How McCarthy reshaped the GOP field

Presented by Amazon: POLITICO's must-read briefing on what's driving the afternoon in Washington.
Sep 27, 2022 View in browser
 
Playbook PM

By Garrett Ross

Presented by

Amazon

BULLETIN — Secret Service officials "confiscated the cellphones of 24 agents involved in the agency's response to the Jan. 6, 2021, riot at the Capitol and handed them over to the Department of Homeland Security's inspector general," NBC's Julia Ainsley reports . "The agency handed over the phones 'shortly after' a July 19 letter was sent by Inspector General JOSEPH CUFFARI's office around the time he launched a criminal probe into the Secret Service's missing text messages from Jan. 6, the sources said. It is unclear what, if any, information the Office of Inspector General has been able to obtain from the cellphones."

HEADS UP — "Trump May Avoid Defamation Suit by Rape Accuser," by Bloomberg's Erik Larson: "Former president Donald Trump may be able to avoid the lawsuit filed against him by New York columnist E. JEAN CARROLL because he qualified as a government employee at the time he allegedly defamed her."

House Minority Leader Rep. Kevin McCarthy speaks during a weekly news conference.

House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy speaks during a weekly news conference on Jan. 13. | Alex Wong/Getty Images

McCARTHY'S MANEUVERING — WaPo's Michael Scherer, Josh Dawsey, Isaac Arnsdorf and Marianna Sotomayor are up with a big look at KEVIN McCARTHY's gambit this year to get the GOP in line behind him as he aims to claim the speaker's gavel come 2023. "The political machine around McCarthy has spent millions of dollars this year in a sometimes secretive effort to systematically weed out GOP candidates who could either cause McCarthy trouble if he becomes House speaker or jeopardize GOP victories in districts where more moderate candidate might have a better chance at winning," they write.

"The allies close to McCarthy have sometimes taken steps to conceal their efforts, as they did in the [North Carolina Rep. MADISON] CAWTHORN case, with money passing from top GOP donors through organizations that do not disclose their donors or have limited public records, federal disclosures show."

Said one anonymous GOP operative: "McCarthy is a political animal, and he has a lot of political animals working for him. … He is not a guy to be trifled with. It's like they say in the Marine Corps, 'No better friend, no worse enemy.' And they mean it, and they act on it."

Of course, there's one big figure looming over McCarthy's machinations: DONALD TRUMP. "If Republicans win a small majority in the House, Trump could likely influence enough votes to determine the speakership, GOP strategists say. It's a major reason McCarthy allies say he has remained close to Trump even when he has grown frustrated with him."

AFTERNOON READ — Vanity Fair is the latest to give Florida Gov. RON DeSANTIS the glossy profile treatment: "Ron DeSantis: The Making And Remaking (And Remaking) of a MAGA Heir," by Gabe Sherman

Good Tuesday afternoon.

 

A message from Amazon:

After high school, Jamie couldn't afford college. While working in a fulfillment center, she enrolled in Amazon's Career Choice program which paid for her to train as a first-aid instructor. "People ask me all the time how I got this job," she said. "And I tell them Amazon got me the job!"

Amazon's 750,000 hourly employees are eligible for Career Choice, which now fully funds college tuition.

 

a logo that reads 2022 ELECTIONS

THE CURIOUS CASE OF JAMES HALL — In Monday's Playbook PM, we included a story from the Washington Free Beacon alleging that New Mexico Democrat GABE VASQUEZ once gave an interview to a El Paso-based KVIA-TV, in which he supposedly used a fake name — the chyron read "James Hall" as he appeared on screen — and criticized the police. But the Vasquez campaign told us he didn't give a fake name, saying that the TV station attributed the name to him.

Well, after publication on Monday, we heard from KVIA-TV. Here's what they had to say: "We would be that TV station, though he didn't give us an interview as 'James Hall.' Nor did we attribute a random name to him when he presumably declined to give us his name," the station's general manager BRENDA DE ANDA-SWANN told Playbook. "The story, which aired in 2020, had a technical error and the graphic for 'James Hall' appeared ahead of time. … The first soundbite — Mr. Vasquez or not — shouldn't have had a name attached to it as it was a 'man on the street' comment. It really was just a technical error during a live newscast."

BIG PICTURE

MOVE FAST AND BREAK THINGS — Meta said on Tuesday that it "took down a network of fake accounts from China that attempted to interfere in American politics ahead of this November's midterm elections," NBC's Ken Dilanian reports.

What it looked like: "Meta said the Chinese operation set up fake accounts posing as Americans, attacking politicians from both parties and posting inflammatory material about divisive issues such as abortion and gun rights. The network was small — just 84 Facebook accounts — and did not have a chance to develop much of an audience, Meta said in a report released Tuesday." Read the Meta report

BATTLE FOR THE SENATE

JUST POSTED — "In 2019, Doug Mastriano said women who violated proposed abortion ban should be charged with murder," by NBC's Allan Smith: "In an interview with Pennsylvania radio station WITF, Mastriano was pressed about a bill he sponsored that would generally bar abortions when a fetal heartbeat could first be detected, usually around six weeks. Mastriano's remarks in that interview were previously unreported. … 'OK, let's go back to the basic question there,' Mastriano said. 'Is that a human being? Is that a little boy or girl? If it is, it deserves equal protection under the law.' Asked if he was saying yes, they should be charged with murder, Mastriano responded: 'Yes, I am.'"

IN PENNSYLVANIA — Pennsylvania Democrat JOHN FETTERMAN's work as lieutenant governor to grant clemency to inmates has become a key line of attack for his opponent MEHMET OZ, with the Republican "training intense fire on the Democrat on social media, in email blasts and in $4.6 million in TV ads accusing him of 'trying to get as many criminals out of prison as he can,'" NYT's Trip Gabriel reports. "Mr. Fetterman, in an interview, accused Dr. Oz of fear-mongering and twisting the facts of the Hortons' case and those of others he championed." It's the latest example of Republicans' shift toward messaging on crime and public safety in races across the country.

ON WISCONSIN — In the Wisconsin Senate race, incumbent RON JOHNSON is "leaning into controversy" as he fends off a challenge from Democratic Lt. Gov. MANDELA BARNES, AP's Scott Bauer writes from Madison. "Johnson has called for the end of guaranteed money for Medicare and Social Security, two popular programs that American politicians usually steer clear from. He's trafficked in conspiracy theories about the 2020 election and dabbled in pseudoscience around the coronavirus."

BATTLE FOR THE HOUSE

MISS INDEPENDENT — AP's James MacPherson writes from Bismarck, N.D., about CARA MUND, a former Miss North Dakota and Miss America winner who is running as an independent hoping to unseat GOP Rep. KELLY ARMSTRONG . "In doing so, Mund is gambling that her primary issue — support for abortion rights — along with her self-proclaimed outsider status and her celebrity can win over enough voters to unseat an incumbent tightly tied to the dominant oil industry in the reddest of states."

HOW IT'S PLAYING — After the 2020 election, California GOP Rep. MIKE GARCIA voted to overturn the results. "It was a perplexing move by the Santa Clarita Republican who had just won his swing district on a whisper-thin margin," L.A. Times' Melanie Mason writes. "Garcia was put on the defensive, while Democrats planned to make it a defining issue in this election. Then they didn't. In the battle over Garcia's district, as well as in the national political landscape, the Capitol siege on Jan. 6 has been a minor subplot."

BATTLE FOR THE STATES

CASH DASH — Democrat JOSH SHAPIRO has opened up a staggering fundraising gap in the gubernatorial race over his opponent, Republican DOUG MASTRIANO. CNN's Dan Merica reports that Shapiro today "will report his campaign raised $25.4 million from June 7 to September 19, ending the three-month period with over $10.9 million in the bank." Meanwhile: "According to the Pennsylvania Department of State, Mastriano's campaign has raised under $1.8 million from the start of 2021 to June of 2022. He has yet to file his June to September report, but the Republican entered June with just under $400,000 in the bank."

THE DEBATE DEBATE — The latest arena where debating is becoming a contentious issue ahead of the midterms is the New York gubernatorial race. Here's how it went down: Republican Rep. LEE ZELDIN challenged Democratic Gov. KATHY HOCHUL to a handful of debates. Hochul wouldn't commit to the slate, but finally agreed to do one in late October. But Zeldin spurned that offer, insisting they participate in multiple debates. "So, as matters stand, it remains unclear when, or even if, New Yorkers will get an opportunity to watch Ms. Hochul and Mr. Zeldin face off as they contend for the state's highest office, in a race largely defined by competing visions around issues of public safety, affordability and reproductive rights," NYT's Luis Ferré-Sadurní reports.

HOT ADS

With help from Steve Shepard

Kansas: The Republican Governors Association's Kansas affiliate is up with a new response ad pushing back on Democratic Gov. LAURA KELLY's assertion that she believes "men should not play women's sports."

Michigan: Put Michigan First, a group backed by the Democratic Governors Association, is out with a new ad seeking to tie GOP nominee TUDOR DIXON to former Education Secretary BETSY DeVOS , a longtime bankroller of conservative candidates and causes in the state.

Pennsylvania: Senate Leadership Fund's crime blitz against Democratic nominee Fetterman continues with the elected Republican sheriff in suburban Bucks County, north of Philly, telling viewers, "Protect your family: Don't vote [for] Fetterman."

New Hampshire: Sen. MAGGIE HASSAN is up today with the platonic ideal of a Democratic rebuttal to GOP crime attacks. "Hassan's done the opposite of defunding the police," a county sheriff attests, citing her record as governor, "and it's no different with Maggie in the Senate."

 

DON'T MISS - MILKEN INSTITUTE ASIA SUMMIT : Go inside the 9th annual Milken Institute Asia Summit, taking place from September 28-30, with a special edition of POLITICO's Global Insider newsletter, featuring exclusive coverage and insights from this important gathering. Stay up to speed with daily updates from the summit, which brings together more than 1,200 of the world's most influential leaders from business, government, finance, technology, and academia. Don't miss out, subscribe today.

 
 

JAN. 6 AND ITS AFTERMATH

WHAT'S LEFT FOR THE COMMITTEE — As we prepare for the next installment of the Jan. 6 committee's public hearings on Wednesday, NYT's Luke Broadwater and Katie Benner tick through the known unknowns that remain: "It has yet to settle on whether to enforce subpoenas issued to Republican members of Congress who have refused to cooperate with the inquiry, or what legislative recommendations to make. It must still grapple with when to turn its files over to the Justice Department, how to finish what it hopes will be a comprehensive written report and whether to make criminal referrals. It cannot even agree on whether Wednesday's hearing will be its last."

Even as the panel has gathered more evidence and heard more testimony since its last public hearing, "the committee has debated whether and how to highlight certain information related to the Jan. 6 attack. For instance, some members and staff have wanted to hold a hearing to highlight the panel's extensive work investigating the law enforcement failures related to the assault, but others have argued that doing so would take attention off Mr. Trump."

CNN's Zachary Cohen, Holmes Lybrand and Jackson Grigsby obtained footage from the documentary film crew that was with ROGER STONE on the day before the 2020 election, in which Stone is heard saying, "F**k the voting, let's get right to the violence." The film footage is expected to be included in Wednesday's hearing in some fashion.

THE WHITE HOUSE

BIDEN'S HUNGER PLAN — Ahead of an event on Wednesday to tout Biden's commitment to ending hunger in America by 2030, the White House released details of the plan: The administration wants to expand "monthly benefits that help low-income Americans buy food," AP's Colleen Long writes. The administration is also "seeking to increase healthy eating and physical activity so that fewer people are afflicted with diabetes, obesity, hypertension and other diet-related diseases. It said it would work to expand Medicaid and Medicare access to obesity counseling and nutrition." Read the White House plan

Bloomberg's Mike Dorning has the download on what the president is up against in his gambit: "Hunger is spreading among Americans with steady but low-paying jobs, reversing President Joe Biden's early success in cutting food scarcity by nearly a third and threatening to worsen as the country teeters on the brink of recession," he writes. "The situation threatens to worsen as the Federal Reserve raises interest rates and the economy slows, with private forecasters now predicting a 50% chance of recession over the next 12 months."

 

SPONSORED CONTENT

"Amazon training changed the course of my career"

While working in a fulfillment center, Jamie enrolled in Amazon's Career Choice program and successfully trained to become a first-aid instructor with the American Red Cross. Amazon's Career Choice funds high school completion, GEDs, ESL proficiency certifications, and college tuition. Learn more.

Sponsored by Amazon

Advertisement Image

 

CONGRESS

HEADS UP — Dem senators and civil rights lawyers are working together on a bill that would "limit U.S. law enforcement agencies' ability to buy cellphone tracking tools to follow people's whereabouts, including back years in time, and sometimes without a search warrant," AP's Jason Dearen and Garance Burke report.

JUDICIARY SQUARE

THE AGE-OLD QUESTION — Insider's latest installment of its "Red, White and Gray" series takes a look at the federal judiciary: "Alzheimer's disease, retirement 'pacts,' and serving until you're 104 years old: Inside the federal judiciary's reckoning with age," by C. Ryan Barber and Camila DeChalus

POLICY CORNER

THE LOAN LURCH — "Lawsuit aims to stop Biden's student loan forgiveness plan," by WaPo's Danielle Douglas-Gabriel: "The Pacific Legal Foundation, the conservative public interest law firm in California that is backing the new lawsuit, asserts that the executive branch lacks the authority to create a new forgiveness policy and is usurping Congress's power to make law."

CLIMATE FILES — "Businesses Race for U.S. Climate Incentives," by WSJ's Phred Dvorak: "At one of the first big clean-energy conferences since the U.S. passed legislation full of incentives for renewable power and other climate measures, corporate executives crammed into standing-room-only meetings on green steel and hydrogen fuel."

FOR YOUR RADAR — "U.S. Suit Over Alliance of American Airlines and JetBlue Goes to Trial," by NYT's Niraj Chokshi

 

SUBSCRIBE TO POWER SWITCH: The energy landscape is profoundly transforming. Power Switch is a daily newsletter that unlocks the most important stories driving the energy sector and the political forces shaping critical decisions about your energy future, from production to storage, distribution to consumption. Don't miss out on Power Switch, your guide to the politics of energy transformation in America and around the world. SUBSCRIBE TODAY.

 
 

BEYOND THE BELTWAY

BENEATH THE SURFACE — "Brett Favre is the face of a scandal, but Mississippi's issues go deeper," by WaPo's Rick Maese: "Mississippi's widening welfare scandal involves tens of millions of dollars and has embroiled the state's former governor, Hall of Fame quarterback BRETT FAVRE and professional wrestlers, among others. Organizations such as Operation Shoestring, and the at-risk populations that rely on those funds, continue to feel the sting."

PLAYBOOKERS

TRANSITIONS — Lisa Camooso Miller is now managing director with Cogent Strategies. She currently is a partner with Reset Public Affairs and is an RNC and Denny Hastert alum. … Aaron Wais is joining the Motion Picture Association as senior VP and head of global litigation. He previously was a partner at Mitchell, Silberberg & Knupp. … Heather Zichal will be the global head of sustainability at JPMorgan Chase. She previously was CEO of the American Clean Power Association.

ENGAGED — Jason Alinsky, legislative political coordinator at the Progressive Turnout Project, and Lisa Geller, director of state affairs at the Johns Hopkins Center for Gun Violence Solutions (and sister of our colleague Eric Geller), got engaged on Saturday in Rehoboth Beach, Del. The couple met at an event that Lisa's employer hosted in March 2017, which featured Jason's then-boss, Rep. Jamie Raskin (D-Md.), and they started dating the following year. Pics

BONUS BIRTHDAY: Michael Pierce of Horizon Government Affairs

Correction: Monday's Playbook PM misstated the office Republican Mark Finchem is seeking in Arizona. He is the secretary of state nominee.

 

Sponsored Survey

WE VALUE YOUR OPINION: Please take a quick, three question survey and tell us what you think about one of our advertising partners.

 
 

Follow us on Twitter

Rachael Bade @rachaelmbade

Eugene Daniels @EugeneDaniels2

Ryan Lizza @RyanLizza

Eli Okun @eliokun

Garrett Ross @garrett_ross

 

Subscribe to the POLITICO Playbook family

Playbook  |  Playbook PM  |  California Playbook  |  Florida Playbook  |  Illinois Playbook  |  Massachusetts Playbook  |  New Jersey Playbook  |  New York Playbook  |  Ottawa Playbook  |  Brussels Playbook  |  London Playbook

View all our politics and policy newsletters

Follow us

Follow us on Facebook Follow us on Twitter Follow us on Instagram Listen on Apple Podcast
 

To change your alert settings, please log in at https://www.politico.com/_login?base=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.politico.com/settings

This email was sent to ateebhassan000.ravian@blogger.com by: POLITICO, LLC 1000 Wilson Blvd. Arlington, VA, 22209, USA

Please click here and follow the steps to unsubscribe.

California Today: Newsom’s vetoes

California's governor vetoed a mandatory kindergarten proposal, as well as an effort to reduce light
Author Headshot

By Soumya Karlamangla

California Today, Writer

It's Tuesday. I'm explaining five bills that Gov. Gavin Newsom rejected. Plus, the Academy Museum in L.A. has been surprisingly successful in its first year.

Ana Zavala, a kindergarten teacher, instructing students at Washington Elementary School in Lynwood in January.Marcio Jose Sanchez/Associated Press

Since the California legislative session ended last month, Gov. Gavin Newsom has been making his way through the tall stack of bills that landed on his desk.

The governor has signed off on hundreds of new laws so far. He approved major climate change legislation and rules transforming how the fast-food industry will be regulated. He legalized human composting as a new burial option for Californians. He signed a law that makes it illegal for employers to fire workers for off-the-clock cannabis use. He vowed to crack down on catalytic converter theft.

But the governor has also vetoed a number of proposals. My colleague Jill Cowan wrote about Newsom's rejection of a pilot program that would have allowed some cities to open supervised drug-injection sites. The governor's decision was closely watched as a signal of his political ambitions beyond California.

Newsom has through Friday to weigh in on the remaining bills, and there are bound to be additional vetoes. But today I'll tell you about five bills the governor has already rejected and why.

S.B. 70: Mandatory kindergarten

On Sunday, Newsom vetoed this bill, which would have required children to attend kindergarten before entering first grade at a public school. Dozens of school districts and education groups supported the bill.

ADVERTISEMENT

In his veto message, Newsom said there wasn't room in the state budget for the mandate, which could cost up to $268 million per year.

Governors have often used cost as a reason to reject new laws, even in good budget years. But California this year stands a good chance of missing its revenue estimate this fiscal year, the state's legislative analyst recently estimated.

"With our state facing lower-than-expected revenues over the first few months of this fiscal year, it is important to remain disciplined when it comes to spending, particularly spending that is ongoing," Newsom said. "We must prioritize existing obligations and priorities, including education, health care, public safety and safety-net programs."

S.B. 834: Nonprofits and the Jan. 6 insurrection

Under current law, tax-exempt nonprofits are barred from participating in illegal activity. This measure would have allowed the attorney general to strip a nonprofit of its state tax-exempt status for participating in treason or insurrection or advocating for the overthrow of the government.

ADVERTISEMENT

In his veto message, Newsom said that while groups that participated in anti-government acts, such as the Jan. 6 insurrection, should be renounced and investigated, "these are issues that should be evaluated through the judicial system with due process and a right to a hearing."

A.B. 1919: Free transit for students

This bill would have created a five-year program to let California students ride public transit at no cost. It would have applied to K-12 students as well as those enrolled in public colleges and universities.

In vetoing the bill, Newsom said the state's budget could not handle the $115 million annual price tag for the program.

A.B. 2382: Light pollution

This bill aiming to reduce light pollution would have required all outdoor lights on state properties to have anti-light pollution shields, as well as motion sensors or automatic dimming or shut-off functions to limit the amount of light they project.

ADVERTISEMENT

Newsom said the costs associated with changing light requirements at 24,000 state buildings "may cost millions of dollars not accounted for in the budget."

Assemblyman Alex Lee, who introduced the bill, called the veto "extremely disappointing." "This bill would have protected our night skies and migratory species, while reducing wasteful and unnecessary electricity consumption," Lee told The Los Angeles Times.

A.B. 2550: San Joaquin Valley air quality

The San Joaquin Valley has some of the nation's worst air and consistently fails to meet federal air pollution standards.

This proposal would have required the state's top air watchdog, the California Air Resources Board, to intervene and assert control over the San Joaquin Valley Air Pollution Control District if it failed to meet specific federal regulations.

But Newsom called the bill "unnecessary" because the state already has oversight of the San Joaquin Valley air district.

Catherine Garoupa White, director of the Central Valley Air Quality Coalition, told The Fresno Bee that the existing review process, which Newsom has chosen to preserve, has failed to protect the San Joaquin Valley's public health for the last 20 years.

"Gov. Newsom's choice to ignore our pleas for the most basic of human rights — to breathe clean air — will cause continued injustices, additional lives lost, a growing population of asthmatic children and parents, as well as worsening unhealthy air for the San Joaquin Valley," she said.

Subscribe Today

We hope you've enjoyed this newsletter, which is made possible through subscriber support. Subscribe to The New York Times with this special offer.

Costumes on display at the Academy Museum, which attracted more than 700,000 visitors in its first year.Rozette Rago for The New York Times

The rest of the news

  • Covid relief fraud: A California man was sentenced to four years in federal prison for fraudulently obtaining more than $5 million in Covid relief loans for three shell companies, The Associated Press reports.
  • Insurance: Top insurance companies and associations say California is risking a crisis in the nation's automobile insurance market by refusing to approve any rate increases for more than two years, The Associated Press reports.
SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA
  • Academy Museum: The Academy Museum of Motion Pictures has attracted about 20 percent more people than it expected since opening in September 2021.
  • Homelessness: The Los Angeles City Council committee is divided on whether to stay with Los Angeles Homeless Services Authority, which gets funding from the federal government, Los Angeles Daily News reports.
  • Museum closed: The California Oil Museum in Santa Paula has been temporarily closed for more than a year as the city has tried to determine its next move for the building under a looming deadline, The Ventura County Star reports.
CENTRAL CALIFORNIA
NORTHERN CALIFORNIA
  • Strike: Over 1,000 food and beverage workers at the San Francisco International Airport are now officially on strike over a lack of raises, SFist reports.
  • Uniform policy: A San Francisco firefighter who wore a T-shirt with the conservative catchphrase "Let's Go Brandon" while on duty violated department policy, The Los Angeles Times reports.
Sam Wadieh

What you get

For $750,000: A Spanish-style cottage in Los Angeles, a two-bedroom home in Sonoma or a fully furnished 1991 house in Joshua Tree.

Christopher Simpson for The New York Times.

What we're eating

Visitors set up canopies in the hot weather as children played in the water in Benicia this month.Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group, via Associated Press

Where we're traveling

Today's tip comes from Maureen Arrigo, who lives in San Diego. Maureen recommends a trip to Benicia:

"We recently revisited the charming little town of Benicia, which is less than an hour's drive northeast of San Francisco.

Benicia was, briefly, one of the capitals of California. (Few people probably know that the capital bounced around for awhile before finally staying put in Sacramento.) The Capitol State Park has a few beautifully preserved buildings.

The town has a charming little downtown that terminates at the waterfront. The historic Episcopal church is also worth a short visit."

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.

A gray wolf.Sascha Steinbach/EPA, via Shutterstock

And before you go, some good news

Gray wolves were eradicated in California in the early 20th century, but in 2011, an Oregon wolf became the first confirmed wolf in California in nearly a century.

Since then, the Golden State's wolf population has been increasing. This year, two of the state's three wolf packs produced litters, The Los Angeles Times reports.

"These are really wonderful moments to celebrate," said Amaroq Weiss, senior wolf advocate at the Center for Biological Diversity.

The Lassen pack, located in Lassen and Plumas Counties, produced five pups, while the Whaleback pack, living in Siskiyou County, had at least six, according to a report published by the California Department of Fish and Wildlife. The wolves live in areas threatened by wildfires, making their growth even more impressive.

"California's wolf recovery is still really, really brand new," Weiss told The Los Angeles Times. "It shows you that wolves can be quite resilient."

Thanks for reading. I'll be back tomorrow. — Soumya

Correction: Yesterday's newsletter said that Cyril Derreumaux was the first person to solo kayak from California to Hawaii. He was the second.

Briana Scalia and Jaevon Williams contributed to California Today. You can reach the team at CAtoday@nytimes.com.

Need help? Review our newsletter help page or contact us for assistance.

You received this email because you signed up for California Today from The New York Times.

To stop receiving these emails, unsubscribe or manage your email preferences.

Subscribe to The Times

Connect with us on:

facebooktwitterinstagram

Change Your EmailPrivacy PolicyContact UsCalifornia Notices

LiveIntent LogoAdChoices Logo

The New York Times Company. 620 Eighth Avenue New York, NY 10018