Mitch McConnell and the tale of two moderate Dems

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Sep 26, 2022 View in browser
 
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WASHINGTON, DC - SEPTEMBER 20: U.S. Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY) walks to the Senate Chambers at the U.S. Capitol on September 20, 2022 in Washington, DC. The Senate is working to avert a government shutdown. (Photo by Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images)

Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell's move sets up a showdown with Democrats this week on energy permitting reform. | Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images

BREAKING — Senate Minority Leader MITCH McCONNELL is whipping against Sen. JOE MANCHIN's (D-W.Va.) energy permitting reform bill, which Democrats want to combine with a stopgap government funding bill, Burgess Everett and Caitlin Emma revealed. That could torpedo the legislation that Democratic leaders agreed to grant Manchin this summer in exchange for his support of the Inflation Reduction Act.

McConnell's move sets up a showdown this week as Senate Majority Leader CHUCK SCHUMER tries to push the two pieces of legislation through. With some Democratic defections expected, Manchin will likely need a sizable chunk of Republican support. If McConnell can get enough of his conference to refuse and the reform gets dropped from the continuing resolution, it'll be much more difficult to pass as a stand-alone proposition.

Manchin and McConnell's relationship has run hot and cold over the years, largely tracking the political imperatives of the moment. After months of courting Manchin in order to block a reconciliation bill, preserve the filibuster and perhaps even flip the Senate majority, McConnell "sees no need to help Manchin" after his IRA vote, Burgess and Caitlin write.

Flashback to an old dispute, via Manu Raju in 2012: "Football feud: McConnell vs. Manchin"

But there's another Democratic centrist for whom McConnell had nothing but kind words today: Sen. KYRSTEN SINEMA (D-Ariz.) touted her bipartisan credentials in a speech at the University of Louisville's McConnell Center, where McConnell introduced her as "the most effective first-term senator I've seen in my time in the Senate." Sinema lambasted both parties' moves toward the left and right and the "bitter and tribal extremism" in today's political landscape. More from The Hill

Sinema also said she thinks the Senate should return to a 60-vote threshold for nominations, criticizing both President JOE BIDEN and DONALD TRUMP for supporting changes to the filibuster. (Law360's James Arkin notes that standard would have knocked out the vast majority of the judges Democrats have confirmed in the Biden era.)

And Sinema predicted it's "likely" that Republicans will gain control of Congress in November. Responded Rep. RUBEN GALLEGO (D-Ariz.): "I mean you could be out there helping our candidates @SenatorSinema But my sense is that you would actually prefer the Dems lose control of the Senate and House."

FOR YOUR RADAR — Russian President VLADIMIR PUTIN today granted EDWARD SNOWDEN citizenship in the country where the NSA whistleblower has lived under asylum and then as a permanent resident for the past nine years. More from Reuters

STORM CHASING — Ian has now strengthened into a hurricane, the National Hurricane Center said today, as Florida and Cuba watch warily. It's now forecast to hit the U.S. as a Category 4 storm Wednesday. And parts of Tampa Bay's county are already under a mandatory evacuation notice. More from the Orlando Sentinel

JUST ANNOUNCED — Press secretary KARINE JEAN-PIERRE said Biden will host the first state visit of his presidency on Dec. 1, bringing French President EMMANUEL MACRON to the White House.

Good Monday afternoon, and chag sameach to my fellow Rosh Hashanah celebrants. May all Playbook readers have a sweet new year.

 

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Now, he works as an IT technician for Amazon. "It was probably one of the biggest deals that happened in my life, knowing that Amazon would put even more effort into developing me," he said.

 

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BIG PICTURE

THE PRICE IS RIGHT — Abortion has often been deemed the key issue behind Democrats' polling rebound this summer. But NYT's Nate Cohn writes that another factor shouldn't be overlooked: Gas prices fell steadily over the same period, tracking neatly with the political turnaround. And as some economic indicators have worsened again in the past few weeks — including gas prices halting their decline — the polls have stopped improving for Dems.

BATTLE FOR THE HOUSE

GABE INCOGNITO — New Mexico Democratic congressional nominee GABE VASQUEZ gave an interview to a local TV station as "James Hall" at a 2020 Black Lives Matter rally, The Washington Free Beacon's Collin Anderson reports. "We need serious police reform in this country," he said in the interview. "It's not just about defunding police, it's about defunding a system that privileges white people over everyone else."

In a statement to Playbook, a campaign spokesperson disputed the Free Beacon framing: "Gabe did not give a fake name. That name was attributed to him by the news station when he declined to give his name as he wanted the focus to be on the organizers." Vasquez, who is seeking to unseat GOP Rep. YVETTE HERRELL, added in a statement, "I oppose defunding the police," citing his funding votes on the Las Cruces City Council.

BATTLE FOR THE STATES

MASTRIANO FLAILING — DOUG MASTRIANO's Pennsylvania GOP gubernatorial campaign is struggling with minimal infrastructure, sparsely attended rallies and an advertising drought, NYT's Reid Epstein reports in a brutal story from Harrisburg. The Republican Governors Association has no plans to help him out. "I've not seen anything that is even a semblance of a campaign," says one top Pennsylvania Republican. Mastriano's far-right campaign is a test of whether an ultra-Trumpist strategy can prevail — avoid the news media, double down on the base — with few indicators of success so far.

Stunning data point: "Along with Mr. Mastriano in Pennsylvania, Trump-backed candidates for governor in five other states — Arizona, Illinois, Maryland, Massachusetts and Michigan — have combined to air zero television advertisements since winning their primaries."

DOWN BALLOT — Texas Democrats are hoping AG nominee ROCHELLE GARZA has a shot at unseating KEN PAXTON, focusing on persuading moderates to abandon the GOP incumbent over his legal scandals, WSJ's Elizabeth Findell reports from Austin. Paxton is under indictment and a separate FBI investigation, potentially positioning Garza, a civil rights lawyer, as Dems' best hope statewide in November. But Garza has struggled to raise money, keeping her off the airwaves. And Paxton is casting her as too liberal for Texas.

— Arizona Republican AG nominee MARK FINCHEM "failed for years to follow state laws requiring elected officials to report their sources of income and business ties," the Arizona Republic's Robert Anglen reports — the very laws he'd be in charge of overseeing. "Finchem did not disclose nearly $2,000 a month in pension benefits and a few businesses in which he was involved from the time he took office in 2015 until January."

HOT POLLS

— Pennsylvania: The Phillips Academy Poll shows very tight races: Democrat JOHN FETTERMAN leads MEHMET OZ in the Senate campaign 47% to 45%. And despite that NYT article above, Democratic gubernatorial nominee JOSH SHAPIRO is barely ahead of Mastriano, 46% to 43%.

— Oklahoma: GOP Gov. KEVIN STITT is just 3 points ahead of JOY HOFMEISTER, 47% to 44%, per KOCO 5-Amber Integrated.

— South Dakota: Republican Sen. JOHN THUNE leads BRIAN BENGS 46% to 33%, per a new Dem poll from Lake Research Partners.

HOT ADS

With help from Steve Shepard

— Georgia: Borrowing a page from the 2008 JOHN McCAIN playbook, GOP Gov. BRIAN KEMP's leadership committee is out with a new ad calling Democrat STACEY ABRAMS "Celebrity Stacey," including images of magazine covers and footage of Abrams behind the scenes filming a cameo on the series "Star Trek: Discovery."

— Ohio: Democratic Rep. MARCY KAPTUR's latest ad features RICK GOODMAN, a Republican voter, who says he can't support GOP nominee J.R. MAJEWSKI because of Majewski's extreme beliefs. "There's something wrong with that guy," Goodman says.

 

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JAN. 6 AND ITS AFTERMATH

COMMITTEE LATEST — The House Jan. 6 committee subpoenaed Wisconsin state House Speaker ROBIN VOS this weekend to learn more about a call he had with Trump in July. Vos sued to block enforcement of the subpoena in an emergency lawsuit. The committee initially demanded that Vos testify by this morning, though Kyle Cheney reports in Congress Minutes that the deadline has been extended as the parties await a judge's ruling on the matter.

INSIDE ACCOUNT — Former Capitol Police Chief STEVEN SUND, who commanded the force during the riot, said he will "break my silence and reveal everything that I know happened" in a new book, "Courage Under Fire: Under Siege and Outnumbered 58 to 1 on January 6," set to come out just ahead of the riot's second anniversary. His publisher, Blackstone, says Sund will include a "never-before-heard accounting of a call from the White House" amid the riot and "never-before-detailed conversations" he had with congressional leaders, AP's Hillel Italie reports.

THE PLOT TO SUBVERT THE ELECTION — PHIL WALDRON texted then-White House chief of staff MARK MEADOWS in December 2020 about his efforts to find election fraud in Arizona and Georgia, CNN's Zachary Cohen reveals . Waldron, a prominent promulgator of fraud conspiracy theories, called Arizona "our lead domino we were counting on to start the cascade," and Meadows texted him that opponents' efforts to stop Waldron from accessing voting machines were "[p]athetic." "Despite attempts to distance himself from the more dubious attempts to keep Trump in office, the messages underscore how Meadows was an active participant."

THE HUNT FOR VOTER FRAUD — The Arizona AG's efforts to detect voter fraud over the past few years have "turned up few cases — and … rather than bolster confidence in elections, the absence of massive fraud has just fueled more bogus theories and distrust," WaPo's Beth Reinhard and Yvonne Wingett Sanchez report from Phoenix. Now, as more Republican-led states implement similar efforts, Arizona stands as a cautionary tale of devoting state resources to baseless claims of widespread fraud. The election crimes unit, which was created after Democrats won key races in 2018, hasn't satisfied Republicans who say it's done too little. But its existence has nonetheless helped undermine trust in elections.

WHO YOU GONNA CALL — After former Rep. DENVER RIGGLEMAN revealed that there was a call from a White House landline on the afternoon of Jan. 6 to someone who stormed the Capitol, CNN's Jamie Gangel and Elizabeth Stuart today pulled back the curtain on one half of the call: The recipient was ANTON LUNYK. A 26-year-old Brooklyn man, Lunyk was sentenced earlier this month for criminally illegally demonstrating inside the Capitol. But "Lunyk says he doesn't remember receiving the nine-second call and claims he doesn't know anyone who worked in the Trump White House." It's still not clear who placed the call or whether it's of any real significance.

ROCKY RHODES — From Phoenix, AP's Jacques Billeaud and Lindsay Whitehurst trace the path of STEWART RHODES from an elite Yale Law pedigree and work as a RON PAUL staffer to founding the extremist Oath Keepers militia, ahead of his seditious conspiracy trial Tuesday. "For Rhodes, it will be a position at odds with the role of greatness that he has long envisioned for himself, said his estranged wife, TASHA ADAMS. 'He was going to achieve something amazing,' Adams said. 'He didn't know what it was, but he was going to achieve something incredible and earth shattering.'"

 

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JUDICIARY SQUARE

SCOTUS WATCH — The Conference of Chief Justices doesn't usually weigh in on Supreme Court cases, let alone controversial ones. But the bipartisan group of the country's top state court judges is urging the Supreme Court not to upend election law this term by adopting the radical independent state legislature theory, which could allow state legislatures to override constitutions without judicial review on election changes, NYT's Adam Liptak reports. The case could transform redistricting — and other election litigation, too.

Bloomberg's Greg Stohr previews the term to come, in which the court's conservative majority looks set to pull American jurisprudence further to the right on a variety of issues, from the Clean Water Act to the Voting Rights Act to affirmative action to same-sex wedding services. "The revolution is proving as wide as it is deep," he writes. "With the conservative legal revolution marching on, the question is increasingly not so much where the Supreme Court is going as how quickly it's going to get there."

THE WHITE HOUSE

FLORIDA FEVER — Biden's postponement of a Florida campaign swing due to Hurricane Ian belies the White House's uncertainty about how to treat the swing state that's tinting red, NBC's Mike Memoli reports: "For weeks, there has been a debate among Biden advisers about whether to elevate [Gov. RON] DeSANTIS at a time he clearly welcomes engaging in the national conversation."

TRUMP CARDS

RECORDS REQUEST — The National Archives has to inform the House Oversight Committee by Tuesday whether it's still missing records from the Trump White House, WSJ's Siobhan Hughes previews.

ON THE FRINGES — "How a QAnon splinter group became a feature of Trump rallies," by WaPo's Isaac Arnsdorf in Wilmington, N.C.: "Numbering about 100, they can be spotted by their lanyards sporting as many as 16 commemorative buttons from each rally they have attended. … The arrival of the QAnon group [Negative48], however, has led to a silent standoff with Trump's team, raising concerns that they could disrupt events, alienate other fans, distract from the former president's message or generate bad publicity."

AMERICA AND THE WORLD

TIKTOK ON THE CLOCK — TikTok and Biden administration have ironed out the fundamentals of a deal to take care of national security worries around the app, but it still needs to surmount some final negotiating hurdles, NYT's Lauren Hirsch, David McCabe, Katie Benner and Glenn Thrush report . The draft agreement would change the app's governance, algorithms and data security but not its ownership structure. ByteDance wouldn't be required to sell TikTok (a potential political vulnerability for the Biden administration). A final deal could still be months away, though, as Deputy AG LISA MONACO and Treasury officials have raised continuing concerns about China and national security.

 

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THE ECONOMY

WHAT RON KLAIN IS READING — Manufacturing in the U.S. is enjoying a renaissance the likes of which we haven't seen in decades — and this iteration looks different than it used to, NYT's Jim Tankersley, Alan Rappeport and Ana Swanson report. The center of gravity is shifting from the Rust Belt to the Mountain West and Southeast. And instead of reshoring jobs in the industries of yore, the new manufacturing boom comes in the likes of pharmaceuticals and craft beers. Economists attribute the strong bounce-back to the unusual aspects of the pandemic-triggered recession. The Biden administration also touts the American Rescue Plan's role in helping revitalize.

A BIT OF RELIEF — Apartment rent prices in August fell 0.1% from July, the first time they've declined since December 2020, new CoStar Group data shows, per the WSJ.

POLICY CORNER

BIG AFTERNOON READ — "How Policy Got Done in 2022," by The American Prospect's David Dayen: "To understand the Democrats' big climate and health care bill, you must go back decades."

UP IN THE AIR — The Transportation Department today is rolling out a proposed new rule that would force airlines and travel websites to tell customers up front about extra fees, CNN's Kate Sullivan reports. At today's White House Competition Council meeting, "Biden is expected to call on other agencies to take similar action to increase transparency and limit add-on fees for American consumers."

THE PANDEMIC

GETTING A BOOST — Pfizer and BioNTech today said they asked the FDA to authorize their new Omicron-specific coronavirus vaccine booster for kids ages 5 to 11. More from USA Today

PLAYBOOKERS

MEDIA MOVE — Elahe Izadi will co-host WaPo's "Post Reports" podcast. She'll also continue as a media reporter. Announcement

TRANSITIONS — Dan Jasper is now a policy adviser for Project Drawdown. He previously was Asia public education and advocacy coordinator at the American Friends Service Committee. … Charles Williams is now manager for advocacy and government affairs (federal) for the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation. He most recently was legislative assistant for Rep. Carolyn Maloney (D-N.Y.). … Peggy Ellis is now a strategic partner with Strategic Elements. She currently is president and founder of Ellis and Co., and is a DOT and RNC alum.

Corrections: Tuesday's Playbook PM misspelled Madison Malin's name. Friday's Playbook PM mistakenly included Sen. Amy Klobuchar (D-Minn.) in a "spotted" item at a Moon Rabbit lunch.

 

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California Today: What proposals are on the November ballot

The ballot measures cover sports betting, reproductive rights, school arts funding and more.
Author Headshot

By Shawn Hubler

California Correspondent, National

It's Monday. A guide to the seven propositions Californians will vote on in November. Plus, extreme heat raises new questions about California's power supply.

The gaming floor of the Gardens Casino in Hawaiian Gardens.Gabriella Angotti-Jones for The New York Times

The midterm congressional battles will dominate attention in November, but in California, no general election is complete without a bonus round of direct democracy. Today we offer a handy cheat sheet.

Voters will consider seven measures this year, fewer than in the past two general elections. The pandemic made signature-gathering difficult and pricey, and many proposals, including bans on fracking and vaccination mandates, failed to draw the necessary number of signatures. And the Legislature cut last-minute deals to avert potentially costly ballot measures on medical malpractice awards and on how quickly California should phase out the use of nonrecyclable plastic.

The remaining proposals include a subsidy for zero-emission vehicles and a constitutional amendment on abortion. Campaign spending has already broken records, with a high-dollar fight over legalized sports betting leading the way.

Proposition 1 — Reproductive Freedom

The Supreme Court's reversal of federal abortion rights this year prompted California Democrats to introduce bills aimed at safeguarding the right to the procedure. Key among them was a ballot measure asking voters to explicitly ban the state from denying or interfering with a person's right to abortion and contraceptives, if they so choose. Legal scholars see flaws in the measure's language, but legislative leaders view Proposition 1 as extra protection should abortion opponents pursue a national ban. Abortion rights have long been viewed by the courts as covered under a right to privacy in California's Constitution, but a constitutional guarantee to abortion and contraception could make it even harder for those rights to be eroded by politicians in the future. In a recent poll, 71 percent of California voters said they would vote yes on Proposition 1.

Proposition 26 — Casino Sports Betting

Two sports-betting initiatives are competing on the ballot. If both receive more than 50 percent approval, the one with the most votes wins. They arise from a sweeping 2018 Supreme Court decision that overturned a 1992 federal ban on sports gambling outside Nevada. Wagering on sports is now legal in more than half of states, but it is still outlawed in California, a market potentially worth many billions of dollars. Proposition 26 was bankrolled by Native American tribes who, since 1998, have had the exclusive right in the state to operate casinos. It would allow sports gambling at tribal casinos and large horse racing tracks — but only in person — and let tribes offer new games such as roulette. It includes a 10 percent sports-wagering tax at racetracks and regulatory reimbursements from tribes that the state's legislative analyst estimates would net tens of millions of dollars for the public coffers. Fighting the measure are private card clubs, whose owners compete for business with tribal casinos. They would be more vulnerable to lawsuits from tribes under another provision of the initiative.

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Proposition 27 — Online Sports Betting

Major gambling interests also see California's potential. Proposition 27 was put on the ballot by Las Vegas casinos and the online operators FanDuel and DraftKings. It would allow sports betting not just in person but also through computers and mobile apps, in partnership with tribes. It generally favors large, established operators; companies would have to pay a $100 million fee just to get into the market. Proponents say that 85 percent of that fee will go to programs fighting homelessness and that the remaining 15 percent will go to smaller tribes — only a few of which are supporting the initiative. The state's legislative analyst estimates that up to $500 million would be generated for homelessness programs. But most of California's tribes view the measure as an encroachment on their gambling monopoly, and the fees are a drop in the bucket compared with the money that online operators would stand to make and the billions of dollars California annually spends to address homelessness.

Proposition 28 — School Arts

The 2008 recession forced deep cuts in public school funding. Art and music programs were among the hardest hit and still haven't recovered, particularly in large urban school districts. In his final days as superintendent of the Los Angeles Unified School District last year, Austin Beutner made this initiative his signature project. Proposition 28, along with a series of star-studded joint efforts between the Los Angeles schools and the city's show-business community that he wrote, aims to forge more durable ties between California's largest school system and Los Angeles's signature economic sector. This ballot measure would create a dedicated funding stream for art and music education not by raising taxes, but by requiring the state to match 1 percent of California's prekindergarten-through-12th-grade school dollars from the general fund. California's legislative analyst estimates the set-aside would generate up to $1 billion that would be prioritized for districts that serve low-income families with the greatest number of Black and Latino students. Supporters include the state teachers' union, the state P.T.A. and the Los Angeles County Business Federation. Although the initiative would remove some revenue from the Legislature's purview, no opposition has materialized, which is rare.

Proposition 29 — Dialysis Clinics

California's initiative process is not always just direct democracy in action. Sometimes it is also a handy political tool. Since 2018, the Service Employees International Union-United Healthcare Workers West — which is seeking to organize workers and raise wages at private, for-profit dialysis clinics — has twice asked California voters to approve costly regulations. The initiative campaigns, relatively cheap to deploy from the union perspective, are costly for the dialysis companies, which have so far spent hundreds of millions of dollars to defeat them. This third attempt again calls for several new restrictions on clinics, including a requirement that a doctor, nurse practitioner or physician assistant be on site during all patient treatment. This would enhance labor leverage in a tough workplace, but the state legislative analyst estimates this rule alone will add hundreds of thousands of dollars to the average cost of running a clinic, which will then be passed on to Medi-Cal and other health insurers. That, in turn, would add tens of millions of dollars in costs to state and local government.

Proposition 30 — E.V. Subsidies

This initiative arises from global warming — and from a California law that requires ride-sharing companies to electrify their fleets. It would raise the top tier of the state income tax to help subsidize electric vehicles and charging infrastructure and, to a lesser extent, prevent and respond to wildfires. Personal income over $2 million would be taxed by an extra 1.75 percent, raising up to $5 billion for zero-emission incentives and wildfire prevention programs, according to estimates by the state legislative analyst. A coalition of business and environmental interests, including the ride-sharing company Lyft and the state's electrical workers, have put this proposal on the ballot. Proponents say it will put more electric vehicles on the road; opponents say it will simply help ride-sharing companies, which are under pressure to accelerate the electric transition. Gov. Gavin Newsom has urged voters to defeat it, calling it "a cynical scheme devised by a single corporation to funnel state income tax revenue to their company."

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Proposition 31 — Flavored Tobacco

In 2020, the pandemic accomplished what years of health lobbying had failed to do in California — it persuaded the Legislature to ban the flavored tobacco products that the industry has long marketed to new smokers, including bubble gum vape pens and menthol cigarettes. Newsom almost immediately signed the law, and within days, the industry qualified this referendum, preventing the ban from going into effect. Since then, the statewide ban has remained on pause, even as many California cities have passed municipal bans on flavored tobacco products. A yes vote will enact the ban, and a no vote will overturn the law.

Cari Vander Yacht

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Palisades Tahoe ski area, formerly known as Squaw Valley.George Rose/Getty Images

The rest of the news

  • New names: Gov. Gavin Newsom signed a state law that will remove the word "squaw," now widely considered a slur, from all place names in California by 2025, The Fresno Bee reports.
  • Blackout threat: As climate change makes extreme weather events more frequent, California finds itself faced with the threat of rolling blackouts more than ever.
SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA
  • Grants returned: Nearly $150 million worth of federal grants given to agencies working to reduce homelessness in Los Angeles went unspent between 2015 and 2020, The Los Angeles Times reports.
  • Hazardous chemical: Nine people were taken to the hospital after being exposed to a caustic chemical at a plastics recycling company in Jurupa Valley, The Associated Press reports.
  • Basketball: Greg Lee, the point guard for the unbeaten U.C.L.A. teams that captured the 1972 and 1973 N.C.A.A. basketball tournament championships, died last week in San Diego.
  • Airplane interference: Alexander Tung Cuu Le, a California man who was captured on video punching an American Airlines flight attendant, was charged last week with interference with flight crew members.
CENTRAL CALIFORNIA
  • Shooter training: Sanger Unified will be training its students using a video that instructs them to "Run, Hide, Fight" in active shooter situations, The Fresno Bee reports.
NORTHERN CALIFORNIA
  • Mass shooting plot: A 37-year-old man was arrested Sunday in Chico on suspicion of threatening to kill police officers and planning a "Las Vegas-style" mass shooting, The Associated Press reports.
  • Beetle: The bark beetle, which caused a huge die-off of trees in the Sierra Nevada, is now doing the same in Napa County, raising concerns about fire risk and ecological turmoil, The San Francisco Chronicle reports.
  • Heat advisory: A heat advisory will be in effect from 10 a.m. Monday to 8 p.m. Wednesday in San Diego County, The San Diego Union-Tribune reports.
Sarah Copeland's green shakshuka.David Malosh for The New York Times

What we're eating

An easy twist on classic North African shakshuka.

Tufa towers in Mono Lake.Ben Margot/Associated Press

Where we're traveling

Today's tip comes from Brian Reilly, who lives in Linden. Brian recommends driving Highway 395, what he calls "one of California's delights":

"The road from Ridgecrest to where it enters Nevada at Topaz Lake runs through the Owens Valley against the steep eastern slope of the Sierra, including the continent's highest mountain, Whitney. It has been called California's Alps. During early spring with late-winter snow falls, there seems to be range after snow-capped range while heading north toward Reno. It is also the site of Mono Lake, one of two inland salt water lakes in the U.S. It's a nice place to swim and float at ease due to the high-salt density. During sunsets, the rock tufa towers glow red."

Tell us about your favorite places to visit in California. Email your suggestions to CAtoday@nytimes.com. We'll be sharing more in upcoming editions of the newsletter.

Tell us

It's officially fall. What do you love about the season in California? What are the best ways to enjoy fall in your corner of the state?

Email us at CAtoday@nytimes.com with your stories, memories and recommendations.

Cyril Derreumaux arriving at Hilo Bay, Hawaii, after 91 days at sea.Tom Gomes

And before you go, some good news

Cyril Derreumaux, a Marin County man, has become the first kayaker to ever make a solo trip from the California coast to Hawaii.

Derreumaux started paddling in Monterey on June 21 and made landfall in Hilo Bay on the Big Island on Sept. 20. He crossed 2,400 nautical miles over the course of his 91-day adventure.

"Before leaving I couldn't really explain why I wanted to take on this challenge, but I finally found all the answers to my questions on the water," Derreumaux said in a statement. "I experienced moments of pure magic when all the elements came together: calm of the sea, calm of the currents, calm of the winds, and the visit in the middle of nowhere of a bird. It was so simple and so beautiful."

Thanks for starting your week with us. We'll be back tomorrow.

Soumya Karlamangla, Briana Scalia and Maia Coleman contributed to California Today. You can reach the team at CAtoday@nytimes.com.

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