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'We don't want them here' Los Angeles mayor says of Guard troops

'We don't want them here' Los Angeles mayor says of Guard troops

UPI16 hours ago

Protestors rally in Los Angeles amid enforcement raids by U.S. Immigrations and Customs Enforcement agents. Photo by Caroline Brehman/ EPA-EFE.
June 15 (UPI) -- Mayor Karen Bass said Sunday that Los Angeles does not need National Guard troops to bolster city police amid protests against raids by Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents, despite the gatherings turning violent in recent days.
"We don't want them here," Bass said on CNN's State of the Union. "They don't need to be here. Our local law enforcement have complete control of this situation."
President Donald Trump deployed thousands of U.S. National Guard soldiers to Los Angeles to assist ICE with immigration raids of locations that were suspected of employing or harboring undocumented migrants.
Last week, U.S. District Court Judge Charles Breyer ruled that Trump must return control of the situation to the Los Angeles Police Department, and that Trump's deployment of the troops was unconstitutional.
But hours later, a federal appeals court panel lifted Breyer's order, allowing the soldiers to continue to assist in the immigration raids.
California Gov. Gavin Newsom has also been critical of Trump's troop deployment and said the president overstepped his bounds without first seeking input from state or local officials.
Newsom called Trump a "stone cold liar" in response to the president's comments that he consulted the California governor before deploying the soldiers.
Immigration raids continue. However, Trump has appeared to be moderating on targeting some workplaces, including some farms, meatpacking plants, hotels and restaurants.
Amid the backdrop of the raids and protests, thousands of people rallied in the streets Saturday to protest Trump's policies that his critics have called authoritarian. The "No Kings" rallies took place in cities across the country at the same time that the U.S. paraded high0end military equipment through the streets of Washington in an event that was estimated to cost as much as $45 million. Saturday was also Trump's 79th birthday.

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NYC mayoral primary: 1 week to go
NYC mayoral primary: 1 week to go

Politico

time18 minutes ago

  • Politico

NYC mayoral primary: 1 week to go

Presented by With help from Cris Seda Chabrier More than 66,000 New Yorkers flocked to early voting sites over the weekend, as the Democratic mayoral primary is being framed as a race with national implications. To a raucous Zohran Mamdani rally attended by more than 2,500 people, Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez said the race was about generational change, POLITICO reported Saturday night. 'In a world and a nation that is crying to end the gerontocracy of our leadership, that wants to see a new day, that wants to see a new generation ascend, it is unconscionable to send Andrew Cuomo to Gracie Mansion,' she said. And forget Cuomo's claim he's the best to stand up to the president. 'We can never get past Donald Trump if we continue to elect the same people and make the same decisions that got us here in the first place,' AOC said. The former governor countered that experience matters more than ideology, that he represents 'capacity and competence and accomplishment, and that's what the Democratic Party needs.' 'Less words, less rhetoric, less theory, more accomplishment, more improvement in people's lives,' he told Playbook after speaking at a church service in Jamaica, Queens Sunday. 'My main opponent,' he told churchgoers, 'never had a real job.' Cuomo's face blocks Trump's like a partial solar eclipse on a new flyer his volunteers were handing out at a poll site Sunday. 'Donald Trump is at the gates,' it reads. 'We need someone experienced to slam it shut.' An image of soldiers policing protests in L.A. is on the reverse. That message of toughness has become a defining feature of the campaign — and in this Trump era, it's not just Cuomo presenting himself as a brawler, POLITICO reports today in a piece on all the tough-guy talk infiltrating this election season. Another image of Cuomo in front of Trump is featured in a new mailer from a pro-Mamdani super PAC, which is reminding voters that the president and the candidate share some of the same backers. That PAC, New Yorkers for Lower Costs, is spending a relatively meager $500,000 on mail and promoting a digital ad slamming Cuomo on sexual harassment and sharing Trump donors, while contrasting that with Mamdani's AOC endorsement. That message was heard at a No Kings march in Manhattan Saturday. While Trump was the focus nationally, Mamdani, mayoral candidate Brad Lander and their supporters made it 'No Kings, No Cuomo, No ICE.' It stuck — Playbook heard a 'Don't Rank Cuomo' chant from the marchers on Fifth Avenue. The next day in Queens, Assemblymember David Weprin — a Cuomo backer — hosted an anti-Mamdani event where he said his colleague was 'unready to handle the second hardest job in America' and his 'rhetoric and policies are divisive and dangerous. Weprin's press conference, though, lacked the discernible energy of the anti-Cuomo movement. The anti-Mamdani message is loud, clear and frequent on television and in mailboxes, with the pro-Cuomo super PAC Fix the City spending more than $5 million on a TV ad decrying the democratic socialist for wanting to defund the police, POLITICO reported over the weekend. And the New York Post Editorial Board, loath to endorse Cuomo, instead settled this weekend for a non-endorsement of Mamdani. New polling expected early this week from Marist College will show whether Cuomo has maintained his dominant position as Mamdani appears to surge ahead of the June 24 primary. The other contenders, meanwhile, are defining themselves as alternatives to the two divisive candidates leading the polls. 'We don't have to settle,' Scott Stringer told a voter at an Upper West Side farmers market Sunday. 'I think I combine the best of those two candidates.' Lander is feeling great, after a pseudo-endorsement from a panel of experts convened by The New York Times' opinion section on Thursday morning, a pugnacious debate performance Thursday night and a high-profile cross-endorsement with Mamdani Friday. It's 'Landemonium' to his staffers. To Lander, who spoke to Playbook at the same farmers market Sunday, 'it has felt like people haven't been paying that much attention to this election. And now, people are paying attention. And for me, just at the right time.' — Jeff Coltin IT'S MONDAY: Got news? Send it our way: Jeff Coltin, Emily Ngo and Nick Reisman. WHERE'S KATHY? In Boston meeting with northeastern governors and Canadian premiers. She will also participate in a discussion with Anne Finucane. WHERE'S ERIC? Public schedule unavailable as of 10 p.m. Sunday. QUOTE OF THE DAY: 'I appear to be out of step with the leadership you are forging and I do not want to be the one who keeps questioning why we are not enlarging our tent and actively trying to engage more of our communities.' — American Federation of Teachers President Randi Weingarten in her letter to Chair Ken Martin resigning from the Democratic National Committee. FIRST IN PLAYBOOK: The heralded Hotel and Gaming Trades Council's get-out-the-vote operation is cranking up on Cuomo's behalf — offering a not-so-secret weapon for the frontrunning mayoral candidate as the race tightens in its final week. The union, which endorsed Cuomo in April, is spending about $900,000 on its field operation to turn out voters with direct mail and a fleet of LED billboard trucks operating eight hours a day until the Democratic primary. Civically-engaged neighborhoods are being targeted, such as Canarsie, Flatbush and East New York in Brooklyn; South Jamaica and Corona in Queens; Norwood, Soundview and Wakefield in the Bronx; and Washington Heights and East Harlem in Manhattan, a union spokesperson told Playbook. The GOTV work began in earnest this weekend, as early voting got underway. HTC represents about 40,000 workers. Though far from the city's largest union, it often punches above its weight in political influence — helped in no small part by its voter turnout efforts each election cycle. 'We don't approach turning out votes as a passive exercise but rather a full court press until the final buzzer goes off and Andrew Cuomo and other HTC-endorsed candidates go on to victory,' union spokesperson Austin Shafran said. HTC is pouring $2.5 million into mostly New York City Democratic primary races, including $1 million for Cuomo alone, in its push to remain a major player in city elections. It's also involved in City Council races, in which spending and field operations will support the down-ballot candidates. Among its allies is Councilmember Julie Menin — who carried a union-backed bill to require hotel owners to obtain operating licenses and restrict subcontractors — is considering a run for speaker. The union bolstered Corey Johnson to the speakership in 2017, but backed an unsuccessful rival to Adrienne Adams four years later, in alignment with Mayor Eric Adams. — Nick Reisman CITY HALL: THE LATEST DINING OUT ON THE STATE ACCOUNT: Some of the same lobbyists and donors who've given to City Council Member Justin Brannan's campaign account for city comptroller also contributed to his unspecified state fundraising account — which he used to dine out at Gargiulo's, Serafina and Michael's of Brooklyn. People doing business with the city, like lobbyists, can only give up to $400 to comptroller candidates. But at least 10 registered lobbyists who have donated the max or close to it to Brannan's comptroller campaign already gave to his state account in 2024, effectively taking advantage of a legal loophole to double dip. That was the case for real estate developer Demetrios Moragianis. Those contributions all came before Brannan launched his comptroller campaign in August. But he continued to spend from the state account even after setting a run for the city office — making political contributions to the Bronx Dems and the Jim Owles Liberal Democratic Club, paying a campaign consultant, buying tickets and hotel rooms for the Somos conference in Puerto Rico and covering the tab at political meetings at restaurants. Candidates aren't allowed to use state committees to help a city campaign — as New York Focus reported, regarding City Council Member Rafael Salamanca — but Brannan campaign spokesperson Alyssa Cass said that wasn't the case here. Brannan was keeping his options open for a run for district leader or another office before he settled on comptroller and all the spending was related to that, she said. 'Councilman Brannan is independent, unbought and unbossed. This kind of inside-baseball nonsense isn't what matters to New Yorkers struggling to get by in the richest city in the world,' Cass said in a statement. 'Voters will support Justin because of his record and his vision for what he'll do as City Comptroller—not because he's followed standard, legal fundraising practices for political committees.' — Jeff Coltin BUS MONEY: First in Playbook, Brannan's comptroller campaign is also getting a boost from the Transport Workers Union, which is spending more than $250,000 organizing its members to get out and vote for him — including a TWU for Justin Brannan website. The union, which has 70,000 members in the city including retirees, endorsed Brannan back in February. — Jeff Coltin More from the city: — Eric Adams, who readily promotes his opposition to antisemitism, hosted antisemitic, misogynistic influencer Sneako at Gracie Mansion. (New York Post) — A state judge indefinitely barred Eric Adams' office from allowing ICE from reopening an office on Rikers Island. (THE CITY) — Donald Trump Jr. endorsed City Council Member Inna Vernikov in a campaign video as she faces former Council Member Ari Kagan in a nasty Republican primary. (New York Post) NEW FROM PLANET ALBANY CAPITOL PROTECTION: The shootings of two Minnesota state lawmakers — in one case fatal — is spurring New York officials to beef up security around the Capitol building. Gov. Kathy Hochul's office told Playbook Sunday that while there are 'no known credible threats' the governor and State Police will have an increased presence at the Capitol. 'The State Police, Division of Homeland Security and Emergency Services, and our local law enforcement partners continue the heightened attention to the unprecedented levels of and rise in threats to government officials over the last couple of years,' spokesperson Jess D'Amelia said. Assembly Speaker Carl Heastie on Saturday said he had spoken with Hochul about boosting the law enforcement presence around the statehouse after former state House Speaker Melissa Hortman's assassination and state Sen. John Hoffman was wounded. Hortman's husband was also killed; Hoffman's wife was wounded. Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz called the shootings 'politically motivated.' Visitors to the state Capitol are already subject to airport-style screenings before entering. Balancing security and public access to the building — which often serves as a backdrop for boisterous protests and rallies — has been a challenge as random acts of political violence in a polarized country have been on the rise. Fearing attacks on state houses around the country following the Jan. 6 Capitol riot in 2021, New York officials temporarily cut off vehicle access to State Street. — Nick Reisman More from Albany: — Adrienne Adams and Queens Borough President Donovan Richards are on Hochul's short list for lieutenant governor. (New York Post) — There are more calls for Lt. Gov. Antonio Delgado to resign as he challenges Hochul for the Democratic nomination. (Times Union) — The fate of major environmental bills is in the hands of Assembly Democrats. (POLITICO Pro) KEEPING UP WITH THE DELEGATION — Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer and Democrats are split over the response to Israel's Iran attack. (Axios) — Democratic Rep. John Mannion explained why he lashed out at Republican Rep. Mike Lawler on the House floor. (WSYR) — Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand is pressing to restore student mental health funding. (WBNG) NEW YORK STATE OF MIND — A public defender was charged with smuggling THC-laced paper into Rikers. (New York Times) — A bill meant to strengthen law enforcement mental health is heading to Hochul's desk. (Newsday) — Cannabis license applicants are frustrated by the slow approval process. (Buffalo News) SOCIAL DATA MAKING MOVES – Jesse Binnall and former Rep. John Sweeney (R-N.Y.) have launched King Street Solutions, a boutique government affairs firm. Binnall currently is a partner at Binnall Law Group. IN MEMORIAM: Leonard A. Lauder, Philanthropist and Cosmetics Heir, Dies at 92 (The New York Times) HAPPY BIRTHDAY: Assemblymembers Al Stirpe and Stephen Hawley … AIPAC's Allegra Scheinblum … J.C. Polanco … Con Edison's Jamie McShane … Anthony Thomas. Missed Friday's New York Playbook PM? We forgive you. Read it here.

Stock market today: Dow, S&P 500, Nasdaq futures rise, oil slips as Israel-Iran conflict enters 4th day
Stock market today: Dow, S&P 500, Nasdaq futures rise, oil slips as Israel-Iran conflict enters 4th day

Yahoo

time25 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Stock market today: Dow, S&P 500, Nasdaq futures rise, oil slips as Israel-Iran conflict enters 4th day

US stock futures climbed on Monday, eyeing a rebound as jitters over a widening in the Israel-Iran conflict started to recede despite exchanges of missile strikes throughout the weekend. Dow Jones Industrial Average futures (YM=F) rose 0.5%, while those on the S&P 500 (ES=F) moved up 0.6%. Contracts tied to the Nasdaq 100 (NQ=F) gained 0.7%. The cautious optimism follows a bruising Friday session that saw the Dow plunge more than 700 points in a broad risk-off move. Meanwhile, oil (CL=F) prices edged lower after jumping in the wake of the latest attacks, having surged last week to their highest levels since January. The geopolitical flare-up comes at a delicate moment for markets already buffeted by tariff insecurity. Friday's selloff dragged the major US indexes into negative territory for the week. Read more: The latest on Trump's tariffs Now investors are regaining some appetite for risk amid rising optimism that the conflict won't spill over into a broader regional crisis. President Trump said on Sunday there's a "good chance" of an Israel-Iran peace deal, but the hostilities may need to play out first. 'Sometimes they have to fight it out, but we're going to see what happens,' he told reporters. A measure of calm is also returning to the oil market, rattled by fears of disruption to the global energy supply. After spiking initially, prices pushed down well over 1% to pull Brent crude (BZ=F) toward $73 a barrel and WTI crude to below $72 a barrel. Gold (GC=F) prices also pulled back, having rallied alongside oil as it drew safe-haven flows amid rising volatility. The precious metal traded lower at around $3,440 an ounce. On the trade front, the EU is reportedly ready to accept US tariffs of 10% across all its exports — the baseline for Trump's "reciprocal" hikes — as the president puts pressure on trading partners to reach a deal. The offer is a bid to avert higher rates on cars, drugs, and electronics, Handelsblatt reported. Looking ahead, markets overwhelmingly expect the Fed to hold rates steady on Wednesday. While President Trump has maintained pressure on Chair Jerome Powell to cut rates, current market dynamics may leave little room to budge. Shares of Sarepta (SRPT) plunged 40% in premarket trading on Monday after the company said a second patient died of liver failure while taking its experimental gene therapy, Elevidys. Sarepta paused its clinical trial and halted shipments of the treatment to patients who are unable to walk. News of the death comes after another patient died of acute liver failure in March, which raised concerns over the drug's safety. The therapy is used to treat Duchenne muscular dystrophy, a rare muscle disorder. The focus at this week's Federal Reserve meeting is on whether policymakers are still committed to two interest-rate cuts this year, Yahoo Finance's Jennifer Schonberger reports: Read more here. Here are some of the biggest stories you may have missed over the weekend and early this morning: Economic data: Empire manufacturing activity (June) Earnings: No notable earnings. How many Fed cuts ahead? We (and Trump) are about to find out. EU set to accept flat 10% US tariff — with conditions Mideast tensions, Fed's 'dot plot': What to know this week Oil erases gain as Iran-Israel attacks spare critical flows Why Wall Street doesn't see Fed rate cuts coming anytime soon Investors shun long-term US bonds as rate-cut hopes fade Israel-Iran attacks enter 4th day with no deal in sight Here are some top stocks trending on Yahoo Finance in premarket trading: United States Steel Corporation (X) stock was up 5% before the bell on Monday after President Trump approved of Japan's Nippon Steel's take over of the company. Trump the gave the green light to the $14.9B bid for US Steel on Friday, removing a key hurdle in Nippon's 18-month pursuit of the business. Kering's ( Paris-listed shares rose 9% in premarket trading on Monday, after reports emerged that Renault's chief executive, Luca de Meo would become head of the French luxury goods group Gucci. Tesla (TSLA) stock was up 1% on Monday before the bell, rebounding from losses earlier in the Month due to CEO Elon Musk and President Trump's feud. Renault's ( stock dropped over 6% on news that its CEO Luca de Meo has decided to leave. The Italian who turned around the French automaker has been recruited by Kering (PPXB.F, PPRUF) to perform a similar feat at the luxury goods maker, according to Bloomberg. Shares of Kering rose almost 10% in Paris as investors welcomed the report that de Meo will be appointed as the Gucci owner's CEO in coming days. Bloomberg reports: Read more here. Greetings from Cannes Lions, where I am stationed for the week talking with top advertising execs, sports stars and CEOs. Tough assignment! I have found this event to be very useful each year in helping to understand the economy into year end. You would be surprised how forward-looking market spend trends are at the world's biggest companies. To that end, I just got off set with Disney's (DIS) president of global advertising Rita Ferro — one of the top names in the marketing industry. I asked her if a slowing US economy and general macro volatility were beginning to chip away at ad budgets. She wasn't super bullish about ad spending — more cautiously optimistic. Businesses are buying ads once they see they need them, rather than making large commitments on ad spend early, she suggested. "I think people are being very intentional where they spend money," Ferro tells me. "I would say they're [the data points she watches] not recessionary. We see much closer in buying." Gold prices rose as the conflict erupting between Israel and Iran pushed investors toward safe-haven assets in a broader risk-off move. Bloomberg reports: Read more here. Oil continues to gain as Israel and Iran enter the fourth consecutive day of missile strikes between the warring nations. Iran is the third largest oil producer in OPEC+ and controls the Strait of Hormuz, an essential supply route for oil worldwide. Bloomberg reports: Read more here. Shares of Sarepta (SRPT) plunged 40% in premarket trading on Monday after the company said a second patient died of liver failure while taking its experimental gene therapy, Elevidys. Sarepta paused its clinical trial and halted shipments of the treatment to patients who are unable to walk. News of the death comes after another patient died of acute liver failure in March, which raised concerns over the drug's safety. The therapy is used to treat Duchenne muscular dystrophy, a rare muscle disorder. The focus at this week's Federal Reserve meeting is on whether policymakers are still committed to two interest-rate cuts this year, Yahoo Finance's Jennifer Schonberger reports: Read more here. Here are some of the biggest stories you may have missed over the weekend and early this morning: Economic data: Empire manufacturing activity (June) Earnings: No notable earnings. How many Fed cuts ahead? We (and Trump) are about to find out. EU set to accept flat 10% US tariff — with conditions Mideast tensions, Fed's 'dot plot': What to know this week Oil erases gain as Iran-Israel attacks spare critical flows Why Wall Street doesn't see Fed rate cuts coming anytime soon Investors shun long-term US bonds as rate-cut hopes fade Israel-Iran attacks enter 4th day with no deal in sight Here are some top stocks trending on Yahoo Finance in premarket trading: United States Steel Corporation (X) stock was up 5% before the bell on Monday after President Trump approved of Japan's Nippon Steel's take over of the company. Trump the gave the green light to the $14.9B bid for US Steel on Friday, removing a key hurdle in Nippon's 18-month pursuit of the business. Kering's ( Paris-listed shares rose 9% in premarket trading on Monday, after reports emerged that Renault's chief executive, Luca de Meo would become head of the French luxury goods group Gucci. Tesla (TSLA) stock was up 1% on Monday before the bell, rebounding from losses earlier in the Month due to CEO Elon Musk and President Trump's feud. Renault's ( stock dropped over 6% on news that its CEO Luca de Meo has decided to leave. The Italian who turned around the French automaker has been recruited by Kering (PPXB.F, PPRUF) to perform a similar feat at the luxury goods maker, according to Bloomberg. Shares of Kering rose almost 10% in Paris as investors welcomed the report that de Meo will be appointed as the Gucci owner's CEO in coming days. Bloomberg reports: Read more here. Greetings from Cannes Lions, where I am stationed for the week talking with top advertising execs, sports stars and CEOs. Tough assignment! I have found this event to be very useful each year in helping to understand the economy into year end. You would be surprised how forward-looking market spend trends are at the world's biggest companies. To that end, I just got off set with Disney's (DIS) president of global advertising Rita Ferro — one of the top names in the marketing industry. I asked her if a slowing US economy and general macro volatility were beginning to chip away at ad budgets. She wasn't super bullish about ad spending — more cautiously optimistic. Businesses are buying ads once they see they need them, rather than making large commitments on ad spend early, she suggested. "I think people are being very intentional where they spend money," Ferro tells me. "I would say they're [the data points she watches] not recessionary. We see much closer in buying." Gold prices rose as the conflict erupting between Israel and Iran pushed investors toward safe-haven assets in a broader risk-off move. Bloomberg reports: Read more here. Oil continues to gain as Israel and Iran enter the fourth consecutive day of missile strikes between the warring nations. Iran is the third largest oil producer in OPEC+ and controls the Strait of Hormuz, an essential supply route for oil worldwide. Bloomberg reports: Read more here. Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data

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