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First Thing: Newsom says California hopes to redraw maps in response to Texas plan
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Republican redestricting move aims to win House majority in midterms. Plus, plastic pollution talks fail in Geneva
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 Gavin Newsom calls on Democrats ‘to meet fire with fire’ in redistricting fight with Trump. Photograph: Mario Tama/Getty Images
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Clea Skopeliti
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Good morning.
California’s governor, Gavin Newsom, has said lawmakers would proceed with a redistricting plan to counter the Republican-led map drawing effort in Texas aimed at securing a House majority after the midterm elections.
The Democrat plan, known as the election rigging response act, would “neuter and neutralize” Republican efforts to gain up to five more seats in Texas. It would do so by superseding California’s independent redistricting commission and drawing new congressional lines.
As Newsom spoke at the Japanese American National museum’s National Center for the Preservation of Democracy, federal border patrol agents, armed and masked, raided the area.
Experts condemn NIH director’s defense of cut to vaccine research
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 Jay Bhattacharya, the director of the National Institutes of Health, at his confirmation hearing in March. Photograph: Ben Curtis/AP
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Experts have criticized the director of the National Institutes of Health’s reasoning for cutting funding for research into mRNA vaccines.
Jay Bhattacharya said the funding to develop these vaccines was being rescinded because they had failed to “earn public trust”, but critics said he and other top health officials in the Trump administration had been at the forefront of spreading doubts about public health institutions and life-saving medicines.
Bhattacharya’s comments about public trust appeared in an op-ed in the Washington Post in which he defended the decision by the anti-vaccine health secretary, Robert F Kennedy Jr, to cut $500m in funding for mRNA vaccine research. Kennedy said he was doing so after having “reviewed the science”, but experts have said the evidence Kennedy reviewed did not support halting the research.
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What else do experts say about Bhattacharya’s “public trust” claims? That the issue is not whether the vaccines have public trust, but whether they are safe and effective, which they “clearly” are and this must be communicated.
Man fleeing Ice raid outside LA Home Depot hit and killed on freeway
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 A Home Depot in the Westlake neighborhood of Los Angeles, the site of an earlier raid. Photograph: Google Maps
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A man was struck by a vehicle and killed as he tried to get away from immigration agents who were raiding a Home Depot in Los Angeles county on Thursday, authorities have said.
While details remain scarce, officials in Monrovia confirmed city police officers had seen agents shortly before 10am at the store, which allows day laborers to wait outside for work opportunities. Soon after, Monrovia emergency services responded to reports of a pedestrian struck on the 210 freeway.
The state assembly member John Harabedian, who represents the area, said 10 people were detained during Thursday’s operation. “One individual, fearing for their safety, fled and was tragically struck by a vehicle,” he said.
In other news …
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 Donald Trump speaks with the then secretary general of Nato, Jens Stoltenberg, as they attend a 2019 Nato summit in England. Photograph: Dan Kitwood/Getty Images
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Stat of the day: Hundreds of incarcerated women in California filed sexual abuse complaints between 2013 and 2024
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 Gregory Rodriguez was found to have targeted incarcerated women for nearly a decade before he retired in 2022. Photograph: Courtesy of Madera county district attorney’s office
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Despite female inmates in California filing hundreds of complaints of sexual abuse by staff between 2013 and 2024, just four officers were fired for sexual misconduct during that period. The data suggests this is a structural problem in US prisons.
Don’t miss this: ‘I tried to be nice. Sometimes, I would explode’ – John Fogerty on Creedence, contracts and control
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 John Fogerty of Creedence Clearwater Revival. Photograph: David McLister
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John Fogerty wrote some of the most iconic songs of the 1960s with Creedence Clearwater Revival. But when his relationship with his brother Tom fell apart, and the band split in 1972, things began to go downhill for him. A period followed in which he suffered from “an inability to write any new songs, an allergic reaction to his old ones (he would turn off the radio if they came on), a refusal to play live in any meaningful sense, periods of heavy drinking, reckless behaviour, disturbed sleep”. Here, he tells the Guardian about how he came out the other side.
Climate check: Plastic pollution talks fail
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 Plastic waste in Panama City. Photograph: Carlos Lemos/EPA
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Negotiators in Geneva have rejected the draft treaties for an agreement to end the plastics pollution crisis. The main sticking point has been whether the treaty should impose plastic production limits or focus instead on waste management, recycling and reuse, with oil- and gas-producing countries and the plastics industry opposing production limits. Countries in the latter camp include Saudi Arabia, Russia and Iran, reportedly with the support of the US.
Last Thing: ‘I rent out my mohawk as a billboard’
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 Bob Bagnall, AKA Mohawk Bob, at home in Denver, Colorado. Photograph: Matt Nager/The Guardian
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Bob Bagnall pays the bills in an unusual way. You could say he’s in advertising, with his hair acting as the billboard. Bagnall, AKA Mohawk Bob, first tried out the style when his kids’ school had a “Crazy Hair Day” for the dads, but it soon became a permanent look. Then the interest from businesses started rolling into his inbox, so much so that he was able to quit his job at the grocery store. “I still have a solid hairline for a 58-year-old … Perhaps one day it’ll all fall out and I’ll have to start faking it, but until then, I don’t think my mohawk’s ever coming off.” You could say it’s hair to stay.
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If you have any questions or comments about any of our newsletters please email newsletters@theguardian.com
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Betsy Reed
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Editor, Guardian US
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At this dangerous moment for dissent
I hope you appreciated this newsletter. Before you move on, I wanted to ask if you could support the Guardian at this crucial time for journalism in the US.
When the military is deployed to quell overwhelmingly peaceful protest, when elected officials of the opposing party are arrested or handcuffed, when student activists are jailed and deported, and when a wide range of civic institutions – non-profits, law firms, universities, news outlets, the arts, the civil service, scientists – are targeted and penalized by the federal government, it’s hard to avoid the conclusion that our core freedoms are disappearing before our eyes – and democracy itself is slipping away.
In any country on the cusp of authoritarianism, the role of the press as an engine of scrutiny, truth and accountability becomes increasingly critical. At the Guardian, we see it as our job not only to report on the suppression of dissenting voices, but to make sure those voices are heard.
Not every news organization sees its mission this way – indeed, some have been pressured by their corporate and billionaire owners to avoid antagonizing this government. I am thankful the Guardian is different.
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