we examine the possible political backstory to this week’s surprise endorsement in a high-profile Democrat-versus-Democrat race in the Assembly.

I’m joined by Marisa Lagos of KQED News.

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U.S. Senate candidate Kamala Harris has $2.75 million left in the bank

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Loretta Sanchez says U.S. must address ‘lone wolf’ radicalized terrorists without sacrificing freedoms

The truck that plowed through Bastille Day revelers, its windshield riddled with bullets, is examined by forensics officers in Nice, France.
(Luca Bruno/Associated Press)

A day after a suspected terrorist attack in France killed at least 84 people, Orange County congresswoman Loretta Sanchez said Friday in an interview that the U.S. should “take a look at” doing more to prevent people from being radicalized over the Internet by Islamic State and other terrorist groups.

But Sanchez, who is running for the U.S. Senate, said such an effort cannot be done in a way that may infringe on Americans’ access to the Internet or other constitutional freedoms.

Sanchez was responding to a question about how authorities can protect Americans from “lone wolf” terrorists, those not affiliated with a specific terrorist organization but may become self-radicalized online.

“What makes us American is our freedoms,” Sanchez said during an interview on Fox 11 news. “What [Islamic State] and others really want … is to shut us down. To shut us down and take away those liberties.”

She also cautioned that “we cannot guard against every single thing that will happen.”

Sanchez, a member of the House Homeland Security Committee, urged viewers to follow the “see something, say something” advice given by national security agencies — to alert authorities if someone’s behavior appears suspicious or something appears out of place.

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Teachers union writes a $10-million check for income tax ballot measure, Prop 55

(Brian van der Brug/Los Angeles Times)

Backers of the effort to extend the lifespan of California’s tax rates on the most wealthy boosted their campaign coffers Thursday, with a $10-million contribution from the California Teachers Assn.

State campaign finance reports show the effort to pass Proposition 55 has now collected almost $28 million, bankrolled largely by teachers and by the California Hospital Assn.

Prop. 55 would add 12 years to the lifespan of temporary taxes first approved by voters in 2012. Single filers earning more than $263,000 a year and joint filers reporting more than about $526,000 of income would continue to pay higher rates through 2030. The independent Legislative Analyst’s Office has estimated Prop. 55 could bring in as much as $7.5 billion in tax revenues by 2019.

While the revenues aren’t assumed in the budget Gov. Jerry Brown signed last month, his fiscal advisors have projected budget deficits if the initiative fails to pass.

The teachers group was also one of the leading proponents of the 2012 tax initiative. In addition to teachers and hospitals, the Prop. 55 campaign’s backers include the Service Employees International Union and the California Medical Assn.

UPDATE 9:15 p.m. This story was modified to reflect the total raised is almost $28 million, not $38 million. The error was due to incomplete data on the state’s campaign finance website.

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Embattled Assemblyman Roger Hernández has more troubles as his fundraising efforts crater

Assemblyman Roger Hernandez, right, with Assemblywoman Shannon Grove in 2013.
(Rich Pedroncelli/Associated Press)

State Assemblyman and congressional hopeful Roger Hernández (D-West Covina) has had a difficult month so far:

Now it looks like Hernández is having trouble raising money for his campaign.

Hernández raised only $8,849 in the last quarter covering May 19 through June 30, according to his latest filing with the Federal Elections Commission.

Hernandez has $60,668 in the bank with which to challenge Napolitano. Her campaign has not filled its latest finance report but had just under $278,000 in the bank about three weeks before the election.

Hernandez has so far raised $107,564 from individuals and committees. He also loaned his own campaign $80,000.

Napolitano has raised about $479,000 from individuals and committees.

This post was updated to reflect the dates covered by the latest FEC report.

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Leader of former L.A. Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa’s PAC has a history with Lt. Gov. Gavin Newsom

Former Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa, left, and Lt. Gov. Gavin Newsom.
(Rich Pedroncelli / Associated Press & Brendan Smialowski/AFP/Getty Image)

Former Los Angles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa’s newly formed political action committee, which he says will combat the anti-immigrant rhetoric being stoked by presumptive Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump, has made an intriguing hire.

San Francisco political veteran Alex Tourk has joined Villaraigosa’s “Building Bridges, Not Walls” committee as campaign manager, said committee spokesman Roger Salazar, a Democratic campaign consultant.

Tourk happens to be a former campaign manager for Lt. Gov. Gavin Newsom, whom Villaraigosa would be challenging should he jump into California’s 2018 race for governor.

Tourk ran Newsom’s 2007 reelection campaign for San Francisco mayor but abruptly quit after the revelation that Newsom had an affair with his wife, who was the mayor’s appointments secretary.

Newsom publicly apologized for the relationship at a packed news conference at San Francisco City Hall shortly afterward. The affair took place after Newsom had filed for divorce from his then-wife, attorney Kimberly Guilfoyle.

Tourk had been one of Newsom’s closest political advisors in San Francisco, also serving as a deputy chief of staff at City Hall, and was intimately familiar with his political and personal history.

On the flip side, Newsom’s top political consultants for his gubernatorial bid, Ace Smith and Sean Clegg, ran Villaraigosa’s mayoral races and are intimately familiar with his political and personal history.

Smith and Clegg also are working on state Atty. Gen. Kamala Harris’ U.S. Senate campaign.

Tourk, in an email, said the committee has assembled a great team to “to mobilize Californians to engage in an comprehensive effort to defeat Donald Trump.”

Newsom’s gubernatorial campaign already is underway and Villaraigosa is expected to jump into the race after the November election. The political team Villaraigosa is assembling for his new PAC offers a clue about who might join a potential campaign for governor.

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Critics of California’s death penalty launch the campaign to pass Proposition 62

Proposition 62, California Death Penalty Repeal, would repeal the state death penalty and replace the maximum punishment for murder with life in prison without possibility of parole. It would apply retroactively to those already sentenced to death.

A group of advocates and exonerated inmates gathered in Los Angeles on Thursday to officially launch a campaign in favor of a ballot proposition repealing California’s death penalty.

“What we have here is a coalition of people from very different walks of life, from very different perspectives, who want to let you know why we should be out of the business of killing,” former “M*A*S*H” actor Mike Farrell, author of the initiative, told the audience.

Proposition 62 would replace capital punishment in California for first-degree murder with life in prison without the possibility of parole. It is one of two competing measures on the future of the death penalty that voters will weigh on Nov. 8.

Both ballot measures would require current death row inmates to work and pay restitution to victims. But the opposing measure, Proposition 66, aims to speed up executions through limited and expedited appeals.

Anti-death penalty advocates on Thursday criticized the competing ballot measure as misguided and costly. And they called the current death penalty process dysfunctional and barbaric.

Ron Briggs, who with his father led the campaign that 38 years ago brought the death penalty to California, said they believed then that the law would serve as a deterrent, provide swift justice for families and save taxpayers money.

“We couldn’t have been more wrong,” Briggs said. “What we did was we created an industry for death in California, costing taxpayers $187 million a year.”

Beth Webb, who lost her sister and several friends in a 2011 mass shooting at a Seal Beach hair salon, said more violence did not bring peace. “Neither me or my mom will find closure in the death of another human being,” she said.

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Gov. Brown to lead California delegation to Democratic National Convention

Gov. Jerry Brown will lead the California delegation to the Democratic National Convention starting July 25, the state Democratic Party announced Thursday.

California’s delegation will be the largest of any state headed to the festivities in Philadelphia, with 475 delegates pledged to a candidate and 76 unpledged delegates.

“California is showing what the Democratic Party can do when it’s unified and bold,” Brown said in a statement. “We can combat climate change, fix our broken immigration system and face up to the growing nuclear danger. And later this month, we will bring this message to Philadelphia.”

In addition to Brown, high-profile California delegates to the convention include Lt. Gov. Gavin Newsom, Atty. Gen. Kamala D. Harris, Secretary of State Alex Padilla, Treasurer John Chiang, State Controller Betty T. Yee, Senate President Pro Tem Kevin de León of Los Angeles and Assembly Speaker Anthony Rendon of Los Angeles.

Party officials said California’s delegation is evenly split between men and women and ranges in age from 17 to 85.

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State Sen. Sharon Runner, longtime Republican lawmaker, dies at 62

(Gina Ferazzi / Los Angeles Times)

State Sen. Sharon Runner, a longtime legislator who championed a sweeping law that targeted sex offenders and then battled back into political life after failing health, died Thursday.

She was 62.

A statement from her family cited respiratory complications as the cause of death. She had been absent for much of the legislative year because of her health and was not a candidate for reelection in November.

Runner underwent a double lung transplant in 2012, a result of her long battle with scleroderma and subsequently dropped out of her Senate reelection bid that year. She decided to return in a 2015 special election after another GOP legislator was elected to Congress. She previously served six years in the Assembly, from 2002 to 2008.

Assembly Republican leader Chad Mayes (R-Yucca Valley) called Runner a “champion for California’s children” on Thursday, noting that she authored legislation to expand charter schools, help families adopt, and improve the lives of foster kids.

“Sharon’s battle with scleroderma and her successful recovery from a double lung transplant inspired us all, and encouraged many Californians to sign up to become organ donors,” Mayes added.

Senate President Pro Tem Kevin De Leon (D-Los Angeles) praised Runner for service during difficult circumstances.

“While battling a tragic illness, Senator Runner endured and showed a real commitment to representing the people of her district,” De Leon said.

“Sharon Runner’s life was one of service,” said Jim Brulte, the chairman of California Republican Party, in a statement. “Sharon was committed to the people of her community and our great state.”

“Sharon Runner’s life was one of service,” said Jim Brulte, the chairman of California Republican Party, in a statement. “Sharon was committed to the people of her community and our great state.”

Her tenure in the Legislature for several years at the same time as her husband, George Runner, made them the first husband and wife in state history to serve in the Legislature simultaneously. He is now a member of the state Board of Equalization.

The Runners were instrumental in the drafting and passage of “Jessica’s Law” in 2006, a ballot measure that required sex offenders to be monitored with GPS devices and placed rules on how close they could live to schools and parks where children gather. By the spring of 2015, the law’s provisions had been weakened by a California Supreme Court ruling and subsequent actions by state corrections officials.

When she won election to the Senate in 2015, Runner told The Times that “it’s pretty miraculous to be able to come back again and serve. I’m kind of a comeback story. I’m excited that I am getting back” to Sacramento.

Runner cited health reasons for not seeking re-election to her Senate seat this year in northern Los Angeles County, a district nearly evenly split between Republicans and Democrats.

Her public service began in 1977 when she co-founded Desert Christian Schools, which today serves nearly 1,700 students of all ages on three campuses. Runner was born in Los Angeles and was a longtime resident of the Antelope Valley.

“She died peacefully at home, surrounded by family and friends,” said a written statement on Thursday from the Runner family.

UPDATE 11:40 a.m. This story has been updated from its original version with additional information and reaction from legislators.

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Four California ‘Political Animals’ helped set the stage for marriage equality in the U.S.

Women have a way of leading society into its sociopolitical future, putting their livelihoods on the line for what can be seen as the greater good.

And with “Political Animals,” a documentary about California’s first openly gay legislators -- all women -- and how they set the stage for nationwide marriage equality, director Jonah Markowitz is aiming to properly contextualize the present-day LGBT movement.

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Local control of Ontario International Airport headed for President Obama’s signature

(Irfan Khan / Los Angeles Times)

Ownership of Ontario International Airport will be transferred to San Bernardino County and the city of Ontario once President Obama signs legislation that passed the Senate on Wednesday.

Congress included wording in a bill allowing the Federal Aviation Administration to continue to operate that allows some of the $2-per-passenger facility charge collected at the Ontario airport to be used at Los Angeles International Airport.

It’s necessary under a stipulation of Los Angeles World Airports’ agreement to transfer Ontario International Airport that the Ontario airport would reimburse LAX for millions in fees used to pay for new terminals in the 1990s.

The settlement agreement calls for $120 million in passenger facility charges collected at Ontario to go to LAX over the next 10 years. But that isn’t allowed under current law.

Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.) said that including the language in the bill is a significant victory for the Inland Empire.

“Today is four years in the making,” Feinstein said in a statement. “The transfer will allow the airport to be revitalized and reclaim its role as a driver of economic growth for California.”

The Inland Empire is working to revive the struggling facility that has lost more than a third of its passengers since 2007.

Rep. Ken Calvert (R-Corona) said in a statement that he’s delighted the bill is headed to the White House. He sponsored the language in the House.

“The Inland Empire has waited far too long to have local control of Ontario Airport — but with the passage of this bill, that wait will soon be over,” he said.

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House keeps California water provision in spending bill over Democratic objections

Provisions aimed at moving water around California remain in an appropriations bill after House Republicans on Wednesday rebuffed California Democrats’ attempts to have it removed.

The provision, sponsored by Rep. David Valadao (R-Hanford), focuses on funneling more water to San Joaquin Valley growers by reducing the amount used to support endangered fish populations.

The House voted 248-181 to reject an amendment by Rep. Jerry McNerney (D-Stockton) and other California Democrats that would have removed the language from the Interior and Environment Appropriations bill.

In an interview after the vote, McNerney said Valadao’s language would have long-term implications for Northern California to meet short-term needs in Southern California.

Valadao has pleaded with fellow members to approve something to provide relief for Central Valley farmers.

McNerney said he doesn’t expect the overall spending measure to be approved by the Senate. If it did pass, he doesn’t believe President Obama would sign it.

The White House cited Valadao’s water language as one of the reasons advisors would recommend Obama veto the bill in its current form.

The House was scheduled to vote on the overall appropriations bill late this evening.

Valadao’s language passed the House as an independent bill in 2015, and has been repeatedly inserted in other bills, but the Senate has refused to bring it up.

The Senate is considering a bill proposed by Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.) as part of a broad package of water bills for Western states.

On Tuesday, the 14 Republicans in California’s House delegation sent a letter to Feinstein chastising her because the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee met but did not address her bill or Valadao.

In a statement, Valadao said it’s “beyond disappointing” Feinstein couldn’t get the bill considered before Congress leaves.

“While my colleagues and I in the House have made repeated attempts to advance California water provisions, utilizing a variety of legislative methods, Senator Feinstein has yet to move her water legislation through the Senate chamber,” he said. “In an effort to alleviate human suffering, House Republicans have pursued every avenue available.”

FOR THE RECORD: 7:56 a.m. This post was updated to correct the name of the appropriations bill being considered.

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Kamala Harris says Minnesota police wouldn’t have shot Philando Castile if he were white

State Atty. Gen. Kamala Harris
(Irfan Khan / Los Angeles Times)

California Atty. Gen. Kamala Harris on Wednesday said that Philando Castile, who was shot and killed by a Minnesota police officer during a traffic stop last week, would be alive today had he been white.

Harris, a candidate for U.S. Senate, made the comment to Jake Tapper on CNN.

Tapper noted that Castile had been pulled over by police on 52 separate occasions before the shooting. Tapper asked Harris if she agreed with Minnesota Gov. Mark Dayton that Castile’s race factored into why he was shot.

“I think that there’s no question … that based on the facts as I know it that he would not be dead,” Harris said. “That officer perceived him differently.”

Castile’s death, along with the fatal police shooting of another African American man in Louisiana, Alton Sterling, triggered a wave of protests nationwide. That included a rally in Dallas on Thursday night, when a gunman killed five officers and wounded nine others. Harris called the Dallas shooting a “massacre.”

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San Diego Mayor Kevin Faulconer takes on Gov. Jerry Brown’s parole ballot measure

(Gregory Bull / Associated Press)

Kevin Faulconer, who tamped down talk of a 2018 bid for governor during his successful reelection as mayor of San Diego, will lead the charge against the effort to revamp prison parole laws by Gov. Jerry Brown.

Faulconer appeared with prosecutors and victim rights advocates at a San Diego news conference on Wednesday morning to launch the campaign against Proposition 57.

“Prop. 57 would make it easier for criminals who have committed deplorable, violent crimes to be eligible for early release,” said Faulconer in a written statement prior to the event.

The November ballot measure would allow new parole opportunities for those convicted of nonviolent crimes who have served the full sentence for their primary offense. That would mean those who had extra years tacked on to that sentence could be released early, provided they earn education or good behavior credits.

A key issue in the campaign is likely to be whether those serving sentences for nonviolent crimes are, in fact, nonviolent felons. The effort being led by Faulconer will attempt to convince voters otherwise.

Faulconer, San Diego’s Republican mayor, has been subject of wide speculation about a future gubernatorial effort. During the end of his mayoral race, he publicly pledged not to leave the city’s top job early for a 2018 statewide campaign.

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Senate Committee considers nomination of California judge to serve on 9th Circuit Court of Appeals

The Senate Judiciary Committee on Wednesday considered the nomination of U.S. District Judge Lucy Haeran Koh to serve on the U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals.

If confirmed, Koh would be the first female Korean American to serve as a federal appellate judge. The Senate is not expected to consider her nomination before leaving at the end of the week for a seven-week break.

“Lucy Koh has a very distinguished record and it’s prepared her well to serve on the 9th Circuit,” Sen. Dianne Feinstein said, introducing Koh. “She represents the very best of our country.”

Feinstein and Sen. Barbara Boxer each mentioned Republican and Democratic praise of Koh.

“This is a moment we could come together behind someone who really exemplifies the American dream as both parties see it,” Boxer said. “This is a rare moment in time.”

Koh has served as U.S. district judge for the Northern District of California since 2010. The Senate confirmed her then by a 90-0 vote.

Koh has presided over several major Silicon Valley cases, including approving a $415-million settlement in September to end a lengthy legal saga over allegations that several technology companies conspired to prevent their workers from getting better job offers. She also presided over patent battles between Apple and Samsung over the iPhone.

Questions from senators on the committee largely focused on how Koh would balance individual privacy concerns with the government’s ability to quickly obtain digital information about criminal suspects.

She would replace Judge Harry Pregerson, who at 92 announced plans to step down last summer.

Boxer noted that the 9th Circuit has one of the busiest federal appeals courts in the country.

“This is an emergency vacancy,” Boxer said. “Given the quality of Judge Koh it would be unnecessary to delay this.”

Koh graduated from Harvard Law School in 1993 and worked for the Senate Judiciary Committee and the Department of Justice before serving as an assistant U.S. attorney in the Central District of California from 1997 to 2000.

In private practice, she worked as a senior associate in the Palo Alto office of Wilson Sonsini Goodrich & Rosati and as a partner in the Palo Alto office of McDermott Will & Emery LLP.

In 2008, Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger appointed her to the California Superior Court for Santa Clara County.

Koh is married to California Supreme Court Associate Justice Mariano-Florentino Cuéllar, who attended Wednesday’s hearing along with more than 20 other family members and her staff.

For the record: 8:14 a.m. This post has been updated to correct that Koh is being considered for a position on the 9th Circuit.

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Regulators launch an effort to keep California’s main climate change program alive

Next month, the big debate for Gov. Jerry Brown and lawmakers is expected to be the future of cap and trade, the state’s key climate change program, which is facing numerous political, legal and financial hurdles.

In the meantime, the Brown administration just released a plan to keep cap and trade going past its 2020 expiration date. Should a climate change deal not materialize in August, the new plan represents an insurance policy, albeit one with weaker legal standing.

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Senate leader wades into bitter fight over Assembly seat

In a surprising move, the leader of the state Senate endorsed a Democratic assemblywoman Tuesday whose reelection is opposed by some of California’s leading environmental groups. But the announcement also revealed fractures within the top echelons of Senate leadership.

In a document obtained by The Times, Senate President Pro Tem Kevin de Leon (D-Los Angeles) endorsed Assemblywoman Cheryl Brown (D-San Bernardino) in her bitter fight against fellow Democrat Eloise Reyes in San Bernardino County.

The endorsement came from the California Senate Democratic Leadership and included the names of four other legislators - Sens. Bill Monning (D-Carmel), Connie Leyva (D-Chino), Mike McGuire (D-Healdsburg) and Holly Mitchell (D-Los Angeles) - all of whom hold top posts in the Senate.

The statement noted Brown’s victory in the June 7 primary and that other groups, including the Legislative Black Caucus and the state Democratic Party, have endorsed her.

Courtni Pugh, political advisor to the Senate Democrats, confirmed the endorsement and said “we feel the statement speaks for itself.”

But Leyva has endorsed Reyes, Brown’s opponent. Leyva said on Tuesday the inclusion of her name was an error.

“I support Eloise Reyes. Period. Somehow the pro tem must have misunderstood my position, although I thought I was quite clear,” Leyva told The Times.

Responding to questions on why Leyva’s name was included in the endorsement, Pugh wrote, “Although Sen. Leyva is a member of the Democratic Senate Leadership team, she has individually endorsed a different candidate, Eloise Reyes. However, it is our understanding that Sen. Leyva is not involved in her campaign directly or indirectly.”

Leyva has donated to Reyes’ campaign and appeared at public events supporting her candidacy.

Leo Briones, a campaign consultant for Reyes, called the Senate leader’s endorsement of Brown “unfortunate.”

“Cheryl Brown can have every special interest and every Sacramento politician ... but she still is a legislator that does not represent progressive values or her district when it comes to issues of working families, of consumers, of guns and public safety and the environment,” Briones said.

Brown’s campaign did not immediately return a call seeking comment.

Brown previously said she had asked for De Leon’s endorsement late last year ahead of the contentious primary, but hadn’t heard back.

Chevron and other oil companies have contributed millions of dollars to a campaign account supporting Brown and other candidates this year, leading some progressive and environmental activists to dub her “Chevron Cheryl.

For his part, De Leon has expressed frustration in the past over the Assembly’s growing contingent of business-aligned Democrats, which includes Brown, and who held back support last year for De Leon’s landmark climate change bill until a key provision that would’ve slashed petroleum use statewide was removed.

“I’ve learned a lot from the Assembly,” De Leon joked at a charity roast last month. “Did you know that WSPA stands for the Western States Petroleum Assn.? And all this time I thought it meant We Specialize in Purchasing Assemblymembers.”

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Man gets prison time for fake 911 calls about California lawmaker

The man who put Rep. Ted Lieu through what the congressman called “one of the most traumatic half hours of my life” by phoning in a fake tip to police that the then-state senator had shot his wife has been sentenced to two years in prison.

Mir Islam, 22, of New York was sentenced Monday. He pleaded guilty on July 6, 2015, in U.S. District Court in Washington to three federal charges related to “swatting” (calling in a fake emergency to police) and “doxing” (posting identifying information online) dozens of victims, including Lieu. He also pleaded guilty to making a false bomb threat against a university in Arizona and online harassment and cyberstalking, the Justice Department said.

In 2013, Lieu was driving home when a Torrance police officer called his cellphone and asked whether Lieu had harmed his wife. When Lieu answered no, the officer hung up without explaining, the congressman recalled in an interview.

“A few seconds later I think, well, what if someone else shot my wife?” Lieu said.

He frantically called the officer and his wife repeatedly without a response. “That half hour was probably one of the most traumatic half hours of my life.”

His wife, Betty, wasn’t answering her phone because armed police had arrived at their home and had ordered her to put her hands behind her head as they searched the house for intruders.

“It was quite traumatic for her,” he said.

Lieu said police and fire vehicles blocked the street when he arrived home, and officers were still combing the neighborhood.

“I got to see firsthand the enormous waste of resources. If some other emergency was happening they would have been short-handed, and every time one of these calls happens it costs the city money,” he said.

Several celebrities, including Justin Bieber, Miley Cyrus and Simon Cowell, have been targets of similar swatting calls, and Lieu’s Senate district included the celebrity-studded areas of Beverly Hills, Bel-Air and Pacific Palisades.

Islam told the FBI that Lieu was targeted because he was pushing to increase penalties for making “swatting” calls.

“It was highly disturbing that this person targeted me because of legislation I chose to offer. I’m very pleased the FBI has put a stop to that with this person and hopefully others won’t repeat what he did,” Lieu said.

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House passes resolution supporting L.A.’s Olympics bid

The U.S. House approved a resolution by voice vote Tuesday supporting Los Angeles’ bid to host the 2024 Olympic and Paralympic Games.

“Los Angeles knows what it takes to host the Olympics,” Democratic Caucus Chairman Xavier Becerra, the resolution’s sponsor, said in a statement. “We have proven we can do this and do it successfully.”

Nineteen members of California’s delegation co-sponsored the resolution.

The L.A. 2024 Olympic bid committee has been drumming up support for the city’s application for months. Los Angeles is competing with Paris, Rome and Budapest, Hungary. The International Olympic Committee is scheduled to choose a host in September 2017.

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Sen. Dianne Feinstein opposes ballot measure to legalize pot

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Renewable energy programs helping distressed areas of California with quality jobs, study says

California’s push to develop more renewable energy, including solar and wind power, is creating well-paying jobs that are concentrated in economically distressed parts of the state, according to a new study released Tuesday.

Senate President Pro Tem Kevin de León (D-Los Angeles) and Assemblyman Eduardo Garcia (D-Coachella) said the study is evidence that the state needs to continue to pursue its ambitious goal to have 50% of energy come from renewable sources by 2030.

“Clean energy is an economic success story here in California,” de León said at a news conference at a job training center in Sacramento run by the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers and National Electrical Contractors Assn..

Between 2002 and 2015, a major expansion of the renewable energy industry created 25,500 blue-collar job-years — some 53 million hours of construction work, according to the study by the Don Vial Center on the Green Economy at UC Berkeley.

The greatest job gains were “in counties such as Kern, San Bernardino, Riverside and Imperial, where unemployment rates are far above the state average and income is far below average,” the study concluded.

The effort is producing many middle-class jobs because almost all the large-scale renewable projects are built under project labor agreements, which provide union pay rates, health insurance and pension programs, said Betony Jones, associate chair of the center.

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A large crowd silently makes its way to the state Capitol to urge peace, not police violence

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Lyft agrees to pay fines over late disclosure of lobbying

The ride-hailing firm Lyft Inc., which has enjoyed a string of legislative victories at the Capitol, has agreed to pay $6,000 in fines for repeatedly being late in disclosing its use of lobbyists to influence California state officials.

An investigation by the enforcement staff of the state Fair Political Practices Commission alleged that Lyft failed to file in a timely manner five lobbyist employer reports. The firm admitted the allegations and reached an agreement with staff to pay $6,000 in administrative penalties to the state.

The commission will meet July 21 to act on the proposed agreement on fines.

Lyft spokeswoman Alexandra LaManna said in a statement: “Lyft takes its reporting obligations seriously and has fully cooperated with the F.P.P.C. We look forward to resolving this matter.”

Companies that hire lobbyists to advocate with state government are required to file timely reports detailing the amount of payments. Lyft failed to file the reports by the deadline.

“An express purpose of the [Political Reform] Act is to ensure that the activities and finances of lobbyists are disclosed so that improper influences are not directed at public officials,” according to the staff report.

During the 2013–14 legislative session, Lyft spent more than $271,000 on lobbying activity related to four transportation-regulating bills. One was filed 530 days late, although Lyft did not conduct any lobbying activity during the quarter.

“According to Lyft, the late filing was an oversight caused by Lyft’s reliance on its lobbying firms to file its reports and its lack of experience as a lobbyist employer,” the staff report said.

Other reports, during which there was lobbying activity, were filed from 11 to 165 days late.

In one case, a report failed to disclose payment for text messages, emails and other communications sent to Lyft customers and drivers encouraging recipients to contact their state legislators.

“According to Lyft, the communications were part of Lyft’s overall marketing program, most of which is not related to influencing legislative action, and that is why it initially failed to identify the communications as items that needed to be reported on lobbyist employer reports,” the FPPC report said. “Upon realizing the mistake, Lyft voluntarily and proactively reported the violations…”

Lyft officials told investigators that the violations were “inadvertent,” and said the investigation “revealed no evidence that Lyft intended to conceal its activity or mislead the public, and Lyft does not have a prior history of violations of the Act,” the staff report said in recommending less-than-maximum fines.

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California Controller Betty Yee fined for campaign reporting violations

State Controller Betty T. Yee, the chief fiscal officer of California, has agreed to $2,082 in fines to be paid to the state political watchdog agency to settle seven charges that her campaign committee was late in reporting contributions before the 2014 election.

To give voters more information about donors to candidates, those running for office must report contributions of $1,000 or more with 24 hours during the 90 days before the election.

Yee’s campaign for controller failed to report six batches of contributions totaling $36,500 within 24 hours. Her campaign also filed a late report for a $5,000 contribution.

The state Fair Political Practices Commission enforcement staff recommended the fines in a report in which it said it “found no evidence of intent to conceal.”

Yee said her campaign treasurer took full responsibility for the “oversight” during a time of staff changes and paid the fine.

The commission will consider approving the settlement at its meeting on July 21.

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State Atty. Gen. Kamala Harris criticizes federal blood donation ban on sexually active gay men

(Toby Talbot / Associated Press)

California Atty. Gen. Kamala Harris on Monday criticized the U.S. Food and Drug Administration’s revised policy that bans blood donation by sexually active gay and bisexual men, saying it limited needed blood donations after June’s deadly nightclub shooting in Orlando.

The federal agency in December officially ended its blanket policy that blocked gay and bisexual men from donating blood, allowing them to donate but only on the condition that they have not had sex with another man for at least one year.

Harris, a Democratic candidate for U.S. Senate and former San Francisco district attorney, said in a letter to FDA Commissioner Dr. Robert M. Califf that the revised policy does not go far enough. She called the revised policy “functionally equivalent to a lifetime ban for the vast majority of gay and bisexual men.”

The consequences of that policy came to light after the shooting at the Pulse gay nightclub in Orlando that left 49 people dead and many others wounded.

“When close friends and loving companions of the victims answered urgent calls for blood donations in the wake of the deadliest mass shooting in U.S. history, many were turned away in order to comply with the FDA’s deferral guidance. As a public official, I find this deeply disturbing,” Harris said in the letter.

When they announced the revised blood donation policy, FDA officials said that the one-year deferral treats men who have sex with men the same as people in other groups that face an increased risk of having the human immunodeficiency virus, which causes AIDS.

Harris argued that “science-backed alternatives” exist to the FDA’s blanket ban on sexually active gay and bisexual men.

Men and women who have tested positive for HIV continue to face an indefinite ban on becoming donors.

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House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi weighs in on race to replace Rep. Loretta Sanchez

Lou Correa, left, and Bao Nguyen
Lou Correa, left, and Bao Nguyen
(Don Kelsen / Los Angeles Times; Courtney Lindberg)

House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-San Francisco) has taken a side in the fight between two Democrats running to replace Rep. Loretta Sanchez (D-Orange), who is seeking a U.S. Senate seat.

In a statement Monday, Pelosi announced her endorsement of former state senator Lou Correa.

“Lou has developed a long and strong record of problem solving both as a local and state leader,” Pelosi said. “We need his pragmatism, can-do mentality and his coalition building abilities representing the 46th District in Congress.”

Correa will face Garden Grove Mayor Bao Nguyen, who ultimately eked out enough votes to advance to the November general election after early results showed Republican Bob Peterson in second place .

It’s the first time voters in historically conservative Orange County will choose between two Democrats for Congress.

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California Lottery sets sales record, bringing in $6.3 billion

A crowd lines up to buy Powerball lottery tickets at Bluebird Liquor in Hawthorne recently.
A crowd lines up to buy Powerball lottery tickets at Bluebird Liquor in Hawthorne recently.
(Genaro Molina / Los Angeles Times)

In good news for schools, California Lottery officials say it looks like they broke a record for the fiscal year that ended June 30 by taking in nearly $6.3 billion in total sales, beating the $5.5-billion record set in the previous year.

Huge Powerball jackpots, including the record-setting $1.6-billion pot on Jan. 13, also boosted sales, although an increase in popularity of the Scratchers game accounted for the majority of this year’s lottery revenue, totaling nearly $4.4 billion.

In approving the lottery, California voters required a share of revenue to go to the state’s schools.

Officials estimate a record of nearly $1.5 billion will go to schools from the just-completed fiscal year.

“This is a great achievement for the California Lottery and great news for our state’s public schools,” said Lottery Director Hugo López regarding the record sales. “We know the money to schools is modest, but it helps in real ways.”

He said the California Lottery officials are working to make the current 2016-17 fiscal year another record year in prizes paid to winners and contributions to education.”

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California Rep. Barbara Lee on drafting Democratic Party policy: ‘It was intense’

Long nights and reams of paper went into crafting the Democratic National Committee’s policy platform, and Rep. Barbara Lee of Oakland really hopes you read it.

“I’m encouraging people to read it because I think they would be very proud of where Democrats stand,” Lee said by phone.

Lee said she pushed for more progressive policies in the platform, and that it’s important for voters to know if a “principle [is] embodied and embedded in your party’s platform.”

Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders delayed formally ending his presidential bid for weeks after the final Democratic primary, and the final platform language, agreed on over the weekend at a meeting in Orlando, Fla,, includes many of his progressive demands. Sanders is expected to endorse rival Hillary Clinton when they campaign together for the first time Tuesday.

The 39-page platform draft includes calls for instituting a $15-per-hour federal minimum wage, expanding Social Security and setting a carbon tax on greenhouse gas emissions. It won’t be finalized until the Democratic National Convention in Philadelphia later this month.

This was Lee’s second go-around in helping to write the platform. She was on the committee and presented the platform at the party’s 2012 convention.

The nomination wasn’t contested that year and ”generally we wanted to make sure that the platform not only supported the current administration’s position but moved forward,” she said.

“In this instance, it was more about making sure our presumptive nominee embraced an agenda that would bring people together,” Lee said. “It was important to people new to [the] party that their voices were heard.”

Lee said she approaches the process by thinking of who might not normally see themselves reflected in the document.

“Think about constituencies who may want a voice in this democratic process who have had either little voice or no voice,” she said. “It’s a very methodical and deliberate preparation that you go through.”

This year, the Sanders and Clinton campaigns each got a larger say in who made up the platform committee. Lee was picked by DNC Chairwoman Debbie Wasserman Schultz, and she said that is one reason she put off endorsing a presidential candidate until Monday.

“I wanted to be able to help make sure that I could talk to both the Clinton people and the Sanders people,” she said.

The two campaigns’ increased involvement added a layer to the debate, she said. At one point, specific word choice was negotiated, and whether a plank was included rested on just one or two words.

“It was intense in many ways; you want to do the best job. You’re negotiating consistently,” she said. “You have to be committed to staying there and working through the tough issues.”

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The presidential and statewide primary rules didn’t mesh well in California, leading to confusion and controversy

Californians registered as either a Republican or a Democrat likely had few problems navigating between the presidential and statewide primary choices on June 7, but others were left confused or angry.

And elections officials weren’t much happier.

This week, Secretary of State Alex Padilla will certify the primary results and observes wonder whether the confusion will lead to some lessons for elections to come.

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Gov. Jerry Brown makes a stop on his vacation in Bulgaria to meet with a local author

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All of California’s Democrats in Congress now back Hillary Clinton for president

(Chip Somodevilla / Getty Images)

All 39 Democrats in California’s House delegation now back former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton’s presidential bid after the endorsements of Democratic Reps. Barbara Lee of Oakland and Alan Lowenthal of Long Beach.

Most of California’s House delegation and both of the state’s U.S. Senators publicly backed Clinton in the months before the state’s June 7 primary. House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-San Francisco) and Rep. Norma Torres (D-Pomona) endorsed her shortly before voters went to the polls.

Lee said as a member of the committee writing the party’s platform, she didn’t want to look like she was picking sides.

“After much discussion and close collaboration between the campaigns, I am confident that Hillary Clinton will unite the party around the progressive issues outlined in the platform. That, along with the fact that she is by far the most qualified candidate — male or female — to ever seek our country’s highest office is why I am proud to endorse Hillary Clinton to be our next president,” Lee said in a statement.

Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders is expected to endorse Clinton Tuesday after his supporters were able to insert several progressive ideas into the party’s platform.

Lowenthal said in an interview that he wanted to see who people in his congressional district would support before endorsing a candidate.

“I wanted to let the people decide. Hillary won California, she won the 47th [Congressional District] and I know she’s going to be our candidate and I’m totally behind her,” Lowenthal said.

Who does your member of Congress support? Check out our endorsement tracker.

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Hernández faces erosion of support after restraining order

Assemblyman Roger Hernández (D-West Covina) is running out of friends in Sacramento.

He has seen an erosion of support since a Los Angeles judge issued a domestic violence restraining order against him last Friday in response to charges from his wife that he severely beat her over the course of their marriage.

Assembly Speaker Anthony Rendon (D-Lakewood) stripped Hernández of his Assembly committee assignments and then pulled his endorsement of his colleague’s bid to take on nine-term Congresswoman Grace Napolitano.

At least five more members of the Legislature also have dropped their endorsements since the ruling and now powerful Democrats in Sacramento are working to defeat Hernández.

This isn’t only about an election. It is also about the message we are sending to our daughters and sons. And that is why he needs to resign.

— Shawnda Westly, Democratic strategist

Others in Sacramento have started an ad hoc lobbying effort to peel support away from Hernandez ahead of the November runoff.

A group of political operatives are pressing politicians and organizations to withdraw previous support for Hernandez.

“Roger Hernandez has shown a tremendous lack of integrity and these accusations are serious,” said Dana Williamson, a public affairs consultant who worked in Gov. Jerry Brown’s administration. “I think it is time for him to step down.”

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Small rally assembles outside state Capitol in response to this week’s shootings

More than 200 people on Friday gathered outside the state Capitol for a small but passionate Black Lives Matter rally, hours after at least five Dallas police officers and multiple people were wounded in a sniper attack.

No one association was behind the event, which was organized entirely on social media by social justice activists and residents rattled by the events in the Dallas and the most recent controversial shootings by police of two African American men: Philando Castile, who was shot and killed in his car by a police officer in Minnesota, and Alton Sterling, who was shot several times while he was held on the ground by police outside a Louisiana convenience store.

Participants led a peaceful march around the Capitol, holding signs and shouting a familiar call: “Hands up. Don’t Shoot.” At least two hecklers shouted at the demonstrators but were quickly quieted by the crowd.

Drivers along the streets honked their horns in support.

Alvin Reid and Amber Busby, from Sacramento, were marching with their 4-year-old son, teaching him in the back of the crowd how to say, “Hands up, don’t shoot.”

Busby said she knows her children are in a place where they have no hope. “And that’s scary to me,” she said.

Reid said it was important for his son to attend. “We don’t want police getting hurt, we don’t want us getting hurt,” he said. “We are out here to try and stop that.”

The crowd grew as the marchers finished their round around the Capitol. At the end point, activists urged followers to get involved with the movement and continue attending rallies.

Kevin Carter, a social justice activist with several organizations in Sacramento, said he came out to support the cause after seeing an announcement for the march on his social media feeds.

He shouted to the crowds: “When you turn on the television and you see what they are doing across the country, know that you are a part of it, and that you are making a difference.”

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State Capitol shuts down early because of planned protest of police shootings

Employees working inside California’s state Capitol were sent home early Friday because of concerns about an evening rally to protest recent fatal shootings by police in Minnesota and Louisiana.

Sgt. Jay Castaneda of the California Highway Patrol, the agency that provides security for the Capitol, said state leaders made the decision out of an abundance of caution. No permits have been issued for the protest, so state officials aren’t sure what to expect.

“We don’t anticipate a problem,” Castaneda said. “I think they are taking precautions in light of what’s happened in the past few days.”

During a protest in Dallas on Thursday night, a gunman opened fire on police, killing five officers and injuring others.

The California Legislature is on summer recess, so activity inside the Capitol is lighter than normal.

“Capitol security agreed to close the building earlier due to an unpermitted rally this evening,” said Anthony Reyes, spokesman for State Senate leader Kevin de León (D-Los Angeles).

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California had ‘Vin Scully Day’ thanks to Kevin de León

(Vin Scully, second from left, holds a new street sign. (Rick Loomis / Los Angeles Times))

Gov. Jerry Brown and Lt. Gov. Gavin Newsom are out of state on vacation, so state Senate Pro Tem Kevin de León (D-Los Angeles) is in charge as acting governor.

Once he was imbued with the powers of the executive branch he did something probably every Angeleno would if they had the chance: he declared Friday July 8, 2016, “Vin Scully Day” in California.

The iconic broadcaster is currently in the middle of his 67th and final season behind the microphone for Dodgers baseball.

“The voice of Vin Scully has become the song of summer for generations of Los Angeles baseball fans and aficionados of excellence in sports broadcasting,” de León wrote in the proclamation.

The action is sure to bring a smile to Dodger fans. At least more so than Newsom’s 2013 move while acting governor to declare the artichoke and avocado California’s official vegetable and fruit.

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Clinton delegate to film addiction documentary on drive to Philadelphia

On Saturday, Ryan Hampton leaves his home at Angel’s Way Sober Living in Pasadena to drive 2,500 miles across the country in a 35-foot RV to be a delegate for Hillary Clinton at the Democratic National Convention in Philadelphia.

Along the way, Hampton, 35, a recovering heroin addict, plans to stop at recovery centers and prisons to interview other addicts and their families about life in addiction and how access to treatment changes place to place.

Hampton’s documentary will appear on the Huffington Post and FacingAddiction.org throughout the trip.

Hampton has been sober for 17-1/2 months. He said the overdose deaths of four close friends last fall spurred him to look into the scope of addiction nationwide.

“I’m one of the lucky ones. I was able to access treatment and then get housing afterward,” he said by phone. “I started looking at the addiction problem across America and what I saw was just crazy. It became very clear to me very quickly that this is America’s most urgent health crisis.”

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, opioids — primarily prescription pain relievers and heroin — were involved in 28,647 deaths in 2014, or about 78 people a day.

Congress is working to reconcile the House and Senate versions of the Comprehensive Addiction & Recovery Act, which authorizes $181 million in annual discretionary spending for new programs, a substantial increase in funding for opioid addiction treatment and recovery. Rep. Judy Chu (D-Monterey Park) was on the committee that reconciled the bills and is scheduled to be there when Hampton leaves Saturday.

The House passed the reconciled bill 407-5 on Friday. It needs a final vote in the Senate before going to President Obama’s desk.

Hampton said the idea of running to become a delegate came because the recovery community in Pasadena wanted to draw attention to the scope of the problem.

“I just became a registered voter just a week before I filed for the caucus election,” he said. “We just decided that we were going to use our voice.”

At the delegate election in early May, the recovering addicts and families who have lost someone to addiction fanned out to speak to as many people as possible.

Hampton said they found a lot of people who had their own story of recovery or of the addiction of a person they knew.

In Denver, Hampton will interview teens, and in Austin he will talk with people who are incarcerated. In Houston, he’ll sit down with the parents of one of his close friends who died. Other stops will include visiting advocates trying to expand the use of Narcan, an opiate antidote that can treat an overdose, touring recovery programs and talking with parents trying to improve recovery treatment in prisons.

Along with the normal responsibilities of being a delegate in Philadelphia, Hampton will participate in a forum on addiction and treatment hosted by Facing Addiction, the nonprofit he works with.

“It’s really amazing what one community can do,” he said.

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Biden expected to endorse in California’s U.S. Senate race

Vice President Joe Biden.
(Molly Riley / Associated Press)

Vice President Joe Biden is expected to endorse California Atty. Gen. Kamala Harris for U.S. Senate, according to a source familiar with his decision.

The endorsement from a standing Democratic vice president would be a political coup for Harris, the Senate front-runner, and a major blow to her challenger, Rep. Loretta Sanchez of Orange County.

Both Harris and Sanchez are Democrats. Biden, a former senator from Delaware, served with Sanchez for 12 years on Capitol Hill before becoming President Obama’s running mate.

Representatives from the Harris campaign said they were not aware of Biden disclosing his intentions. They were not available for comment Friday afternoon.

An endorsement from the vice president would only add to Harris’ solid support among the Democratic establishment. Harris already received the endorsements of Democratic Gov. Jerry Brown and the California Democratic Party.

Rep. Lucille Roybal-Allard (D-Downey), who is among the many California Democrats in Congress who support Sanchez, said news of a potential Biden endorsement was a topic of conversation on the floor of the House of Representatives.

Roybal-Allard said she would be “disappointed” should the endorsement happen. She said Sanchez has been a strong and loyal supporter of the Obama administration.

“I’m a little perplexed about why [Biden] would be getting involved in a race in California, especially when two Democrats are running,” Roybal-Allard said.

Harris worked with Biden’s son Beau Biden on a number of issues when he served as Delaware’s attorney general. Both helped negotiate the $25-billion nationwide settlement deal with the nation’s five largest mortgage institutions for improper foreclosure practices during the recent housing market crash.

Beau Biden died in May 2015 after being diagnosed with brain cancer. He was 46. Harris was among those who attended his memorial service.

Obama and Biden have waded into intraparty battles in the past. Both endorsed Pennsylvania Atty. Gen. Katie McGinty in that state’s Democratic primary election, as well as U.S. Rep. Patrick Murphy for Senate in Florida’s Democratic primary.

Times Staff Writer Michael A. Memoli contributed to this report.

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L.A. lawmakers to hold Long Beach prayer meeting following week of shootings

Assemblyman Mike Gipson (D-Carson) and state Sen. Isadore Hall (D-Compton) will host a 5 p.m. prayer meeting in Long Beach for victims of this week’s shootings across the U.S.

The Los Angeles-area lawmakers will join Pastor W. Todd Ervin Sr. in a prayer for “victims and their families; to promote peace; and to unite against hate, bigotry, racism and discrimination.”

The event comes after the shootings of black men by police this week in Minnesota and Louisiana, and the killing of at least five Dallas police officers Thursday.

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Gov. Jerry Brown urges against letting ‘violence tear us apart’

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‘Too much death’: California congressional delegation mourns shootings

Members of California’s congressional delegation on Friday were mourning the shooting deaths of five police officers in Dallas.

Several included the fatal shootings by police of Alton Sterling of Louisiana and Philando Castile of Minnesota in their remarks.

“My thoughts are with the families of those brave Dallas police officers, as well as the families of Alton Sterling and Philando Castile,” Rep. Judy Chu (D-Monterey Park) said in a statement. “But, as we mourn, we must remember that we do not mourn murder through murder. Nor do we create justice through injustice. Now is the time for all of us to come together.”

“The vicious and deliberate attack on public safety officers in Dallas last night was unconscionable. That it occurred while men, women and children were engaged in a righteous and peaceful protest against the senseless killing of two men this week made it even more horrible,” Rep. Scott Peters (D-San Diego) said in a statement. “As tragic and wrong as the deaths of Sterling and Castile were, violence against law enforcement officers who risk their lives every day cannot be tolerated and is never justified.”

In a speech on the House floor, House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-San Francisco) asked for justice and mercy.

“Many questions have yet to be answered, but whatever the motivation of the perpetrators of this horrible crime, it is clear that those perpetrators of this vile act have an agenda of evil. The past few days have seen too much death and too much heartbreak,” Pelosi said.

“We condemn the intolerable actions by a few people who exploited a peaceful demonstration, shooting police officers who were there to protect those marching,” Rep. Grace Napolitano (D-Norwalk) said in a statement. “We offer our deepest condolences to the families of the officers slain and wish speedy recovery to those injured.”

“Though the investigation into the Dallas incident continues, it is clear from the one gunman’s statements that this was a cold and calculated crime to kill police based on their position in society and for the color of their skin,” Rep. Jackie Speier (D-Hillsborough) said in a statement. “And, disturbingly, we’re seeing more Americans turn against each other as hate manifests itself in speech and violent deeds. This is not the America that we dream of for our children.”

In a floor speech, Rep. Doug LaMalfa (R-Richvale) praised the police response to the Dallas shooting.

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Kamala Harris holds strong lead in California’s U.S. Senate race

State Atty. Gen. Kamala Harris has maintained her strong lead over Orange County congresswoman Loretta Sanchez in California’s U.S. Senate race, although more than a third of likely voters remain undecided or don’t support either candidate, according to a new Field Poll.

The survey found that 39% of likely voters supported Harris, compared with 24% for Sanchez. Among the remainder, 22% said they were undecided and 15% didn’t support Harris or Sanchez.

Support for Harris appears to have dropped a bit since the June primary election, when a USC Dornsife/Los Angeles Times poll showed her with a 47% to 22% lead.

The two Democrats will face off in the November election, setting the stage for the highest profile contest between two members of the same party since California adopted a “top two” primary election system.

In the June 6 primary, Harris received 40% of the vote and Sanchez nabbed 19% among the 34 candidates on the Senate ballot. Since no candidate won more than 50%, the top two advanced to the runoff.

According to the Field Poll, Harris leads among most voter groups, including Democrats, Republicans, men and women. Among Republicans, 31% said they didn’t support either candidate and 25% were undecided.

Harris’ strongest bases of support are among registered Democrats, liberals, Bay Area voters, African Americans and those with a household income of $40,000 or more.

Sanchez leads Harris among Latinos and voters under 40.

The two candidates were closely matched among independent voters, conservatives and voters with household incomes of less than $40,000.

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Write-in legislative candidates win spots on the November ballot, in some cases with only a handful of votes

Though most races for the California Legislature require winning tens of thousands of votes, the state’s relatively new primary election rules mean candidates can earn a spot on the November ballot with far less.

In fact, the June 7 primary saw some candidates advance to the fall election with the support of fewer voters than would fill a community swimming pool.

In Los Angeles County, seven write-in candidates for legislative races qualified for the Nov. 8 general election with a combined 456 votes. Most of those candidates had only a few dozen votes, but one write-in candidate moved on to November after receiving just seven votes.

The top-two primary, created by voters in 2010, eliminated a guaranteed spot on the fall ballot. As a result, some districts with an overwhelming registration advantage for one party are routinely abandoned by other parties, opening the door to late challengers who mount write-in campaigns.

Angela Rupert, a Democratic write-in candidate in the 46th Assembly District, said she made the decision to run for office only after the filing deadline had closed.

“I didn’t feel that we had any representation,” she said.

The Toluca Lake resident received 131 write-in votes and will now face incumbent Assemblyman Adrin Nazarian (D-Sherman Oaks), who received 51,135 votes.

Though announced candidates for the Assembly had to either gather 1,500 signatures or pay a $1,000 filing fee, a write-in candidate had to only gather between 40 and 80 signatures. Even so, Rupert said, she had to convince voters to then add her name to their June ballot.

“It’s a really hard thing to do,” she said.

Election rules state that only the two candidates with the most votes advance to the November contest. But two write-in candidates each earned 32 votes in the 62nd Assembly District, and election law states both will move on to face the incumbent, Assemblywoman Autumn R. Burke (D-Marina del Rey).

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Patrick Kennedy endorses Loretta Sanchez for Senate

Rep. Loretta Sanchez
(J. Scott Applewhite / AP)

Former Democratic Rhode Island Rep.Patrick Kennedy on Thursday endorsed Rep. Loretta Sanchez (D-Orange) for U.S. Senate, praising her work in Congress to protect people with mental illness.

Kennedy, the youngest son of the late Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, served in Congress with Sanchez for 14 years.

“I have worked side-by-side with Loretta Sanchez in Congress and I know first-hand her strong commitment to supporting mental health equity policy and helping Americans and their families who are struggling with this disease,” Kennedy said in a statement released by the Sanchez campaign.

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Conservative radio host Hugh Hewitt interviews Loretta Sanchez, endorses her for Senate

Orange County congresswoman and U.S. Senate candidate Loretta Sanchez.
(Mark Boster / Los Angeles Times)
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Ex-Facebook President Sean Parker donates another $1.25 million to pot legalization campaign

Former Facebook President Sean Parker has put another $1.25 million into the campaign for Proposition 64, the initiative to legalize the recreational use of marijuana in California, bringing his total contributions so far to $2.5 million, according to records released Thursday.

The latest donation by the billionaire tech titan was reported to the secretary of state by the initiative campaign committee, Californians to Control, Regulate and Tax Adult Use of Marijuana While Protecting Children.

If approved by voters Nov. 8, the ballot measure would allow adults 21 and older to possess, transport and use up to an ounce of cannabis for recreational purposes and would allow individuals to grow as many as six plants. The measure would also impose a 15% tax on retail sales of the drug.

Parker has emerged as the biggest donor to the campaign, which has raised $5 million so far, much of it spent on a petition drive to qualify the measure for the ballot.

A controversial figure, Parker left as Facebook’s first president in 2005 after a cocaine-related arrest, even though he was not charged with a crime.

The opposition to the measure is led by the Coalition for Responsible Drug Policies, which has raised about $125,000 from groups including the Assn. of Los Angeles Deputy Sheriffs State PAC and the Los Angeles County Professional Peace Officers Assn.

Wayne Johnson, the lead strategist for the campaign against Proposition 64, said that supporters including Parker expect to make money if the initiative passes, something a Parker representative denied.

“Sean Parker didn’t make a contribution, he made a business investment that he expects to pay off,” Johnson said. “And why shouldn’t it? The initiative practically eliminates his competition by decimating the medical marijuana provider network. This is strictly a big-business monopoly model that permits a single company to control growing, manufacturing and distribution.”

Jason Kinney, a spokesman for the pro-legalization campaign, said the criticism is misplaced.

“[Parker] has no investment or interest in the marijuana industry nor any plans to enter it,” Kinney said. “He’s supportive because he is a social justice advocate. Like pretty much everything the opposition tries to throw at us, this is jello that doesn’t stick.”

Kinney also disputed that the measure would lead to a monopoly. “This measure was specifically and carefully written to protect small business, especially existing small operators who are abiding by the new regulatory framework created by the Governor and Legislature.”

Meanwhile, Proposition 64 was opposed Thursday by the California District Attorneys Assn. in part for failing to “give prosecutors any standard by which to measure and convict drug-impaired drivers,” according to Mark Zahner, the group’s chief executive officer.

UPDATED at 3:10 pm to include opposition from prosecutors group.

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California vote counting from June 7 primary is coming to an end

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House Democrats line up in chamber to demand gun vote

House Democrats are one by one stepping up to the microphone in the chamber, asking Republicans to bring up a bill to expand background checks for gun sales.

The House is supposed to be debating the rules for what can be added to a bill funding treatment for opioid addiction, and Republicans have refused to bring up HR 1217, the background-check bill sponsored by Rep. Mike Thompson (D-St. Helena).

Before the House broke for the July 4 recess, Democrats held a 25-hour sit-in on the House floor, repeatedly demanding a vote on gun control legislation. Thursday’s action took place during normal House business, with Democrats using up the time set aside for them to debate the rule.

Members have held up pictures of friends and constituents. They each repeat the same script.

Politico reported Thursday that House Republican leaders have delayed votes on their bill aimed at making it harder for people on the FBI’s watch list to purchase firearms.

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Los Angeles-area congressman is a target of a new anti-Trump ad campaign

California Republican Rep. Steve Knight is among the targets of a new ad campaign from national Democrats as they aim to tie presumptive Republican nominee Donald Trump to GOP lawmakers.

The Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee says the seven-figure national cable television and digital ad campaign is an attempt to gain footing in 10 districts where the electorate is particularly shakable. The spots launch Monday and will run through Republican National Convention. Knight is the only Californian on the list.

Dubbed “Standards” and “Sidekick,” the commercials are aimed at women 25 and older. One shows a bully and suggests that the “sidekick” is just as bad. The other shows citizens criticizing Trump over his vitriolic statements against women and communities of color. Each suggests that GOP members of Congress shouldn’t stand by Trump as the party nominee. Knight, a freshman from Lancaster, has been called the most endangered incumbent in California.

Knight’s north Los Angeles County district, which stretches from Lancaster to Santa Clarita and Simi Valley, is almost evenly split between Democrats and Republicans, and analysis from the nonpartisan Cook Political Report have labeled it a “toss-up” thanks to turbulence from Trump.

Democratic registration in the district has surged. Knight has struggled with shaky fundraising and has been reluctant to state his position on Trump.

“Whether House Republicans stand with Donald Trump or refuse to stand up to him, the point is the same: they are putting their party over our country and have betrayed the values and standards that Americans hold dear,” DCCC Chairman Ben Ray Lujan said in a statement. “House Republicans, including Jeff Denham, David Valadao, Steve Knight, and Darrell Issa, have allowed a man who freely attacks people and intentionally divides our nation to be their standard-bearer without lifting a finger to stop him.”

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Lawmakers remember a woman who blazed a trail in the California Legislature

The two-decade-long career of Marian Bergeson was praised by lawmakers and political insiders on Wednesday, after news spread that the Orange County legislator had died at the age of 90.

Bergeson was the first woman to serve in both the state Assembly and Senate, a 17-year run that ended as the era of term limits arrived in Sacramento and her election as an Orange County supervisor in 1994.

“Using a mostly low-key, tactical approach, Bergeson gets a lot done for her district,” reported the former California Journal in a 1988 profile.

“It takes perseverance and a heck of a lot of stamina,” Bergeson said in the story.

She lost the 1990 race for lieutenant governor, and later served as education secretary to Gov. Pete Wilson.

“Marian Bergeson worked tirelessly for decades to make California a better place and blazed a new trail for women in doing so,” Sharon Day, co-chair of the Republican National Committee, said in a statement.

Both Democrats and Republicans praised Bergeson on Wednesday, not only for her focus on education issues but for her role in boosting the political power of women in California.

“She encouraged women to enter the male-dominated world of politics and to dedicate themselves to public service,” said Senate GOP Leader Jean Fuller (R-Bakersfield) in a statement. “Her influence and passionate dedication stretched for decades and to all parts of California.”

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Senate candidate Loretta Sanchez supports ballot measure to repeal the death penalty

Rep. Loretta Sanchez (D-Orange)
(Hayne Palmour IV / San Diego Union-Tribune)

Congresswoman and U.S. Senate candidate Loretta Sanchez on Wednesday announced her support for a statewide ballot measure to repeal the death penalty in California.

Sanchez, an Orange County Democrat first elected to Congress in 1996, said that the “death penalty in California remains an ineffective deterrent and does not meet the constitutional standards of due process.”

“That is why, after careful consideration and 20 years experience in public office, I have concluded that we must end the fruitless attempts at reform and simply end the death penalty in California,” Sanchez said in a statement Wednesday morning.

If approved by state voters in November, the initiative would repeal the 1978 law that permits executions for people convicted of first-degree murder and other heinous crimes. Death sentences would be changed to life without parole under the measure. Voters rejected a similar effort in 2012.

A competing statewide measure on the November ballot would streamline the death penalty appeals process.

The last execution in the state was in January 2006, when 76-year-old Clarence Ray Allen was put to death.

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California Atty. Gen. Kamala Harris says anti-Muslim political rhetoric has led to increase in hate crimes

State Atty. Gen. Kamala Harris on Wednesday blamed a surge in hate crimes in California on the increasing political rhetoric against Muslims and other religious and ethnic minorities.

Harris, a Democrat running for U.S. Senate, didn’t mention presumptive Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump by name, but she did refer to his call to prohibit Muslims from entering the country in the wake of recent terrorist attacks.

Harris made the comments during an address to members of the Islamic Center of Southern California, who gathered at the Los Angeles Convention Center on Wednesday morning to mark the end of Ramadan.

“When they say people should be denied entry into our country based on whether they face east when they pray, they’re going against the idea of religious liberty that was the cornerstone and foundation of our democracy,” Harris said.

A recent report released by the attorney general showed that hate crimes were on the rise between 2014 and 2015.

“In the last year, while some politicians ratcheted up the rage, we saw a 50% increase in hate crimes motivated by religious bias, including attacks on mosques and synagogues across the state of California,” she said.

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Clear Creek Management Area would reopen under House-passed measure

(Lawrence K. Ho / Los Angeles Times)

The House passed legislation directing the Bureau of Land Management to open the 75,000-acre Clear Creek Management Area in San Benito and Fresno counties to recreational use, including off-road vehicles, hikers and hunters.

The unanimous voice vote, a common method of passing non-controversial bills, occurred Tuesday evening. It next goes to the Senate.

The Environmental Protection Agency closed the area because of high levels of naturally occurring asbestos. Opening the area to recreation is on the list of legislation Rep. Sam Farr (D-Carmel) hopes to pass before leaving Congress in January.

The bill also designates 21,000 acres of sandstone outcroppings in Fresno County as the Joaquin Rocks Wilderness. HR 1838 is co-sponsored by Reps. David Valadao (R-Hanford); Jeff Denham (R-Turlock) and Paul Cook (R-Yucca Valley).

“From the start, this has always been about bringing people together to support recreation, conservation and economic growth,” Farr said in a statement. “It’s been a pleasure to work with Representatives Denham and Valadao to reopen Clear Creek, and I’m excited to see people enjoy this unique area in a safe, responsible way.”

The House on Tuesday night passed by voice vote four other bills sponsored by Californians.

That includes Denham’s HR 4582, which exempts striped bass, which are not native to California, from a Central Valley Improvement Act program aimed at increasing the population of spawning fish like salmon, which are on the Endangered Species list.

The Turlock Republican’s bill is supported by several Democratic and Republican California members.

The House also voted to approve HR 5244 by Rep. Steve Knight (R-Palmdale), which would establish a national memorial and national monument to commemorate the more than 430 people killed by the collapse of the St. Francis Dam in Santa Clarita on March 12, 1928.

“This issue has been bantered about in my district for many years, and we’re finally getting a recourse,” Knight said on the House floor Tuesday.

House members also approved Rep. Tom McClintock’s HR 3079, which places some federal land in Tuolumne County into trust for the Tuolumne Band of Me-Wuk Indians, and House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy’s HR 4854, which places some federal land in Tulare County into trust for the Tule River Indian Tribe.

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About 70,000 votes from California’s primary remain uncounted as the final deadline looms

(Allen J. Schaben / Los Angeles Times)

The number of uncounted ballots in California from the June 7 presidential primary fell substantially over the holiday weekend and Tuesday, with the tallied vote count standing at almost 8.5 million.

The latest report, issued Tuesday afternoon by the secretary of state’s office, found 70,455 ballots had yet to be reviewed four weeks after election day. The tally as of last Friday was about 288,000.

Only eight counties still have ballots left to process, with California’s largest counties having finished their work prior to the July 4 holiday.

Sonoma County accounts for the majority of the remaining unprocessed ballots. A phone call placed to Sonoma elections officials Tuesday was not immediately returned.

By law, elections officials have until Friday to report all votes cast. The statewide results are then certified the following week.

One change this year may have played a role in the delay: a state law signed by Gov. Jerry Brown in 2015 to allow ballots with an election day postmark to be counted if they arrive as many as three days late.

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Lawmakers discuss reform for California’s bail system

Assemblyman Rob Bonta (D-Oakland) on Tuesday led a discussion among attorneys and advocates on the need to reform the process through which judges award offenders bail in California, a system he says criminalizes the poor and doesn’t protect communities.

In a hearing held at the Elihu Harris State Building in Oakland, Bonta said lawmakers must search for alternatives to the state’s “cash bail system,” which in most cases requires defendants to post a fee up front before they are released while their case is pending. Under the rules, people are evaluated on their ability to pay, he and other panelists said, rather than whether they are willing to make their next court date or pose a danger to society.

Bonta, whose office has been studying the issue all year, said he plans to introduce legislation at the start of the next session in December.

“To me, at its core, this is an issue of social, economic and racial justice,” he said. “It is going to be a heavy lift. It is a massive, fundamental change to the status quo.”

When people cannot afford to pay for pretrial release, they can lose their employment or housing, the panelists said. Even three days in jail can result in loss of wages, jobs and family connections, leaving some defendants 40% more likely to commit crime in the future, studies show.

The policies disproportionately affect minorities, the panelists said.

“If you can lose your home, if you can lose your car, if you can lose your job, without ever being convicted of anything, that is punishment,” said Zachary Norris, executive director of the Ella Baker Center for Human Rights.

San Francisco Dist. Atty. George Gascón said at least 29 jurisdictions have developed “risk-assessment” models, which allow court and pretrial staff to use data and other evidence to determine whether a person should be released. But representatives from two bail bondsman companies urged lawmakers not to completely do away with the surety bail, saying it allows defendants access to their civil liberties.

Senator Loni Hancock (D-Oakland) said the concerns with the current system extended well beyond California, where 65% to 75% of detainees in county jails statewide are awaiting trial, not serving sentences.

Hancock authored legislation requiring counties to use risk-assessment tools when preparing pretrial reports for inmates. The bill passed the Senate but died in the Assembly.

“The system is overdue for reform,” she said.

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House Democrats keep up gun control push as they return from recess

Several California members picked up right where they left off Tuesday morning, pushing the issue of gun control as soon as the House was gaveled into session after the holiday break.

Protestors followed suit, and police arrested several people Tuesday.

The House had recessed June 23, hours after Democrats sat on the House floor and demanded a vote on bills to expand background checks for gun purchases and prevent people on the FBI’s watchlist from purchasing guns.

Democrats held rallies and meetings in their districts during the break in an attempt to keep the momentum going.

Democrats have pledged to keep pressure on House Republicans to hold a vote on their bills, but it isn’t yet clear if that will include another sit-in.

House Republicans have scheduled votes this week on a bill that limits gun sales to terrorism suspects if the Department of Justice proves within three days that the suspect intends to commit terrorism. It is supported by the National Rifle Assn. Democrats say it does not go far enough. It was already rejected in the Senate.

As House Democrats stepped up to the microphone one-by-one, several people personally affected by gun violence sat down in the Capitol’s rotunda in protest. Capitol police quickly bound their hands and escorted them out of the building. One of the protesters who was not arrested told Roll Call that they were inspired by Democrats’ sit-in.

Rep. Mike Thompson (D-St. Helena), the leader of the Democratic Gun Violence Prevention Task Force, said on the House floor that people don’t want a bill “drafted by the gun lobby” that makes it difficult to block gun sales to suspected terrorists.

“The American people deserve a Congress that’s going to stand up to the gun lobby and do what it takes to help keep our communities safe,” he said.

Rep. Mark Takano (D-Riverside) called the bill “a fig leaf to cover up Republicans’ refusal to take any meaningful action on gun violence.”

The lone Republican waiting to speak Tuesday, Rep. Tom McClintock (R-Elk Grove), called Democrats’ sit-in “one of the most disgraceful and childish breaches of decorum in the history of this institution.”

During the 25-hour sit-in, Democrats shouted down the lawmaker presiding over the House as votes were called and essentially stalled legislative action until Republicans recessed the House until after the July 4 holiday.

“What we saw was the mob law of Occupy Wall Street brought to the House floor,” McClintock said. “They’re seeking to use the recent terrorist attack as justification for making it harder for law abiding Americans to defend themselves.”

McClintock said Democrats should have used the legislative process.

“Their only problem is they don’t have enough votes. Well, sorry. That’s called democracy; the majority of their colleagues simply disagree with them,” McClintock said.

Republican leaders have said they won’t tolerate such a protest again, and House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy of Bakersfield told reporters Tuesday that House leaders are meeting with the Sergeant of Arms about possible reprimands.

McClintock urged punishment for the Democrats who broke House rules.

“Serious damage was done that day to our orderly process of government, and it cannot go unchallenged. Doing so would establish a dangerous and corrosive precedent,” McClintock said.

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Politics podcast: Gun bills take center stage now and in November

Legislation to tackle gun violence was front and center this week, both in the sweeping laws signed by Gov. Jerry Brown and by the issue’s placement on the Nov. 8 statewide ballot.

On this week’s California Politics Podcast, we discuss both isssues as well as the new political awareness around helping the state’s homeless.

I’m joined by Anthony York of the Grizzly Bear Project.

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Judge OKs restraining order against Assemblyman Roger Hernández

(Assemblyman Roger Hernández (D-West Covina) left, is hugged by Assemblywoman Lorena Gonzalez as they speak with Assemblyman Bill Dodd. (Rich Pedroncelli / Associated Press))

State Assemblyman Roger Hernández (D-West Covina) was ordered by a judge on Friday to stay away from his ex-wife for three years after she accused him of violently abusing her over the last three years of their marriage.

Los Angeles County Superior Court Judge Shelley Kaufman issued the domestic-violence restraining order after Baldwin Park City Councilwoman Susan Rubio came forward in April with allegations that he punched and choked her during their marriage.

In granting the order Friday, Kaufman said she found Rubio’s detailed testimony chronicling specific incidents of abuse, including one in which Rubio said he threatened her with a knife, to be credible.

Hernandez must stay at least 100 yards away from Rubio, her home and her workplace until July 1, 2019. He must stay at least 15 feet away from her at public events.

Rubio cried in court as Kaufman read her ruling, and Hernández nodded as he was told the details of the order. He went to sit with his weeping mother in the audience until a bailiff handed him a copy of the restraining order.

Hernández declined to comment through his lawyer, Donald Schweitzer.

The couple’s divorce was also finalized by the court on Friday.

The order comes as Hernández is seeking to unseat nine-term incumbent Rep. Grace Napolitano (D-Norwalk) in the San Gabriel Valley’s 32nd Congressional District. He was seen as a potentially strong candidate when he launched his campaign last year.

Rubio’s allegations came two months before the June election.

Hernández fell to third place in the race behind Napolitano and a first-time Republican candidate until this week, when he moved into second place. The final count of votes released by the Los Angeles County Registrar-Recorder on Friday has Hernández in second place by 792 votes, which would qualify him for the general election.

Assembly Speaker Anthony Rendon (D-Lakewood) stripped Hernández of his Assembly committee assignments Friday evening after the ruling saying in a statement that “Hernández has problems in his personal life that need to be addressed, and he should focus on resolving them.”

“Domestic abuse is deplorable,” he said in the statement.

Rubio filled a declaration seeking the order after an April 5 divorce hearing at which she said Hernández came “aggressively” toward her and began shouting in her face. She said in her declaration the incident gave her “flashbacks” of previous violence during their marriage.

Rubio said in court that she did not previously seek a restraining order out of fear of retaliation and because she thought it could harm the couple’s political careers.

Testifying two weeks ago, Rubio said she feared for her safety if Hernández lost the election. Hernández testified that Rubio’s allegations played a “significant role” in his poor showing and were used in attack mailers.

Kaufman agreed that Rubio’s safety might be in “jeopardy” because of Hernández’s showing in the election.

Hernández regularly denied Rubio’s allegations throughout the court proceedings. In a May 3 court declaration, he said he “would never engage in the type of conduct respondent has accused me of committing.”

He testified in court in June that Rubio had “fabricated” many of the allegations against him. He said he and Rubio had had arguments, but that he never hit her.

“There were times when she exaggerated events,” he said in court earlier in June.

In her ruling Friday, Kaufman said she did not find his testimony “credible” compared to Rubio’s detailed accounts.

Hernández left the courtroom in a huddle with his family members while Rubio left in the opposite direction with two of her sisters.

Rubio’s attorney, Crystal Boultinghouse, said she was pleased with the ruling.

“The right thing occurred today,” she said. “It is a victory for all victims of domestic violence.”

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Judge issues restraining order against Assemblyman Roger Hernandez

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November’s ballot will feature Propositions 51 through 67, and the order is required by law

California’s chief elections officer assigned numbers Friday that will become synonymous with the state’s hefty list of Nov. 8 ballot propositions.

The ballot order unveiled by Secretary of State Alex Padilla is largely controlled by election law, based on the type of proposition that qualified and when it earned a spot on the ballot.

First up will be a $9-billion school bond, Proposition 51, largely thanks to the election law that requires top billing for bonds, which are paid back over time with government revenues.

Amendments to California’s state constitution come next, and there are six of those, including Gov. Jerry Brown’s attempt to revamp prison parole rules that is Proposition 57.

After that, it’s statutory measures written by the Legislature. And here may be the one that was most vexing, as Proposition 59 is an advisory measure from lawmakers on money in politics. It earned a spot on the ballot only after a ruling by the California Supreme Court.

Statutory initiatives come next, those that seek to write new state laws. Of the seven propositions in this category, voters will need to closely compare two opposing sides of the debate over California’s death penalty: a repeal under Proposition 62 and an expediting of the legal process under Proposition 66.

Proposition 67 actually was one of the first ones to qualify for the ballot. But as a referendum — in this case, whether to uphold or reject a 2014 state law banning single-use plastic bags — election law says it must come at the end.

UPDATE 7:11 p.m. Saturday: This story has been updated to reflect a Saturday evening advisory from the Secretary of State’s office that officials “reinstated” a proposition list issued Friday afternoon.

UPDATE 6:23 p.m. This story has been updated to reflect a Friday evening advisory from the Secretary of State’s office that officials had made a mistake in where to place the Citizens United measure, now numbered as Proposition 67.

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Assemblyman accused of illegally coordinating with independent expenditure committee

Claims of campaign law violations are already flying in the closely watched rematch between Assemblyman David Hadley (R-Manhattan Beach) and Democrat Al Muratsuchi in coastal Los Angeles County Assembly District 66.

Muratsuchi’s campaign says it filed an official complaint with the state’s Fair Political Practices Commission on Tuesday, alleging that Hadley’s strategists may have illegally coordinated with an independent expenditure committee has spent hundreds of thousands of dollars to support him. The commission confirmed that it received a complaint against the Hadley campaign Wednesday, but is barred from releasing details of the complaint for five days.

State law allows such committees to spend unlimited amounts of money to support or oppose a candidate, as long as they don’t coordinate with a candidate’s official campaign. Last year, the state’s top ethics watchdog approved a slew of tougher regulations on independent expenditures, including the presumption of coordination when candidate committees and independent expenditures share a consultant.

Spirit of Democracy, which is funded largely by Republican mega-donor Charles Munger Jr., has spent more than $292,000 to support Hadley this year. It spent more than $1.1 million backing him and opposing Muratsuchi two years ago.

The Muratsuchi campaign says the complaint points to $4,000 that Spirit of Democracy paid earlier this year to Sacramento-based consulting firm Presson & Associates, which has also received $35,000 in consulting fees from the Hadley campaign this cycle.

A few weeks later, Presson refunded the $4,000 to the independent expenditure committee, the same day Spirit of Democracy first reported dropping funds to support Hadley’s bid.

The firm’s owner, Steven Presson, who is still working for the Hadley campaign, called Muratsuchi’s claim “preposterous” and “fabricated.” He said Spirit of Democracy retained him initially to work on a separate Northern California race. When another committee took over that effort, he refunded the consulting fees to Munger’s committee, he said.

Munger and attorneys for Spirit of Democracy did not return emails or calls seeking comment.

Muratsuchi’s campaign calls the refund an “ill-conceived attempt to conceal the coordination that occurred.” Both Muratsuchi and Hadley have been reprimanded by the FPPC before.

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From pot to parole and beyond, California’s November ballot looms large

(Wally Skalij / Los Angeles Times)

On Nov. 8, California voters will weigh both sides of the death penalty, the merits of a statewide ban on plastic bags and fees on replacement bags, even the role of money in congressional and national elections.

Seventeen propositions in all, with the potential for lawmakers to add on a few more, are now officially set for the statewide fall ballot.

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Lt. Gov. Gavin Newsom applauds new gun laws, even as some overlap with his November initiative

(Justin Sullivan/Getty Images)

Though Gov. Jerry Brown put California on a path toward enhanced gun control with Friday’s signing of several sweeping new laws, voters will also have a say on the issue in November.

Lt. Gov. Gavin Newsom successfully placed his own anti-gun-violence initiative on the fall ballot last week, and he praised Brown’s actions in a brief statement Friday.

“I’m pleased that the governor took meaningful action to reduce gun violence,” Newsom said. “Now, with the Safety for All initiative, voters will finally have a chance to take matters into their own hands and keep the momentum going with bold reforms that build on these achievements and go well beyond.”

Newsom’s measure earned a spot on the Nov. 8 statewide ballot last week. The initiative both mirrors the new laws and goes somewhat further.

Both efforts, for example, impose background checks for purchasing ammunition and new licensing for those who sell ammunition. But the initiative also requires background checks for dealers and their employees. And it would force gun owners to give up their weapons if convicted of a felony.

A spokesperson for Brown said that voters “will have a chance to go even further in November, if they choose” to enact Newsom’s proposal.

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Gov. Jerry Brown signs bulk of sweeping gun-control package into law, vetoes five bills

Gov. Jerry Brown on Friday signed six gun-control bills into law, including a requirement that ammunition purchasers undergo background checks. The governor vetoed five other measures, including an expansion of the use of restraining orders to take guns from people deemed to be dangerous.

“My goal in signing these bills is to enhance public safety by tightening our existing laws in a responsible and focused manner, while protecting the rights of law-abiding gun owners,” Brown wrote in a message.

Brown approved bills that would ban the sale of semiautomatic rifles equipped with bullet buttons allowing the ammunition magazines to be easily detached and replaced.

Vetoes included a bill that would have allowed co-workers, mental health workers and school officials to petition the court for a “gun violence restraining order” for people judged a danger to themselves and others. Such orders would allow guns to be confiscated for a year.

In vetoing the bill, Brown wrote that he had agreed last year to approve a law allowing family members and law enforcement to petition the courts for restraining orders. “That law took effect on Jan.1, 2016, so at this point it would be premature to enact a further expansion,” he said.

The governor’s action comes one day after the Legislature approved 12 gun-control bills that were introduced in response to the December mass shooting in San Bernardino that killed 14 people. The bills gained legislative momentum after last month’s massacre in Orlando that claimed 49 lives.

The National Rifle Assn. Institute for Legislative Action accused the governor of exploiting the terrorist attacks for political gain.

“Gov. Jerry Brown today signed a Draconian gun control package that turns California’s law-abiding gun owners into second-class citizens,” said Amy Hunter, California spokesperson for the group. “ The governor and legislature exploited a terrorist attack to push these measures through even though the state’s already restrictive laws did nothing to stop the attack in San Bernadino.”

Bills the governor signed will:

— Require an ID and background check to purchase ammunition and create a new state database of ammunition owners

Ban possession of ammunition magazines that hold more than 10 bullets.

Restrict the loaning of guns without background checks to close family members.

Bills the governor vetoed would have:

— Put an initiative on the November ballot to clarify that theft of a firearm is grand theft and is punishable as a felony.

— Require those who make guns at home to register them with the state and get a serial number so the weapons can be tracked.

— Required stolen or lost guns to be reported within five days.

— Limited Californians to the purchase of one rifle or shotgun per month

On the latter bill, Brown wrote: “While well-intentioned, I believe this bill would have the effect of burdening lawful citizens who wish to sell certain firearms that they no longer need,” Brown said.

Brown acted on the gun bills just before he left for a European vacation expected to last a few weeks.

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Gov. Jerry Brown signs most of the gun-violence bills approved by lawmakers, vetoes others

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