Edison told the government that Calderon was an 'executive.' Now it claims she wasn't.
Southern California Edison has repeatedly insisted that its former government affairs manager, state Assemblywoman Lisa Calderon (D-Whittier), was never an executive with the company.
But that's not what Edison told the federal government.
Calderon is sponsoring legislation favored by Edison that would slash the credits that many homeowners receive for generating electricity with rooftop solar panels.
Edison has objected to The Times' identifying Calderon as a former executive for the utility, claiming on its website that the news organization is 'choosing sensationalism over facts.'
But in its official reports to the Federal Election Commission, the political action committee for Edison International — the utility's parent company — listed Calderon's occupation as an executive in more than a dozen filings made before she left the company in 2020 to run for office.
All the filings were signed by the PAC's treasurer saying that 'to the best of my knowledge and belief' the information 'is true, correct and complete.'
Asked to explain the contradiction, Edison spokeswoman Kathleen Dunleavy said that the company was referring in its filings with the commission to a broad class of individuals that met requirements for executive as defined by the commission, but not by Edison itself.
Edison uses the term to "designate someone in a high position of authority," she said, such as "an employee director, vice president or similar title." Because Edison didn't consider Calderon an executive, she said, others shouldn't either.
Calderon told The Times earlier that she was a senior advisor of government affairs at Edison International. In other biographies, she is described as government affairs director. On Monday, she said her official title was government affairs manager.
For years, she managed the parent company's political action committee.
In a statement, Calderon said she had not filled out the political action committee's reports. Instead they were prepared and filed by the company's law firm, she said.
'Due to her professional responsibilities, she was categorized as an executive for FEC filing purposes,' her office said. 'That does not mean that she was an executive at Edison.'
Calderon's AB 942 would sharply reduce the financial credits that the owners of rooftop panels receive when they send unused power to the grid.
The bill applies to those who installed the panels before April 15, 2023. It would limit the current program's benefits to 10 years — half of the 20-year period that the state had told the rooftop owners they would receive. The bill also would cancel the solar contracts if the homes were sold. It wouldn't apply to customers served by municipal electric utilities.
Edison and the state's other big for-profit utilities have long fought to reduce the energy credits aimed at getting Californians to invest in rooftop solar panels. The popularity of the systems has cut into electricity sales.
Read more: California officials push to cut energy credits to households with rooftop solar panels
Calderon, Edison and other supporters of the bill point to an analysis by the California Public Utility Commission's Public Advocates Office that found the energy credits given to the rooftop owners were increasing the electric bills of those who don't have solar panels.
The bill's first hearing is scheduled for Wednesday.
Edison has been under scrutiny since Jan. 7, when videos captured the devastating Eaton wildfire igniting under one of its transmission towers. The wildfire killed 18 people and destroyed thousands of homes, businesses and other structures in Altadena.
Edison says it is cooperating with investigators working to determine the cause of the inferno.
Read more: Former Edison executive Calderon, now a lawmaker, seeks to cut rooftop solar credits
This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.
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Politico
37 minutes ago
- Politico
Major escalations in LA as Newsom, Trump fight over Guard troops
Presented by Californians for Energy Independence DRIVING THE DAY — Gov. Gavin Newsom plans to file a lawsuit early this morning to challenge President Donald Trump's move to deploy the National Guard in Los Angeles, his office confirmed. But that was hardly the only provocation over the weekend. Newsom bristled at the Trump administration's threat to arrest California officials if they get in the way of his crackdown on immigration protests and civil unrest in Los Angeles. 'Arrest me. Let's just get it over with, tough guy. I don't give a damn … Tom, arrest me. Let's go,' Newsom told MSNBC as he recoiled at the statements from President Donald Trump and his border czar, Tom Homan. The tension in Los Angeles County is only growing as protests enter their fourth day and immigration agents continue to conduct raids. FIRE WITH FIRE — Newsom had tried to avoid skirmishing with Trump over immigration. But the governor now finds himself locked in an increasingly incendiary power struggle with the president as he fights for control of the state's National Guard. Trump's move to commandeer control of the troops to thwart protests over ICE raids in LA is exceedingly rare in modern American political history. Not since the civil rights era of 1965 has a U.S. president deployed the National Guard without a governor's consent. COURT CHALLENGE INCOMING … Democrats — including blue-state governors — were shell-shocked by Trump's sweeping assertion of federal executive powers. Newsom called the move an 'illegal act' and vowed, in an interview on MSNBC Sunday night, to file a lawsuit 'very early' today. 'He's exacerbated the conditions,' Newsom said. 'He's lit the proverbial match, he's putting fuel on this fire ever since he announced he's taking over the National Guard.' While Democratic officials said the protests were largely peaceful, there were instances of rioting. Videos posted on social media Sunday evening showed multiple Waymo vehicles on fire. In an AP video, protesters blocked off a major roadway, many of them waving Mexican flags and holding signs as traffic came to a standstill. 'Governor Gavin Newscum and 'Mayor' Bass should apologize to the people of Los Angeles for the absolutely horrible job that they have done, and this now includes the ongoing L.A. riots,' Trump posted on Truth Social. NEWSOM WARNS OF FASCISM … Newsom on Sunday suggested Trump's actions were steps toward fascism. 'These are the acts of a dictator, not a President,' Newsom posted on X. He accused Trump of deliberately inciting violence in LA so he could send the military into a major American city. Newsom urged Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth on Sunday to back down as demonstrators clashed with law enforcement. As Blake reported, the governor's legal affairs secretary wrote in a letter to Hegseth that the deployment came without necessary coordination with California officials. Newsom said state and local law enforcement agencies had the protests under control and that federal intervention would only intensify the conflict. But the Guard might not be the extent of the unwanted federal intervention; Hegseth has also threatened to send in the U.S. Marines. A Defense official told POLITICO that 500 members of the military branch were given 'prepare to deploy' orders and could be sent to the region. DEM GOVERNORS UNITE … Every Democratic governor in the nation spoke out in support of Newsom on Sunday, releasing a joint statement calling Trump's actions an 'ineffective and dangerous' override of California's authority that sets a frightening precedent. 'President Trump's move to deploy California's National Guard is an alarming abuse of power,' the Democratic chief executives wrote. GOOD MORNING. It's Monday. 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@ and bjones@ or on X — @DustinGardiner and @jonesblakej. WHERE'S GAVIN? In Los Angeles, meeting with local leaders and law enforcement. STATE CAPITOL LEADER LIMÓN? — State Sen. Monique Limón's allies say she is closing in on the votes necessary to succeed Senate leader Mike McGuire, and edging out her top competition, Senate Majority Leader Lena Gonzalez, several people with direct knowledge of the race told Playbook. But several senators and people briefed on the matter said they hadn't seen evidence of Limón securing the votes. Like McGuire, Limón would be a relative short-timer in the post. She has represented Santa Barbara in the Legislature since 2016, and her final term ends in 2028. McGuire, meanwhile, leaves office after the end of next year — a timeline that has periodically caused succession chatter to pick up in the upper house since his first year as president pro tempore. McGuire has signaled to colleagues that he wants to stay in his role until next year, an adviser for him previously told Playbook. But he could be replaced sooner, depending on the succession timeline. McGuire's office didn't respond to a request for comment. — With help from Jeremy B. White and Melanie Mason FIRST IN POLITICO: BUDGET DEAL IN FOCUS — The broad strokes of a budget agreement among California lawmakers came into focus Friday, according to five people familiar with the negotiations, as legislative leaders scramble to close a $12 billion deficit. As Dustin and our colleague Eric He scooped for subscribers, the deal between leaders of the state Senate and Assembly would look in part to close the deficit with deferrals and various accounting maneuvers, though details were still unclear. Any budget would require a negotiation after passage with Newsom. Five major points being discussed, according to people briefed on the tentative agreement who were granted anonymity to discuss private negotiations: DEFERRING HEALTH CUTS: Lawmakers' budget plan would avoid imposing some of the most severe Medi-Cal cuts that Newsom laid out in his May budget proposal by deferring reductions for two to three more years. Putting off such cuts would soften Newsom's proposal to cap Medi-Cal benefits for undocumented immigrants and overtime pay for in-home supportive service providers. TRANSIT BAILOUT LOAN: Transit advocates had requested $2 billion for a fiscal lifeline to ailing transit systems in the Bay Area and Los Angeles, including BART, MUNI and LA Metro. Now, lawmakers want to provide at least a portion of that relief in the form of a long-term loan, which would help transit agencies cover their operating expenses and avoid steep service cuts to bus and rail service. PARTIAL HOMELESSNESS FUNDING: Cities and counties have pleaded for more state money to address the homelessness crisis. The Legislature is expected to propose sending $500 million in new funding for the Homeless Housing, Assistance and Prevention program, which issues grants to local governments. That's less than the $1 billion they received in prior years, though Newsom had proposed no new funding for the program. REVENUE DEBATE PUNT: Progressive Democrats have floated an array of corporate tax proposals, from targeting offshore tax havens to penalizing companies that employ large shares of Medi-Cal recipients, to help the state address its shortfall while minimizing cuts. Those proposals aren't expected to be part of the initial deal and will likely be punted to a later date, possibly in the fall — depending on the extent to which California loses federal funding. HOLLYWOOD LIFELINE: Lawmakers overwhelmingly support Newsom's proposal to double the state's film tax credit. Newsom's proposal for a revamped $750 million tax break is designed to lure back production companies that have fled in droves to other states and countries. Assembly Speaker Robert Rivas and McGuire declined to comment, as did a spokesperson for Newsom. CAMPAIGN YEAR(S) FIRST IN PLAYBOOK: JOINING FORCES — Former state Sen. Steven Bradford is out of the race for lieutenant governor, but he's still hoping to boost a political ally's fortunes in the contest. Bradford will today endorse State Treasurer Fiona Ma, as the duo exclusively told Playbook. Ma will, in turn, endorse Bradford for state insurance commissioner. The two previously served together in the state Assembly and have been friends and political allies for over 16 years. 'From expanding affordable housing to protecting taxpayers, she has the vision and experience we need in our next lieutenant governor,' Bradford said. WAGE WARRIOR — Lt. Gov. Eleni Kounalakis was the only candidate for governor at a recent CalChamber forum to unabashedly advocate for raising California's minimum wage, and her campaign is seeking to capitalize with digital ads pointing that out. 'I was proud to be the ONLY Democratic candidate for governor to advocate for raising the minimum wage, while my opponents turned their backs on our workers and unions,' reads a digital ad written from Kounalakis' point of view. — Kounalakis at the event said the state should work toward a $20 an hour minimum wage, rather than 'throw poor people under the bus.' — Former Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa said 'I believe in a higher minimum wage,' before cautioning, 'We can't just keep on raising the minimum wage. We address affordability, and we don't have to do that.' — Former Rep. Katie Porter at the forum made a similar argument: 'We can't endlessly keep raising wages. It isn't the solution.' — And former legislative leader Toni Atkins said 'we should be working toward' a higher statewide minimum, 'but now is not the moment.' ON THE AIRWAVES FIRST IN PLAYBOOK: INJURY ATTORNEYS ASSEMBLE — The beef between consumer attorneys and corporations pushing for tort reform in Sacramento is quickly escalating with dueling ad campaigns. As Playbook exclusively learned, the Consumer Attorneys of California will today launch digital ads and a website targeting Uber and other companies behind a new advocacy group that's pushing for legislation to limit civil lawsuits in California and other states. The ads accuse corporations of seeking to 'roll back consumer protections and shield powerful interests from accountability in court.' The attorneys are specifically taking aim at Protecting American Consumers Together (or PACT), an independent-expenditure group that recently urged Georgia lawmakers to pass a landmark tort reform bill. 'It's time to hit the brakes on corporate greed,' states one of the ads. It's a counteroffensive that comes after PACT launched its own ad blitz earlier this year, with a roughly $1 million buy that includes cheeky spots designed to mock highway billboard ads typical of the personal injury legal industry. PACT has previously disclosed that its funders include Uber and Waffle House Inc. CLIMATE AND ENERGY FISH VS. FARMS — California's water wars have long pitted fishermen and farmers against each other. But old battle lines are shifting as both sides grow increasingly desperate about the decline in salmon populations, which is triggering fishing restrictions as well as cuts in water deliveries to farmers. Read more in California Climate's interview with Lisa Damrosch, the executive director of a major commercial fishing group that teamed up with farmers on a first-ever joint trip to Washington to lobby for more money for salmon hatcheries. TOP TALKERS CAN THEY BE FRIENDS? — The messy breakup between billionaire Elon Musk and Trump appears to have quieted down — at the very least, a shaky detente in the social media strife between the two held over the weekend. The possible truce followed a call between representatives for both sides Friday, as our Washington colleagues Dasha Burns and Julia Marsh reported. 'He's stopped posting, but that doesn't mean he's happy,' said a White House official, who was granted anonymity to speak freely about Trump's reaction. 'The future of their relationship is totally uncertain.' THE OTHER GIULIANI — Andrew Giuliani, the son of former New York City Mayor and onetime Trump lawyer Rudy Giuliani, is the new head of the White House's World Cup Task Force. He's charged with coordinating the federal government's role in the 2026 games in LA. As our colleague Sophia Cai reports, the younger Giuliani faces a tough task. The task force promises an 'America welcoming the world' tournament even as the administration bans travel from countries hoping to compete and Trump's policies have inflamed relations with co-hosts Canada and Mexico. AROUND THE STATE —- Bay Area residents from the Middle East and Northern Africa are anxious over Trump's recent order banning travel to the U.S. from 12 countries. (San Francisco Chronicle) — San Diego Mayor Todd Gloria won't attend Pride in his city, citing objections to headlining performer Kehlani, who has been accused of amplifying antisemitism in their lyrics about the war in Gaza. (The San Diego Union-Tribune) — The Oakland Unified School District could soon exit state financial oversight, but the district could quickly slip back into receivership as it spends its rainy day fund to alleviate a budget deficit. (KQED) — Rancho Cucamonga, a suburb in east LA County, could be home to the first bullet train hub in the U.S. as Brightline breaks ground on its high-speed rail line to connect Las Vegas and SoCal. (Bloomberg) PLAYBOOKERS SPOTTED: RAINBOW CITY HALL — San Francisco Mayor Daniel Lurie hosted a Pride flag raising ceremony at City Hall on Friday. Among the politicians in the crowd: Lt. Gov. Eleni Kounalakis; state Sen. Scott Wiener; Assemblymember Matt Haney; Board of Supervisors President Rafael Mandelman; Supervisors Bilal Mahmood and Joel Engardio; former Supervisor Leslie Katz; city Treasurer José Cisneros; Honey Mahogany, director of the city's Office of Transgender Initiatives; Community College Board Member Luis Zamora; SF Pride Executive Director Suzanne Ford; BART Board Member Janice Li; and drag queen Juanita More. While the mood was largely celebratory, Wiener offered a sober take on the state of LGBTQ+ rights in America. He railed against the Trump administration's effort to remove Harvey Milk's name from a U.S. naval ship. 'What a petty, despicable move to remove his name,' Wiener said of Milk, the first openly gay man elected in the U.S. PEOPLE MOVES — Kevin Orellana will be a legislative assistant for Rep. Vince Fong (R-Calif.), handling his financial services portfolio. He previously was a legislative aide for Rep. Young Kim (R-Calif.). — Josh Korn is now head of public policy at Whatnot. He previously was tech policy head at Netflix. — Alex Khan has been promoted to principal at Valencia Government Relations Inc., and the firm is rebranding to Valencia Khan Government Relations. He was previously its senior legislative advocate. BIRTHDAYS — director Aaron Sorkin … actress Natalie Portman … Raphael Ouzan at … Ria Strasser-Galvis at JPMorgan Chase … Brad Gallant … tech entrepreneur Raj Goyle BELATED B-DAY WISHES — (was Sunday): Rep. Ken Calvert … actress Julianna Margulies … author Mel Levine … Kaitlin Kirshner at Microsoft … comms strategist Elizabeth Thorp … Helga Zheutlin … (was Saturday): Blake Johnson at Child Action, Inc. 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.
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Democrats ignore Nevada's upside down, regressive, and unfair tax structure. Again.
The Nevada Legislature Building underwent a face lift prior to this year's session, but the Democratic legislative leadership's economic agenda, inasmuch as there is one, remained the same as it ever was. (Photo: Richard Bednarski/Nevada Current) Democrats nationwide are awash in conflicting opinions about how to stanch the loss of young and working class voters before the U.S. backslide into autocracy is irreversible, if it's not already. Some Democrats blame 'wokeness.' Some Democrats say the party needs to lean in on kitchen-table issues. Some think they should do nothing and just wait for Trump and Trumpism to collapse under the weight of its self-generated slagheap of corruption, lawlessness, malice, and counterproductive policies. Some Democrats, including at least half of those in Nevada's congressional delegation, seem to think the best way to inspire the electorate is to make sure every sentence they mutter includes a noun, a verb, and the word 'bipartisan.' And on and on. And then there are Nevada's Democratic state legislative leaders. They chose to meet this inflection point by yet again allowing generous public subsidies for deep-pocketed Californians to serve as the featured attraction of this year's recently concluded Nevada legislative session. Yes, ding dong, the film tax credit bill is dead. Praise be, etc. But Democratic legislative leadership — Senate Majority Leader Nicole Cannizzaro and Assembly Speaker Steve Yeager — whether by design or neglect, allowed a government giveaway scheme to film corporations to become the one and only thing about the 2025 Legislature working class voters, especially young ones, most likely ever heard about. Assuming they heard about anything legislative at all. Ever since it was plopped onto the Nevada policy landscape more than a decade ago by then-Democratic state senator, now Democratic state Attorney General Aaron Ford, the film tax credit has always been a predominantly Democratic production. One of the chief legislative sponsors of this year's version was state Sen. Daniele Monroe-Mareno, who also currently serves as chair of the state Democratic Party. To reiterate, a critical mass of voters nationwide, including voters on which Democrats once relied, are marinading in nihilism and cynicism, and evidently don't grasp the goals, agenda, priorities — the point — of the Democratic Party, or just cold stopped caring. Against that backdrop, Democrats in Nevada put on a big show about a scheme to use nearly $2 billion of public money to enrich two of California's largest film corporations and one of the nation's most prominent corporate developers of master-planned communities. Weird. In Nevada, Democrats over the last ten years have been very successful at doing what(ever) it takes to win and maintain majorities in both houses of the state Legislature, an endeavor which, luckily for them, had more to do with voter registration numbers and redistricting power than policy positions. As a result, mean-spirited reactionary policies that are racist, poverty-shaming, misogynistic, anti-LGBTQ, anti-democracy, anti-immigrant, and anti-rights — policies designed first and foremost to feed the MAGAfolk — are (mostly) not enacted here. Keeping such pernicious policies (mostly) at bay in Nevada is no small consideration. Winning enough elections to block Republicans from enacting that stuff is arguably the crowning state-level achievement of contemporary Nevada Democrats. But when it comes to pro-active progress, specifically on economic policy, the Nevada Democratic legislative agenda, inasmuch as there is one, is tired (they're 'for' education), and worse than useless (inveterate footsie-playing with industries, mischaracterizing public giveaways to private corporations as 'economic development'). In the meantime, with only the occasional exception, they can rarely be bothered to acknowledge, let alone confront, the fact that the state has one of the country's most upside-down tax structures, in which the smaller your income, the higher the percentage of it you pay in taxes. Giving working families a break by lowering the state's aggressively high sales tax rate would leave a budget hole that would have to be filled by generating revenue elsewhere (evergreen suggestion: raising Nevada's lowest-in-the-nation gaming tax). Under Nevada's constitution, raising or creating taxes requires a two-thirds vote of both legislative houses, majorities Democrats have not had and would probably be afraid to use if they did. In Washington state, which is bluer than Nevada but whose residents have also suffered under a regressive tax structure, it took 15 years of advocacy from organizations and politicians to finally enact a tax on the ultra-wealthy (another good suggestion). Reforming Nevada's tax structure would likewise be a long process. That's assuming Democrats and, for that matter, their most powerful progressive organizational allies, would do something they so far haven't: get started on a public education campaign advocating tax fairness that would also enable the state to be a little less cheap and a little more responsible when it comes to funding public services, programs, and projects. If only the state's Democratic legislative brain trust had spent as much time advocating for an equitable tax system as they've spent advocating and/or rubber-stamping government handouts to corporations and billionaires. The first quarter of the 21st century has been economically harder on Nevada than any other state. It's perhaps a testament to the state Democratic Party's long-hailed organizational oomph that Nevada didn't go for Trump in 2016 and 2020, and only finally fell to Trump last year. It remains to be seen if and how Democrats nationally can generate enough trust and optimism to pull the country out of its degenerative spiral. If they do, there might be some Nevadans, including some state legislators, who will make a meaningful contribution to the effort. But if prior performance is any indication of future results, it's hard to imagine Nevada legislative and party leadership having much of a role in that. At least not in a good way. A version of this column originally appeared in the Daily Current newsletter, which is free and which you can subscribe to here.
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Karoline Leavitt Squirms Over Maria Bartiromo's Blunt Question About Elon Musk
White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt on Sunday tried to laugh off Fox News host Maria Bartiromo's question about an alleged physical altercation that reportedly erupted between top Trump ally-turned-detractor Elon Musk and Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent. Citing a news report from The Washington Post that now-departed Department of Government Efficiency boss Musk body-checked Bessent during a blowout over a difference in opinion at the White House in April, Bartiromo said: 'We're all trying to figure out what happened here and how come this got to this level.' She then asked Leavitt, 'What happened? Did he body-check the treasury secretary in the White House?' Leavitt chuckled and tried to spin the clash as one of the 'healthy disagreements amongst the Cabinet and Elon Musk' that she claimed only 'really speaks to the heart of this Cabinet and the president's team, that they can have these robust disagreements and then still come together to do what's right for the people they are serving.' Bartiromo pressed later, 'What I'm trying to understand here is how rough this got, because the president said that Elon Musk disrespected the office of the president.' 'Now, we know that there was real disrespect in a lot of those X posts from Elon Musk, for sure. But did he actually get physical?' she continued. 'Was there a fistfight that he body-checked the treasury secretary?' 'I certainly wouldn't describe it as a fistfight, Maria,' Leavitt responded. 'It was definitely a disagreement. Although, I was not there, I didn't witness it with my own eyes. I heard about it through secondhand reporting. But again, we've moved on from that. The president has moved on from it.' Watch here: Marjorie Taylor Greene's 'Lesson For Us All' Leaves Seth Meyers Absolutely Floored 6 Wildly Different Ways Fox News Hosts Struggled To Process Trump-Musk Blowup German Leader Politely Shuts Down Trump's Hot Take On D-Day 1 Subtle Barb In Trump-Musk Blow-Out Has Dana Bash Saying 'Wow, Wow, Wow'