A California high school teacher has been put on administrative leave after he was captured warning students they could be put in "concentration camps" because of President-elect Donald Trump's win and blaming "racist" voters and "the patriarchy" for Vice ...
This isn’t unusual or unexpected, as the nation’s most populous state is consistently among the slowest to report all its election results. Compare it to a state like Florida, the third-largest, which finished counting its votes four days after Election Day.
Newsom has vowed to make California a leader of the resistance against Trump’s second term — especially when it comes to disagreements over the state’s voter-ID and climate laws, as well as protections for women seeking abortions and LGBTQ+ rights.
If California Democrats are going to help reclaim the American Dream from whatever malevolence befalls it now, we can start by reclaiming the California Dream first.
Nine of the 16 races that will determine which party controls the House of Representatives are in California. No state takes longer to tally votes.
Donald Trump’s win challenges the state’s progressive policies on climate, immigration, abortion and LGBTQ rights. Meanwhile, Gavin Newsom may benefit politically.
This electoral trend toward orderly urbanism was most stark in ultraliberal San Francisco. Fifty-eight percent of voters there lined up against Prop. 33—despite the Board of Supervisors unanimously passing a rent control expansion just weeks before the election. Prop. 36 won with 64 percent of the vote.
Donald Trump significantly outperformed his 2020 and 2016 presidential election performances in the state of California on Tuesday, while progressives were unseated as mayor of San Francisco and Los Angeles County district attorney.
Only private property owners or authorized campaign staff are allowed to remove political signs in California. According to California Business and Professions Code 5405.3, political campaign signs must be removed within 10 days after Election Day.
LET IT SNOW: Northern California is expecting the most rainy days in a week since March, starting with a drizzle on Monday that could bring two to eight inches of snow to the Sierra Nevada’s peaks. Another storm could bring even more precipitation on Wednesday and Thursday.