.

“As an adjudicated insurrectionist, Trump is an illegitimate president according to Section 3 of the 14th Amendment, and therefore every official act as president will be illegitimate.”

–Mike Zonta, co-editor of OccupySF.net

The 14th Amendment states: “No person shall be a Senator or Representative in Congress, or elector of President and Vice President, or hold any office, civil or military, under the United States, or under any state, who, having previously taken an oath, as a member of Congress, or as an officer of the United States, or as a member of any state legislature, or as an executive or judicial officer of any state, to support the Constitution of the United States, shall have engaged in insurrection or rebellion against the same, or given aid or comfort to the enemies thereof. But Congress may, by a vote of two-thirds of each House, remove such disability.”

Call your Congressperson and your U.S. Senators at (202) 224-3121

How the California governor’s race is changing post-Swalwell

  • Laurel Rosenhall | © 2025 The New York Times Company
  • Apr 20, 2026 (SFExaminer.com)
Xavier Becerra Wikimedia
Xavier Becerra, whose polling numbers had languished for months, has jumped into the top tier of Democratic candidates since Swalwell’s campaign imploded amid accusations of sexual assault. Photo: Gage Skidmore from Peoria, AZ, United States of AmericaCC BY-SA 2.0, via Wikimedia Commons

SACRAMENTO, Calif. — In the 10 days since Eric Swalwell dropped out of the race for California governor, two of his Democratic rivals’ fortunes have turned in opposite directions. Betty Yee, a former state controller, ended her campaign on Monday, while Xavier Becerra, a former California attorney general, has drawn a surge of support in multiple polls.

 Four polls in the past week have shown Becerra as receiving at least 10% support, at least twice what he previously had, putting him in contention in a large field of candidates.

But the competition is stiff, and the race remains fluid. Becerra, who served as health and human services secretary under President Joe Biden, has roughly the same level of support as two other Democrats: Tom Steyer, a billionaire former hedge fund manager, and Katie Porter, a former member of Congress.

Many voters remain undecided two weeks before Californians begin receiving ballots by mail for the June 2 election. The state’s nonpartisan primary rules have added extra intrigue to the race to succeed Gov. Gavin Newsom, a Democrat who must leave office in January because of term limits. In this deeply Democratic state, no Democrat has dominated, and two Republicans — Steve Hilton, a former Fox News host who has been endorsed by President Donald Trump, and Chad Bianco, the sheriff of Riverside County — have been among the front-runners.

In California primaries, all candidates run on the same ballot, and the two who get the most votes advance to the general election, regardless of party. With a gubernatorial field that once included eight prominent Democrats, polls suggested that two best-known Republicans might take the top two spots because the minority party had far fewer candidates to split its votes.

Such a scenario would block Democrats from the general election and hand the governor’s office of the nation’s largest blue state to a Republican.

To prevent that possibility, Rusty Hicks, chair of the California Democratic Party, has been encouraging Democrats to drop out if their campaigns did not seem viable. Hicks on Monday urged flagging candidates to follow Yee’s example.

“I continue to believe there are too many Democrats in the field,” Hicks said as he released the results of a poll that the California Democratic Party commissioned in an effort to thin the field.

The poll was one of four that have demonstrated momentum for Becerra since Swalwell dropped out. Becerra hired a new social media strategist last week, Tonya Lamont, Newsom’s former digital communications director, and his online presence has since boomed.

A campaign event for Becerra in Los Angeles on Saturday drew a large crowd. Mariana Salas, 45, had previously supported Swalwell but said she was looking for a new candidate and had seen social media influencers talk about Becerra in recent days.

Salas said she had identified with Becerra as a fellow Mexican American and was impressed by his experience as state attorney general.

Ex // Top Stories

SFMTA project aims to improve one of The City’s busiest Muni lines

Transportation officials embarking on multiyear effort aimed at boosting pedestrian and transit safety along the 1 California route

Local startup offers promise of clean power for SF

Palo Alto-based XGS Energy is developing a new geothermal power system that could produce more power in more places

Foes of changes to Overpaid Executive Tax add $2 million to fight it

Business interests poured $2 million more into a campaign fighting a labor union ballot measure that would raise San Francisco’s Overpaid Executive Tax

“When he mentioned the suing of Donald Trump, I was like, ‘Oh my God, maybe this is the next guy,'” she said.

Other Democrats are also positioning themselves as the candidate who can best lead California’s fight against the Trump administration. Steyer has run on a liberal platform and received an endorsement Monday from Our Revolution, which was founded by Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt.

It was a notable endorsement of a billionaire by a group established to fight what it calls “the billionaire class.”

Porter, a former Democratic member of Congress from Orange County, was endorsed Monday by Rep. Robert Garcia, a California Democrat and a member of the Congressional Progressive Caucus. She already had support from Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass..

Matt Mahan, the mayor of San Jose, California, has received millions of dollars in support from Silicon Valley executives this month.

Supporters believe that Mahan, a moderate Democrat, has an opportunity to win over former backers of Swalwell and other voters who are undecided, though he has faced criticism that he is too aligned with California billionaires, and he has not made big gains in polls over the past week.

Yee, 68, announced her withdrawal from the race in an emotional call with reporters on Monday. She had pitched herself as a budget expert who would be the scandal-free choice following Swalwell’s demise. She called herself “Boring Betty” in social media posts that highlighted her deep experience in California state government, including two terms as the state’s chief fiscal officer.

But Yee has lagged at the bottom of most polls since she entered the race in 2024 and has struggled to raise money. Her message had not broken through in a state with several expensive media markets.

“We’re living in a reality TV era,” she said in the call with reporters. “I got no gimmicks. I have no scandals.”

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.

Nobody Testifies Against Trump Twice

Five dead. One pattern. None of them made it to sworn testimony.

W. A. Lawrence Apr 21, 2026

Arnold Böcklin, Isle of the Dead. Names carried into silence before they ever reached the stand. Public domain.

Foreign governments are opening independent Epstein investigations beyond American jurisdiction. Decades of documented corruption and systematic suppression of evidence shifted scrutiny into forums Trump cannot fire, withhold, or delay. What domestic institutions stalled now moves beyond the reach of patronage and political containment.

The man examined in this piece holds nuclear authority and the pardon power. Donald Trump can remove prosecutors inside the United States, yet those powers end at the water’s edge, where foreign courts and independent investigators answer to neither loyalty nor fear.

This work generates under $120 a week from roughly 40 hours spent researching, sourcing, and writing. That return cannot sustain independent reporting much longer. The annual plan offers the best value at 25¢ a day. Reader backing keeps Glass Empires independent and expanding. Will you help keep this work going?

Keep Glass Empires Independent

Every name on Trump’s witness list found a reason to stop talking before the questions started.

This is a record. Draw your own conclusions.

On October 10, 1989, a helicopter carrying three of Donald Trump’s most capable executives lifted off from Manhattan and never arrived.

Stephen Hyde, 43, ran all three Atlantic City casino properties. Mark Grossinger Etess, 38, was building the Taj Mahal from the ground up. Jonathan Benanav, 33, served as executive vice president of Trump Plaza. Pilots Robert Kent and Lawrence Diener died alongside all three when the main rotor detached over the Garden State Parkway and the aircraft fell straight down into the tree line.

Trump publicly claimed a scheduled seat on that flight, missed only because the afternoon ran long. Multiple insiders disputed that claim on the record. In a 1991 book, former Trump Plaza president John O’Donnell documented what came next: Trump blamed the crash victims for financial failures the dead could never contest.

The Taj Mahal opened six months later. Bankruptcy followed within the year.

All five arrived at that crash site without subpoenas, without pending testimony, without any scheduled appearance before any authority. The significance lies elsewhere. All three executives held direct knowledge of every financial decision Trump would spend the next decade blaming on dead men. The last chance to contradict that story left New Jersey on October 10, 1989. Every authority with the power to ask Trump to explain the distance between the eulogy and the blame chose silence instead.

Jeffrey Epstein was arrested on federal sex trafficking charges on July 6, 2019. His contact book held presidents, princes, and financiers. Flight logs placed Donald Trump aboard the private jet eight times between 1993 and 1997, while both men circulated through the same donor class for years. Trump later described him as a terrific guy who liked beautiful women, many on the younger side.

Thirty five days later, guards found him dead inside the Metropolitan Correctional Center. Suicide watch had preceded the death. Officers missed checks for hours, cameras failed, and a forensic pathologist retained by the family said the injuries aligned more closely with strangulation than hanging. Authorities ruled suicide.

At a July 31, 2019 hearing, Judge Richard Berman set June 8, 2020 as the earliest trial date. Ten days later, the defendant was dead. The trial vanished. The black book stayed closed. Every name tied to those pages walked free.

The House Oversight Committee subpoenaed Attorney General Pam Bondi on March 17, 2026. Sworn deposition: April 14, 2026.

Trump fired Bondi on April 2. Twelve days before the chair.

April 9: Melania Trump appeared at the White House to deny any relationship with Epstein or Maxwell. Questions were refused. Every powerful person named across those 3.5 million pages remains, as of today, uncharged.

The name is fully redacted in every document.

FBI intake report EFTA00020518, dated October 27, 2020, reads as follows: in 1995, a limo driver picked up Trump in the Dallas-Fort Worth area for an airport run. During the ride, Trump worked a cell phone, repeating the name “Jeffrey” and making references to abusing a girl, and the statements grew alarming enough that the driver told the FBI: within seconds, pulling onto the median and removing Trump from the vehicle by force was a live option.

The driver met a woman who told him Trump and Epstein had raped her. A girl with a strange name made the introduction. A hotel or building. That is all the woman would give.

The driver pushed for a police report. Christmas Day 1999, the phone rang. The report had been filed. The driver told her she had done what the evidence demanded. Christmas morning. Across the country, people were opening presents. Inside that call: a woman who had just told police the future president had raped her, and a line going quiet because there was nothing left that words could carry.

Contact ended January 10, 2000.

Word came back from Kiefer, Oklahoma. Head blown off. Local police said definitively: not a suicide. The county coroner ruled it one regardless. Dead within two weeks of trusting the system with her name.

In March 2026, the Justice Department released 16 pages previously withheld without legal basis, summarizing four FBI interviews with a separate accuser who said Trump sexually assaulted the accuser as a minor. Investigators found the witness credible enough to conduct three additional sessions. The White House dismissed the allegations as untrue and sensationalist.

At the February 11, 2026 House Judiciary hearing, Ted Lieu placed the limo driver’s account directly before Bondi. Even then, the Department of Justice had never contacted the driver.

Investigators found Ivana Trump at the bottom of a staircase in a Manhattan townhouse on July 14, 2022. Blunt impact to the torso. Age 73.

The obituaries buried the lead.

Ivana was a material witness in Attorney General Letitia James’ civil fraud investigation into the Trump Organization. Donald Trump, Ivanka Trump, and Donald Trump Jr. had been court-ordered to begin depositions the week of July 18, 2022, four days after Ivana’s death. Decades of firsthand knowledge about how Trump ran the business died with her before reaching the record.

Attorneys for the family requested a delay within 24 hours. James’ office agreed. The case moved forward without a single word from the one person who had watched Trump build the empire under investigation, producing a $364 million judgment against Trump in February 2024.

Ivana left the record blank.

Maxwell recruited Virginia Giuffre at age 16 from a job at Trump’s Mar-a-Lago club, as Giuffre told FBI investigators in 2021. Two decades of civil suits followed. Giuffre forced Prince Andrew into a financial settlement in 2022. Litigation against Alan Dershowitz remained active when she died.

On April 25, 2024, the family announced a suicide. She was 41.

Days earlier, Giuffre posted that if anything happened, the cause would not be accidental. Cases remained open when she was buried. The final post read like a line going dead after every warning landed.

The lawsuits died with the plaintiff. Named parties faced zero consequence.

What you have just read is a timeline with dates attached.

Five executives dead before anyone could ask them anything. One financier dead 35 days after arrest, ten days after Judge Berman set a trial date of June 8, 2020. One woman dead within two weeks of filing a police report, before any court date could be set. One former wife dead on July 14, 2022, four days before the court-ordered deposition week of July 18. One survivor dead on April 25, 2024, active litigation pending, after writing that death would be deliberate. The line went quiet. It always goes quiet.

The mob has a word for this kind of housekeeping.

The attorney general sworn to answer for the pattern lost the job twelve days before the chair. Files naming the living remain contested and partially withheld. The limo driver has been on FBI record since October 2020 and received zero contact from the Justice Department. Giuffre named names before death.

The people tied to those files hold office and decide what the public may know. They control what surfaces and what vanishes. Distributing documented knowledge inside a political apparatus this hostile to accountability carries consequences.

Every name on those pages is still out there. So are you. The phone is still ringing. Nobody is picking up.

Unlock Full Access

Sources

UPI Archives
Trump officials die in helicopter crash
October 10, 1989
https://www.upi.com/Archives/1989/10/10/Trump-officials-die-in-helicopter-crash/2349623995200/

UPI Archives
NTSB blames manufacturer for 1989 Trump helicopter crash
May 21, 1992
https://www.upi.com/Archives/1992/05/21/NTSB-blames-manufacturer-for-1989-Trump-helicopter-crash/6833706420800/

John R. O’Donnell and James Rutherford
Trumped!
Simon & Schuster, 1991

New York magazine
Jeffrey Epstein: International Moneyman of Mystery
October 28, 2002
https://nymag.com/nymetro/news/people/n_7912/

U.S. Department of Justice
United States v. Jeffrey Epstein case materials
https://www.justice.gov/epstein

Reuters
U.S. House panel subpoenas Bondi in Epstein probe
March 17, 2026

Reuters
Trump fires Bondi as attorney general
April 2, 2026

Reuters
Trump and adult children testimony postponed after Ivana Trump death
July 15, 2022

Supreme Court of the State of New York
People of the State of New York v. Trump Organization
Judgment entered February 16, 2024

EXCLUSIVE: Hundreds of Prisoners Launch Hunger Strike at Largest ICE Prison in Midwest

SC learned of hunger strike at Michigan’s North Lake Detention Center: “I peed on myself when they were beating me,” female prisoner wrote in Habeas corpus petition SC obtained

Jordan Chariton Apr 21, 2026

Status Coup has been reporting ON THE GROUND covering Trump’s ICE TERROR for nearly a year in LA, NYC, Alligator Alcatraz, Chicago, Charlotte, & Minneapolis. PLEASE SUPPORT this important reporting for as low as $5 bucks a month:

SUPPORT STATUS COUP AS LOW AS $5/MONTH

Status Coup has exclusively learned that a hunger strike has launched inside one of the largest ICE prisons in the midwest currently imprisoning approximately 1,400 immigrants under horrid conditions.

At this point, approximately 200 male prisoners at Michigan’s North Lake Detention Center have begun their strike in the ICE prison located in rural Baldwin, Michigan. The prison is owned by controversial for-profit prison operator GEO Group. At the time of publishing this story, it’s unknown if female prisoners will be joining the strike. Prisoners hail from a variety of origin countries including Venezuela and Ecuador.

Multiple sources told Status Coup that the prisoners launching the strike are being detained in multiple units, called pods, and are begging for help as they suffer through horrid conditions including:

  • Freezing temperatures
  • Only one thin blanket provided; prisoners have to purchase additional blankets and sweatshirts out of their prison commissary account.
  • Insufficient medical care: prisoners are unable to get the treatment they need or see specialists for certain conditions. Regardless of medical symptoms, prisoners are only receiving Tylenol or Ibuprofen.
  • Doctors and guards don’t speak the language prisoners speak (and insufficient number and quality of translators).
  • If prisoners arrive at medical unit early in morning, they don’t get seen that day.
  • Guards using racist language toward prisoners
  • Prisoners getting paid $1 dollar a day to work jobs in kitchen, laundry rom, etc.
  • Prisoners’ work pay often delayed

Making matters worse, multiple sources told Status Coup that local hospitals and doctors are not offering medical care to the ICE prison due to concerns over GEO Group’s operations and treatment of prisoners.

SUPPORT INVESTIGATIVE REPORTING $5/MONTH

GEO Group did not answer Status Coup’s specific questions about the conditions inside this ICE prison and provided a general statement (read at the end of this story).

In 2025, the for-profit prison operator saw a staggering 695 percentage increase in profit—earning $254.4 million in profit compared to $32 million in 2024.

The cash surge came from President Trump’s surge in ICE prisons and prisoners—showering GEO Group with cash. Status Coup has previously reported on ICE prisoners at the Dilley Detention Center in Texas—which is imprisoning hundreds of children—having to pay nearly $40 dollars for a 10-pack of bottled water (watch that report below). Without the bottled water, prisoners are provided contaminated water.

Over a dozen female prisoners, housed in a different unit inside the ICE prison, have filed a Habeas corpus petition, sounding the alarm about the horrid conditions they are enduring, physical abuse they’ve sufferred, human rights abuses, and constitutional violations.

BECOME A SC MEMBER FOR $5/MONTH

Status Coup has obtained the petition and are posting some of the pages from it below (with redactions to protect prisoner identities).

We have also highlighted certain parts of one female prisoners’ handwritten account of physical abuse and starvation she endured at the local ICE field office she was held at for nearly three weeks before being transferred to North Lake Detention Center.

She believes she was beaten as a result of her sexual orientation—and described being beaten so severely she urinated on herself.

(Read documents below and here are are some key parts of her recounting this abuse)

“For 20 days I was starving, they only fed me snacks”

“I came to the US from Venezuela looking for freedom and justice.”

“Where I’m detained at North Lake Processing Center I feel lost and still having nightmares and scared.”

“In those weeks they didn’t let me take a shower. I was smelling horrible. Remember I peed on myself when they were beating me.”

“An agent said you have a right to call a lawyer but were not going to help you.”

“She gave me a sandal and said I can keep it until I leave and she started laughing and said that’s if you leave.”

“Most times I was afraid to sleep thinking someone is going to come and abuse me.”

“Old man hitting me with such hate I believe they were mad at me & treated me so bad is because of my sexual orientation (I have a big LGBT flag in the back of my window in car)”

“They made me stay there until the bruises of my face & broken nose and mouth disappeared.”

Read statement provided to Status Coup by GEO Group:

“We are proud of the role our company has played for 40 years to support the law enforcement mission of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE). Over the last four decades, our innovative support service solutions have helped the federal government implement the policies of seven different Presidential Administrations.

In all instances, our support services are monitored by ICE, including by on-site agency personnel, and other organizations within the Department of Homeland Security to ensure compliance with ICE’s detention standards and contract requirements regarding the treatment and services ICE detainees receive. In the event issues are identified, we quickly resolve all of ICE’s concerns as required by ICE’s Quality Assurance Surveillance Plan.

The support services GEO provides include around-the-clock access to medical care, in-person and virtual legal and family visitation, general and legal library access, translation services, dietician-approved meals, religious and specialty diets, recreational amenities, and opportunities to practice their religious beliefs. Additionally, all of GEO’s ICE Processing Centers are independently accredited by the American Correctional Association and the National Commission on Correctional Health Care.

At locations where GEO provides health care services, individuals are provided with access to teams of medical professionals including physicians, nurses, dentists, psychologists, and psychiatrists. Ready access to off-site medical specialists, imaging facilities, Emergency Medical Services, and local community hospitals is also provided when needed.”

Fractures Emerge Between GOP’s Pro-Pedophilia, Extremely Pro-Pedophilia Wings

The Onion Apr 21, 2026 Infighting between the two coalitions has reached new levels of intensity in the leadup to the midterm elections, leaving GOP leadership to question how best to handle the future of their party’s sexual attraction to minors. Become an Onion member while it’s still optional: https://membership.theonion.com/?camp…

San Francisco League of Pissed Off Voters

San Francisco League of Pissed Off Voters

The Pissed Off Voter Guide for the June 2nd primary is going to the printer this week, and it looks soooo good! We can’t wait to share it with you. Tons of SF voters don’t even know there’s an election around the corner, so we’re writing to ask you to help us get our voter guide out there. 

#1: Donate to the League to help with printing costs.

If we can raise $10,000, the Pissed Off Voter Guide will make a huge difference for Connie Chan for CongressNatalie Gee for D4 Supervisor, and other key ballot races.

We don’t have billionaire donors, just grassroots supporters like you! We can print a hundred guides with your $35 contribution. We do a lot with a little (and even more with a lot). Donate today!

Donate to the Pissed Off Voter Guide

#2: Help distribute the Pissed Off Voter Guide

If you are interested in helping distribute the Pissed Off Voter Guide, we want to hear from you! Please email theLeagueSF@gmail.com and let us know you are interested in volunteering for this election. We’d love to hear your ideas on how we can spread the Pissed Off Voter Guide together.

Thanks for your continued support and for spreading the word. We’ll be back in a few weeks with the full Pissed Off Voter Guide!

Love,

The League

Paid for by the San Francisco League of Pissed Off Voters.
Financial disclosures available at sfethics.org  San Francisco League of Pissed Off Voters
https://www.theleaguesf.org/

SF tech millionaire’s spending laps that of opponents in race for Congress

Relying mostly on loans he made or guaranteed to his campaign, tech tycoon Saikat Chakrabarti has spent nearly $5 million on his run to succeed U.S. Rep. Nancy Pelosi in Congress — more than all of his rivals combined in the race.

Chakrabarti’s campaign shelled out $3.3 million from Jan. 1 through March 31, bringing total disbursements for the race to nearly $4.97 million, according to federal disclosures for the June 2 primary.

The top two vote-getters in June will advance to November to see who will represent the 11th Congressional District, which covers much of San Francisco.

Chakrabarti’s operation reported raising $3.4 million in the first quarter, bringing the campaign total to almost $5.2 million, leaving nearly $209,000 in cash on hand.

Loans made or guaranteed by Chakrabarti, who made a fortune as an early engineer for payments-technology company Stripe, hit more than $3.3 million for the quarter, bringing the total to more than $4.8 million for the campaign.

Aside from loans, Chakrabarti’s campaign reported $61,643 in direct contributions in the first quarter, raising his total of direct contributions for the race to nearly $360,890.

A first-time candidate, Chakrabarti was a top campaign official for liberal firebrand U.S. Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez of New York and was her chief of staff for eight months. He left that job amid reports of conflicts between him and Democrats and co-founded New Consensus, a think tank that develops and promotes progressive public-policy ideas.

Chakrabarti’s campaign in the past has said that his reliance on personal money reflected his pledge to take no corporate or lobbyist money. A spokesperson Thursday provided a statement emphasizing that he received 3,500 individual contributions during the quarter at an average amount of $17.46, with more than 13,000 contributions to date at an average of $27.

“This is what a grassroots campaign looks like,” said Tiffaney Bradley, his campaign’s communications director. “That’s real people chipping in what they can because they believe we deserve a candidate who isn’t backed by tech billionaires and corporations to represent San Francisco in [Washington] D.C.”

Bradley said the campaign was investing in voter outreach — “knocking doors, showing up in communities, and meeting people where they are.”

An independent committee called Abundant Future, meanwhile, had spent at least $277,388 as of April 16 on direct mail opposing Chakrabarti. That committee has received support from various San Francisco tech big wigs, including cryptocurrency billionaire Chris Larsen, Y Combinator CEO Garry Tan and Yelp CEO Jeremy Stoppelman, among others.

Joe Arellano, the campaign spokesperson for next the highest fundraiser, state Sen. Scott Wiener, challenged the notion that Chakrabarti’s is a “grassroots” movement.

“He is trying to purchase a congressional seat with personal wealth, spending more on advertising in three months than most candidates raise in an entire cycle,” Arellano said.

“This is not a campaign built on community support,” he said.

Arellano said Chakrabarti was “trying to cover up the skeletons in his closet” from his time in the nation’s capital “and make it look like he actually has ties to San Francisco. News flash: He doesn’t.”

While Wiener has said Chakrabarti lacked a presence in San Francisco before running for office, Chakrabarti says that he has long had a home in The City.

Ex // Top Stories

SF home sale prices buck national trends, new report finds

As buying season gets underway, prospective buyers are navigating rising costs and limited inventory

Bay Area accounts for record share of venture investment in Q1

More than 80% of all the money invested in startups nationwide went to local firms — but a handful of them accounted for nearly all the funds

SFMTA project aims to improve one of The City’s busiest Muni lines

Transportation officials embarking on multiyear effort aimed at boosting pedestrian and transit safety along the 1 California route

Wiener, a prolific author of legislation on many subjects who is known particularly for reducing cities’ regulatory abilities to impede housing construction, has collected far more than Chakrabarti in direct contributions — including nearly $735,000 in the first quarter — for a total of $3.5 million since 2023.

The money came from 1,363 donors in the first quarter, bringing the number of donors since the launch of his campaign last October to 3,371, Arellano said.

Wiener’s campaign had paid out about $386,000 in the first quarter, bringing its total spending to a little less than $900,000 for the race. That left just more than $2.6 million in cash on hand. The campaign reported no loans.

Trailing distantly on the cash front was Supervisor Connie Chan, who represents District 1 on the Board of Supervisors. A progressive supported by numerous labor groups, Chan raised about $282,000 in the quarter, bringing her total to just over $456,000 for the race.

Chan’s campaign also had no loans. It had spent about $247,000 in the quarter, for a total of $302,000, and had nearly $157,000 cash on hand.

“Connie Chan is a longtime public servant — she is not bankrolled by billionaires; she is not a tech millionaire,” said campaign spokesperson Julie Edwards. “This is why she has the support of working people like teachers, nurses, firefighters, hotel workers, seniors, tenants and students — over 2,000 individual donors who will continue to power this campaign to victory on June 2.”

Edwards also provided a statement from Chan assailing Chakrabarti’s spending.

“This is an election, not an auction,” Chan said. “San Franciscans are tired of the mega-rich using endless wealth to buy elections, and we know our city is not for sale.”

Meanwhile, the campaign of Marie Hurabiell, who only announced her candidacy on Feb. 25, reported raising nearly $422,000. That included a $100,000 loan made or guaranteed by the candidate.

The campaign reported spending $18,922, leaving Hurabiell with nearly $403,000 cash on hand.

Hurabiell, who previously ran unsuccessfully twice for the City College of San Francisco board of trustees, held various private-sector roles before 2020, when she founded ConnectedSF, a nonprofit focused on “pragmatic solutions, accountability, and results.” She is the group’s executive director, though currently on leave.

Hurabiell, who presented herself as an alternative to “the extreme, progressive agenda that has failed our beautiful city” in her candidacy announcement, is a registered Democrat who backed Mayor Daniel Lurie. The former Republican was a three-year appointee of President Donald Trump’s to the Presidio Trust board of directors.

Huriabell was also active in the successful recalls of District Attorney Chesa Boudin and three members of the Board of Education in 2022.

In a statement provided by her campaign, Hurabiell touted the fact that she raised more in direct contributions in the first quarter than either Chakrabarti or Chan.

“It’s a huge achievement to have outraised Connie and Saikat in Q1,” Hurabiell said. “I also raised a very respectable number next to Scott, and I only had one month versus the rest of my opponents fundraising for a full quarter. Clearly, San Franciscans are ready for a common sense candidate.”

Inside Trump’s Effort to “Take Over” the Midterm Elections

by Doug Bock Clark and Jen Fifield

April 13, 2026 (propublica.org)

ProPublica is a nonprofit newsroom that investigates abuses of power. Sign up to receive our biggest stories as soon as they’re published.

Reporting Highlights

  • Safeguards Destroyed: In advance of this year’s midterm elections, President Donald Trump has systematically demolished federal guardrails that prevented him from overturning the 2020 election.
  • Changing of Guard: At least 75 career staff are gone. Two dozen appointees, including many from the election denial movement, have been hired. Ten helped try to overturn the 2020 vote.
  • Political Interference: Once-fringe actors now have access to vast powers, which they’ve already used to push forward unprecedented actions that critics say amount to partisan interference.

These highlights were written by the reporters and editors who worked on this story.

In mid-December 2020, federal officials responsible for protecting American elections from fraud converged in a windowless, dim, fortified room at the Justice Department’s downtown Washington, D.C., headquarters.

They had been summoned by Attorney General William Barr.

Over the preceding weeks, Donald Trump’s claims that the presidential election had been stolen from him had reached a crescendo. He’d become obsessed with a conspiracy theory that voting machines in Antrim County, Michigan, had switched votes from him to Joe Biden. 

With each day, Trump ratcheted up the pressure to unleash the might of the federal government to undo his defeat. 

Barr interrogated experts from the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency, crammed in beside top FBI officials around a cheap table. He needed the group of around 10 to answer a crucial question: Was it really possible the 2020 presidential vote had been hacked?

ProPublica’s description of the previously unreported meeting comes from several people who were in the room or were briefed on the gathering. Everyone understood that the meeting represented an important moment for the nation, they said. Barr, who did not respond to requests for comment, had walked a delicate line with Trump, instructing the FBI to investigate allegations of election irregularities while declaring publicly there had been no evidence “to date” of widespread fraud.

The nonpartisan specialists from CISA, backed by their FBI counterparts, explained they’d unravelled what had happened in Antrim County. A clerk had made a mistake when updating ballot styles on machines, leading to a software problem that initially transferred votes from Republicans to Democrats, they said. There was no fraud, just human error — which would soon be publicly confirmed through a hand count of the county’s ballots.Animation by Matt Rota and Henrike Lendowski

Listening intently, Barr seemed to understand both the truth and that telling it to the president would almost certainly cost him his job. 

At the end of the meeting, Barr turned to his top deputy, made hand motions as if he was tying on a bandana and said he was going to “kamikaze” into the White House. 

What happened next is well known. When Barr met with Trump in the Oval Office on Dec. 14, the president launched into a monologue about how the events in Antrim County were “absolute proof” that the election had been stolen. Barr waited to get a word in edgewise before telling his boss what the experts from CISA had told him.

Do you have information you can share about federal officials working on elections or any of the individuals in this article? Reporter Doug Bock Clark can be reached at doug.clark@propublica.org and on Signal at 678-243-0784. Reporter Jen Fifield can be reached at jen.fifield@propublica.org and on Signal at 480-476-0108. If you’re concerned about confidentiality, check out our advice on the most secure ways to share tips.

Then Barr offered his resignation letter, which Trump accepted. Barr left believing he’d done his part to preserve democratic norms. 

“I was saddened,” Barr wrote of Trump in his memoir. “If he actually believed this stuff he had become significantly detached from reality.”

Barr was one of many federal officials — most of them Trump appointees — who refused to bend to the president’s demands, which only intensified after Barr was gone. Although rioters inspired by Trump managed to delay the certification of his defeat by storming the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, ultimately the institutional guardrails of American democracy held — barely.

But if faced with the same tests today, the guardrails and people that held the line would largely be missing, an examination by ProPublica found. 

ProPublica scrutinized what happened the last time Trump lost a national election. Some of that happened in plain sight: After a cascade of defeats in court, Trump began pressuring state and local officials to overturn the results. But more happened behind the scenes, like the meeting that helped persuade Barr to hold the line.

Our reporting uncovered previously undisclosed aspects of a federal effort to safeguard the results of the 2020 vote, which involved at least 75 people across several agencies. Today, nearly all of those people are gone, having resigned, been fired or been reassigned, particularly in the departments of Justice and Homeland Security. That included the cybersecurity specialists who had established that the Antrim County allegations were false and reported their findings to Barr. 

The people we identified as resisting attempts to overturn the 2020 results have been replaced by roughly two dozen people Trump has installed in positions that could affect elections. Ten of them actively worked to reverse the 2020 vote, and the rest are associates of such people. In some cases, ProPublica found, officials have been hired from activist groups that are pillars of the election denial movement. Experts warn that shows the movement has merged with the federal government.

These new officials could influence how Trump reacts to the upcoming midterms as polling shows Republicans are approaching what could be a significant electoral loss, with the president’s approval rating nearing record lows, and public concern growing about the weak economy, the administration’s mass deportation effort and the war on Iran. Seemingly in preparation to head off such a blow, Trump has stepped up his efforts to “nationalize” the 2026 elections, saying that Republicans need “to take over” the midterms. Democrats who monitored Trump’s attempts to block his 2020 loss have begun to question whether he will allow a “blue wave,” particularly if it flips control of a House of Representatives that impeached him twice in his first term.

ProPublica’s examination reveals new details on how the president has unleashed his loyalists to transform elections. This includes the background of this year’s FBI raid in Georgia to seize 2020 election materials and how they are using federal resources to search for noncitizens voting. Ultimately, ProPublica’s reporting shows how thoroughly and expansively the Trump administration has overhauled the federal government into what some fear is a vehicle for making sure elections go his way.

ProPublica’s reporting is based on interviews with roughly 30 current or former executive branch officials familiar with the work of Trump loyalists installed in election roles. Most spoke on condition of anonymity because they fear retribution, including those knowledgeable about the December 2020 Barr meeting. 

The Trump administration maintains its actions will make U.S. elections fairer and more secure — and keep those prohibited from voting, such as noncitizens, from doing so.

“Election integrity has always been a top priority for President Trump,” White House spokesperson Abigail Jackson said in a statement. “The President will do everything in his power to defend the safety and security of American elections and to ensure that only American citizens are voting in them.”

Spokespeople for the DOJ and DHS emphasized that their departments are focused on ensuring elections are free and fair, and that they are working closely with the states to achieve those goals. Contentions to the contrary, they say, are false.

A few guardrails have endured, preventing Trump from fully realizing his agenda for elections. Judges have blocked key parts of a March 2025 executive order in which Trump attempted to exert greater federal control over aspects of voting, and some Republican state officials have fought back against Justice Department lawsuits demanding state voter rolls. 

Late last month, Trump issued another executive order on elections that attempts to exert unparalleled federal control over mail-in voting and voter eligibility, which Democrats and voting rights groups are challenging in court.

Experts say 2026 will serve as an unprecedented stress test of the integrity of American elections.   

“Our election system withstood” Trump’s “attacks following the 2020 election,” said Sen. Alex Padilla, a California Democrat who has led the pushback to the administration’s actions on elections, “but this will be an even tougher test, with more election deniers having access to federal power than ever before.”Animation by Matt Rota and Henrike Lendowski

The Dismantling

Barr has said that in the high-stakes days following the 2020 election, he felt like he was playing Whac-A-Mole with Trump’s “avalanche” of false election claims.

The investigators at DHS’ Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency supplied intelligence that disproved many of them, not just those involving Antrim County.

CISA was created by Trump in his first term to counter cyber threats in the aftermath of Russia’s efforts to influence the 2016 vote. It soon came to provide crucial expertise and support to thousands of local election officials grappling with increasingly sophisticated attacks. 

After the 2020 election, it also played a crucial part in puncturing fallacies spread by Trump supporters, producing a “Rumor Control” website to rebut them. And it partnered with state officials and technology vendors to release a statement calling the election “the most secure in American history.” Trump swiftly fired Chris Krebs, whom he had appointed to lead CISA, but Krebs’ defense of the election’s soundness reverberated widely in the media and on Capitol Hill.

Among Trump’s first actions upon returning to the Oval Office was eviscerating CISA. 

Starting in February 2025, DHS leadership put employees focused on countering disinformation and helping safeguard elections on leave. The leadership also froze the agency’s other election security work, which included assessing local election offices for physical and cybersecurity risks, and disseminating sensitive intelligence information on threats. Eventually, all three dozen or so CISA employees specializing in elections were fired or transferred to work in other areas. 

“It took years of dedicated, bipartisan, cross-sector partnership to build the security infrastructure we’ve had, and dismantling CISA leaves a gaping hole,” said Kathy Boockvar, an elections security expert who served as Pennsylvania’s secretary of state from 2019 to 2021. “We are making the job of securing our democracy exponentially harder.”

A DHS spokesperson told ProPublica that the changes at CISA were in response to “a ballooning budget concealing a dangerous departure from its statutory mission,” which included “electioneering instead of defending America’s critical infrastructure.” The spokesperson said that CISA’s mission is still to coordinate protection of critical infrastructure, including by supporting local partners against cyber threats.

It isn’t just CISA that’s been gutted. 

The Trump administration has discarded or diminished other federal initiatives with roles in protecting election integrity or blocking foreign interference. While many of these actions have been reported, together they reveal the full sweep of the changes. 

First, the administration got rid of the National Security Council’s election security group, which convened departmental leaders to coordinate federal actions related to voting. Then in August, the administration dismantled the Foreign Malign Influence Center, a branch of the Office of the Director of National Intelligence that had stymied efforts by Russia, China and Iran to interfere in the 2024 election. 

A spokesperson for ODNI said the center was redundant and that its functions were folded into other parts of the office’s intelligence apparatus in ways that “arguably makes our ability to monitor and address threats from foreign adversaries stronger, more efficient and more effective.”

However, former national security officials, including one who had worked at the center, told ProPublica that its functions had largely ceased. Caitlin Durkovich, who led the NSC’s election security work during the Biden administration, said that under Trump the federal government has “abandoned” its traditional role in preserving election integrity and security.

“Nearly every program and capability to stop bad actors and support election administrators has been dismantled,” she said. “Heading into the midterms, this leaves states and localities exposed, without the intelligence support or federal coordination they need to detect and respond to threats in real time — precisely when the stakes are highest.”

The early months of the second Trump administration also brought seismic changes to three parts of federal law enforcement with central roles in elections.

Kash Patel, the FBI’s new director, dismantled the public corruption team, which had been deployed in previous administrations to help monitor possible criminal activity on Election Day. The Foreign Influence Task Force, which aimed to combat foreign influence in U.S. politics, was also disbanded. (An FBI spokesperson said the bureau “remains committed to detecting and countering foreign influence efforts by adversarial nations.”)

Furthermore, the Justice Department substantially reduced the role of its Public Integrity Section, which had been responsible for making sure the department’s inquiries weren’t improperly influenced by politics. 

Continue reading

Your weekly to-dos

  1. Keep telling Congress: Trump’s war has to end. Despite his erratic announcements of victory/ceasefires/imminent war crimes, Trump’s war on Iran grinds on, at the expense of thousands of lives across the region, the wholesale disruption of the world economy, and soaring costs for Americans. We must meet Trump’s incompetence and inconsistency with a steady determination of our own to neither give up nor give in. Tell your Members of Congress: Either they do all they can to end the war that Trump and Israel launched, or the blood is on their hands, too. After sending an email via the above link, please call your representative and your senators.
  2. Join Detention Watch Network’s Stop ICE Warehouse Detention day of action (Sat, 4/25). The Trump regime is purchasing and converting warehouses to serve as concentration camps for the people ICE and Border Patrol disappear off the street — but local communities are fighting back. Detention Watch Network’s national day of action is this Saturday. Find an event (or sign up to host one) and get ready by watching last week’s training call.
  3. Join the May Day training mass callNo Work, No School, No Shopping. (Thurs 8pm ET/5pm PT) Indivisible and Grassroots Democracy are hosting a training on what “No Work, No School, No Shopping” means, and how you can tap into the day of economic disruption however is right for you. We’ll also dig into the strategy behind economic noncooperation and why we’re taking action now. Be sure to invite friends and family to join the call, too!
  4. Join Indivisible’s phone banks for Jasmine Clark in GA-13 (Wed & Thurs, 5:30pm ET/2:30pm PT). Join us as we make calls to voters in GA-13 in support of Indivisible endorsee Jasmine Clark ahead of the May 19 Democratic primary. Help us send a real fighter for families and defender of democracy to Congress and replace a checked-out representative who didn’t even cast a vote against Trump in the 2024 election! First-time dialers and phonebank pros are welcome to join; we’ll have a short phonebanking training at the start of each event for anyone who needs it. (Paid for by Indivisible Action. Not authorized by any candidate or committee.)