 | | During his time as California’s attorney general, Xavier Becerra has filed roughly 100 lawsuits against the Trump administration.Jim Wilson/The New York Times |
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On top of that, Mr. Biden would look to California, the nation’s most populous state and its biggest blue stronghold, for a stocked pool of cabinet candidates. |
So far, all of those wheels are turning, mostly as predicted. |
Four years ago, Mr. Becerra was a veteran California congressman when Jerry Brown, the governor at the time, picked him to replace Ms. Harris as the state’s top prosecutor, after she was elected to the Senate. |
In that role, Mr. Becerra has been cast as the leader of the legal resistance against President Trump, filing dozens of lawsuits challenging the Trump administration on an array of issues including climate change and immigration. |
So Mr. Biden’s naming of Mr. Becerra for a job helping to lead the nation’s response to a pandemic came as a surprise, particularly for medical experts who had urged the president-elect to pick someone with public health expertise. |
Still, supporters — including Gov. Gavin Newsom, who called the move “a game-changer” on Monday — said Mr. Becerra was a great fit. |
The governor said Mr. Becerra, if confirmed, would be in a powerful position to advocate for health care for Californians. |
“We’ve had our eye on some big reforms,” he said. “We’ve been looking for a great partner. And we’ve found one.” |
Mr. Brown emphasized that Mr. Becerra would be committed to his task — “not just to the Affordable Care Act, but to health care and equity in general,” the former governor said. |
“And he knows his way around Washington,” he added. |
Others have cited Mr. Becerra’s environmental justice bureau, the first in the nation, as evidence that he will bring racial equity to the fore. |
And this week, The Sacramento Bee’s opinion editor, Gil Duran, wrote a piece slamming the attorney general for threatening legal actions against journalists for publishing information about officers who had been accused or convicted of crimes and for being largely absent in the State Legislature’s debates over major policing reforms. |
“I’ve never gone out there and done a press conference and beat my chest,” Mr. Becerra told Mr. Duran, defending his record. He said he had been a more low-key proponent of reform. |
- Senate Republicans may be skeptical of Mr. Becerra, but they’ve stopped short of saying he wouldn’t be confirmed. [The San Francisco Chronicle]
- Mr. Becerra’s exit gives the governor the rare opportunity to pick three high-profile leaders. [Politico]
- It wasn’t just George Gascón: Protests over the summer fueled a “tsunami of change,” as cities across the country elected progressive prosecutors. [The New York Times]
- If you missed it, here’s why Latino advocates say representation is about more than just having leaders who look like the electorate. [The New York Times]
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Here’s what else to know today |
 | | People protesting at the Los Angeles City Council against a measure they believed could adversely affect affordable housing.Lucy Nicholson/Reuters |
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- Some two million Californians are teetering on the verge of losing their homes. Most are protected by an eviction moratorium — but temporarily. Here’s a collaboration looking in depth at what’s at stake. [CalMatters]
- A Bay Area lawmaker hopes to expand the state’s existing eviction protections. [The Mercury News]
- State Assembly leaders are pushing for school districts to reopen in the spring. Proposed legislation would require public school students to return in phases and only after their counties are moved from the state’s most restrictive reopening tier. [EdSource]
- The alert you may have gotten on your cellphone about the state’s stay-at-home orders was its largest such alert ever. [The Sacramento Bee]
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- Battle lines are already being drawn over fracking. The governor called for the Legislature to pass a bill banning the practice by 2024. [The Bakersfield Californian]
- If you’ve ever wondered whether the waters off the San Onofre nuclear plant are safe, you now have a way of finding out. (So far, scientists say, it’s slightly radioactive, but much less than even a dental X-ray.) [The San Diego Union-Tribune]
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 | | Clockwise from center: Amazon Studios; Jeong Park/Netflix; Jessica Perez/Hulu; Liana Mukhamedzyanova/Kino Lorber; Francesca Errichiello/Kino Lorber |
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In a normal year, I look forward to perusing the end-of-year lists for the best restaurants I haven’t tried, the best movies I haven’t watched, albums I haven’t listened to, books I haven’t read. It’s fun, despite the tinge of FOMO I tend to get; I know I’ll never catch up, but there’s always more to discover. |
This year, though, as the lists have begun to trickle out, the feelings are complicated. |
Lists of restaurants are necessarily reminders of the places we’ve lost, lists of albums are reminders of concerts we didn’t get to experience. I found myself relating more than is probably healthy to my colleague Manohla Dargis, whose list of the 10 best movies of 2020 is headlined “I Watched Until My Eyes Bled.” |
At the same time, this year’s lists help us remember that people have adapted and found ways to create. |
Jill Cowan grew up in Orange County, graduated from U.C. Berkeley and has reported all over the state, including the Bay Area, Bakersfield and Los Angeles — but she always wants to see more. Follow along here or on Twitter. |
California Today is edited by Julie Bloom, who grew up in Los Angeles and graduated from U.C. Berkeley. |
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