logo
SCOOP: McGuire plans to stay until 2026

SCOOP: McGuire plans to stay until 2026

Politico29-05-2025

Presented by California Environmental Voters
THE BUZZ: TAKE YOUR TIME — California Senate insiders are jonesing to know when the chamber might select its next leader. But Mike McGuire is in no rush to share his plans, even as he's raked in more than $221,000 this year to run for another office.
McGuire, the Senate president pro tem who's termed out of the Legislature next year, is signaling he doesn't expect to announce a transition plan until 2026, an adviser familiar with his thinking revealed exclusively to Playbook.
'The pro tem has made it clear to his colleagues and caucus that he intends to lead the Senate into next year,' the adviser said. 'Doing this job, and doing it well, is his sole focus. There will be time in 2026 for him to decide what's next, and at that point he'll work with his caucus — just as he always does — to determine next steps.'
McGuire may not be ready to plot his exit, but the contest to lead the Senate is taking shape around him. And his ideal timeline stands in direct conflict with some senators eager to solidify the chamber's top ranks.
Rumblings about jockeying for votes intensified in recent weeks — and the likelihood of a leadership fight coming to a head by late summer is now an open question, according to Capitol insiders familiar with dynamics of the chamber, who were granted anonymity to discuss sensitive conversations.
Four senators have been the focus of internal discussions: Lena Gonzalez, Angelique Ashby, Monique Limón and Steve Padilla. None has officially declared their candidacy, though their aspirations are well known within the caucus.
The unease about McGuire's plans comes as he's raked in contributions via his campaign committee for state insurance commissioner. McGuire hasn't said if that's the job he wants; he's also a potential contender for longtime Rep. Mike Thompson's seat in the North Bay Area, whenever he retires.
Kevin de León, a former pro tem who served nearly four years before running for the U.S. Senate in 2018, said he cautions McGuire about trying to hold onto legislative power while running for a higher office.
'In the words of Mick Jagger — you can't always get what you want,' de León told Playbook in a text. 'Sometimes you just need to pick a damn lane to get what you want.'
The people familiar with Senate dynamics said they generally agree there will be no push to force the question before the Legislature and Gov. Gavin Newsom work out a deal to resolve the state's $12 billion budget deficit. Lawmakers must pass a budget by June 15 — or go without pay.
The real challenge for McGuire is what comes after the budget and lawmakers' summer recess. A fellow Democratic senator needs 16 votes — a majority of the 30 Senate Democrats — to force an internal caucus vote. By publicizing a timeline, McGuire could have a harder time saving face (and buying more time) should his colleagues move to replace him sooner.
And if McGuire resists a quicker timeline, he would effectively be asking senators to not repeat his own leadership play from two years ago, when he gathered the votes needed to broker a transition with former President Pro Tem Toni Atkins earlier than she had expected.
Steve Maviglio, a veteran Democratic strategist, said a key frustration for some inside the Capitol seems to be that McGuire's plans could force the caucus to deal with a leadership shakeup in an election year. Democrats in the state Senate lost a seat to Republicans last year, and the pro tem is charged with leading caucus fundraising.
'You can't do that if you're raising money yourself,' said Maviglio, an Ashby ally. 'The sooner he makes his decision, the better it will be for the Senate because the Assembly already has a longtime leader.'
GOOD MORNING. Happy Thursday. Thanks for waking up with Playbook.
You can text us at ‪916-562-0685‬‪ — save it as 'CA Playbook' in your contacts. Or drop us a line at dgardiner@politico.com and bjones@politico.com, or on X — @DustinGardiner and @jonesblakej.
WHERE'S GAVIN? Nothing official announced.
CAMPAIGN YEAR(S)
FIRST IN PLAYBOOK: DOWN THE BALLOT — Former state Sen. Steven Bradford is exiting the lieutenant governor's contest to run for state insurance commissioner, moving into an emptier field but vying for one of the most vexing jobs in California politics.
Bradford, a Gardena native who served on his home city council and in the Legislature for 14 years, had long been rumored to be considering the move down the ballot. But his launch officially thins the lieutenant governor's field, where more Democrats could still join Treasurer Fiona Ma and former Stockton Mayor Michael Tubbs — particularly if former Vice President Kamala Harris gets in the governor's race and sends other Democrats looking for a landing spot down the ballot.
Bradford, a Democrat, could be pitted against McGuire if — and that's a sizable 'if' — the Senate leader uses his open committee to run for the insurance job.
The office, namely term-limited Commissioner Ricardo Lara, has drawn increased scrutiny as wildfires and other climate disasters put intense strain on the insurance market. Bradford's campaign pointed to the Los Angeles fires, the exodus of insurers and the difficulty of securing affordable policies in California as motivators for him entering the race.
'It's critical that California establishes a stable marketplace that can attract and maintain a business environment so that insurance companies can compete here,' Bradford said in a statement. 'At the same time, we need to ensure that consumers are not priced out, that they get the coverage they need, that it's fair, equitable and adequately covers their needs.'
Bradford was a member of California's first-in-the-nation reparations task force and chaired the state legislative Black Caucus. He also chaired several committees as a legislator, including Senate Energy Utilities and Communications as well as Assembly Utilities and Commerce before term limits stopped him from running for the Senate again in 2024.
SAN DIEGO
CORY IN THE HOUSE — Before speaking at the California Democratic Party Convention in Anaheim on Saturday, Sen. Cory Booker is stopping in San Diego today to stump for board of supervisors candidate Paloma Aguirre — who is running to restore Democratic control to the panel.
The officials plan to stop at the Tijuana River, through which sewage seeps from Mexico into San Diego County, posing a concern to residents more widespread than the odor.
'The health and safety of these communities have been ignored for far too long,' Booker said in a statement. 'I'm here to see it firsthand, to stand with local leaders like Mayor Aguirre, and to push for the federal action this crisis demands.'
Aguirre, now mayor of Imperial Beach, is running against Chula Vista's Republican Mayor John McCann in a July 1 runoff election for a vacant seat after neither candidate won outright during an April special election. The board of supervisors is deadlocked on partisan issues including immigration, with two Democrats and two Republicans.
CLIMATE AND ENERGY
THE MUSK EFFECT — Elon Musk already played a lead role in killing California's electric vehicle mandate, and now he's giving state officials headaches as he leaves the Trump administration. Read last night's California Climate to see how Musk has turned Democrats against California's EV policies.
TOP TALKERS
CLASS DISMISSED — The San Francisco Unified School District will back off of the 'Grading for Equity' initiative, a plan to have about 10 percent of the district's teachers align grades closer to learning outcomes rather than factors like attendance and participation, the San Francisco Chronicle reports.
'It's clear there are a lot of questions, concerns, and misinformation with this proposal,' said Superintendent Maria Su. 'We want to make sure any changes benefit our students. I have decided not to pursue this strategy for next year to ensure we have time to meaningfully engage the community.'
SOMETHING'S IN THE AIR — Scientists from University of California San Diego have discovered that pollutants from the raw sewage in the Tijuana River are polluting the air near the U.S.-Mexico border, the Los Angeles Times reports.
They found, for example, that sea spray aerosols contain illicit drugs and drug byproducts that are found in human urine.
AROUND THE STATE
— Rep. David Valadao's constituents protested his vote for a budget megabill that includes Medicaid cuts outside several of his district offices this week. (The Fresno Bee)
— San Diego will analyze how the city can remedy funding disparities between recreation centers in southern and northern parts of the city. (The San Diego Union Tribune)
— Morro Bay's City Council voted to move forward with an environmental review of a controversial roundabout, potentially giving the project a second life. (The San Luis Obispo Tribune)
PLAYBOOKERS
SPOTTED: WEDDING BELLS — Public affairs pro and former Newsom comms aide Alex Stack married political fundraiser Naomi Jefferson in Edinburgh over the weekend. The weekend kicked off Friday with a welcome party that included Scottish country dance at the royal Edinburgh castle and culminated in a festive affair in a 14th century crypt surrounded by friends and family (and nearly all men in kilts). Other guests include Newsom alums Priscilla Cheng, Tonya Lamont, Joey Freeman, Nathan Click and Sepi Esfahlani, LA Mayor Karen Bass comms head Zach Seidl, digital consultant Alf LaMont and SEIU USWW communications aide Sebastian Silva.
SPOTTED: CAPITOL MEOW-MENT — Assemblymember Alex Lee and his staff love cats so much that they recently turned 'Donut Fridays' at the Capitol Swing Space into a feline fest. Last Friday was Team Lee's turn to host the weekly gathering and provide breakfast bites. Naturally, they created a 'Cat Cafe' and invited staffers to submit their pets in a 'Cutest Cat Photo Competition.' Mr. Richard, whose parent is Eddie Kirby in Assemblymember Patrick Ahrens' office, took home first place honors.
PEOPLE MOVES — Judith Gutierrez is now the American Heart Association's state government relations director. She was most recently communications director for Assemblymember Jesse Gabriel.
Zane Barnes, San Jose's chief intergovernmental relations officer, is departing for a new position as the vice president for government relations at Austin Capital Metro in Texas.
BIRTHDAYS — Beth Miller at Miller Public Affairs Group … TV producer Mitchell Hurwitz … consultant Todd Flournoy … Dayna Geldwert at Meta … Nkiruka Catherine Ohaegbu at Adaptive Strategies Consulting …
BELATED B-DAY WISHES — Chris Fadeff at Galvanize Climate Solutions
WANT A SHOUT-OUT FEATURED? — Send us a birthday, career move or another special occasion to include in POLITICO's California Playbook. You can now submit a shout-out using this Google form.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Escalating ICE raids pull California Democrats back into immigration fight
Escalating ICE raids pull California Democrats back into immigration fight

Yahoo

time38 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Escalating ICE raids pull California Democrats back into immigration fight

SAN FRANCISCO — The Trump administration's increasingly aggressive moves on immigration are pulling Democrats back into a border security debate they had tried to ignore. For months, Democrats scarred by the politics of the issue sought to sidestep President Donald Trump's immigration wars — focusing instead on the economy, tariffs or, in the case of deportations, due process concerns. But in the span of a week, that calculation was jolted in California, after a series of high-profile raids and arrests, including of a labor union leader and dozens of other people in Los Angeles, and with President Donald Trump on Saturday announcing the deployment of 2,000 National Guard troops to the area. In this citadel of Democratic politics, party officials from the governor's mansion to city halls are suddenly tearing into Trump on immigration again, inflaming a debate that worked to Trump's benefit in 2024 — but where Democrats believe they now have a political opening. 'We were wrong on the border,' said Rep. Scott Peters, a Democrat from San Diego who chided Immigration and Customs Enforcement over a raid at a popular restaurant in the city. 'But it is not hard to explain to average Americans why what's happening here is unproductive. It's so un-American, and it's so cruel.' Peters and other San Diego leaders — including Democratic Reps. Juan Vargas, Sara Jacobs and Mike Levin — were quick to condemn the recent raid on an Italian restaurant in the trendy South Park neighborhood, where around 20 masked agents stormed the restaurant and handcuffed workers as a rattled crowd looked on. Four undocumented immigrants were arrested. The lawmakers called the agents' tactics 'needlessly reckless' and said the heavy-handed approach 'terrorized' residents, noting agents used flash-bang grenades to disperse those who gathered outside to protest. But if the enforcement action was aggressive, the response from Democrats represented an escalation in their engagement on immigration, too. San Diego Mayor Todd Gloria, a Democrat, had previously said little about Trump or his immigration policies in the early months of his second term — similar to other blue-city mayors in California who've sought to avoid drawing the president's ire. But in recent days, Gloria sharply criticized federal officials over the raids. And then came the immigration sweeps in Los Angeles, where union officials said the Service Employees International Union's state president, David Huerta, was injured and arrested. Rep. Derek Tran, a Democrat from Orange County, who last fall flipped a hotly contested GOP seat, said on X that he was 'appalled by this clear violation of first amendment rights,' while Rep. Jimmy Gomez called it part of a 'nationwide pattern of suppression.' Protests erupted in the city, and Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass decried immigration enforcement tactics she said 'sow terror in our communities.' 'These are fear-driven, military-style operations that have no place in a democratic society,' said Mark Gonzalez, a Democratic state Assemblymember whose downtown LA district was the epicenter of Friday's raids. The next day, when Trump announced the Guard's deployment, Democrats rushed to take a stand in a fight shifting from deportations to the deployment of the Guard. Gov. Gavin Newsom blasted the measure as 'purposefully inflammatory.' And when Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth threatened to deploy the U.S. military, too, Newsom posted on social media, 'This is deranged behavior.' In a note to his super PAC list, he said, 'These are not people who have some deep conviction about protecting law enforcement. This is a President who failed to call up the National Guard when it was actually needed — on January 6th — and then pardoned the participants as one of his first acts as president. They want a spectacle. They want the violence.' For the party at large, it's a notable swing from the immediate aftermath of Trump's victory in November, when many Democratic leaders in California and elsewhere sought to moderate on the issue — or at least strike a more muted tone than they did during Trump's first term. Polling suggests that voter frustration over Democrats' handling of border security and crime played a strong role in Trump's sweeping return to power, and many elected officials adjusted in response. Newsom was among them. He has avoided using the word 'sanctuary' to defend the state's immigration laws that limit police cooperation with ICE. He also vowed to veto a Democratic-led bill that would have applied such restrictions to state prisons and is now proposing steep cuts to a health care program for undocumented immigrants. Earlier this year, he suggested the legal fight over Kilmar Abrego Garcia, the Maryland resident mistakenly deported by the Trump administration and imprisoned in El Salvador — he is now back in U.S. custody and facing federal human trafficking charges — was a 'distraction' intended to take Democrats' focus away from other parts of Trump's agenda (Newsom's office later said his remarks were misconstrued). But in recent days, the governor has criticized federal deportation efforts, including reports that federal authorities threatened the family of a Bakersfield girl with a rare, life-threatening medical condition with deportation, despite the family earlier being granted humanitarian protection. 'The @GOP are sending a 4 year old off to her death without a care in the world. It's sick,' Newsom posted on X. The Trump administration has accused Democrats and the media of distorting the facts of the case, noting the girl wasn't actively being deported. Department of Homeland Security Officials said the family has since been approved to stay in the U.S. while she receives medical care. White House spokesperson Abigail Jackson said in an email that the left's 'unhinged smears' of immigration-enforcement tactics have led to a surge of assaults on ICE agents. 'President Trump is keeping his promise to the American people to deport illegal aliens,' she said. 'It's disturbing that Democrats would side with illegal aliens over Americans and stoke hatred against American law enforcement.' In a social media post, Trump said, 'If Governor Gavin Newscum, of California, and Mayor Karen Bass, of Los Angeles, can't do their jobs, which everyone knows they can't, then the Federal Government will step in and solve the problem, RIOTS & LOOTERS, the way it should be solved!!!' ICE officials have also defended the agency's actions in the San Diego raids, saying agents wear masks due to escalating death threats and online harassment. The agency said it deployed flash-bang grenades when the crowd outside the restaurant 'became unruly' and posed a potential danger. Regarding the arrest of SEIU's leader, federal authorities said Huerta had blocked an ICE vehicle while agents were serving a warrant. Still, the headline-grabbing incidents and images of residents clashing with ICE agents have provided an opening for Democrats to put the Trump administration on the defensive — over raids, accounts of children being separated from their parents during ICE detentions and migrants being arrested in federal courthouses while attending legal proceedings. Recent polling suggests that after making gains with Latino voters in 2024, Trump's support among Latinos is falling off. 'It's one thing when you're talking about illegal aliens in the abstract,' said Mike Madrid, a veteran political consultant and anti-Trump Republican. 'It moved from the abstract to the real. It's cruelty for cruelty's sake, and that's where you're going to lose support.' Chris Newman, legal director with the National Day Laborer Organizing Network, said while Democrats were hurt in the 2024 election by the Biden administration's handling of immigration, the politics are shifting as Trump tries to carry out his promise of mass deportations. 'When you see these types of Gestapo-style tactics playing out in real life, the whole country is recoiling to that,' said Newman, who represents the family of Abrego Garcia. He has criticized Democrats, including Newsom, over their response to the Abrego Garcia case, which captured national headlines due to Trump's defiance of multiple federal court orders. In that case, Democrats focused their messaging not on the humanitarian toll of deportations, but due process and the rule of law. Newman said the latest raids show Democrats hesitant to attack Republicans over their immigration policies have misread the moment: 'The wrong lesson (from the 2024 election) is that immigration is inherently a losing issue for Democrats at the top level. The right lesson is that what … the American public wants is a clear, legible immigration policy.' Among the most outspoken California Democrats in recent days has been San Diego Councilmember Sean Elo-Rivera, who was pilloried by conservative media outlets over his Instagram post that included a photo labeling ICE agents as 'terrorists' in the restaurant raid. The post drew national attention, with White House Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller accusing politicians on the left of 'openly encouraging violence against law enforcement to aid and abet the invasion of America.' Elo-Rivera, who's also a member of the progressive Working Families Party, said while the restaurant incident made headlines, it was indicative of more aggressive ICE actions that have rattled his district near the U.S.-Mexico border — tactics he argues are designed to stoke fear. He said while Democrats did a lot of 'hemming and hawing' post-election over the party's stance on immigration, they now have a chance to make a sharp contrast with the GOP by consistently advocating for the dignity and rights of migrants. 'Immigration is not a distraction for Democrats. We just need to have the conversation on our terms,' Elo-Rivera said. 'Unfortunately, there's folks that think they need to see a poll first before they take a position.'

Escalating ICE raids pull California Democrats back into immigration fight
Escalating ICE raids pull California Democrats back into immigration fight

Politico

time42 minutes ago

  • Politico

Escalating ICE raids pull California Democrats back into immigration fight

SAN FRANCISCO — The Trump administration's increasingly aggressive moves on immigration are pulling Democrats back into a border security debate they had tried to ignore. For months, Democrats scarred by the politics of the issue sought to sidestep President Donald Trump's immigration wars — focusing instead on the economy, tariffs or, in the case of deportations, due process concerns. But in the span of a week, that calculation was jolted in California, after a series of high-profile raids and arrests, including of a labor union leader and dozens of other people in Los Angeles, and with President Donald Trump on Saturday announcing the deployment of 2,000 National Guard troops to the area. In this citadel of Democratic politics, party officials from the governor's mansion to city halls are suddenly tearing into Trump on immigration again, inflaming a debate that worked to Trump's benefit in 2024 — but where Democrats believe they now have a political opening. 'We were wrong on the border,' said Rep. Scott Peters, a Democrat from San Diego who chided Immigration and Customs Enforcement over a raid at a popular restaurant in the city. 'But it is not hard to explain to average Americans why what's happening here is unproductive. It's so un-American, and it's so cruel.' Peters and other San Diego leaders — including Democratic Reps. Juan Vargas, Sara Jacobs and Mike Levin — were quick to condemn the recent raid on an Italian restaurant in the trendy South Park neighborhood, where around 20 masked agents stormed the restaurant and handcuffed workers as a rattled crowd looked on. Four undocumented immigrants were arrested. The lawmakers called the agents' tactics 'needlessly reckless' and said the heavy-handed approach 'terrorized' residents, noting agents used flash-bang grenades to disperse those who gathered outside to protest. But if the enforcement action was aggressive, the response from Democrats represented an escalation in their engagement on immigration, too. San Diego Mayor Todd Gloria, a Democrat, had previously said little about Trump or his immigration policies in the early months of his second term — similar to other blue-city mayors in California who've sought to avoid drawing the president's ire. But in recent days, Gloria sharply criticized federal officials over the raids. And then came the immigration sweeps in Los Angeles, where union officials said the Service Employees International Union's state president, David Huerta, was injured and arrested. Rep. Derek Tran, a Democrat from Orange County, who last fall flipped a hotly contested GOP seat, said on X that he was 'appalled by this clear violation of first amendment rights,' while Rep. Jimmy Gomez called it part of a 'nationwide pattern of suppression.' Protests erupted in the city, and Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass decried immigration enforcement tactics she said 'sow terror in our communities.' 'These are fear-driven, military-style operations that have no place in a democratic society,' said Mark Gonzalez, a Democratic state Assemblymember whose downtown LA district was the epicenter of Friday's raids. The next day, when Trump announced the Guard's deployment, Democrats rushed to take a stand in a fight shifting from deportations to the deployment of the Guard. Gov. Gavin Newsom blasted the measure as 'purposefully inflammatory.' And when Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth threatened to deploy the U.S. military, too, Newsom posted on social media, 'This is deranged behavior.' In a note to his super PAC list, he said, 'These are not people who have some deep conviction about protecting law enforcement. This is a President who failed to call up the National Guard when it was actually needed — on January 6th — and then pardoned the participants as one of his first acts as president. They want a spectacle. They want the violence.' For the party at large, it's a notable swing from the immediate aftermath of Trump's victory in November, when many Democratic leaders in California and elsewhere sought to moderate on the issue — or at least strike a more muted tone than they did during Trump's first term. Polling suggests that voter frustration over Democrats' handling of border security and crime played a strong role in Trump's sweeping return to power, and many elected officials adjusted in response. Newsom was among them. He has avoided using the word 'sanctuary' to defend the state's immigration laws that limit police cooperation with ICE. He also vowed to veto a Democratic-led bill that would have applied such restrictions to state prisons and is now proposing steep cuts to a health care program for undocumented immigrants. Earlier this year, he suggested the legal fight over Kilmar Abrego Garcia, the Maryland resident mistakenly deported by the Trump administration and imprisoned in El Salvador — he is now back in U.S. custody and facing federal human trafficking charges — was a 'distraction' intended to take Democrats' focus away from other parts of Trump's agenda (Newsom's office later said his remarks were misconstrued). But in recent days, the governor has criticized federal deportation efforts, including reports that federal authorities threatened the family of a Bakersfield girl with a rare, life-threatening medical condition with deportation, despite the family earlier being granted humanitarian protection. 'The @GOP are sending a 4 year old off to her death without a care in the world. It's sick,' Newsom posted on X. The Trump administration has accused Democrats and the media of distorting the facts of the case, noting the girl wasn't actively being deported. Department of Homeland Security Officials said the family has since been approved to stay in the U.S. while she receives medical care. White House spokesperson Abigail Jackson said in an email that the left's 'unhinged smears' of immigration-enforcement tactics have led to a surge of assaults on ICE agents. 'President Trump is keeping his promise to the American people to deport illegal aliens,' she said. 'It's disturbing that Democrats would side with illegal aliens over Americans and stoke hatred against American law enforcement.' In a social media post, Trump said, 'If Governor Gavin Newscum, of California, and Mayor Karen Bass, of Los Angeles, can't do their jobs, which everyone knows they can't, then the Federal Government will step in and solve the problem, RIOTS & LOOTERS, the way it should be solved!!!' ICE officials have also defended the agency's actions in the San Diego raids, saying agents wear masks due to escalating death threats and online harassment. The agency said it deployed flash-bang grenades when the crowd outside the restaurant 'became unruly' and posed a potential danger. Regarding the arrest of SEIU's leader, federal authorities said Huerta had blocked an ICE vehicle while agents were serving a warrant. Still, the headline-grabbing incidents and images of residents clashing with ICE agents have provided an opening for Democrats to put the Trump administration on the defensive — over raids, accounts of children being separated from their parents during ICE detentions and migrants being arrested in federal courthouses while attending legal proceedings. Recent polling suggests that after making gains with Latino voters in 2024, Trump's support among Latinos is falling off. 'It's one thing when you're talking about illegal aliens in the abstract,' said Mike Madrid, a veteran political consultant and anti-Trump Republican. 'It moved from the abstract to the real. It's cruelty for cruelty's sake, and that's where you're going to lose support.' Chris Newman, legal director with the National Day Laborer Organizing Network, said while Democrats were hurt in the 2024 election by the Biden administration's handling of immigration, the politics are shifting as Trump tries to carry out his promise of mass deportations. 'When you see these types of Gestapo-style tactics playing out in real life, the whole country is recoiling to that,' said Newman, who represents the family of Abrego Garcia. He has criticized Democrats, including Newsom, over their response to the Abrego Garcia case, which captured national headlines due to Trump's defiance of multiple federal court orders. In that case, Democrats focused their messaging not on the humanitarian toll of deportations, but due process and the rule of law. Newman said the latest raids show Democrats hesitant to attack Republicans over their immigration policies have misread the moment: 'The wrong lesson (from the 2024 election) is that immigration is inherently a losing issue for Democrats at the top level. The right lesson is that what … the American public wants is a clear, legible immigration policy.' Among the most outspoken California Democrats in recent days has been San Diego Councilmember Sean Elo-Rivera, who was pilloried by conservative media outlets over his Instagram post that included a photo labeling ICE agents as 'terrorists' in the restaurant raid. The post drew national attention, with White House Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller accusing politicians on the left of 'openly encouraging violence against law enforcement to aid and abet the invasion of America.' Elo-Rivera, who's also a member of the progressive Working Families Party, said while the restaurant incident made headlines, it was indicative of more aggressive ICE actions that have rattled his district near the U.S.-Mexico border — tactics he argues are designed to stoke fear. He said while Democrats did a lot of 'hemming and hawing' post-election over the party's stance on immigration, they now have a chance to make a sharp contrast with the GOP by consistently advocating for the dignity and rights of migrants. 'Immigration is not a distraction for Democrats. We just need to have the conversation on our terms,' Elo-Rivera said. 'Unfortunately, there's folks that think they need to see a poll first before they take a position.'

Bernie Sanders: Trump moving US 'into authoritarianism' after troops sent to LA
Bernie Sanders: Trump moving US 'into authoritarianism' after troops sent to LA

USA Today

timean hour ago

  • USA Today

Bernie Sanders: Trump moving US 'into authoritarianism' after troops sent to LA

Bernie Sanders: Trump moving US 'into authoritarianism' after troops sent to LA Show Caption Hide Caption Trump orders troops to LA as agents, protesters clash over immigration President Trump ordered 2,000 National Guard troops to Los Angeles to combat violent protesters opposed to immigration enforcement. WASHINGTON − Progressive firebrand Sen. Bernie Sanders said he believes President Donald Trump is 'moving this country rapidly into authoritarianism" after Trump deployed 2,000 National Guard troops to help quell immigration protests in Los Angeles. 'This guy wants all of the power. He does not believe in the Constitution. He does not believe in the rule of law. My understanding is that the governor of California, the mayor of the city of Los Angeles did not request the National Guard, but he thinks he has a right to do anything he wants,' Sanders, a Vermont independent, told CNN's Dana Bash on 'State of the Union.' The protests come as the Trump administration has taken stronger actions to arrest and deport undocumented immigrants. Demonstrators allege the administration's immigration enforcement has violated civil and human rights. Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt said in a statement on June 7 that Trump signed a memo deploying the guardsmen 'to address the lawlessness that has been allowed to fester.' Both California Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom and Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass, however, have criticized the move, saying it would only escalate tensions in the area. 'I would say that to a large degree, the future of this country rests with a small number of Republicans in the House and Senate who know better, who do know what the Constitution is about, and it's high time they stood up for our Constitution and the rule of law,' Sanders said. Oklahoma Republican Sen. Markwayne Mullin, meanwhile, defended the president's move to Bash, arguing that the situation is not under control. The Department of Homeland Security said that some protesters have hurled large chunks of broken concrete at officers, slashed tires and defaced buildings. Video footage of some of the protests showed dozens of green-uniformed security personnel with gas masks, lined up on a road strewn with overturned shopping carts as small canisters exploded into gas clouds. 'The president has made it very clear. If the governor or the mayor of the city isn't willing to protect the citizens of his state or the city, then the president will. The American people elected him to restore the law and order back to our streets," Mullin said. Contributing: Reuters

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store