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“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.”

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Federal Agents at the Polls

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The freedom to vote is the very foundation of our democracy. Voting is how we secure our civil rights and liberties and help shape our country, state, and town. Every eligible citizen has the right to cast a ballot freely, fairly, and accessibly — without fear of deception or intimidation. As President Trump and his administration’s abuses of power continue, it is all the more important to plan ahead and learn about your rights when voting.

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This section shall not prevent any officer or member of the armed forces of the United States from exercising the right of suffrage in any election district to which he may belong, if otherwise qualified according to the laws of the State in which he offers to vote.

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Chakrabarti keeps campaign troops in the field for Chan

Albert Lam and Noah Kline_Connie Chan_SF Solidarity PAC_800 Irving Street_02Jul2026_243.JPG
Chinese Program Manager Albert Lam, left, and Noah Kline call voters from the phone bank at Saikat Chakrabarti’s former campaign headquarters — now the SF Solidarity PAC campaign for Connie Chan — on Irving Street in the Inner Sunset.Craig Lee/The Examiner

Shortly after being knocked out of the race to succeed U.S. Rep. Nancy Pelosi in Congress in the June 2 primary, centimillionaire and progressive activist Saikat Chakrabarti gathered campaign staffers for a bonfire on Ocean Beach. Attendees at the event said he talked about the idea of working to support former opponent Connie Chan as an alternative to state Sen. Scott Wiener.

While not all took the offer, a core group of organizers — largely in their 20s and new to politics — jumped at the chance. Ultimately, more than 100 workers joined Chakrabarti’s new independent SF Solidarity PAC effort, mostly as door-to-door canvassers.

Six days per week, the operation has been phone-banking and running canvassing crews in support of Chan, who represents District 1 on the Board of Supervisors, across Pelosi’s 11th Congressional district, which covers all but a southern chunk of The City.

The committee also provided support to Melat Kiros, a progressive Democratic candidate for Congress who just won an upset primary victory in Colorado.

Mel Halem: “This is my first campaign — it was my first job in politics at all, but I’m hooked now. I really feel like I want to stay involved in this.”Craig Lee/The Examiner

“This is my first campaign — it was my first job in politics at all, but I’m hooked now,” said Mel Halem, a 25-year-old former cafe barista who worked her way up over the past year from volunteer to senior field organizer for Chakrabarti’s campaign and is now deputy campaign manager for the SF Solidarity operation. “I really feel like I want to stay involved in this.”

Like her co-workers, Halem — a transplant from Orlando, Fla. — said she was inspired by Chakrabarti’s talk about matters such as wealth inequality, affordable housing and healthcare and believed Chan would have similar priorities.

“I feel like we need trustworthy people in Congress, and that comes from people who aren’t funded by mega billionaires and big pharma and things like that,” Halem said.

Halem and others also expressed a desire to keep working with a youthful crew that forged connections with each other through the long days trying to sell voters on Chakrabarti.

“We are all friends, like outside of this, we all see each other after hours and on the weekends, and I think that’s what makes our bond and our work ethic so strong,” said 23-year-old Dior Hartman. “Here you want to go above and beyond because you love your coworkers.”

Hartman joined in March as a canvasser along with several others, all of whom had been doing similar work to raise money for The Nature Conservancy.

“This is the hardest I’ve worked in a job, but it also just feels very energizing,” said Kaizen Betts-LaCroix, a Berkeley resident and former bartender in Emeryville who joined Chakrabarti’s campaign in January.

The SF Solidarity PAC’s operation is about half the peak size of Chakrabarti’s campaign, which Chakrabarti called the largest field operation in The City’s history. Its headquarters are in a retail space at 9th Avenue and Irving Street in the Inner Sunset, one of the three offices that Chakrabarti’s campaign had at its height.

The new operation will continue at its current level until July 15 and then continue in a slimmed-down form through November, Chakrabarti said. He estimated that “all in, it’s going to end up being a seven figure [independent expenditure] by November, for sure.”

Alex Vanscoy, right: “I am just on the lookout for the next big progressive cause that I can join, because, you know, the fight is definitely not over.”Craig Lee/The Examiner

Current campaign manager Alex Vanscoy, 22, is expecting to return soon to San Francisco State University, from which he took a leave of absence to work on Chakrabarti’s campaign. He said he plans to stay politically involved.

“I am just on the lookout for the next big progressive cause that I can join, because, you know, the fight is definitely not over,” he said.

Jason Olaru-Hagen, 23, said working on the campaigns had been stimulating after working in the health-care industry.

“I could still be doing an office job where I really did not feel any meaning attached to my work,” he said. “It’s been the exact opposite, and it’s been the most fulfilling thing I’ve ever done.”

Olaru-Hagen said he likes the high intensity of campaign work and he is hoping to continue working in progressive politics in some fashion.

Shawn Canin, 23, an organizer who is a senior at UC Berkeley majoring in media studies with a focus on law and policy, said he hoped to stay connected to his coworkers.

“This is, I think, just the beginning,” he said.

Whether the intensive door-knocking operation on Chan’s behalf will have more effect than the one for Chakrabarti remains to be seen. Chakrabarti ultimately won 42,060 votes (or 17.87%) to Chan’s 69,899 (29.7%) and Wiener’s 95,816 (40.71%).

Chakrabarti said in an interview that voters who supported him skewed younger than Chan’s and could complement her base of support.

“If we actually combine those two bases, that’s a winning coalition,” he said. “That’s a formidable coalition.”

Saikat Chakrabarti headshot

Saikat ChakrabartiCraig Lee/The Examiner

“It’s really important just to establish who she is and get her name out there, so people know who she is and what she stands for,” Chakrabarti said.

The SF Solidarity PAC is an independent-expenditure committee. A Chan spokesperson declined to comment about the independent operation.

The message Chakrabarti’s team is purveying is “We Trust Connie” because she does not take “corporate bribes,” including money from lobbyists or CEOs or contributions from the American Israel Public Affairs Committee.

Joe Arellano, Wiener’s campaign spokesperson, said that Wiener “has not taken and will not take money from AIPAC due to significant policy differences.”

Wiener’s campaign money has come almost entirely from individual donors, and though the campaign has accepted funds from union political-action committees, it has a rule against taking money from corporate PACs — and if such donations sneak through, the policy is to return them, Arellano said.

The money theme is one that members of Chakrabarti’s committee staff said resonated with them and helped them to switch to supporting Chan.

“We’re all fighting the same fight — and especially when it comes to corporate money,” Hartman said.

Chakrabarti, who made a fortune as an early software engineer at the payments company Stripe, loaned or contributed at least $9.9 million of the $10.3 million his campaign raised in the leadup to the election. Chan, who declared her candidacy relatively late, on Nov. 20, had raised about $700,000 by the time of the election. Wiener raised about $4 million.

Arellano said that Chakrabarti’s new spending won’t have a different result.

“Saikat’s money wasn’t effective then, and his corporate super PAC for Connie Chan won’t work either,” Arellano said.

Arellano predicted voters will choose Wiener, highlighting in particular his record on housing. Among the numerous pieces of legislation Wiener has authored are laws aimed at spurring new housing development and weakening cities’ regulatory ability to impede it.

“This November, voters have a clear choice: Connie Chan, who’s blocked housing at every turn, or Scott Wiener, who has the record — and the vision — to actually solve the housing-affordability crisis when he gets to Congress,” Arellano said.

Chan spokesperson Julie Edwards, meanwhile, said that, “Scott Wiener has claimed to be a housing champion for 16 years, and housing has never been more expensive.”

Edwards said Wiener “has said he supports progressive taxation — but every chance he gets, he caves to his corporate donors instead of making big corporations pay their fair share.”

Wiener has said he opposes a labor-union-backed November ballot measure that would impose a one-time tax of up to 5% on taxpayers and trusts with certain assets valued over $1 billion, primarily to fund health care, as well as food-assistance or education-related programs.

Wiener has said he has supported progressive tax proposals in the past, but a one-time tax is not the optimal strategy, Arellano said.

Wiener also opposed the union-backed Proposition D, a measure that San Francisco voters rejected in June that would have increased The City’s Overpaid Executive Tax, which generally imposes a gross-receipts tax on companies at which the highest-paid managerial employee earns more than 100 times the median compensation of employees based in San Francisco. Wiener said the measure could hurt The City’s economy, Arellano said.

Chan supported Prop. D and also supports the impending statewide measure.

“Voters have had enough of his corporate Democratic ‘leadership,’ and that’s why 60% of San Francisco voters rejected him in June,” Edwards said of Wiener.

Chakrabarti, a co-founder of the economic-policy think tank New Consensus, said he believed voters lost confidence in him partly because U.S. Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez of New York did not endorse him. He was campaign manager and chair for Ocasio-Cortez and her chief of staff in Washington, D.C. for about eight months, and had sought her endorsement.

In addition, Chakrabati said, “attack mailers” against him took a toll. An independent group funded mailers playing on the allegation that Chakrabarti lived in Maryland, though Chakrabarti insisted he only bought a home there for his parents.

“So the message no longer mattered, because people lost their trust in me as a candidate, and so we think it’s really important to establish that Connie Chan is someone you can trust,” he said.

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Can San Francisco Fill Vacant Storefronts?

by Randy Shaw on July 6, 2026 (BeyondChron.org)

New Mid-Market housing above vacant retail

New Mid-Market housing above vacant retail

Progress Made But More Help Needed

San Francisco’s Storefront Opportunity Grant program has made grants of $50,000-100,000 to 39 businesses which have opened or will do so by 2027. Restaurant and small business permits are being expedited. Entertainment zones facilitate outdoor drinking. San Francisco’s vacancy tax has had a positive impact.

But San Francisco still has far more vacant storefronts than before Covid. Is there more the city can do? Or has online purchasing permanently reduced the city’s retail demand?

High Vacancies in “Ring” Neighborhoods

San Francisco’s retail vacancies primarily impact the Mission, Castro, SOMA, Mid-Market, downtown, Cathedral Hill, lower Polk, lower Nob Hill and the Tenderloin. These were once known as the “ring” neighborhoods as they collectively form a ring spreading out from downtown,

Four factors have driven this retail decline.

First, there are fewer daily customers coming into San Francisco. Blame the steep reduction in BART ridership into the city and the huge rise in working at home. Downtown office space is still 29.7% vacant.

Second, these areas still suffer from the post-Covid boost in sidewalk drug activities. Negative perceptions remain even where sidewalk drug use has declined. As I have written about the Tenderloin, neighborhood improvements are not seen by those who have given up on area businesses.

Past and present drug activity discourages opening businesses. Labor and business costs are the same in Noe Valley or the Marina. Why would investors choose a more troubled neighborhood? Particularly when rents are not that much lower.

Third, some landlords benefiting from rising apartment rents feel no pressure to rent their retail spaces. They keep them vacant until someone meets their unrealistic price.

Fourth, changes in consumption practices have hurt restaurants and bars. The younger generation has reduced alcohol consumption. The widespread use of Ozempic—which reduces spending on food between 5-8%-–has people ordering less food.

Tenderloin bars were once recession-proof. But since Covid even historic Tenderloin bars have closed. Their spaces are either still vacant or have been converted to the now pervasive mini-markets. Several of which have been sued by the City Attorney’s office for being fronts for the drug trade.

What More Can City Do?

City Hall’s targeted, well-funded efforts to revive Union Square and Downtown should expand. For example, Mid-Market desperately needs help filling its ground floor retail. The retail situation is so bad that two major new housing developments at 50 Jones and 1028 Market (the Prism) haven’t even built out their retail spaces years after opening (see photo above).

Market Street between 7th and 5th streets is desolate due to the lack of retail.  IKEA’s purchase in 2020 of the long vacant 250,000-square-foot building at 945 Market Street has not galvanized the area. Its Saluhall food hall has had a complete turnover of businesses

The closure of the former Westfield Centre sharply reduced foot traffic on that stretch of Market Street. No destination business in the area now exists.

Mayor Lurie’s San Francisco Downtown Development Corporation has yet to make the major investment that the core of Mid-Market  needs. Plans to label Mid-Market the “Theater District” will help but a lot more is needed to return retail customers to the area.

Some trumpet the city’s renting more office space at 1455 Market as a boost for Mid-Market. But Market and 11th Street has not been a challenging area. “Mid-Market is customarily seen as between Ninth and Fifth Streets.

That’s where investment in Mid-Market also benefits SOMA and the Tenderloin. And where City Hall and its donor allies should invest a lot more time and money.

Will Upzoning Revive Retail?

In 2019 I wrote “Cure for Vacant Storefronts? Build Housing.” But the hundreds of new housing units that opened in Mid-Market after Covid have not produced successful retail. Building six to eight story buildings under the Family Zoning Plan or state law will fill vacant storefronts in neighborhoods where retail already thrives. That’s where upzoning will most likely encourage housing to actually be built.

Filling Tenderloin Vacancies

I have spent years trying fill Tenderloin retail vacancies. We had great success leading up to Covid. It’s a challenge in 2026 for the reasons stated above.

The Tenderloin has very few blocks with continuous retail. Little Saigon has long been the Tenderloin’s core commercial district.

In November 2023 I counted eighteen vacant storefronts in the two-block stretch of Larkin between Eddy and O’Farrell. There were still eighteen in February 2026. And the same number last week. It’s hard to attract businesses when Larkin between O’Farrell and Geary still has ongoing day and night sidewalk drug activities.

Businesses that have received city grants for Larkin Street on blocks without drug activities have still not opened.

But the situation could soon dramatically improve.

Chris Larsen has donated $5 million to revive Larkin Street and Little Saigon. This sends a clear message that the area is set for revival.

The Tenderloin has many landlords eager to give good rent deals to fill retail spaces. But Little Saigon has some owners uninterested in renting storefronts. They don’t post “For Rent” signs. They allow their spaces to physically deteriorate.

San Francisco enacted a vacancy tax to pressure such landlords. One idea that has been floated by a close Lurie ally is to strengthen the tax by increasing fines and have them kick in faster. The city would also get the power to put liens on buildings with longterm vacancies.

Areas like Little Saigon need enhanced penalties. Owners should not be able to hold once thriving retail districts hostage.

Has Online Shopping Forever Reduced Demand?

Some believe online shopping has permanently reduced in store demand. Yet that doesn’t explain why retail is booming in the city’s more affluent neighborhoods. After all, those customers also buy online.

Online shopping also doesn’t explain vacant dining spaces. Prior to Covid, restaurants, bars and cafes filled many of the now vacant storefronts in the ring neighborhoods. The city must focus on bringing these dining spots back.

So can San Francisco fill vacant storefronts? Yes the City Can.

Randy Shaw

Randy Shaw is the Editor of Beyond Chron and the Director of San Francisco’s Tenderloin Housing Clinic, which publishes Beyond Chron. Shaw’s new book is the revised and updated, The Tenderloin: Sex, Crime and Resistance in the Heart of San Francisco. His prior books include Generation Priced Out: Who Gets to Live in the New Urban America. The Activist’s Handbook: Winning Social Change in the 21st Century, and Beyond the Fields: Cesar Chavez, the UFW and the Struggle for Justice in the 21st Century.

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Troy Jackson Files to Explore Senate Bid as Graham Platner Faces Growing Calls to Exit

Troy Jackson

Troy Jackson speaks during a May Day rally organized by local unions on May 1, 2026 outside City Hall in Portland, Maine.

 (Photo by Graeme Sloan/Getty Images)

“If Graham’s stepping away, I am very, very interested and think I’m the best person to replace him,” said Jackson, the former Maine Senate president.

Jake Johnson

Jul 07, 2026 (CommonDreams.org)

Former Maine Senate President Troy Jackson filed federal paperwork on Tuesday to explore a US Senate bid after a sexual assault allegation against current Democratic nominee Graham Platner prompted a torrent of calls for him to drop out of the race.

Jackson, a fifth-generation logger who lost Maine’s Democratic gubernatorial primary last month, was among those urging Platner to end his Senate campaign following Politico’s reporting late Monday, writing on social media that “there is no place in our politics for sexual violence.”

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In an interview with the Bangor Daily News, which first reported the news of Jackson’s filing, the former gubernatorial candidate said that “if Graham’s stepping away, I am very, very interested and think I’m the best person to replace him.”

Platner denied the sexual assault allegation and, as of this writing, has yet to drop out of the race, though his departure is widely seen as a foregone conclusion as his most prominent supporters—including Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.)—push him to exit. One unnamed source told The New York Times that Platner is seeking a “guarantee” that he “would be replaced by someone in agreement with ‘the values and vision and policy agenda’” that he articulated throughout his campaign.

Jackson, like Platner, was endorsed by Sanders and has expressed support for Medicare for All, stronger union protections, wage increases, and other progressive priorities. In recent months, Jackson has joined Sanders and Platner at “Fighting Oligarchy” rallies where the former Maine Senate leader said American workers are being robbed by a billionaire class bent on enriching itself no matter the societal costs.

“I am running for the people who worked their entire lives and still can’t afford to retire because the economic system in this country is rigged against them,” Jackson said during a Labor Day rally last year. “And I’m running for all the workers… who’ve been told that they’re replaceable and that their lives are disposable.”

Platner, who backed Jackson’s gubernatorial bid, can be replaced as the Democratic nominee in the US Senate race against Republican incumbent Sen. Susan Collins if he withdraws by July 13. By a process yet to be determined, the Maine Democratic Party would have until July 27 to select a replacement.

The New York Times reported that “the options under discussion include a convention or a statewide caucus in late July.”

Our work is licensed under Creative Commons (CC BY-NC-ND 3.0). Feel free to republish and share widely.

Jake Johnson

Jake Johnson is a senior editor and staff writer for Common Dreams.

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Belgium beats US 4-1 to reach World Cup quarterfinals, taking advantage of defensive lapses

United States’ Folarin Balogun fouls Bosnia’s Tarik Muharemovic resulting in a red card during the World Cup round of 32 soccer match between the United States and Bosnia Wednesday, July 1, 2026 in Santa Clara, Calif. (Jeff Chiu / AP)

By  RONALD BLUM Updated July 7, 2026

Leer en español

SEATTLE (AP) — Images told the story of the United States’ World Cup downfall.

Christian Pulisic sprawled on the field in agony after hurting an ankle.

Matt Freese holding his hands on his head after his gaffe gifted a goal.

Chris Richards crumpling to the ground, his face pressed on the grass.

Mauricio Pochettino kicking a rack in front of the American bench, sending four water bottles flying.

American hopes for a deep World Cup run at home ended when Charles De Ketelaere scored twice and assisted on another goal, helping Belgium expose the U.S. defensive liabilities in a 4-1 win Monday night that earned a quarterfinal berth.

“It stinks,” Tyler Adams said. “This was a moment to have an opportunity to advance and really try and do something special. We fell short.”

The AP’s Jennifer King reports US World Cup dreams crashed down to earth in a decisive 4-1 defeat by Belgium.

While the U.S. was boosted by the presence of star forward Folarin Balogun, whose one-game red-card suspension was controversially lifted by FIFA, American defenders were at fault in a pair of first-half goals and Freese’s howler gave the Red Devils a third early in the second half.

Second-half substitute Romelu Lukaku added Belgium’s final goal in the third minute of stoppage time after Richards’ giveaway. The U.S. hadn’t allowed that many goals in a World Cup game since a 5-1 loss to Czechoslovakia in the Americans’ 1990 opener, when they returned to soccer’s biggest stage after a 40-year absence.

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“A very bad day,” said Pochettino, the U.S. coach. “It’s not like you are in a rocket and you improve and you grow. … It’s not linear.”

This loss was a painful reckoning for a team that hoped to boost the sport but instead failed to shake a quarter-century of stagnation since 20-year-old Landon Donovan led the Americans to the 2002 quarterfinals. Since then, the U.S. has lost four times in the round of 16.

“Everyone had nerves, right, because we knew how much this meant for the whole country, not just our team,” said 21-year-old defender Alex Freeman, the youngest U.S. player.

Belgium knocked out the U.S. in the round of 16 for the second time in 12 years and extended its unbeaten streak to 18 games. The Red Devils play 2010 champion Spain on Friday at Inglewood, California, for a semifinal berth against France or Morocco.

“We showed that we’re ready and we want to perform,” captain Youri Tielemans said.

All six CONCACAF nations have been eliminated, with the three co-hosts falling in the round of 16.

Malik Tillman tied the score 1-1 midway through the first half when he became the first player since France’s Bernard Genghini in 1982 to have two free kick goals in a World Cup, but the Americans conceded less than a minute after the ensuing kickoff.

American star Christian Pulisic could only watch the end from the bench after injuring his right ankle when he hit Tielemans’ boot on a 52nd-minute shot attempt. Pulisic was replaced seven minutes later, finishing the tournament with no goals.

“I didn’t quite have the moments I was hoping to and to try to help us to really push and get over this next step of beating a really good team,” he said. “I’m disappointed with myself, of course, but I’m going to try and stay positive. I did a lot of good things and the team did, as well.”

After winning three World Cup games for the first time in this expanded 48-nation tournament, the U.S. lost its seventh straight match to Belgium. The Americans have dropped 11 of their last 12 games against European opponents, winning only their round of 32 match against Bosnia-Herzegovina.

A heralded generation led by Pulisic, Adams and Weston McKennie only partially accomplished their mission of lifting soccer’s stature closer to that of the NFL, MLB and the NBA.

“A goal was obviously to inspire people that the sport was growing in the U.S., which I think we saw. The support was unbelievable,” Adams said. “In this moment we let them down.”

De Ketelaere put Belgium ahead in the eighth minute and Tillman’s goal in the 31st energized a largely red-white-and-blue crowd of 66,925 at Lumen Field. De Ketelaere damped that and assisted on Hans Vanaken’s 57th-minute goal after Freese lost control of the ball in front of his net.

“Obviously disappointed for my involvement and error in judgment on the third goal,” Freese said.

Belgium, which didn’t start stars Jérémy Doku as and Kevin De Bruyne, pressed from the start and exposed a defense regarded as the Americans’ weak spot.

Dodi Lukébakio made a long diagonal pass to the opposite corner, leading to the opening goal. Leandro Troussard controlled the ball and his cross was blocked by Freeman and popped into the air. Freeman headed the ball into the penalty area and Timothy Castagne charged after it and hooked a centering pass around Richards. De Ketelaere split Antonee Robinson and Tim Ream, at 38 the oldest American ever in a World Cup, then with his right foot redirected the ball into an open net.

Pochettino held out his arms, as if to ask: What was going on?

Tillman scored after Brandon Mechele knocked down Balogun about 25 yards from goal. Tillman’s kick deflected off Vanaken’s head and deflected to the left of goalkeeper Thibaut Courtois, who had dived right.

Troussard got around Sergiño Dest for a cross and De Ketelaere outjumped Ream and headed the ball past Freese in the 33rd minute for his eighth international goal.

Belgium built a two-goal lead when Mechele lofted a long ball that Freese chested after two hops. Freese hesitated with a touch, then scrambled and kicked the ball off De Ketelaere. Vanaken one-timed a shot from 35 yards that deflected in off Ream.

Lukaku entered in the 67th minute and scored his 93rd international goal.

Pochettino replaced Gregg Berhalter after first-round elimination at the 2024 Copa America. His contract expires this summer and he hasn’t decided whether to stay through the 2030 World Cup.

Instead of focusing on Spain, Pochettino has a different near-term agenda.

“To rest a little bit, to think, to have conversation,” he said, “and then see what the decision is from the federation and from us.”

___

AP Sports Writer Andrew Destin and Associated Press writer Eugene Johnson contributed to this report.

The president’s latest ‘communist’ warning echoes history

America 250 Trump Roosevelt Library
President Donald Trump recently told religious leaders that his top priority was “to stop this horrible threat of cancer that’s permeating our country called communism.”Julia Demaree Nikhinson/Associated Press

Branding political opponents on the left as communists is a century-old American tradition.

From the Red Scare of the 1920s to the McCarthy era of the 1950s, labeling someone a “commie,” Marxist or “pinko” is a tried-and-true method of stirring nationalistic passions.

When 68 people were arrested at San Francisco City Hall in 1960 for trying to attend a congressional hearing on “un-American” activities, they were quickly vilified as communists.

“I only wish every American could have been in San Francisco and could have seen what I saw there,” the late U.S. Sen. Strom Thurmond said of the protests that greeted the House Un-American Activities Committee.

“It reminded me of a bunch of howling wolves to see the communists and the communist led-people with thwarted minds, and misled people — college professors, students and others — being led by communists and being sucked into that movement.”

In fact, not one of the protesters arrested that day was a communist, nor were any convicted of crimes (among them was Albert Einstein’s granddaughter, Eveylyn, who — like many of the protesters — was a student at UC Berkeley).

Propaganda, however, does not require truth.

This past week, with his popularity at an all-time low, his party facing potentially devastating losses in November’s elections, and perhaps concern that his new term “Dumocrats” isn’t having much effect, President Donald Trump resurrected the “communism” attack in hopes of scaring voters about the Democratic Party.

Trump told religious leaders at the Faith and Freedom Coalition that his top priority was “to stop this horrible threat of cancer that’s permeating our country called communism.”

A few days later, he told reporters in the Oval Office that communism is the “biggest threat to our nation … maybe since our founding. That includes World War I, World War II, Sept. 11. It includes the Pearl Harbor attack.”

And where does the president see the red menace rising, posing a greater danger perhaps than the Civil War, the Great Depression or Covid-19?

It’s the election of social democrats such as New York Mayor Zohran Mamdani and Los Angeles City Councilwoman Nithya Raman, the latter of whom placed second in the Los Angeles mayoral race and will face incumbent Karen Bass in a November runoff.

“These are not social Dumocrats — these are hardcore, godless communists,” Trump said. “This is the most serious threat to our country since its existence, in my opinion, 250 years ago. They use the word social democrat because its sounds so nice, but it’s really communism you’re talking about.”

No, it’s not.

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Communism is an economic system in which the public, rather than private entities, owns all resources and the means of production. Communists favor a classless society, in which profit motives and other capitalist notions are replaced by communal ownership.

Social democrats are capitalists who call for regulating private ownership, distributing profits more equitably, and providing widespread access to education, housing and healthcare.

Mamdani has called for strict rent control and programs to expand home ownership. Social democrats in Congress, such as Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, have proposed a Green New Deal to rein in carbon emissions, not a government takeover of the energy sector.

The one political leader who has openly boasted about public ownership of private companies is none other than Trump. Earlier this year, he bragged about the U.S. government taking a 10 percent ownership share of chipmaker Intel in exchange for a subsidy to promote its products. He said the government was taking a “golden share” of U.S. Steel as part of Japanese firm Nippon Steel’s purchase of the company. He has talked about similar arrangements with OpenAI and Anthropic.

It’s not what Karl Marx had in mind, but it’s a lot closer to communism than what Democrats have proposed.

Trump might believe communism is evil, but — true to form — he boasts that if he chose to become a communist, he’d be very good at it.

“I’ll be honest — I think I’d be the greatest communist in history” he said last week. “It would be so easy.”

Why? Because it involves making false promises, he said, such as promising free rent and free food — not to be confused with his pledges to cut energy bills in half or end the Russia-Ukraine war in 24 hours.

And just in case the label has lost any of its sting in the 100 years since the Bolsheviks led by Vladimir Lenin took control of Russia, Trump spelled out in easy-to-understand terms what happens if such candidates win.

“Communism is very easy to sell, but you’ll start living in squalor,” Trump said. “There will be no food; there will be no housing; there will be no military; there will be no law and order. There will be nothing. You’ll be a third world [nation] in every way, and everyone will suffer or die.’

In 1948, as Senator Joseph McCarthy was building momentum, President Harry Truman warned that reckless cries of “communism” threatened the country more than they protected it.

“There is nothing that the communists would like better than to weaken the liberal programs that are our shields against communism,” Truman said.

Marc Sandalow has been writing about California politics from Washington, D.C., for more than 30 years.