.

“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

Anti-Monopoly Bill Hits Make-or-Break Moment in California

Advocates have gained momentum to beef up the state’s primary antitrust law, but the largest companies in the nation are trying to stop it.

David Dayenby David Dayen June 29, 2026 (Prospect.org)

California State Capitol with California state flag
Credit: DustyPixel/iStock

A bill to update the antitrust laws in the nation’s most populous state faces a critical legislative hearing this week. At a time when California is among the states being relied upon as a substitute for proper antitrust enforcement, which is moribund at the federal level thanks to Trump administration corruption, advocates say the state must have a full suite of tools to succeed.

Monied interests are working diligently to stop the bill, but it gained important momentum late last week when a key senator signed on. The office of state Sen. Ben Allen, who is running for statewide office to become California’s insurance commissioner, told the Prospect that “the Senator is very likely going to be supporting the bill.” Allen was one of a handful of Senate Judiciary Committee Democrats whose position on the bill was uncertain as of last week.

More from David Dayen

Allen is roommates in Sacramento with Sen. Henry Stern; they represent nearby districts in Southern California and often vote in concert. Stern has also been considered a swing vote on the legislation. His office did not respond to a request from the Prospect for clarification.

There are 13 members on the committee, 11 Democrats and 2 Republicans. If Allen and Stern support the bill, it likely has enough votes to get out of the committee. Sen. Scott Wiener, who is running for Congress from San Francisco, previously told the Prospect he would support it, and five other Democrats are expected yes votes, with three others undecided, including the chair, Sen. Tom Umberg. As chair, however, Umberg could influence several committee members with his recommendation, so the outcome remains uncertain.

Neither Umberg’s office nor the offices of Akilah Weber Pierson and Angelique Ashby, who are also considered swing votes, responded to requests for comment.

THE BILL, KNOWN AS THE COMPETE ACT (AB 1776), will get heard in the Judiciary Committee on Tuesday. It would fix a defect in the state’s antitrust law, the Cartwright Act: namely, that it does not cover single-firm conduct. Currently, the law can only be applied to coordinated conduct by multiple firms to monopolize an industry. But the new language affirms that “it is unlawful for one or more persons” to “unreasonably restrain trade” or “monopolize or monopsonize, attempt to monopolize or monopsonize, maintain a monopoly or monopsony, or combine or conspire with another person to monopolize or monopsonize any part of trade or commerce.” Given that the quintessential monopoly is a single firm, it’s a logical update.

Assembly Majority Leader Cecilia Aguiar-Curry introduced the update in February, which tracks closely the recommendations of the California Law Revision Commission, which assists the legislature with ideas for updating legislation in the state. The CLRC recommendation to add a single-firm conduct provision came after years of study and testimony.

Restrictions on single-firm conduct would allow individual would-be monopolists to be sued under state law. That would include Silicon Valley–based tech firms like Google, Apple, and Meta, all of which have faced monopolization cases at the federal level; Google has been found guilty of monopolization twice. Real estate firms like algorithmic price coordinator RealPage, grocers with local footprints like Kroger and Albertsons (which tried to merge in 2024), home insurance companies colluding to deny fire coverage in the state, and Hollywood studios that could be scrutinized over tying together distribution and production would be at greater risk from a souped-up Cartwright Act.

The COMPETE Act passed the State Assembly easily in May, but the Senate Judiciary Committee has been seen as a location for corporate interests to make a stand. The committee is considered more moderate than the state Senate as a whole.

The California Chamber of Commerce released a letter to Umberg last week with 106 co-signers, lambasting the COMPETE Act as unnecessary, claiming it would sow confusion, chill lawful conduct, and “increase litigation and impose significant cost on consumers as well as all businesses operating in California.” CalChamber is calling AB 1776 a “cost driver” bill, a new category they have been using to group together legislation in an age of inflation. Historically, bills designated “job killers” by CalChamber have died in the state legislature; the cost driver epithet is a similar play.

An analysis of the co-signers to the CalChamber letter tells a somewhat different story than their argument that it puts all businesses at risk, however. Eleven of the co-signers are trade associations for the tech industry, fourteen represent agriculture and food retail, nine represent real estate interests, seven represent finance and insurance, five represent hospitality and entertainment, and another nine represent health care, life sciences, transportation, and manufacturing. These are among the most concentrated industries in the economy.

The talking points in the opposition letter reference activities unique to those industries. It cites “reward programs offered by hotels and airlines,” “discounts provided by pharmaceutical companies,” pharmaceutical and technology patents, and movie studio distribution practices. This aligns with the pharmaceutical industry’s stated claims that new treatments and clinical trials will have to be scrapped if the bill goes through.

“The technology, real estate, health care, and airline sectors represented in the opposition coalition have the most direct and prominent recent antitrust exposure relevant to what AB 1776 would expand liability for,” according to Lee Hepner, senior legal counsel with the American Economic Liberties Project.

Close to four dozen local chambers of commerce and business councils also signed on in opposition. But those groups are made up of small-business memberships who are often in combat with larger firms attempting to monopolize their markets. In addition, numerous small-business groups (including the National Small Business Advocacy Council, American Independent Business Alliance, and Small Business Majority) and local business councils (the state’s Black Chamber of Commerce and local chambers in Los Angeles, San Francisco, San Diego, Stanislaus, Sierra, Sonoma, San Gabriel Valley, Richmond, and the High Desert) are in support.

The Prospect asked CalChamber how it made sure its position reflected the views of its membership. Spokesperson John Myers replied that members “can join policy committees that review issues such as this one” and “are consulted in a variety of ways” during the legislative session.

BIG-MONEY LOBBYISTS HAVE ALREADY added amendments into AB 1776, including exemptions for small businesses and requirements to provide evidence of market power in any liability cases. Predictably, CalChamber has said that the amendments only add uncertainty and continue to put all businesses in litigation risk.

Umberg has endorsed other antitrust bills in the past, including the law that passed last year banning algorithmic price-fixing. He did object to the BASED Act, a separate antitrust bill brought by Sen. Wiener this year that would have prevented self-preferencing by technology platforms. But BASED didn’t have the imprimatur of the state Law Review Commission, which is rarely rejected by the legislature.

The bill has emerged just as California’s attorney general Rob Bonta has led a coalition of state enforcers using federal antitrust laws to fight consolidation on multiple fronts. This has become necessary because the federal government has committed ritual suicide on its antitrust enforcement agencies. Just last week, the new acting head of the Justice Department Antitrust Division, Stanley Woodward, told staffers that he preferred not to go to trial on any case.

The state coalition has picked up the slack. It successfully prosecuted Ticketmaster, which was found guilty of monopolization in federal court. It has blocked a television station merger between conglomerates Nexstar and Tegna. And Bonta is expected to lead a challenge to the merger between entertainment studios Paramount and Warner Bros. Discovery. (One wrinkle: the private-sector lawyer that the states hired to win the Ticketmaster case, Jeffrey Kessler, has been hired by Paramount.)

Bonta has not spoken out about the COMPETE Act, though advocates and other officials in California have been working to obtain his support, sources tell the Prospect. Bonta’s office did not respond to a request for comment.

If the COMPETE Act makes it through the Senate Judiciary Committee, it would likely get to the governor’s desk. Gavin Newsom has fallen in line with CalChamber and other business groups in the past, and he’s currently fighting a billionaire tax proposal whose top opponent is Google co-founder Sergey Brin, who would likely have a problem with a stronger state antitrust law as well.

But Newsom, who is expected to run for president in 2028, has been making several moves in the antitrust space. He asked for increased funding for enforcement amid the more prominent role of state attorneys general. And this week, former Consumer Financial Protection Bureau director Rohit Chopra begins work in Sacramento as a Newsom appointee, running a new consumer protection agency in the state. Perhaps political ambition can work for the good of Californians this time.

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The Prospect doesn’t answer to advertisers or billionaire owners. We answer to you and to our commitment to pursuing the truth, wherever that leads us. 

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David Dayen

ddayen@prospect.org

David Dayen is the executive editor of The American Prospect. He is the author of Monopolized: Life in the Age of Corporate Power and Chain of Title: How Three Ordinary Americans Uncovered Wall Street’s Great Foreclosure Fraud. He co-hosts the podcast Organized Money with Matt Stoller. He can be reached on Signal at ddayen.90. More by David Dayen

US media presents centrist panic over progressive wins as mere post-ideological ‘electability concerns’ 

Rahm Emanuel, U.S. ambassador to Japan, attends a photo op with Prime Minister Fumio Kishida and congressional leaders before Kishida addressed a joint meeting of Congress on Thursday, April 11, 2022. Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images

Posted in Politics and Movements: US

No mention of pro-Israel and corporate funding, no mention of capitalist ideology—just ‘good-faith’ worry over what will play in Purple America.

by Adam Johnson June 26, 2026 (therealnews.com)

Rahm Emanuel, U.S. ambassador to Japan, attends a photo op with Prime Minister Fumio Kishida and congressional leaders before Kishida addressed a joint meeting of Congress on Thursday, April 11, 2022. Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images

It’s simply taken for granted in US legacy media that “left-wing/progressive” electeds are driven by rigid ideology while centrists are motivated by cold, calculated, and semi-scientific concern with How To Defeat Republicans. This is a premise basically no one in our media challenges. It is asserted as pure dogma that “centrist” or “moderate” Democrats are only “centrist” or “moderate” because they are forced to be by electoral realities, and thus every position they advance is not the end result of donor pressure or class interest, but a good-faith, totally organic demand from purple-area voters they must channel if they want to “take back Congress.” 

Never is this dynamic more evident in media coverage than after the left-wing flank of the party has the kind of electoral success they saw this past Tuesday, when self-identified Democratic Socialist candidates scored major victories in New York City and state office. Immediately, before the votes were even counted, corporate media rushed to take the predictable angle, “Does electing far left-ideologues undermine Democrats’ ability to win in November,” because it’s simply taken for granted that left-wing policy perspectives are mutually exclusive with “electability.” 

Leading the charge was, as always, the New York Times. “Democrats find themselves squeezed by competing forces,” the paper lamented. “The party’s leaders in Washington are pushing for moderate candidates who they hope will be competitive in states and areas that have been inhospitable to Democrats in recent years. But primary voters in New York and other recent contests are moving in the opposite direction, increasingly turning to progressives and even socialists who excite the base.”

It’s simply taken for granted that left-wing policy perspectives are mutually exclusive with “electability.”

Note how the NYT presents a completely false dichotomy: taking back Congress from Republicans vs. progressives and socialists winning primaries. These are the two options and they are, we are told, in tension. There’s no data cited to support this, no studies linked to; the article just asserts casual dogma, then moves on to debate how Democrats will manage this supposed conflict between its base and the desire to be “competitive in states and areas that have been inhospitable to Democrats in recent years.” To do this they turn to alleged “party leaders” who are presented not as ideologues in their own right, or conflicted, corporate-funded mouthpieces, but entirely good-faith strategists simply concerned with winning. The “moderate” sources are:

  • Neera Tanden, who is presented as someone who has “served in the last three Democratic administrations and is now the president of the Center for American Progress (CAP), one of the party’s leading think tanks.” What isn’t mentioned is that CAP has historically been funded by major corporations, billionaire donors, and foreign dictatorships, but Tanden stopped disclosing CAP’s donors so it’s anyone’s guess who floats them presently.
  • Tré Easton, who is presented as “a Democratic strategist at the Searchlight Institute, a Democratic think tank.” What isn’t mentioned is Searchlight was founded explicitly to combat the left flank of the party and is, according to a different NYT article, funded by “a roster of billionaire donors highlighted by Stephen Mandel, a hedge fund manager, and Eric Laufer, a real estate investor.”  
  • Jaime Harrison, who is presented as “a South Carolinian who served as chairman of the Democratic National Committee during Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s presidency.” What isn’t mentioned is that Harrison is a longtime former lobbyist for corporate America—namely Bank of America, Wells Fargo, Wallmart, BP America, Boeing, and Lockheed Martin.

Yet none of these billionaire and corporate-backed sources are presented as potentially conflicted or motivated by their own conservative ideology. Their overarching worldview—a worldview that also happens to handsomely fund their entire careers—that capitalism and Israel are fundamentally good and worth defending is ignored and, instead, they’re simply presented as Concerned Democrats worried about potential electoral vulnerabilities. Why isn’t their capitalist ideology mentioned in a story that centers the ideology of socialism? Why are they presented as Having Concerns while Democratic Socialists are painted as indifferent or even hostile to taking back Congress? 

Also left unmentioned is that these “party leaders” and their allies in Congress, like House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries and Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, routinely adopt positions that are unpopular with the independent voters they’re allegedly motivated to win over. 

  • CAP, Jeffries, and Schumer support economic and military aid to Israel despite the fact that only 31% of independent voters support continued military backing of Israel and 43% oppose it. Forty-eight percent of all voters think the US is too supportive of Israel, while 38% think the US support of Israel is about right.
  • CAP, Jeffries, and Schumer do not support Medicare for All* despite 71% of independents supporting it and only 19% opposing it.
  • CAP, Jeffries, and Schumer do not support free college for all Americans despite 70% of independents supporting it.

If these “moderates” are Simply Concerned With Winning in Purple America why do they not adopt these broadly popular positions? Why no mention of potential ulterior motives for the “concerns” from a party leadership defined by their lockstep support for Israel. Rather than being toxic to the Democrats’ brand, it’s clear Party Leadership’s issue with this slate of explicitly anti-zionist (or at least Israel-critical) candidates is ideological. Jeffries was the largest recipient of pro-Israel money out of 435 voting members in the House last election cycle (and, it’s worth noting, despite running in a non-competive primary and general), and Schumer has explicitly said his “job” is to “keep the left pro-Israel.” Why isn’t this mentioned when discussing potential motives for why leadership have “concerns” with Tuesday’s election results? 

CNN would join the centrist pity party with their entirely baseless headline, “House Democrats’ anxiety rises after wins by Mamdani-backed candidates: ‘Are we going to let them take over the party?’”

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The DSA and Democratic Party have roughly the same negatives, but only one is scandalized and painted as fringe.

Which “House Democrats” were anxious? The article only cites four—Josh Gottheimer, Gregory Meeks, Tom Suozzi, and Vicente Gonzalez—or 1.8% of House Democrats, which seems to be sufficient enough to represent “House Democrats” to CNN’s editors. But, of course, “House Democrats” have no known uniform position because no one surveyed the remaining 98.2%. CNN’s Harry Enten, citing DSA’s net -27 favorables with the public in general, did a separate breathless segment accepting the framing that the Democratic Socialist of America were unpopular with the mainstream and Republicans are now “licking their chops” to tie the Democratic party to the DSA’s toxic brand. The segment fails to mention that, in the very same Marquette poll he cites, the Democratic Party has -25 favorables, which is within the margin of error and effectively the same level of popularity. In other words: the DSA and Democratic Party have roughly the same negatives, but only one is scandalized and painted as fringe. 

Again, the default, existing power structure is naturalized and seen as broadly popular when it’s anything but, whereas anyone disrupting the established, overtly capitalist order is viewed as unconcerned with The Realities of Winning Elections. A premise that, again, has zero empirical basis. This same dynamic has been seen in several media interviews over the past few days: 

Their primary evidence for this alleged toxicity is Republicans signaling they will make hay over it. Of course they’re going to say this, but it’s not objective proof of anything. Democrats could barely contain their excitement in taking on Trump in both 2016 and 2024, to the extent that Hillary Clinton attempted to support Trump’s camp during the Republican primary, and we all know how that turned out.  

Time and again, those who have gotten rich and powerful off the corporatist Democratic order, who led the party as it lost to Trump twice, are presented simply as savvy and concerned loyal partisans agnostic to ideology or conflicts of interests. Except they’re anything but. Rather than starting from the assumption that everyone involved wants to win office and just has different ideological visions and theories for how this is achieved, it’s taken for granted that only one wing of the party has an ideology and is inherently hostile to the realities of “taking back Congress” while the “moderate” wing is post-ideological, post-conflict of interest and is simply calling balls and strikes about the Realities of Middle America. The most popular, fourth most popular, and fifth most popular active politicians in the United States are self-identified Democratic Socialists. But listening to the New York Times and CNN you would have no idea. Instead, one would be under the distinct impression that Americans are crying out for the charisma and charm of Tom Suozzi and Rahm Emanuel.

*Jeffries technically came out in support of Medicare For All when it was trendy to do so in 2019 but has not mentioned it once in the past seven years. 

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Journalists Set the Record Straight After Musk Claims ‘Not a Single’ Child Died From DOGE’s USAID Cuts

U.S. President Trump Meets With China's President Xi And Attends State Banquet

Tesla CEO Elon Musk attends a state banquet hosted by Chinese President Xi Jinping at the Great Hall of the People on May 14, 2026 in Beijing, China.

 (Photo by Alex Wong/Getty Images)

“Come with me on a reporting trip,” said New York Times columnist Nicholas Kristof. “You’ll see the dying children themselves.”

Stephen Prager

Jun 29, 2026 (CommonDreams.org)

As Elon Musk continues to claim that “not a single” child has died as a result of his foreign aid cuts at the beginning of the second Trump administration, journalists—including ones who witnessed the consequences of the policy firsthand—are correcting the record.

Since being called out by Rep. Ro Khanna (D-Calif.), who cited a journal’s projection that 4.5 million children under 5 could die by 2030 as a result of the Department of Government Efficiency’s (DOGE) sudden termination of most of the United States Agency for International Development’s (USAID) programs—including an 88% cut to children’s health aid awards—last year, the newly minted trillionaire has repeatedly asserted that the claim that he is responsible for the deaths of kids is “a total lie.”

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Undeterred by Threats, Khanna Tells Musk to ‘Testify, Under Oath, About What He Did’ to USAID

“There is not even a single dead child!” Musk wrote on his social media platform X last Monday. “If there were, it would be worldwide headline news!”

Multiple journalists have been quick to respond that, in fact, the deaths of children and other people directly attributed to the termination of USAID programs by the agency he headed have been widely documented by major news outlets.

“Independent analyses estimate that your actions to dismantle USAID and drastically reduce lifesaving foreign aid have already killed 700,000 people,” wrote Atul Gawande, the former USAID global health chief and longtime New Yorker writer, who cited models from Boston University epidemiologist Brooke Nichols.

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In a lengthy thread posted on Thursday, Gawande cited nearly two-dozen examples in which news outlets named people who died as a direct result of cuts to health programs they relied upon, including:

  • Nyagoa, the 1-year-old daughter of Nyajime Duop, who died of cholera after the International Rescue Committee’s mobile health team stopped coming to her village in South Sudan after its grant was terminated, according to a December report from ProPublica. Save the Children said last year that it was forced to either shutter or scale back care at its 27 child clinics in Akobo County, in South Sudan’s Jonglei state. In April 2025, amid a cholera outbreak, the group reported that five children died while walking three hours to the nearest clinic after the one near them closed, which was reported by The Associated Press.
  • 5-year-old Suza Kenyaba in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, who died on February 19 after shipment of an anti-malaria drug that had already been purchased was left stranded in a distribution warehouse after payments to contractors were frozen by the US government, according to The Washington Post. There were more than 600 malaria deaths in the DRC’s Haut-Katanga province in the first six months of 2025, more than the total number in 2024. The Post found that 95% of USAID malaria medication shipments in the first six months of 2025 were either delayed or did not arrive at all.
  • 11-year-old Paciencia in Mozambique died after the case worker handling her treatment for HIV was abruptly laid off along with most others, hospitals ran out of the US-funded antiretroviral drugs she relied upon, and she was given the wrong medication after the data clerks who managed patient information were laid off, according to the South African publication Spotlight. The National Association for Self-Sustained Development (ANDA), the US-funded group that handled this HIV treatment, found that at least 16 children died between January and June 2025 in the province of Manica, many more than they had seen before the cuts.

These are just a few of the numerous other examples cited by Gawande, who added that part of the reason verifying deaths has been challenging is that DOGE’s cuts also “destroyed” USAID’s data and auditing systems, which meant that figures and overall mortality effects would take another year to fully tally.

However, he said he and a team of reporters had already compiled individual reports of more than 1,200 people whose deaths can be directly attributed to the cuts.

Even after being presented with direct evidence to the contrary, Musk continued to insist on Sunday that critics of his cuts to USAID “cannot cite a single name of someone who died out of the ‘millions’ they falsely claim have died. Not a single name!”

New York Times columnist Nicholas Kristof, whose reporting on the impacts of the sudden aid cuts was a finalist for a Pulitzer Prize, responded that he could give Musk a list of “many, many names of people who have died because of your aid cuts.”He listed the names of just a few of the people whose cases he had witnessed firsthand, which are recounted in greater depth in his reports. As Kristoff wrote:

  • Yamah Freeman was a [21-year-old] woman who died in childbirth because you stopped paying for the diesel for ambulances in her part of Liberia. I talked to her parents and sister in their village.
  • Gbessey Kiadu, age 1, died of malaria because of your cuts in Liberia. I talked to his mom in her village.
  • Ibrahim Koroma, an infant, died of AIDS in Sierra Leone after you interrupted HIV supplies. I talked to health workers who cared for him.
  • Achol Deng was an 8-year-old girl with HIV in South Sudan who died when you cut funding for the health care worker who provided her medicines. I talked to him.

“I could go on and on,” Kristof continued, “In almost every village you go to in South Sudan, Uganda, Liberia, Sierra Leone or other countries I reported in, you find people dying because of aid cuts.”

He issued a “challenge” to Musk: “Come with me on a reporting trip, and we’ll talk to these moms and dads, and you’ll see the dying children themselves. I think if you see the kids whose lives are at stake, maybe you’ll change your mind.”

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

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Stephen Prager is a staff writer for Common Dreams.

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In ‘Victory for Voters,’ Supreme Court Rejects Trump-GOP ​Attack on Mailed Ballots

Absentee ballots are prepared to be mailed at the Wake County Board of Elections

Absentee ballots are prepared to be mailed at the Wake County Board of Elections on September 17, 2024 in Raleigh, North Carolina.

 (Photo by Allison Joyce/Getty Images)

“At a time when the Roberts Court has too often made it harder for Americans to exercise their rights, today’s decision is an important and welcome exception.”

Jessica Corbett

Jun 29, 2026 (CommonDreams.org)

In a surprise blow to President Donald Trump’s intensifying assault on democracy in the lead-up to the November midterms, the US Supreme Court ruled Monday that states can decide to count ballots received after Election Day as long as they were postmarked in time.

Although the high court’s right-wing supermajority has handed Trump various victories over his two terms, Chief Justice John Roberts and Justice Amy Coney Barrett joined the court’s three liberals for the 5-4 decision, which was welcomed by advocates for Americans with disabilities, military families, the elderly, and others who choose to vote by mail.

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While over half of US states allow at least some ballots received after Election Day to be counted, in Watson v. Republican National Committee, the RNC challenged a Mississippi law that requires ballots to be postmarked on or before the date of the election and received by the registrar no more than five business days afterward.

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Following oral arguments in March, the ideologically split majority found that “nothing in the federal election day statutes requires ballots to be received by Election Day,” with Barrett—one of three justices appointed by Trump—delivering the majority opinion. She stressed that “we cannot add to the words Congress chose.”

In a statement cheering the decision, Danielle Lang, vice president for voting rights and rule of law at Campaign Legal Center, which filed an amicus brief in this case with Protect Democracy, said that “all voters, no matter how they cast their ballot, deserve the freedom to make their voices heard. This is a cornerstone of American democracy. And access to vote-by-mail, along with early voting and in-person voting, makes our democracy stronger by expanding access to the ballot for more voters.”

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Robert Weiner, the Voting Rights Project director at the Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights Under Law—which also submitted an amicus brief in this case and is suing over Trump’s executive order on mail-in voting—celebrated that the ruling “rejects yet another attempt to prevent eligible voters from casting their votes and having them counted.”

“Our democracy is stronger when more people, not less, can participate,” declared Weiner, encouraging all US voters to “check the rules in your state,” and anyone voting absentee “to mail their ballots early and confirm they were received.”

Retired Amb. Norm Eisen, co-founder and executive chair of Democracy Defenders Fund, which filed an amicus brief on behalf of the League of United Latin American Citizens, said that “this ruling respects state authority over election administration and prevents needless confusion for voters and election officials. At a time when the Roberts Court has too often made it harder for Americans to exercise their rights, today’s decision is an important and welcome exception.”

US Marine Corps veteran and Vet Voice Foundation CEO Janessa Goldbeck called the decision “a victory for every American who follows the rules, mails their ballot on time, and deserves to have their vote counted,” while also highlighting that absentee voting is common among troops and their families.

“For service members stationed around the world, military spouses, veterans, and other Americans who rely on voting by mail, this ruling recognizes a simple principle: Voters should not lose their voice because of circumstances beyond their control,” Goldbeck said.

As Richard Fiesta, executive director of the Alliance for Retired Americans, pointed out, older voters also often vote by mail. He said that “for generations, states have adopted practical election rules that reflect the realities of mail delivery, protect the right to vote, and meet the needs of their citizens. The court’s decision means that voters in the 14 states that provide a grace period for regular mail ballots, and the 29 states which allow additional time for at least some mail voters, including military and overseas voters, can breathe a little easier.”

“Our alliance members in Mississippi proudly joined this case to defend the constitutional right to vote. We have always maintained that no eligible voter who casts a ballot in a timely manner should have that vote tossed out because of circumstances they cannot control,” he added. “We will continue fighting to protect every eligible voter’s right to have a ballot cast in a timely manner.”

Among the older voters who have recently voted by mail is 80-year-old Trump, noted Common Cause president and CEO Virginia Kase Solomón—who applauded the new ruling as “a victory for voters and for an election system that meets the needs of the people it serves.”

“Now, it’s on Congress to pass long-overdue nationwide protections for voters,” she asserted. “Common Cause will mobilize our one million members to make sure Congress hears voters loud and clear: national voting protections now.”

BlueSky: https://embed.bsky.app/embed/did:plc:7y56hbn7lt6gkqrjj65quotl/app.bsky.feed.post/3mpgrd5kki22d?id=48946321246389923&ref_url=https%253A%252F%252Fwww.commondreams.org%252Fnews%252Fsupreme-court-mail-in-ballots&colorMode=system

Republicans narrowly control both chambers of Congress, and Trump continues to pressure lawmakers to approve the Safeguard American Voter Eligibility (SAVE America) Act requiring proof of US citizenship to register and photo ID to vote in federal elections. Given Democratic opposition to the bill and the GOP’s slim Senate majority, passage would require working around the filibuster.

Democratic leaders on Monday joined voting rights advocates in celebrating the Supreme Court’s new ruling but also emphasized that, in the words of Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY), “as the midterm elections approach, Trump and his allies are working overtime to silence Americans’ votes.”

“Senate Democrats will continue to do everything we can to protect free and fair elections, where everyone’s voice is heard,” he vowed.

Democratic National Committee Chair Ken Martin said that “the DNC is proud to have stood with the state of Mississippi to defeat the RNC’s latest attack on Americans’ voting rights,” and “Trump and Republicans are attacking our elections and trying to rig the system in their favor because they know the American people are ready to reject their chaos and corruption this November.”

He, too, pledged that “the DNC will remain vigilant and use every tool at our disposal to protect every eligible voter’s access to the ballot box.”

Democratic Association of Secretaries of State Chair Cisco Aguilar said that “my attendance at the oral arguments for Watson v. RNC in March was a demonstration of Nevada’s commitment to protecting mail voting and ensuring that every eligible voter can cast a ballot in the way that works best for them.”

“Democratic secretaries of state have repeatedly said that the Constitution is clear: States decide how their elections are run. Today’s ruling shows they were right,” Aguilar continued. “This ruling should also be a warning to the president that the letter of the law still holds weight with the Supreme Court.”

“Despite this win, the right to vote remains more under threat this year than ever before,” he added. “Democratic secretaries of state will continue to be on the frontlines of democracy, fighting to protect the rights of all Americans to legally cast their ballots and have confidence that their votes will be counted.”

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Jessica Corbett

Jessica Corbett is a senior editor and staff writer for Common Dreams.

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Your weekly to-dos

  1. Phonebank for Indivisible endorsed candidate Julie Gonzales (CO-Sen) TONIGHT, Monday, June 29 (7:30pm ET/5:30pm MT). We will be joined by Indivisible’s co-executive director Ezra Levin to help get Gonzales across the finish line before her primary tomorrow. Recent polling has her within striking distance of Sen. Hickenlooper, and each voter we reach will make a difference to ensure Coloradans are represented by a true progressive fighter in the US Senate. Paid for by Indivisible Action. Not authorized by any candidate or candidate committee.
  2. Join the Mass Call to gear up for the Good Trouble Lives On Weekend of Action next Tuesday, July 7 (8pm ET/5pm PT). The GTLO Weekend of Action on July 17-19 honors the legacy of civil rights leader Congressman John Lewis. On next Tuesday’s Mass Call, we’ll discuss how you can organize or attend a local event in your community to continue the fight for civil rights and support one another in exercising our sacred freedom to vote.
  3. Sign up to join the Hands Off Our Vote Movement, our national program to ensure all eligible voters get to cast their ballot and that those ballots are counted. We know Trump and his sycophants will do everything they can to intimidate voters and sabotage the 2026 election results. We’ll be ready to counter their dirty tricks and tactics with the support of Indivisibles all across the US. Read on for more about this campaign below.
  4. Register for our Immigrant Justice Summer Training Series, beginning next Thursday, July 9, to learn how to respond when ICE surges in your community. In our first training call, we will discuss a concrete three-step organizing blueprint: aligning with immigrant-led organizations in your community, making a plan for your role in ICE response, and growing your circle of neighbors who are ready to act.

Two rulings that are impossible to reconcile

DAYEN ON TAP

June 29, 2026 (Prospect.org)

If you believe that presidents get to fire executive branch appointees, there is no logical way for that to only be inapplicable for the Federal Reserve.Much of what you need to know about who rules America can be found in two Supreme Court opinions released today. They reinforce how the law as interpreted by this Court is malleable depending on whom it’s applied to.

If you work in the executive branch, you can now be fired by the president for whatever reason or no reason at all, even if you were appointed to what was once called an independent agency with quasi-judicial and quasi-legislative functions like the Federal Trade Commission, even if the law creating the agency said you needed a reason. This new standard overturns 91 years of precedent and is now the law, in every case—except if the agency you work for is the Federal Reserve.
That’s the effect of Trump v. Slaughter and Trump v. Cook, opinions that were released simultaneously this morning. That they were written by the same person, Chief Justice John Roberts, only adds to an absurdity that can only be reconciled by the truism that money rules the world.

Trump v. Slaughter overrules Humphrey’s Executor, a 1935 ruling that affirmed the FTC’s statute, which says that commissioners can only be fired for cause (specifically, “inefficiency, neglect of duty, or malfeasance in office”). Several independent agencies had similar for-cause provisions, but that’s all gone, deemed a violation of the separation of powers.

None of these independent agencies will ever operate the same way again. They historically have been set up as five-member panels, with at least two from the opposite party. But Trump has fired practically every Democrat in these agencies, and in his second term not a single Democrat has been nominated to fill those positions. That’s likely to be the new standard: If presidents can fire any member of the executive branch at will, why would anyone from the opposite party willing to criticize executive branch decisions be allowed to stay in the government?
You can make at least a colorable argument that a president should be allowed to have control over their subordinates, despite the damage it does to an agency structure set up by Congress. But when you add in the carve-out for the Federal Reserve, it quickly becomes totally ridiculous. There is no way to hold the two rulings together at once.

In Trump v. Cook, Roberts—the same guy who wrote the Slaughter ruling—extols America’s “long tradition of independent central banking” to justify allowing the statutory for-cause provision to stand for Fed governors. The Fed was literally established one year before the FTC, and both have substantially similar language around removal. Roberts justifies this by saying that there have been central banks since before the Constitution—but there was also a postal service before the Constitution, yet the precedent Roberts relied upon in Slaughter, a 1926 opinion called Myers, allowed the president to fire a local postmaster at will.

“Acceptance of the Government’s position would in effect transform the Federal Reserve’s for-cause protection into at-will employment—an interpretive leap out of step with the statute Congress enacted and our Nation’s tradition of central banking protected from political interference,” writes the chief justice in Cook, the same man who precisely transformed the FTC’s for-cause protection into at-will employment, out of step with the statute Congress enacted and 91 years of tradition, on the same day, in Slaughter.

This idea that monetary policy simply must be “politically independent,” but holding corporations accountable, adjudicating labor law, and other agency functions can be done at the sole discretion of the White House, tells you all you need to know about the role of the money power and of everything else in America. Roberts made a fictitious differentiation so bankers could breathe easier. Period, end of sentence.
P.S.: On a more surprising note, the Court preserved a Mississippi law that allows ballots postmarked by Election Day but arriving to election offices afterward to be counted. Justice Amy Coney Barrett ruled that “nothing in the federal election-day statutes requires ballots to be received by election day.” The Postal Service is not necessarily postmarking ballots as they receive them, though a lower court struck down post office efforts to tie mail ballot delivery to handing over voter rolls to the White House.

The larger issue here is that there appear to be five votes on the Court affirming that election laws are reserved for the states. That’s an important indicator as Trump continues his attempts to meddle.
David Dayen
Executive Editor

Will a jury send the Golden Gate Bridge protesters away for 15 years?

Seven activists, all with Berkeley ties, blocked the span in 2024, protesting genocide in Gaza. Jurors resume deliberations Monday in the nationally watched felony trial.

by Esther Kaplan June 29, 2026 (Berkeleyside.org)

Rocky Chau and River Allen block the Golden Gate Bridge on April 15, 2024, to protest the war on Gaza. They and five other East Bay codefendants are now facing a felony trial in San Francisco. Credit: Courtesy of Fran de Sena

No one really disputes what happened on April 15, 2024, on the Golden Gate Bridge.

A small group of protesters, all with ties to Berkeley, met at the Ashby BART station in the early morning hours and drove to Marin, then onto the bridge, where just before 8 a.m. on a workday, they stopped in the middle of the span. A passenger in each of three cars got out and locked themselves through a tube to their driver. Together, the three cars and three protesters blocked rush hour traffic for four hours, as others hoisted banners and chanted, in what they have described as a desperate gambit to get elected officials to halt U.S. military support for Israel’s war in Gaza. 

The war was entering its seventh month, with nearly 34,000 Palestinians dead, and the civil disobedience on the bridge was part of a global day of action timed for Tax Day, dubbed A15.

What a jury will debate in a San Francisco courthouse this week is whether the protesters’ actions constituted a serious crime.

San Francisco District Attorney Brooke Jenkins threw the book at them, charging eight participants with felony conspiracy as well as a stack of misdemeanors, from trespass to unlawful assembly to 38 counts of false imprisonment of the commuters whose trips were delayed. 

Eighteen others, who Jenkins’ office charged with misdemeanors, later took diversion deals. (A pretrial judge eventually threw out all but five of the false imprisonment charges, Raye Kahn, a spokesperson for the defense team, said, and one of the eight felony defendants saw all of her charges dismissed.)

The charges facing the seven protesters still on trial could carry sentences of up to 15 years.

Protesters block the Golden Gate Bridge on April 15, 2024, to protest the war on Gaza. Credit: Courtesy of Fran de Sena

Tori Porell, a senior attorney with Palestine Legal, a nonprofit firm that defends the free speech rights of those speaking out on Palestine, said she sees the case as “a classic overprosecution of an act of civil disobedience that is meant to stifle dissent and scare people away from speaking out against the US war machine and its role in the Israeli genocide against Palestinians.”

The district attorney’s office declined to comment on this claim or on any aspect of the case, noting that “the jury is deliberating.”

But Jenkins explained her thinking in 2024 when she announced the charges. “While we must protect avenues for free speech, the exercise of free speech cannot compromise public safety,” she said. “Regardless of the message, blocking roadways is not only illegal but also dangerous for protesters, motorists, and first responders.”

The protesters hoped to offer a different explanation of the case to the jury: that the disruption they caused was necessary to prevent a genocide in Gaza. Their attorneys, in opening remarks, said the prosecution would never meet the burden of establishing criminal intent, required for a conspiracy charge, because the protesters were there to save lives.

‘We have the right to take action to save lives’

The trial opened on May 20, before Judge Teresa Caffese, in San Francisco Superior Court, against seven defendants: Sarah Ferrell, Conrad de Jesus, Em Tillotson, and Bhavika Anandpura, all of Oakland, and Rocky Chau, Sara Cantor, and River Allen of Richmond.

All seven have ties to Berkeley. Allen worked at Black Pine Circle School at the time of the protest and Cantor at the East Bay Community Law Center. Tillotson is a former resident who now works at a restaurant in the city, while Chau volunteered at the Berkeley Animal Rights Center for nearly a decade. Ferrell, de Jesus and Anandpura are all UC Berkeley graduates.

Each day at, dozens of supporters filed in, many of them clad in keffiyehs, the Palestinian scarves; some days, parents of the defendants would sit in the gallery. One day, a mother visibly dissolved in tears as her daughter testified.

The prosecution’s case, argued by assistant district attorney Angela Roze, played out over five daysleaning heavily on the testimony of California Highway Patrol officers who arrived to the scene, as well as half a dozen people stuck on the bridge that day, including, according to notes from one trial observer, a nurse who was delayed getting to her job at Kaiser Permanente, a mortgage broker who missed a big sales meeting, and a parent who was stuck in her car with her two young children.

A protester offers snacks to a bystander trapped on the Golden Gate Bridge on April 15, 2024. Credit: Courtesy of Saman Qadir

The testimony, at times, did not appear to go as planned. A CHP investigator who examined the protesters’ phones said that he’d found no evidence of communication between them, according to a Bay City News reporter who was present that day, which did little to support the conspiracy charges. A CHP captain testified that he’d never seriously considered opening up an emergency lane, which a bridge official said could have been accomplished by a zipper truck, which moves traffic dividers, in about half an hour. 

And one of the trapped drivers — a man who’d been subpoenaed by prosecutors because he’d missed a medical appointment related to the removal of a tumor — unexpectedly broke down on the stand as he spoke about how the Palestinian people had been kicked around for so long, according to two observers. 

Caffese ended up dropping this count of false imprisonment because the man said he was able to reschedule his appointment and never felt held against his will.

The defense case relied almost entirely on the testimony of the protesters themselves, who spoke in detail about their motivations. For a conspiracy charge, explained attorney Jeff Wozniak, who was an early member of the defense team, a prosecutor has to prove criminal intent. What the defense was hoping to show, he said, was “they weren’t there to impact the bridge finances or to stop these drivers — they were there to demand attention to the genocide.”

In fact, several defendants, including Ferrell, said they had assumed officials would use the zipper truck to open a fourth lane to let through anyone in need and would not have sought to prevent it; instead, CHP officers halted northbound traffic as well.

The protesters locked their arms together through tubes to delay their removal by law enforcement. Credit: Courtesy of Fran de Sena

When Oakland resident Conrad de Jesus took the stand on May 29, he looked every bit the architect that he is, in close-cropped hair and chunky glasses. Prompted by his defense attorney, Katherine Isa, he walked the jury through his biography — a child of immigrants from the Philippines, his father a Navy man — and his history of involvement in the animal rights movement. It was there, through his involvement in DxE, or Direct Action Everywhere, based in Berkeley, that he first learned about civil disobedience and the idea of the necessity defense, an argument that a defendant acted to prevent significant bodily harm to someone else.

“We believe we have the right to take action to save lives,” he said.

He became emotional as he spoke about the case of Hind Rajab, a 6-year-old girl whose January 2024 call to the Palestine Red Crescent Society after her family’s car was hit by a barrage of bullets had circulated online. “She coughed up blood and was afraid her mother would be angry because she spoiled her dress,” he said. “Ultimately, she was shot and killed by Israeli forces. And that affected me deeply, because I’m a father.”

In the weeks that followed, he said, he saw footage of an apartment building that had been turned to rubble, something he knew, as an architect, would require an extraordinary degree of force. De Jesus recalled seeing a father amid the building’s remains holding the dead body of what appeared to be a 4-year-old girl, and hearing him say, “Habibi,” an Arabic term of endearment that translates to “my darling” or “my love.”

For months, de Jesus said, he had been going to marches; reaching out to his members of Congress; and attending public hearings, including an Oakland City Council meeting where a ceasefire resolution was considered. “I’d done everything I could,” he told the court. 

Isa then asked him about his decision to participate in the bridge blockade. “I believed that it was an emergency, that we needed to act very quickly. Just days before, the World Central Kitchen employees were killed by an attack by the Israeli military, so we knew they would stop at nothing,” he said. “We knew Palestinians were being pushed back south to Rafah, and there were plans by the Israeli military to attack Rafah.”

For much of the war, Gazans had been instructed to evacuate from areas in the north that were being heavily bombarded to points south. By the time Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu announced on April 8 that he had set a date to invade Rafah, the strip’s southernmost city, an estimated 1.5 million people were sheltered there.

Golden Gate Bridge defendants Conrad de Jesus, Rocky Chau, Sara Cantor, Em Tillotson, Bhavika Amandpura, River Allen, and Sarah Ferrell outside the Civic Center Courthouse in San Francisco. Credit: Courtesy of Manan Kocher

Another defendant, the public health worker Sarah Ferrell, was paired with de Jesus that day, and was behind the wheel in one of the vehicles that blocked traffic. She told the court that she had been inundated with images of the destruction in Gaza, and that she had been moving through her days in a state of grief, mourning and outrage. She too had tried everything to persuade Congress to stop arms shipments to Israel: a monthslong postcard campaign, daily calls to her senators, protest marches, testimony before the Oakland City Council. 

“The executive branch was completely failing us,” Ferrell said. “The legislative branch was failing us. Civil society was failing us. There were no avenues left to stop the U.S. from sending the supplies to support the invasion of Rafah.” 

The bridge action, she said, was a chance to be seen, to say, “You can’t ignore us anymore.”

While she and de Jesus were locked together, she recalled noticing at one point that he was crying. She said she looked out over the water, imagining Gaza far on the other side, and thought to herself, “We hear you. I’m so sorry.” And then, as the daughter of a minister, she prayed.

Prosecutors sought to document the disruption’s harm

San Francisco District Attorney Brooke Jenkins speaks during a news conference April 13, 2026, in San Francisco. Credit: AP Photo/Jeff Chiu

From the start, San Francisco’s district attorney seemed determined to prosecute the case aggressively. The day after the action, Jenkins held a press conference announcing that she would bring felony conspiracy charges. At that event, and then on social media, she called for “anyone who was falsely imprisoned on the Golden Gate Bridge” to come forward, saying they may be entitled to restitution. The California Highway Patrol also issued a callout for anyone stuck on the bridge that day.

“There are people that were inconvenienced by this protest and that’s been true of every protest going back to the Edmund Pettis Bridge,” said Wozniak, who has defended Bay Area protesters facing criminal charges over many years. “But soliciting people to come forward who were impacted by a protest, with the promise of monetary payment under the restitution laws, is something I’ve never seen before.” 

When Jenkins’ office filed charges against 26 of the protesters that August, the affidavit described numerous drivers who missed work, medical appointments, and flights, including the man who’d missed his pre-op appointment, and two others who said they had to relieve themselves in their car. The DA also sought $162,554 in restitution to the Golden Gate Bridge District for lost toll revenue. Though the bridge district later dropped the restitution claim, it was cited by a judge in November as the reason he denied a motion to downgrade the felony charges.

“The April 15, 2024, protest was unprecedented in its duration. Protesters blocked all southbound traffic on the Golden Gate Bridge for over four hours,” bridge district spokesperson Paolo Cosulich-Schwartz said when asked if the district had ever previously filed a restitution claim over a protest. “The Bridge District has not previously sought restitution for other protest incidents because they were resolved quickly at the direction of law enforcement.” 

The felony charges brought by Jenkins’ office were unusual for an act of protest in San Francisco — and stood out among the many disruptive protests that took place on A15. Protesters in Eugene, Oregon, for example, who blocked the I-5 that day, got charged with misdemeanor disorderly conduct. Chicago activists who blocked access to O’Hare Airport faced misdemeanor charges for obstructing traffic. And protesters who blocked a bridge on the I-84 in Beacon, N.Y., in the Hudson Valley, faced misdemeanor charges of trespassing and disorderly conduct.

Historically, participants in other Golden Gate Bridge protests that halted traffic have faced lesser charges as well. A famous AIDS protest in 1989, which blocked traffic for nearly an hour, and a “Save the Redwoods” protest in 1996, which press reports said caused an “all-day traffic snarl,” each resulted only in misdemeanor charges. A Black Lives Matter march that clogged bridge traffic in the summer of 2020 didn’t even result in arrests. 

Demonstrators shut down the Bay Bridge, Nov. 16, 2023, in San Francisco to demand a cease-fire in Gaza; defendants in that case received only community service. Credit: AP Photo/Noah Berger

And in the wake of a protest on the Bay Bridge in November 2023, just five months before the A15 action, which shut down traffic for the same window of time, four hours, Jenkins’ office filed only misdemeanor charges — all of which were ultimately dismissed in exchange for community service.

“Jenkins has taken a much more draconian approach to charging across the board,” Wozniak, who was a defense attorney in that case, said. “But it’s also clear that she didn’t like the press that the Bay Bridge case brought,” when the protesters didn’t get jail time.

The defense team accuses Jenkins of bias

In an Aug. 20 letter, attorneys for the 26 original defendants requested that Jenkins recuse herself from the case, claiming that she had overcharged the protesters due to a “bias against Palestinians.” She had at least two meetings with the Israeli Consulate in 2023, they wrote, and had received gifts of wine from the consulate. The attorneys cited a remark she made in October 2023, calling an antiwar protest “pro-Hamas,” and emails from one of her assistant DAs, reported by the SF Standard, calling Palestinians “brutal Arab invaders” and “Nazis.”

The DA’s office said at the time that the ADA’s remarks “do not reflect the views of the District Attorney or the District Attorney’s Office,” and that the matter was under review. And the office dismissed the concerns raised in the lawyers’ letter, issuing statements to the press saying that meeting with consular staff was a routine part of the job for elected officials.

Yet those concerns were amplified as the case advanced and Jenkins’ office filed a pretrial motion asking a judge to bar the word “genocide” from being mentioned during trial.

It was a tactic that had been used in another high-profile Bay Area case against pro-Palestine protesters, this one over an office occupation at Stanford University in June 2024, part of a student-led campaign to get the university to divest from companies implicated in the Israeli offensive in Gaza. In that case, Santa Clara District Attorney Jeff Rosen, who charged a dozen protesters with felony vandalism and conspiracy charges, also sought to disallow the defense from introducing evidence of the protesters’ political motivations. A judge denied both motions last December, then recused Rosen and his office in May after the defense discovered that he’d mischaracterized the case as a fight against anti-Semitism in a fundraising appeal for his reelection campaign.

Protesters blocked traffic on the Golden Gate Bridge for four hours on April 15, 2024, to protest the war on Gaza. Credit: Courtesy of Fran de Sena

“Trying to keep out the word genocide is wanting the case to be content neutral,” said Tony Brass, a lawyer who represented one of the Stanford defendants, Hunter Taylor-Black. “There’s an argument here that you’re fighting for the greater good, that it’s a legal necessity — everything else I’m doing isn’t landing, isn’t saving lives, and I might be able to save lives if I do this.”

“Do we have a right to know what was in their mind when they did it?” he said. “If you strip out the meaning and necessity of what people are doing, they just look like a bunch of lunatics.”

A judge rejected a pretrial defense motion to recuse Jenkins from the Golden Gate Bridge case, and Caffese later rejected the prosecution’s motion to disallow the word “genocide” in court.

Still, Roze, the prosecutor, interjected repeatedly during the defendants’ testimony, asking Caffese to admonish the jury that the protesters were not testifying as experts on Gaza. The judge did so often, instructing the jury several times that when the protesters spoke about the destruction they had seen and read about in the news, it was evidence only of their own state of mind.

The jury will consider narrow questions of intent

On the morning of June 5, the day closing arguments were set to begin, the defendants and their supporters gathered on an expanse of lawn on McAllister Street, opposite the courthouse. De Jesus wore a dark brown suit and tie, a black keffiyeh around his neck. Ferrell wore a white jacket with a white and green keffiyeh, a bouquet of irises and dahlias in her hands. They held one side of a Palestinian flag; Allen held the other. None of the defendants offered remarks, on the advice of their attorneys, but several of their supporters did.

One of them was Taylor-Black, the Stanford defendant, who was free to speak because, several months after she graduated, her case ended in a mistrial. “I’ve honestly recently been thinking a lot about the term complicity,” she said. “They sought to ban the use of the word genocide. The reason they do this is because they know that the actions taken on that bridge on April 14 and on Stanford University’s campus on June 5 are not crimes. We are not the ones who have made ourselves complicit in genocide in our time.” 

After the defendants filed through the metal detectors and into the upstairs courtroom, Caffese began her instructions to the jury, which took the better part of an hour. She never said the words the seven defendants, their families, and their attorneys were waiting for: She did not instruct the jury to consider a necessity defense, even though a California appellate court had recently allowed it in an unrelated case about an animal rights protest. That means that the jury isn’t supposed to consider the question of whether trying to halt a genocide justified the protesters’ actions.

Or at least, as Brass, Taylor-Black’s attorney, explained, the jurors are technically not supposed to. Still, he said, the defendants’ sense of urgency about trying to stop genocide might make jurors hesitate to convict, which might motivate them to look at all of the elements of the case with greater scrutiny. 

Sarah Ferrell, Conrad de Jesus, left, and River Allen, right, hold at Palestinian flag outside the San Francisco Superior Court before closing arguments in their felony case, June 4, 2026. Credit: Esther Kaplan/The Oaklandside

Just as prosecutors have discretion over what charges to bring, jurors bring their own judgment when deciding verdicts. Nearly three years since Hamas’ Oct. 7 attack and Israel’s invasion of Gaza, U.S. public opinion has shifted dramatically, with many more Americans now sympathizing with Palestinians over Israelis, and a third believing that the U.S. provides Israel with too much military assistance

There is another affirmative defense, known as a “mistake of law,” that was a throughline in the defense testimony. In a felony conspiracy charge, as Kahn explained, one of the key elements is intent — in this case, the intent to commit several alleged misdemeanor crimes, from trespass to false imprisonment. With this defense, what would matter is that the protesters thought their actions were legal, because they were justified, even if they didn’t properly understand the law. Caffese didn’t instruct the jury to consider that defense either.

“The defendants thought it was necessary to block traffic on that bridge to prevent a greater harm from happening, even if they were mistaken,” Kahn said.

“What was their intent that day? They were heartbroken. They wanted to do everything in their power to stop these atrocities.” 

Berkeleyside staff contributed reporting to this story.

Mehdi vs. the New York Times

The Times called out our editor-in-chief for supposedly “misstating the facts” on its softball coverage of the GOP, versus its nonstop criticisms of progressives. But Mehdi came back with receipts.

Team Zeteo Jun 30, 2026

Left: The New York Times building in New York City, United States on July 13, 2024. Photo by Jakub Porzycki/NurPhoto via Getty Images. Right: Mehdi Hasan

It’s not everyday that the most-subscribed newspaper in the U.S. comes after you.

The New York Times – notorious for whitewashing Israel’s genocide in Gaza – published a profile piece on Darializa Avila Chevalier, one of three Mamdani-backed progressives who shocked the Democratic establishment when they won their NYC primaries last week.

“Who is Darializa Avila Chevalier?” the headline asks. The piece features old social media posts from Chevalier that say things like “Fuck Kamala Harris” – quotes that Times chief White House correspondent Peter Baker amplified on Twitter:

Mehdi responded to Baker’s post, calling out the Times for scrutinizing progressives while giving right-wingers a pass, even though GOP politicians routinely traffic in much more extreme and racist rhetoric:

The New York Times PR team proceeded to tweet at Mehdi in response, implying that he was “misstating the facts”:

Of course, Mehdi responded – with receipts:

So, you can subscribe to the self-declared “both sides” journalism of the mainstream New York Times, where racists, Islamophobes, and literal Nazis get off easy.

Or, you can support a new kind of media that’s independent and unafraid – journalism that refuses to both-sides genocide, fascism, and white supremacy.

The choice is yours.

The Rise and Fall of America’s Wickedest Neighborhood: The Barbary Coast, San Francisco

Paul McAllister and Johnny Desert Jun 28, 2026 San Francisco’s Barbary Coast ran for nearly seventy years on a three-block stretch of Pacific Street — longer than any red-light district in American history. It began in the chaos of the 1849 Gold Rush, when the city’s population exploded from under five hundred to over twenty-five thousand in two years and abandoned ships were sunk in Yerba Buena Cove to claim the mud beneath them as real estate. What followed was a neighborhood built entirely on extraction: gambling halls where half a million dollars sat on the tables, a shanghaiing trade that kidnapped men into forced labor at sea, and a vice economy so profitable that the city’s own politicians had no interest in shutting it down. The 1906 San Francisco earthquake and fire leveled every saloon and brothel on the Coast — and within a year, they were all rebuilt. In the district’s final act, African American musicians at clubs like Purcell’s So Different Café invented the dance crazes that swept the nation, from the Texas Tommy to the Turkey Trot, making Pacific Street one of the birthplaces of American jazz. The Barbary Coast survived vigilantes, earthquakes, and six major fires. It was finally killed by a newspaper editorial and a police commission resolution banning dancing. Today the same blocks are Jackson Square — San Francisco’s first historic district, home to Michelin-starred restaurants and tech firms paying tens of millions for the brick-and-iron buildings where crimps once dropped drugged sailors through trap doors. Sources Herbert Asbury, The Barbary Coast: An Informal History of the San Francisco Underworld (1933) Tom Stoddard, Jazz on the Barbary Coast (Heyday Books, 1982; rev. 1998) San Francisco Heritage, “Heritage in the Neighborhoods: Jackson Square” series (sfheritage.org, June 2025) Gary Kamiya, “Depravity of San Francisco’s Barbary Coast Was Legendary,” San Francisco Examiner (2023) FoundSF, “Barbary Coast” and “Shanghaiing” entries (foundsf.org) Sid LeProtti oral history recordings, Columbia Records / San Francisco Traditional Jazz Foundation Collection (1953; digitized at Stanford University)

Two Postcards a Week

(Image from Google.com)

The witness of Otto and Elise Hampel, and what it means for the rest of us

Scot Nakagawa Jun 29, 2026

They weren’t famous. They were not obviously brave. Otto Hampel was a factory worker who had fought in the First World War. Elise Hampel was a domestic servant who had, until a few years earlier, belonged to the National Socialist Women’s League. They lived in a working-class apartment in Wedding, a Berlin neighborhood, in a building ordinary enough that nothing about them caught the eye. They were, by every outward measure, precisely the kind of people whose lives do not appear in history books.

In 1940, Elise’s brother was killed in France. Something in her broke, and something in Otto broke alongside it. They did not have a platform. They did not belong to any resistance organization. They were not connected to the White Rose or to any underground network. What they had was a kitchen table, a stack of postcards, a pen, and a decision.

Starting in September of that year, and for the next two years, Otto and Elise Hampel hand-wrote more than two hundred postcards denouncing Hitler and the Nazi regime. The messages were plain. Refuse military service. Refuse to donate to the Winter Relief. Refuse to cooperate. One card, written across a stamp bearing Hitler’s face, read simply: worker murderer. Another read, Mother! The Führer has murdered my son. Mother! The Führer will murder your sons too.

They dropped the cards in mailboxes. They left them in stairwells. They walked their own city, an ordinary couple on an ordinary errand, and scattered the truth like seeds.

Here is the part that will break your heart. Nearly every postcard was turned in to the Gestapo immediately. The people who found them were terrified, to be caught with such a card was to be marked. So they handed them in. Card after card. The Gestapo, reading them, became convinced it was tracking a communist spy ring, a sophisticated underground network. The idea that two working-class people at a kitchen table were producing all of this, alone, for two years, did not occur to them.

For two years, Otto and Elise Hampel risked their lives every week. They believed that somewhere, somehow, someone was reading. They believed the seeds would find soil. They didn’t know that almost every card they wrote was going directly into a Gestapo file. They didn’t know their campaign, by any immediate measure, was failing.

They were arrested in October 1942. Otto told the police he was happy to have protested against Hitler. Roland Freisler’s People’s Court convicted them of preparing for high treason and demoralizing the troops. On April 8, 1943, Otto and Elise were guillotined at Plötzensee Prison within hours of each other.

Sit with the part of this story that feels like defeat. They didn’t overthrow Hitler. They didn’t start a movement. They did not, as far as they ever knew, move a single reader. They went to their deaths with no evidence that their two years of quiet, terrified, unglamorous work had mattered to anyone at all.

And yet.

After the war, the German novelist Hans Fallada was handed their Gestapo file. He wrote a novel based directly on what they did, published in English as Every Man Dies Alone, and in the UK as Alone in Berlin. The file itself survived. Their mug shots, their handwriting, their confessions, and several of the actual postcards were contained in it. Schoolchildren in Germany study them. A plaque now marks the place they lived. Emma Thompson and Brendan Gleeson played them in a 2016 film. Eighty years later, I am sitting down to write to you about them.

The regime they opposed is gone. The people who turned in their postcards are forgotten. The Hampels are not.

You will be told – I’m sure you have already been told – that you are too small to matter. That you are not famous enough, not positioned enough, not important enough for your refusal to make a difference. The Hampels were less positioned than you are. They had postcards. You have more than that. The question they answered at their kitchen table, and the question in front of you now, is not whether your witness will be measurable in your lifetime. It is whether you will stand witness anyway.

They didn’t know, when the guillotine fell, that we would be speaking their names. They acted anyway. That is the whole lesson. The meaning of a small refusal is not what it accomplishes in the week you make it. The meaning is that it enters the record of what human beings did when it was hard. Someone, later, will find it. Someone always does.

To read more: Hans Fallada, Every Man Dies Alone (Melville House, 2009). The U.S. edition includes an extraordinary appendix reproducing pages from the actual Gestapo file – the Hampels’ mug shots, their handwriting, several of the original postcards. In the UK the same novel was published as Alone in Berlin. The 2016 film Alone in Berlin, starring Emma Thompson and Brendan Gleeson, is faithful to the arc of the story and a fine ninety-minute introduction. For a concise historical account, the couple’s Wikipedia entry under “Otto and Elise Hampel” is solid and well-sourced.

(Contributed by Gwyllm Llwydd)