A white electric vehicle is parked at a charging station, with charging cables connected to the vehicle. The station displays green accents and a digital interface. The words "EV Charging Only" are painted on the asphalt, indicating the designated parking area for electric vehicle charging. The background includes a building and bare tree branches.
An Electrify America charging station in Oakland on Feb. 27, 2024. Photo by Camille Cohen for CalMatters

Nota de programación: WhatMatters is taking Memorial Day off and will return to your inboxes on Tuesday.

California officials moved quickly to start another legal battle against President Donald Trump’s administration after the U.S. Senate voted Thursday to revoke federal waivers that allowed the state to phase-out gas powered cars and combat air pollution.

Gov. Gavin Newsom and California Attorney General Rob Bonta said they plan to file a lawsuit on the grounds that Congress’ use of the Congressional Review Act to rescind the waivers is illegal. The law allows Congress to overturn actions of federal agencies, under specific circumstances, without a supermajority vote. California secured the waivers last year from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency under President Joe Biden. 

  • Buena: “California has received approximately 100 waivers since waivers have been given and the CRA has never been applied to any of those waivers before. … This is a workaround for Trump to punish California for defying his efforts to bring us backward.”

While Bonta emphasized that Trump’s actions aimed to obstruct California’s authority to enforce its own state laws, Newsom focused on how revoking the waivers threatened California’s public health and the country’s electric vehicle industry. Saying that the administration was “doubling down on stupid,” the governor argued that this would further enable China’s dominance over the electric vehicle market.

  • Newsom: “Big day for Big Oil. … Big day for China. Terrible day for your kids, terrible day for air quality, terrible day for innovation and entrepreneurship.” 

As the state readies itself for its 23rd lawsuit against Trump since his second term, more California laws may be under threat from the administration and GOP members in Congress, including dozens of existing and proposed laws regulating artificial intelligence and laws that benefit immigrants lacking permanent legal status.

For more on the Senate vote and the waivers, check out CalMatters’ story de alejandro lazo y Alejandra Reyes Velarde.


Lawsuit tracker: CalMatters is tracking the lawsuits California is filing against the Trump administration. Compruébalo aquí.



LA fights LAPD over false complaint warning

A wide view of two police officers standing near a police car in a street that is partially taped off with yellow police tape.
Officers with the Los Angeles Police Department at an active crime scene outside a Superior Grocers in Los Angeles on Dec. 7, 2024. Photo by Mark Abramson for CalMatters

Can a 36-word warning about making a false complaint against a police officer be a violation of free speech? The city of Los Angeles argues that it does, as its case against the union representing Los Angeles Police Department officers lands before the state’s Supreme Court.

Como CalMatters Nigel Duara explains, when filing a complaint against an LAPD officer, complainants are shown this warning on the form, in bold and in all caps:

 “IT IS AGAINST THE LAW TO MAKE A COMPLAINT THAT YOU KNOW TO BE FALSE. IF YOU MAKE A COMPLAINT AGAINST AN OFFICER KNOWING THAT IT IS FALSE, YOU CAN BE PROSECUTED ON A MISDEMEANOR CHARGE.

The city of L.A. wants to strike that language, arguing that the warning discourages people from filing complaints and curbs their rights protected under the First Amendment. But the Los Angeles Police Protective League union says the warning is constitutionally sound, and it’s necessary to prevent false complaints that could disrupt an officer’s career.

The California high court is expected to issue a ruling sometime this year.

Leer más aquí.

Google shrinks pledge to help news organizations

Siluetas de personas sentadas en un gran público frente a un escenario con una pantalla prominente que muestra el logotipo de Google en texto negro en negrita sobre un fondo blanco. El escenario está iluminado con una luz cálida, lo que crea un brillo suave, mientras que la sala está tenuemente iluminada alrededor del público.
Audience members gather at Google’s Made By Google event in Mountain View on Aug. 13, 2024. Photo by Juliana Yamada, AP Photo

A week after Gov. Newsom revealed his plans to reduce the amount of money the state is expected to provide to help fund local news outlets, Google said it too will cut some of the support it had previously agreed to pay, writes CalMatters’ Juana Kuang.

The tech giant said it will now pay $10 million in its first year contributing to California’s local news fund, rather than the $15 million it initially pledged less than a year ago. The company agreed to only put money into the fund as a match to state dollars, and it got the green light to do so after Newsom proposed to reduce the state’s first-year contribution from $30 million to $10 million

Alphabet, Google’s parent company, has a market cap of more than $2 trillion. Ten million dollars is 0.0005% of $2 trillion. There are three bench players on the Los Angeles Lakers who earned more than $10 million last season. 

Together, California and Google have shrunk their commitment to assist the state’s struggling news industry from $45 million to $20 million. So far, no newsroom has received money from the fund.

The money is part of a compromise lawmakers made with Google last year: In exchange for the Legislature pulling bills that would have forced tech companies to pay outlets for their content, Google and the state would put millions of dollars into a fund over five years to support California journalism. 

Leer más aquí.

And lastly: CA colleges feed students

A colorful food locker station labeled “Rooted in Community!” stands against a wall inside a Contra Costa College building. The locker, decorated with illustrations of fruit, is a partnership with the Food Bank of Contra Costa and Solano. A person with a knee brace sits at a nearby table eating, while another person uses a laptop against the wall. Bulletin boards and hallway doors are visible in the background.
The refrigerated food lockers at Contra Costa College in San Pablo on May 8, 2025. Photo by Florence Middleton for CalMatters

With more than two-thirds of college students experiencing food insecurity in the state, five California campuses are tackling the issue in ways that go beyond typical food pantries. Descubrir what they’re doing from Amy Elizabeth Moore de CalMatters Red de periodismo universitario.



Otras cosas que merecen tu tiempo:

Algunas historias pueden requerir una suscripción para leerse.


CA Sen. Cervantes cited for DUI while allegedly under the influence of a drug // CalMatters

Trump tax bill details: Measure passed by House to have outsize impact on Californians // San Francisco Chronicle

The great food bank robbery: Hungry Californians face losing their daily bread // Capital y principal

Why former VP Harris could run for CA governor and bypass another White House bid // Noticias AP

Shirley Weber to seek reelection as CA Secretary of State // La abeja de Sacramento

A killing at Palisades: How a visa worker was slain by cops at Tahoe’s biggest resort // El estándar de San Francisco

Ford files $100-million suit over alleged ‘Lemon Law’ scheme by LA lawyers // Los Angeles Times

After LA wildfires, Edison faces blowback over proposed rate hike // Los Angeles Times

Six killed when small plane crashes into military homes in Murphy Canyon neighborhood // El Union-Tribune de San Diego

Lynn La es la redactora del boletín de CalMatters y se centra en las principales historias políticas, políticas y del Capitolio de California todos los días de la semana. Produce y cura WhatMatters, el boletín diario insignia de CalMatters...