.

“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

What the Pope’s encyclical on AI means for the city building it

Vatican Pope Encyclical
Pope Leo XIV, center, speaks with Anthropic co-founder Christopher Olah, right, and theologian Anna Rowlands on May 25 during the presentation of his first encyclical.Alessandra Tarantino/Associated Press

On the morning of May 25, Pope Leo XIV released “Magnifica humanitas: On Safeguarding the Human Person in the Time of Artificial Intelligence,” his sweeping first encyclical.

By 5 a.m., Dr. Mark Shiffman, a professor of philosophy at Saint Patrick’s Seminary in Menlo Park and the founding director of the Institute for Philosophy, Technology, and Politics, was already awake and reading it.

In San Francisco, he wasn’t alone. I’ve spent the last month in conversation about this document and the questions swirling around it — most notably, what AI means for our humanity.

What I’ve found is a faith community that was already deep in this discussion before the encyclical landed — and a city with a particular reason to take it seriously.

San Francisco has always been a city of believers. It was built around missions, shaped by parishes, its hills dotted with steeples. It attracted the optimistic toting nothing more than gold pans and hope.

Eventually, tech became the dominant faith, with its own missionaries and orthodoxies — and its own conviction that this time, we’ve found the thing that will save us.

Now the actual Catholic Church has something to say about that — and people here are listening differently than they might anywhere else.

Eleven of the country’s top 20 AI companies are headquartered in The City. The people building this technology drop their kids off at our preschools, drive our streets, fill our pews. When the Pope speaks about AI, San Francisco is the room where it’s happening.

“This is a unifying issue where we have this responsibility to speak out because we are talking about the nature of humanity,” said Michael Pappas, the executive director of the San Francisco Interfaith Council.

What’s striking, when talking to faith leaders across traditions, is how long they’ve already been having this conversation.

Rabbi Sarah Parris of Congregation Emanu-El preached about AI at High Holidays three years ago. Her commute to temple along Stanyan, regularly snarled by Cruise vehicles navigating their training routes, had become its own philosophical provocation. What does it mean to share a road with something that drives “perfectly,” yet somehow wrong?

Now she’s planning a full conference at Emanu-El in January: sessions on AI and Jewish ethics, AI and medicine, and AI and online antisemitism, with space built in for congregants who work in tech to actually talk to each other.

“No single person can answer these ethical questions,” Parris told me. “It is only by being in conversation and in community, with the right ethical text in front of you, that progress can be made.”

That’s what the encyclical clarified, even for those already engaged. Shiffman described it as giving people a map. Before “Magnifica Humanitas,” graduate students wanting to explore the implications of AI on warfare couldn’t find their footing.

“Now people know: Of I want to address this question, I’m either agreeing with this or disagreeing with this, or pushing it forward,” he said.

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That guidance from the Vatican is welcomed by teachers having to adapt quickly to how AI is shaping young minds. Sharon McCarthy Allen, the principal at St. Stephen School, described AI as a blessing and a curse.

“We have to be sure that we are upholding the dignity of each human being, specifically when it comes to our children and educating them,” she said. “AI is not going to help them with critical-thinking skills. We don’t want AI to take away their creativity.”

Not everyone in the pews is on board with that framing. At a tech industry party in the weeks after the encyclical’s release, I found myself in conversation with a practicing Catholic who works in AI, someone whose faith and professional life sit in direct proximity to everything the Pope was writing about.

His read: Leo got it wrong. AI, he told me emphatically, is going to solve everything. Suffering itself would become optional.

I asked whether he’d read Aldous Huxley’s “Brave New World.” He had not.

It felt like a parable of the moment — the gap between the people building this technology and the centuries of moral philosophy that exist specifically to ask what we lose when we eliminate struggle, imperfection and the friction of being human.

That question is exactly what Shiffman and his colleagues are trained for, and what Parris explored in her 2023 sermon, drawing on Jewish tradition’s insight that imperfection isn’t a bug in the human design, it’s a feature.

“There is value in the learning, growing, and changing that we all do each day,” she said during the sermon.

At the Vatican ceremony, Anthropic co-founder Chris Olah made a striking admission: that AI labs, including his own, operate inside incentives that sometimes conflict with doing the right thing.

“No matter how sincerely any of us intend to do the right thing — and I believe many of us do — we will always be influenced by those incentives,” he said.

He invited external moral pressure — voices the market can’t bend.

San Francisco’s faith communities are volunteering for exactly that. Sometimes this city ships things before they’re fully baked. The implications of AI, however, might be too consequential to accommodate that startup worldview.

“The question isn’t about what AI takes away from humanity by doing it better than we do,” Parris said in 2023. “The question is about how we can continue to be who we are alongside AI.”

Fourth-generation San Franciscan Ali Wunderman is an award-winning travel, food and culture writer. She lives in Nob Hill with her two rescue dogs and can often be found at John’s Grill enjoying a dirty martini.

UN Creates ‘AI for Good’ Commission—Full of Big Tech Execs

World Economic Forum 2025

The CEO of the software company Salesforce, Marc Benioff, attends the 55th annual meeting of the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland on January 23, 2025.

 (Photo by Halil Sagirkaya/Anadolu via Getty Images)

The commission’s upcoming first meeting will focus on “strengthening AI infrastructure, accelerating AI’s impact on health, education, food security, and disaster response, and ensuring trust and safety,” said its CEO co-chair.

Jessica Corbett

Jul 01, 2026 ( CommonDreams.org)

A week after United Nations Secretary-General António Guterres called on artificial intelligence companies to “come clean” about the full costs of power-sucking data centers, and as a UN panel on Wednesday released a report detailing the risks and impacts of AI, Axios revealed the creation of a related commission that’s full of Big Tech executives.

The UN and its International Telecommunication Union (ITU) are convening the AI for Good Global Commission, which will hold its first meeting on July 8 in Geneva, Switzerland,” according to the outlet. It will be co-chaired by Salesforce CEO Marc Benioff and Rwandan President Paul Kagame, with other tech and policy leaders joining as members.

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So far, Axios reported, they include ITU Secretary-General Doreen Bogdan-Martin, Estonian President Alar Karis, Amazon CEO Andy Jassy, Anthropic co-founder Jack Clark, Cohere co-founder Aidan Gomez, Microsoft president Brad Smith, Nvidia founder and CEO Jensen Huang, and AI and tech policymakers from Kazakhstan, Namibia, NigeriaSaudi Arabia, and Singapore.

“AI is the most profound technological transition in history. And our values have to guide every step, because responsibility is the core of AI ethics,” Benioff said. The commission will bring together “the people who build AI, deploy it, shape policy, and represent communities.”

He added that “our inaugural meeting will focus on where this group is uniquely positioned to act together: strengthening AI infrastructure, accelerating AI’s impact on health, education, food security, and disaster response, and ensuring trust and safety.”

However, given recent polls showing that the public has limited confidence in large technology companies, opposes constructing data centers for artificial intelligence in their local area, is wary of AI’s impact on daily life, and has concerns about politicians having a “cozy relationship” with Big Tech, the commission may be met with skepticism or even backlash.

In the lead-up to the commission’s meeting next week at the ITU’s AI for Good Global Summit, the UN plans to hold the inaugural Global Dialogue on AI Governance, featuring a presentation of the “Preliminary Report of the Independent International Scientific Panel on Artificial Intelligence,” published Wednesday.

Established with a UN resolution last August, the panel is the first global scientific body on AI—and, as Guterres said in a statement about its new report, “the panel is intended to help the world separate fact from fakes, and science from slop.”

“We are looking to them to provide an authoritative reference point at a moment when reliable, unbiased understanding of AI has never been more critical,” the UN chief explained. “I am pleased to say that they have delivered a down payment on that commitment—in record time.”

The panel’s co-chair, Canadian computer scientist Yoshua Bengio, noted that “AI capabilities are outpacing both scientific understanding and governments’ ability to adapt. With growing evidence of deceptive AI behavior, science currently cannot guarantee that as capabilities continue to increase, AI will not cause catastrophic harm, either on its own or due to malicious users.”

“To act effectively, global policymakers must understand these systems,” he asserted. “This panel provides exactly that: a rigorous, shared scientific foundation to guide our collective way forward.”

X post: https://x.com/Yoshua_Bengio/status/2072350544056688935?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw%7Ctwcamp%5Etweetembed%7Ctwterm%5E2072350544056688935%7Ctwgr%5Ee033766e6320b4d16a47505a3796272a63d23f99%7Ctwcon%5Es1_c10&ref_url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.commondreams.org%2Fnews%2Funited-nations-ai

The report discusses AI’s recent advances and expected trajectories; societal applications, from agriculture to education to healthcare; economic implications; security and environmental concerns; impacts on democracyhuman rights, and information; potential harms to child safety and culture; and governance of the rapidly developing technology.

“The technology is transformative, but if the world keeps moving along this trajectory, humanity will fail to realize the gains it promises. The risks—to societies, to security, and to our species—are too high, and the forces driving AI forward are not the forces that will deliver its benefits,” said Maria Ressa, a panel’s co-chair and Nobel Peace Prize-winning Filipino-American journalist.

Guterres, whose term ends this year, similarly stressed the need for urgent action on a global scale. He said that the “single lesson” he wanted to highlight from the multifaceted report is that “the more AI advances without shared rules, the less say governments and people will have in the outcome. So my message to governments is simple: Do not wait.”

“Next week in Geneva, the first Global Dialogue on AI Governance will begin to turn science into shared action—with every nation at the same table,” he said. “I look forward to joining member states there to help carry this work forward. And soon, I will set out proposals to help countries build the capacity to adequately deal with this technology—and share in its rewards.”

Guterres’ Wednesday comments came after he publicly took aim at artificial intelligence companies last week, proposing the AI Environmental Transparency Initiative during London Climate Action Week, as the second heatwave in as many months scorched the United Kingdom and various other European countries, killing at least hundreds of people.

“I am calling on every major AI company to measure and publicly disclose the full environmental impact of its systems—carbon, water, and land footprints—and to commit to power every data center with renewable energy by 2030,” he declared. “No more hidden costs. No more shifting the burden onto those least able to bear it.”

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

Jessica Corbett

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

Full Bio >

Netanyahu Claims He Doesn’t Want Any More American Aid. Why Are Top Democrats Trying to Keep It Flowing?

Benjamin Netanyahu

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu speaks at a news conference in Jerusalem on June 15, 2026. 

(Photo by Ronen Zvulun/Pool/AFP via Getty Images)

“It should be a no-brainer: Our tax dollars should not fund a genocide,” said Democratic Rep. Ilhan Omar, who supports an amendment to cut off $3.3 billion in military aid to Israel.

Jake Johnson

Jul 01, 2026 (CommonDreams.org)

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Tuesday compared US aid to “welfare” and said he wants it to end, remarks that came as top Democrats in the US House of Representatives expressed opposition to an amendment that would cut off $3.3 billion in American military assistance to Israel.

“I want to stop American aid,” Netanyahu said during a televised event in Israel on Tuesday, saying he wants the US aid phaseout to begin this year. “We can finance ourselves.”

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In recent weeks, amid growing US public backlash against continued military aid to Israel as its military commits atrocities in Gaza and throughout the Middle East, Netanyahu has signaled a desire to “shift the framework” of the US-Israeli relationship “from aid to partnership,” as the prime minister put it in a June 1 letter to US Rep. Marlin Stutzman (R-Ind.).

“Israel deeply appreciates the financial component of the military aid the United States has generously provided us over the years,” Netanyahu wrote in the letter. “The time has now arrived for us to move from aid recipient to partner.”

Netanyahu’s stated vision aligns with legislative text included in annual US defense policy legislation, which would deepen integration of the American and Israeli militaries. Earlier this week, the Republican-controlled House Rules Committee refused to allow a floor vote on an amendment by Reps. Thomas Massie (R-Ky.) and Ro Khanna (D-Calif.) that proposed stripping the integration measure from the bill, which is currently moving through Congress.

But the rules panel is allowing a full House vote on a separate Massie-led amendment that would prevent any US State Department or national security appropriations from being “obligated or expended for Israel” in the coming fiscal year. The amendment would specifically cut off the $3.3 billion in assistance Israel is slated to receive via the Foreign Military Financing Program in 2027.

Massie’s proposal has spotlighted a consequential rift in the House Democratic caucus, even as an overwhelming majority of Democratic voters support ending US aid to the Israeli government.

Prominent progressives—including Reps. Greg Casar (D-Texas), Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-NY), and Ilhan Omar (D-Minn.)—have said they plan to vote yes on the amendment, which could come to a vote next week.

“It should be a no-brainer: Our tax dollars should not fund a genocide,” Omar, the deputy chair of the Congressional Progressive Caucus, said Tuesday. “We cannot continue to be complicit in Israel’s crimes against humanity.”

But top Democrats, including the ranking members of key committees, are opposed to the Massie amendment, which is unlikely to get through the Republican-controlled House. Few Republicans are expected to support Massie’s proposal.

“I don’t want Israel to be without what they need,” Rep. Gregory Meeks (D-NY), the top Democrat on the House Foreign Affairs Committee, told Jewish Insider earlier this week, following a closed-door House Democratic caucus meeting.

Rep. Adam Smith (D-Wash.), the top Democrat on the House Armed Services Committee, said he is “against” the Massie proposal because it would cut off “all aid for Israel.”

“I don’t think there’s support for it,” Smith added, “but we’ll see.”

House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries (D-NY), who is staunchly pro-Israel and a recipient of AIPAC campaign cash, has not publicly taken a position on the Massie amendment.

The Hill reported that the House Democratic leadership told caucus members during Tuesday’s private meeting to “vote according to their conscience” on the amendment, as some members expressed concerns about the proposal’s broad scope and the process by which it is being brought to a vote.

Casar, the chair of the Congressional Progressive Caucus, acknowledged earlier this week that—if passed—the amendment “may cut off both military weapons (~$3.3 billion) and some diplomatic funding (~$50 million).”

“While I would prefer to vote on an amendment that stripped just military funding,” Casar wrote on social media, “I think opposing the billions in military funding is what’s most important here.”

Speaking to MS NOW earlier this week, Casar said that “it’s really important for members to recognize that, while a relatively very small amount of diplomatic funding could be implicated on the amendment… virtually all of the money is military financing that the Israeli military has used to buy fighter planes and attack helicopters.”

“You’re going to see a growing number of Democrats come out against sending more money for weapons for Netanyahu’s military,” Casar predicted. “In the past, it was just a very, very small number. You could count on maybe one or two hands how many members of Congress would vote against sending the Israeli military money for more weapons.”

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.

Full Bio >

Anthropic ban not the AI curb that’s needed, security experts say

Dario Amodei
Anthropic — led by CEO and co-founder Dario Amodei — closed a $13 billion venture-funding deal in September, the largest in the quarter and one of the largest ever.Jeff Chiu/Associated Press

When it comes to artificial intelligence, President Donald Trump’s second administration has taken a decidedly antiregulatory stance — until this month. 

One of Trump’s first moves in his second term was to ditch the modest AI safety guidelines issued by his predecessor, Joe Biden. After Congress over the summer overwhelmingly rejected a proposal to ban new state laws and roll back existing ones governing the technology, the president issued an executive order seeking to do just that

But in recent weeks — in the wake of San Francisco-based Anthropic warning that its newest model, Mythos, represents a dangerous cybersecurity threat — Trump’s administration seems to have embraced the need to control the technology.

The administration’s moves — including what amounts to a ban on Anthropic’s Mythos and a preclearance regime for OpenAI — go well beyond anything the Biden administration put in place. 

“It’s certainly a landmark about-face in the attitude that the [Trump] administration has about AI,” said Anthony Aguirre, CEO of the Future of Life Institute, a nonprofit focusing on trying to prevent AI from causing large-scale harm.

The Mythos ban in particular, he said, is a “180-degree shift in how they’re treating AI.”

There have been growing calls in recent years to regulate AI. Members of the public, advocacy groups, legal experts, politicians and even people within the industry have pushed for laws or rules that would prevent AI models from doing harmful things such as encouraging teen suicidescreating nonconsensual sexual deepfakes, exploiting computer vulnerabilities, or creating bioweapons or other weapons of mass destruction

But regulatory and security experts are dubious about the rationale, legality and effectiveness of the administration’s recent moves to constrain the technology, particularly the ban on Mythos.

“My problem is not so much that they’ve changed their minds,” said Alan Rozenshtein, a law professor at the University of Minnesota law school, “it’s just that I have no confidence in the policymaking apparatus of this administration.”

While the administration might have been acting out of real concern about the model’s cybersecurity implications, it has given little public justification for its move, there doesn’t seem to be a coherent process undergirding it, and there’s reason to believe it might have been driven as much by animosity toward Anthropic as anything else, those experts told The Examiner.

Because of the importance of AI technology and its implications on society and the economy, it’s no surprise that the Trump administration has changed its mind about regulating it, said Alan Rozenshtein, a law professor at the University of Minnesota law school who focuses on technology policy.

“My problem is not so much that they’ve changed their minds,” Rozenshtein said. “It’s just that I have no confidence in the policymaking apparatus of this administration.”

Anthropic rolled out a preview of Mythos in early April. Warning that the model was particularly good at finding and taking advantage of previously unknown computer-software vulnerabilities, the company initially limited access to a handful of companies and organizations to use for defensive purposes.

The release of the model reportedly set off alarm bells in the Trump administration, which quickly reversed its previous deregulatory stance.   

First, the president issued an executive order on June 2 calling for a process by which AI developers could voluntarily submit their models for evaluation by the federal government

Then, on June 9, administration officials held a secret meeting with AI companies — pointedly not including Anthropic — about developing a process for reviewing cutting-edge AI models before they’ve been released, according to The Information.

That same day, Anthropic publicly released a version of Mythos called Fable 5 to which it had added safeguards. It made available to select organizations a more capable version called Mythos 5.

Three days later, the administration put an export control on both models that effectively blocks the company from allowing anyone to use either one.

Sam Altman, CEO of Anthropic’s cross-town rival OpenAI, told employees Wednesday the company would initially provide limited access to its newest model, GPT 5.6, in response to a request from the administration, The Information reported.

Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick had warned Altman earlier in the week to get sign-off from other government agencies before releasing the model, according to the report.

The reason many regulatory and security experts are doubtful about the rationale for the Mythos ban is that it came mere months after Anthropic got into a dispute with the administration over the use of its models by the military. The company tried to forbid its technology from being used for domestic surveillance or fully autonomous weapons.

In reaction to that dispute, Trump ordered the federal government to cut ties with the company. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth designated it a supply-chain risk, threatening its relationships with other government contractors.

Although a Pentagon official said in May the administration’s concern about Mythos is a “separate” issue, many experts doubt that’s true.

Soon after Anthropic released its Mythos preview and announced the model had found a collection of previously undiscovered vulnerabilities, security researchers elsewhere said they’d found that other models that were already available, including OpenAI’s GPT 5.5, had similar or even greater capabilities.

But the administration didn’t seek to block those models — although it did later seek to limit the release of more advanced OpenAI models.

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“Pretty sure this government is mad at Anthropic and this is, like, the hammer they found,” said Bruce Schneier, a renowned cybersecurity expert who is a lecturer at Harvard’s Kennedy School. “I don’t think we can read any policy into the administration.”

“Pretty sure this government is mad at Anthropic and this is, like, the hammer they found,” said Bruce Schneier, a cybersecurity expert and lecturer at the Harvard Kennedy School.

Experts also questioned the legality of the export controls the administration slapped on the Mythos models.

In his letter to Anthropic announcing the export controls, Lutnick cited a collection of laws and regulations seemingly giving him the authority to take that step. But some of the rules he cited appear irrelevant in this case, and he declined to name other regulations that might have given him clearer authority in the matter, said Bahrad Sokhansanj, a senior research scholar at the Institute for Law & AI, a nonpartisan think tank. 

Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick, right and President Donald Trump — seen in the Oval Office on June 11 — have both played roles in the White House’s dustup with Anthropic.Jacquelyn Martin/AP Photo

One big objection to the use of an export control to block Mythos is that there’s good reason to think that such measures aren’t applicable in this case, the experts said. 

For nearly two decades, the Bureau of Industry and Security, which oversees such controls, has taken the position that digital services accessed in the cloud don’t involve exporting the underlying software or technology, so access to them can’t be blocked with export controls. 

Mythos and other closed-source artificial-intelligence models are essentially cloud-based services. Consumers interact with them via web interfaces or apps. Businesses tap into them using application programming interfaces. Data is sent to the models via those APIs, and the models return responses, but the underlying technology is never transferred. 

There’s a bill in Congress now that would extend export controls to cover APIs, suggesting that Congress doesn’t believe the BIS currently has that power, Rozenshtein said.

“It’s not clear even under what authority this export control is being issued,” he said.

Additionally, the regulations cited by Lutnick typically require investigations and detailed findings, which the administration seems to have skipped over entirely, Sokhansanj said. Also, before putting in place severe measures such as the one they took, officials are supposed to explore whether there are less-restrictive options that would involve less harm to American companies, he said.

“There’s no indication they went through any of this kind of analysis, and there’s no way they could have, because this stuff takes time,” Sokhansanj said.

But even if the move to slap export controls on the Mythos models was warranted and legal, at least some of the experts doubted their effectiveness. Other models that appear to be just as capable at finding and exploiting computer vulnerabilities as the Mythos ones are already available, the experts said.

Even if the Mythos models have some capabilities that go beyond other current models, AI development in this area is proceeding so rapidly that other models will likely obtain those capabilities within months, they said. 

“If the goal is a safety one … I don’t know if it will actually be helpful,” said Elizaeth Seger, a senior policy advisor at the Tony Blair Institute, a U.K.-based public-policy think tank, of the export controls. 

“It’s really only a matter of time before we start seeing equivalent capabilities that are made openly available on global markets for anyone to use and build off of,” she said.

AI technology does pose real dangers, the experts said. The U.S. government should be taking them seriously and taking steps to protect the public, they said. But many of the experts said that doing so would likely involve Congress writing laws and a democratic process of figuring out the appropriate regulations, rather than the reactive, seemingly one-off process the Trump administration is following.

AI technology does pose real dangers, the experts said. The U.S. government should be taking them seriously and taking steps to protect the public.

A big part of the problem with the way the administration has gone about AI regulation is that there’s no transparency, said Amos Toh, a senior counsel at the Brennan Center for Justice, a left-leaning policy think tank at New York University’s law school. Ideally, there would be a publicly determined and disclosed process for testing new models, evaluating the risks they pose and deciding how to mitigate those risks, he said.

“All of these questions need to be sorted out — and not behind closed doors,” Toh said.

But Congress hasn’t stepped forward to create that process. And the administration has been gutting the very agencies that would be necessary for overseeing that process, the experts said, most notably the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency.   

The Trump administration now seems to have dropped its laissez-faire, pro-AI industry approach. Pressure from the public and increasing risks from AI models will likely push it and Congress to go farther down the road toward regulation, some of the experts said.

The public has become very skeptical of AI technology and overwhelmingly supports regulating it, Aguirre said. The questions that remain are what form regulation will take, whether the process will remain ad hoc and, in the end, how effective it will be.

“I think ultimately, public concern about this is not going to go away,” Aguirre said.

If you have a tip about tech, startups or the venture industry, contact Troy Wolverton at twolverton@sfexaminer.com or via text or Signal at (415) 515-5594.

Trump Suffers Rare Supreme Court Setback on Mail-in Ballot Due Dates

Amy Coney Barrett, George W. Bush Presidential Center
US Supreme Court Justice Amy Coney Barrett speaking at the George W. Bush Presidential Center about her journey to the Supreme Court in Dallas, TX, on May 4, 2026. Photo credit: George W. Bush Presidential Center / Flickr (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0)

Courts

Klaus Marre 06/29/26 (whowhatwhy.org)

The Supreme Court on Monday upheld a Mississippi law that allows properly postmarked ballots received up to five days after Election Day to still be counted. Donald Trump didn’t take the news well.

Donald Trump reacted to a rare Supreme Court loss on Monday with a social media rant and a renewed call on the Senate to pass a voter suppression bill that would eliminate most voting by mail.

Earlier in the day, the court had ruled in a narrow 5-4 decision, in which Chief Justice John Roberts and Justice Amy Coney Barrett sided with their three liberal colleagues, that properly postmarked mail-in ballots arriving after Election Day must be counted.

Stating that the Founding Fathers had realized that writing election laws covering any possible future scenario posed a major challenge and therefore “decided that ‘a discretionary power over elections’ needed to be lodged ‘somewhere,’” Barrett wrote for the majority that “suffice it to say, that power was not lodged in this Court.”

She noted that statutes defining Election Day “say nothing about ballot receipt,” and declared that “we cannot add to the words Congress chose.”

As a result, the court upheld a Mississippi law granting a grace period of five days for ballots postmarked by Election Day.

Trump, who has been on a warpath against mail-in voting, which he blames for his 2020 election loss that he still fails to accept, took to social media shortly afterwards to call the decision a “tremendous loss.”

The president used the opportunity to demand that the Senate pass the SAVE America Act, which would impose new voter ID and proof of citizenship requirements on Americans, millions of whom would not be able to meet them even though they are eligible by law to vote.

In addition, the legislation would also ban almost all types of mail-in voting.

Making up a non-existent threat of a “powerful Communist Movement” in the US that, according to the president, is “more dangerous than World War I, World War II, Pearl Harbor, or September 11th,” he called on Republican senators opposed to passing the bill and/or eliminating the filibuster to do so to bend to his will in light of the decision.

Even though the Supreme Court ruled against him, Trump’s allegations of “election fraud” — which he has never been able to back up with any kind of evidence — and the GOP’s subsequent efforts to help him undermine democracy, bled into Barrett’s decision.

“Election fraud and its appearance are serious issues. Like other such issues, however, they must be addressed through the democratic process,” Barrett wrote. “The election-day statutes are proof of concept: When voting on different days in different States sparked allegations of fraud, Congress set a nationally uniform deadline for voting. If varied deadlines for ballot receipt similarly call for a national solution, the American people must choose it through their elected representatives.”

Unfortunately, many of those representatives, i.e., most Republicans, are now adherents of Trump’s Big Lie. This means that, whether out of ignorance or political calculation, they are willing to help the president change election laws in a way that they hope will give them an advantage.

Therefore, this narrow ruling, while important, is merely a reprieve as Trump’s assault on democracy continues.

  • Klaus Marre Klaus Marre, a former congressional reporter, is a senior editor for US politics at WhoWhatWhy. He writes regularly here, and you can also follow him on Bluesky and Substack.

Is NYC Really More Progressive Than San Francisco?

by Randy Shaw on June 29, 2026 (BeyondChron.org)

Mayors Don’t Tell Full Story

Last week, New York City voters turned the city into Mamdani Land. Longtime incumbent Democrats were defeated by more progressive challengers. The huge DSA-backed election wins offered a sharp contrast with San Francisco, where the left is faltering politically. But while San Francisco has never had a DSA mayor, is New York City really more progressive?

We think not. Here’s why.

SF’s Stronger Tenant Protections

I see the core definition of “progressive” as supporting policies that allow low-income, working-class and middle-class people to live in a city. A city can pass progressive laws for transit, parks and public safety but if its housing prices prevent the non-affluent from living there it is not progressive.

I described in Generation Priced Out how even under progressive New York City mayor Bill de Blasio tenants in vulnerable communities like Crown Heights faced displacement and gentrification. Tenants were threatened with the loss of their homes under circumstances where San Francisco’s laws would protect them. New York City still maintains a loophole for renovation evictions that do not happen in San Francisco. Tens of thousands of New York City tenants are impacted.

Non-affluent tenants remain in San Francisco because the city has the strongest rent control and just cause eviction laws of any major city. New York City still has a way to go.

Mayor Mamdani recognizes that tenants need greater protections. He created a Mayor’s Office to Protect Tenants and appointed Cea Weaver as its first Director. Weaver was the Crown Heights organizer featured in my book. She is a tireless and savvy advocate for tenants. Backed by the mayor, she will make a huge difference.

Mamdani’s New York City has already begun ncreasing tenant protections. Last Thursday the Rent Guidelines Board  froze rents on one and two year rent stabilized leases. It was an historic victory for New York City tenants. Sumathy Kumar, the executive director of New York State Tenant Bloc, told the popular news site Hell Gate that “Mamdani ‘popularized the call’ for a rent freeze. He took up the call that tenants had been making for a really long time, and exposed thousands, millions of people to it.’”

The title of the Hell Gate story says it all: “Tenant Hell Has Frozen Over.”

SF Better Protects SRO Tenants

San Francisco also better protects SRO tenants. On May 21, 2026 it was reported that longtime SRO tenants in a Bowery hotel were being forced out by illegal demolitions and renovations. San Francisco has not seen a similar pattern of conduct since the mid-1980’s.

According to the story:

Over the past decade, the number of SRO units in Lower Manhattan—and specifically on the Bowery—have […] plummeted. There was the former Sunshine Hotel at 245 Bowery, which now houses a cocktail bar and office spaces, and the Whitehouse, at 340 Bowery, which has been converted into a micro-boutique hotel. SROs are endangered partly because landlords have found new ways to evict tenants and convert their buildings into properties they can rent out at market rates. If a tenant vacates the unit, the landlord may rent it to transient hotel guests at whatever price they set.”

I spent years getting laws passed and filing lawsuits for the Tenderloin Housing Clinic to protect San Francisco’s supply of residential SRO’s and SRO tenants. In San Francisco, legal hotel conversions must give lifetime leases to existing tenants.

San Francisco doesn’t allow residential SRO’s to become boutique hotels without meeting very steep conversion requirements. Which is how San Francisco maintained its residential hotel stock whereas New York City has not.

SF Allows Local Ballot Measures

San Francisco’s strong, progressive tenant protection laws were primarily passed by voters. Giving voters a chance to set policy may be the best example of San Francisco offering a more progressive version of democracy than New York City. New York City prevents voters from gathering signatures for local initiatives.

Ballot measures have made San Francisco a more inclusive city. And a more progressive city. Voters raised the city’s minimum wage, expanded free child care and earmarked hundreds of millions of dollars to address homelessness. It was voters who put a cap on unrestricted downtown development with Prop M in 1986.

The ability to circumvent politicians and go directly to voters has been a driving force behind a more democratic and progressive San Francisco. But San Francisco “moderates” are now trying to limit voter-initiated ballot measures. They claim to want to address  an allegedly overcrowded ballot. The real goal is to choke off a vehicle for progressive policies. One that New York City has sorely lacked.

Electing Politicians vs. Passing Laws

New York City easily outpaces San Francisco when it comes to electing self-proclaimed progressive mayors. Labor-backed Bill de Blasio was elected in 2013 with over 73% of the vote. Despite constant media attacks on his leadership, the left-wing de Blasio was re-elected in 2017 with over 66%.

The only reason moderate Eric Adams won in 2022 was the left’s failure to field a strong consensus candidate. When they remedied this in 2025, Zohran Mamdani got slightly over 50% of the vote in a three-way race.

San Francisco has not elected a self-identified progressive mayor since Art Agnos in 1987. Matt Gonzalez would have given San Francisco a Green Party mayor but narrowly lost to Newsom in a 2003 runoff despite being massively outspent.

Mayors Willie Brown and Ed Lee backed many progressive laws and policies. In most cities their policies would have placed them solidly in the progressive camp. But in San Francisco neither were considered “progressive.” Nor was Gavin Newsom, despite opening the door for marriage equality.

San Francisco’s initiative process has brought progressive change without “progressive” mayors. New York City’s lack of an initiative process has slowed progressive policies despite electing progressive mayors.

Where NYC is More Progressive

Ironically, one area where New York City is more progressive than San Francisco is in its network of bike lanes.  And that was brought about by Mayor Michael Bloomberg, not a progressive.

To be clear, Bloomberg’s greatest legacy as mayor was upzoning neighborhoods to facilitate displacement and gentrification while downzoning affluent neighborhoods. But he fully backed Janette Sadik-Khan’s creation of a top-notch bicycling infrastructure.

Bloomberg also promoted New York City’s far superior use of public spaces. Compare New York City’s incredibly active Bryant Park to San Francisco’s far less busy Civic Center Park. Both have a history of being dominated by public drug use. But since being cleared Bryant Park is regularly filled with people and Civic Center Park is not.

New York City also gets credit for a vastly superior subway system, network of public pools and many high quality public parks. This progressive infrastructure goes back to the New Deal.

The contrast between New York City’s Mayor Mamdani and San Francisco Mayor Daniel Lurie is striking. But for now, when it comes to city policies and laws, San Francisco is more progressive.

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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Supreme Court Blocking Trump Birthright Citizen Attack a ‘Real Relief,’ But Also ‘Bare Minimum’

A protester holds a sign reading "birthright citizenship is a right" outside the supreme court

Demonstrators rally in support of birthright citizenship outside the US Supreme Court in Washington, DC on April 1, 2026.

 (Photo by Kent Nishimura/AFP via Getty Images)

“Birthright citizenship is protected today. But the workers whose children depend on it still face deportation, worksite raids, and an administration that has made clear it will use every tool available to make immigrant workers afraid, isolated, and stripped of their rights,” said one campaigner.

Brett Wilkins

Jun 30, 2026

The US Supreme Court on Tuesday struck down President Donald Trump’s executive order that sought to deny automatic citizenship to children born in the United States to undocumented parents, preserving 150 years of birthright citizenship under the 14th Amendment and dealing a major blow to the administration’s xenophobic agenda.

“Children born in the United States to parents unlawfully or temporarily present are ‘subject to the jurisdiction’ of the United States and are citizens at birth under the 14th Amendment’s citizenship clause,” the high court held in Trump v. Barbara.

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The 6-3 decision roundly rejected an executive order issued by Trump on the first day of his second term that sought to deny US citizenship for babies born in the United States to parents who are either unlawfully in the United States or legally living in the country on temporary visas.

Every lower court rejected the order. Just three days after its issuance, US District Judge John Coughenour, an appointee of former President Ronald Reagan, blasted it as “blatantly unconstitutional.”

A majority of the right-wing Supreme Court agreed.

“Citizenship, then and now, was the right to have rights—to freely participate in our political community. The framers of the 14th Amendment extended that promise to ‘every free-born person in this land,’” Chief Justice John Roberts wrote for the court. “We keep that promise today.”

Roberts was joined in the majority by Justices Sonia Sotomayor, Elena Kagan, Amy Coney Barrett, and Ketanji Brown Jackson, with Justice Brett Kavanaugh writing a separate concurring opinion agreeing that Trump’s executive order was unlawful but basing his reasoning on federal immigration law rather than the 14th Amendment.

“As revealed by the court’s opinion with its detailed account of history and precedent, and by the weighty and thoughtful dissents, the constitutional issue is far more complicated than the statutory issue,” Kavanaugh wrote.

Justices Samuel AlitoClarence Thomas, and Neil Gorsuch dissented.

“This is one of the most important decisions in the history of the court, and in my judgment, the court has made a serious mistake,” Alito wrote in his dissent. “As interpreted by the court today, the 14th Amendment confers citizenship on virtually everyone who happens to be born in this country, including the children of ‘birth tourists,’ women who come here solely for the purpose of giving birth to a child and then promptly return home.”

Alito further argued that the 14th Amendment “confers citizenship on only those children who, at birth, owe allegiance solely to this country.”

In a 91-page dissent more than three times longer than Roberts’ opinion, Thomas wrote that “the court adds to the sad history of the 14th Amendment, which was designed and understood to secure equal rights for the freed Blacks but has instead been repurposed for political projects that the Reconstruction Congress did not support.”

Trump took to his Truth Social network to lament, “The Supreme Court upheld Birthright Citizenship, which is too bad for our Country, but we can easily make it up in Congress through Legislation, with the support of the President, that has now been determined during this process.”

“No long and unwieldy Constitutional Amendment is necessary!” he added. “Congress should start TODAY to work on ending expensive and unfair to our Country, Birthright Citizenship. They will have my Complete and Total Support!”

Stephen Miller, Trump’s xenophobic deputy chief of staff, seethed on X that Trump v. Barbara is “one of the most destructive and outrageous decisions in the long history of the Supreme Court.”

“American citizenship is not the birthright of the world,” the white nationalist added. “It belongs only and solely to Americans. No provision of the Constitution can be read to require our national self-obliteration.”

Defenders of birthright citizenship and the Constitution welcomed the ruling.

“The Supreme Court affirmed what we know in our hearts and in our communities: The 14th Amendment extends the promise of citizenship to everyone born in the US Immigrants belong,” Congresswoman Delia C. Ramirez (D-Ill.), a birthright citizen, said on Bluesky. “No one can deny that immigrants today are also the inheritors of the promise of America—just like so many of my colleagues’ ancestors were.”

BlueSky: https://embed.bsky.app/embed/did:plc:kp5qfcszvb73kuoc35hydd6i/app.bsky.feed.post/3mpjeluh6xk2a?id=11711926964999286&ref_url=https%253A%252F%252Fwww.commondreams.org%252Fnews%252Fsupreme-court-birthright-citizenship-2677134238&colorMode=system

Congresswoman Ilhan Omar (D-Minn.), a former refugee from Somaliasaid on social media: “The Supreme Court just upheld birthright citizenship, blocking Trump’s attempt to dismantle the 14th Amendment and strip away a constitutional guarantee. If you were born here, you are an American citizen. The Constitution is clear. No one can change that.”

American Immigration Council senior fellow Aaron Reichlin-Melnick called the decision “the easiest of layups possible.”

Thomas Wolf, director of democracy initiatives at the Brennan Center for Justice at New York University School of Law, said that “the court could not have defensibly ruled any differently.”

“The 14th Amendment guaranteed citizenship to everyone born here over 150 years ago,” he added. “The Supreme Court affirmed that 20 years later in Wong Kim Ark.”

https://twitter.com/i/broadcasts/1OxwbbZavMoJB

ACLU national legal director Cecilia Wang, a birthright citizen who argued the case before the Supreme Court, said the decision “reaffirms a fundamental American promise—if you are born here, you are a citizen. A president cannot change the Constitution by executive fiat.”

Neidi Dominguez, executive director of the multiracial advocacy group Organized Power in Numbers, said that “today the Supreme Court reaffirmed a constitutional right that should never have been in question.”

“Birthright citizenship was guaranteed through the passage of the 14th Amendment after the Civil War, when formerly enslaved Africans and their allies fought to access equal rights and affirm that children born in the United States have citizenship regardless of where their parents come from,” she noted. “That right survives today.”

“But let us be clear about what happened here,” Dominguez continued. “The Trump administration tried to narrow the definition of citizenship and the access to the rights that come with it, and even this Supreme Court disagreed. This is a real relief, and it is welcome. It is also the bare minimum.”

“The same court that today defended birthright citizenship last week stripped legal protections from more than 350,000 Haitian and Syrian workers with [temporary protected status] and opened the door to doing the same to up to 1.3 million people,” she said. “Earlier this term, it cleared the way for mass layoffs of tens of thousands of federal workers. Working people are not safe because one constitutional right survived. They are fighting on every front.”

“Birthright citizenship is protected today. But the workers whose children depend on it still face deportation, worksite raids, and an administration that has made clear it will use every tool available to make immigrant workers afraid, isolated, and stripped of their rights,” Dominguez added. “Employers cannot stay silent while the workers they depend on are stripped of their rights one ruling at a time. We are not done fighting.”

X post: https://x.com/ImmDef/status/2071986054190530694?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw%7Ctwcamp%5Etweetembed%7Ctwterm%5E2071986054190530694%7Ctwgr%5Edb27201854e2781b028b3a514d4739726d159d52%7Ctwcon%5Es1_c10&ref_url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.commondreams.org%2Fnews%2Fsupreme-court-birthright-citizenship-2677134238

Virginia Kase Solomón, president and CEO of the pro-democracy group Common Cause, issued a statement saying, “While we welcome the court finally upholding a constitutional amendment ratified nearly two centuries ago, upholding the law is no cause for celebration, it is a requirement.”

“Let today be a stark reminder that this court continues to systematically dismantle voting protections for Black and brown communities, tilting the scales of justice toward a dark era where a wealthy, privileged few dictate the rules for the rest of us,” she added. “Today may be a brief victory for the rule of law, but our fight to protect our multiracial democracy continues.”

Wolf at the Brennan Center said that “today’s ruling is the right one amid an avalanche of Supreme Court opinions undermining our democracy.”

“In just the past few weeks alone, the court further undermined the Voting Rights Act, encouraged more aggressive partisan gerrymandering, dangerously expanded presidential power over federal agencies, and further depleted protections for immigrants,” he noted. “This ruling does not make up for all the damage the court has done this term.”

On Tuesday, the court also ruled that states may ban transgender girls from participating in sports at schools receiving public funding.

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

Brett Wilkins

Brett Wilkins is a staff writer for Common Dreams.

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Hillary Clinton and Trump’s Board of Peace for Gaza

Why would the former Democratic presidential nominee endorse one of Trump’s more grotesque ventures?

Robert Kuttnerby Robert Kuttner June 30, 2026 (Prospect.org)

President Donald Trump poses with other Board of Peace attendees
President Donald Trump, center, with Vice President JD Vance to his left, and Secretary of State Marco Rubio to his right, arrives for a Board of Peace meeting at the U.S. Institute of Peace, February 19, 2026, in Washington. Credit: Mark Schiefelbein/AP Photo

On Saturday, The Guardian published a leaked draft memo that would give Trump’s so-called “Board of Peace” and its contractors in Gaza blanket legal immunity from any charges of wrongdoing. The draft language would also let the organization obtain public property in Gaza “free of charge.” This is only the latest example of the crass power grab in Trump’s Gaza peace plan, which U.S. representatives strong-armed the U.N. Security Council into endorsing back in November 2025.

Meanwhile, on June 18, Hillary Rodham Clinton published an absolutely bizarre op-ed piece in the Financial Times endorsing Trump’s Board of Peace and its grand plans for Gaza. The op-ed was titled “The World May Not Like Trump’s Gaza Plan—but There Is No Alternative.”

Neither article has gotten much attention in U.S. media.

More from Robert Kuttner

Clinton wrote, “There is no alternative framework waiting in the wings. No rival coalition is quietly preparing a more viable proposal. The 20-point plan is not the one many of us would have drafted, but it remains the only framework backed by sufficient leverage, political engagement and potential resources to move the parties towards implementation.”

Say what? This is total malarkey. There had better be alternatives.

Trump’s Gaza design, a real estate grab masquerading as a peace plan and economic reconstruction, can move forward only in the context of total Israeli domination of Gaza and victory over Hamas and Hezbollah, goals that look less likely by the day. The Board of Peace epitomizes Trump’s corrupt conflation of his family financial interests with U.S. foreign policy.

Clinton went on: “The Board of Peace and the plan contain elements many governments dislike or disagree with. Some are uneasy with the political sequencing, sceptical of provisions on Palestinian governance and representation, or wary of placing trust in an American-led framework at a moment when confidence in U.S. leadership has eroded. Many are understandably sceptical of an approach so closely associated with Donald Trump.”

Well, yes!

She concluded, “Yet if even I, an implacable opponent of President Trump, can accept that this is the best option in a terrible situation, then surely others can too?”

With a different control structure, some of the elements of the 20-point plan do make sense, especially the rebuilding of infrastructure and other economic development—but not as a Trump family business. Moreover, any legitimate redevelopment of Gaza needs a substantial role for Palestinians, and as long as Benjamin Netanyahu is prime minister, that is a nonstarter. Even a post-Netanyahu government would likely resist.

Why on earth would Clinton, savaged in 2016 by Trump, who keeps trashing both her husband and the president, Barack Obama, whom she served as secretary of state, now be carrying water for him? And why now, when the entire Trump design for achieving regional hegemony by annihilating Iran has imploded?

The structure of the Board of Peace underscores the sheer corruption. Trump is “Chairman for Life,” even after he leaves the presidency. Other key members of the executive board are close-in Trump aides and cronies: son-in-law Jared Kushner, real estate and golfing buddy (and part-time failed diplomat) Steve Witkoff, Secretary of State Marco Rubio, and Chief of Staff Susie Wiles, among others. The only non-Trumpie is former British prime minister and world-class opportunist Tony Blair.

Should we have any doubt that Hillary Clinton is doing someone a favor, to be called in at a later date, in what novelist Tom Wolfe memorably called the Favor Bank?

My guess would be Tony Blair, who stands to gain if the Gaza plan goes forward. Blair is close to the Clintons and has been a regular speaker at their events. Trump’s enterprises, mixing official business and family businesses, are only more brazen versions of a model ventured by the Clintons in the Clinton Global Initiative and Blair’s Institute for Global Change, which made both families rich.

As Democrats try to contain Trump and pose compelling alternatives, too many cynical voters conclude, “They all do it.” Softer corruption gives Trump cover for more overt corruption.

Before you go.

I hope that you found this article interesting and thought-provoking. The reason we’re able to publish stories like this — free of programmatic ads and never behind a paywall — is because readers like you step up to support our work. 

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. 

Independent, reader-supported journalism is critical at a time when the free press is under assault. 

If you believe this kind of reporting should exist and remain free to read, we hope you’ll consider chipping in. Every contribution, however modest, makes a real difference.

Donate Now

David Dayen

David Dayen
Executive Editor

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rkuttner@prospect.org

Robert Kuttner is co-founder and co-editor of The American Prospect, and professor at Brandeis University’s Heller School. His latest book is Notes for Next Time: Surviving Tyranny, Redeeming America. Follow Bob at his site, robertkuttner.com, and on Twitter. More by Robert Kuttner

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.

Before you go.

I hope that you found this article interesting and thought-provoking. The reason we’re able to publish stories like this — free of programmatic ads and never behind a paywall — is because readers like you step up to support our work. 

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. 

Independent, reader-supported journalism is critical at a time when the free press is under assault. 

If you believe this kind of reporting should exist and remain free to read, we hope you’ll consider chipping in. Every contribution, however modest, makes a real difference.

Donate Now

David Dayen

David Dayen
Executive Editor

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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