Xavier Becerra pulled ahead of rival Steve Hilton in election results returned Friday.

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Xavier Becerra pulled ahead of rival Steve Hilton in election results returned Friday.

Jana Silverman avalia início da validade de novo status de PCC e CV como organizações terroristas Fonte

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Jana Silverman avalia início da validade de novo status de PCC e CV como organizações terroristas Fonte

A notice from the California State Supreme Court went out to attorneys on Friday to be ready to present oral arguments on the Kern River possibly as early as this September. If that happens, it will have been just four years from the time the case was initially filed to a hearing before the state’s […]

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SJV Water
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A notice from the California State Supreme Court went out to attorneys on Friday to be ready to present oral arguments on the Kern River possibly as early as this September. If that happens, it will have been just four years from the time the case was initially filed to a hearing before the state’s […]

Suasana sejuk langsung terasa ketika memasuki lahan seluas 1,6 hektar di Desa Ngembat, Kecamatan Gondang, Kabupaten Mojokerto, Jawa Timur. Pepohonan hijau nan rimbun mengelilingi kawasan di lereng Gunung Anjasmoro ini. Lahan itu merupakan hutan wakaf Yayasan Pendidikan dan Sosial Ma’arif (YPM) Sidoarjo. Agus Sugiarto,  Ketua Hutan Wakaf YPM, mengisahkan awal mula hutan wakaf itu. Tanah […] The post Inisiatif Hutan Wakaf, Upaya Konservasi dari Swadaya Warga appeared first on Mongabay.co.id.

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Suasana sejuk langsung terasa ketika memasuki lahan seluas 1,6 hektar di Desa Ngembat, Kecamatan Gondang, Kabupaten Mojokerto, Jawa Timur. Pepohonan hijau nan rimbun mengelilingi kawasan di lereng Gunung Anjasmoro ini. Lahan itu merupakan hutan wakaf Yayasan Pendidikan dan Sosial Ma’arif (YPM) Sidoarjo. Agus Sugiarto,  Ketua Hutan Wakaf YPM, mengisahkan awal mula hutan wakaf itu. Tanah […] The post Inisiatif Hutan Wakaf, Upaya Konservasi dari Swadaya Warga appeared first on Mongabay.co.id.

La entrega del facsímil del Popol Wuj, el libro sagrado de los K’iche’, fue realizada por académicos mayas apoyados por miembros del comité internacional del proyecto en Santa Cruz del Quiché, en un evento donde participaron autoridades indígenas, dirigentes comunitarios, estudiantes, representantes de organizaciones y otros. Por Julián Ventura  En un acontecimiento de gran relevancia ... Read more The post Santa Cruz del Quiché recibe facsímil del Popol Wuj y distribuye 200 ejemplares para fortalecer la identidad cultural appeared first on Prensa Comunitaria.

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Prensa Comunitaria
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La entrega del facsímil del Popol Wuj, el libro sagrado de los K’iche’, fue realizada por académicos mayas apoyados por miembros del comité internacional del proyecto en Santa Cruz del Quiché, en un evento donde participaron autoridades indígenas, dirigentes comunitarios, estudiantes, representantes de organizaciones y otros. Por Julián Ventura  En un acontecimiento de gran relevancia ... Read more The post Santa Cruz del Quiché recibe facsímil del Popol Wuj y distribuye 200 ejemplares para fortalecer la identidad cultural appeared first on Prensa Comunitaria.

What both communities share besides a love of Georgia’s coast is a sense of anger – at larger forces, with greater resources, threatening their long-established way of life.  The Current is an inclusive nonprofit, non-partisan news organization providing in-depth watchdog journalism for Savannah and Coastal Georgia’s communities.

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What both communities share besides a love of Georgia’s coast is a sense of anger – at larger forces, with greater resources, threatening their long-established way of life.  The Current is an inclusive nonprofit, non-partisan news organization providing in-depth watchdog journalism for Savannah and Coastal Georgia’s communities.

25 minutes

Rhode Island Current
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A record $15.2 billion fiscal 2027 budget breezed through the Rhode Island House of Representatives in near record time Friday, with the 65-10 vote finalized with an hour to spare before sunset. The approved budget is almost identical to the version given preliminary vetting by the House Committee on Finance one week ago, featuring a […]

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Rhode Island Current
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A record $15.2 billion fiscal 2027 budget breezed through the Rhode Island House of Representatives in near record time Friday, with the 65-10 vote finalized with an hour to spare before sunset. The approved budget is almost identical to the version given preliminary vetting by the House Committee on Finance one week ago, featuring a […]

A controversial oil and gas lease sale in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge drew one big bid Friday from an independent Anchorage-based natural gas producer, along with a smattering of other bids from a state economic development agency. HEX Energy LLC, which produces natural gas in Cook Inlet but has never operated on the North […]

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A controversial oil and gas lease sale in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge drew one big bid Friday from an independent Anchorage-based natural gas producer, along with a smattering of other bids from a state economic development agency. HEX Energy LLC, which produces natural gas in Cook Inlet but has never operated on the North […]

30 minutes

Mundiario
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Tres décadas después de la llegada de José María Aznar al poder, el debate sobre la influencia de los medios de comunicación, la actuación de la justicia y las estrategias de desgaste político vuelve a ocupar un lugar central en la vida pública española.

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Mundiario
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Tres décadas después de la llegada de José María Aznar al poder, el debate sobre la influencia de los medios de comunicación, la actuación de la justicia y las estrategias de desgaste político vuelve a ocupar un lugar central en la vida pública española.

31 minutes

Iowa Capital Dispatch
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The field is set for candidates running in the general election and campaigns, as well as political organizations, have kicked off a series early attack ads — particularly targeting candidates portraying themselves as moderates. In the days after the June 2 primary, candidates have quickly pivoted to early messaging before the Nov. 3 general election. […]

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Iowa Capital Dispatch
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The field is set for candidates running in the general election and campaigns, as well as political organizations, have kicked off a series early attack ads — particularly targeting candidates portraying themselves as moderates. In the days after the June 2 primary, candidates have quickly pivoted to early messaging before the Nov. 3 general election. […]

Marathon Petroleum seeks to increase emissions in Detroit's polluted 48217 zip code. State regulators say they can't consider cumulative impacts.

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Marathon Petroleum seeks to increase emissions in Detroit's polluted 48217 zip code. State regulators say they can't consider cumulative impacts.

35 minutes

The Center Square
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(The Center Square) – California’s bond debt has gone down 18.3% since 2025, new data from the California Debt & Investment Advisory Commission shows. A report from the commission shows that $32.75 billion of bond debt has been issued in 2026 statewide, compared to $102.91 billion in 2025. California’s 2026 bond debt issuance is the lowest reported since 2017, according to data compiled by the commission. The last year since 2017 that exceeded California’s 2025 levels of bond debt was 2021, which saw $103.62 billion of new bond debt issued, according to the commission. Despite the lower levels of bond debt issued just this year, Wayne Winegarden, senior business fellow and economist at Pasadena-based Pacific Research Institute, said he doesn’t see the state’s total indebtedness improving. “I’m not sure how much we’re actually changing, especially with all of the fund shifts and everything the governor has proposed,” Winegarden told The Center Square. Winegarden added he hopes state lawmakers look at paying down the unemployment insurance debt, as well as addressing pension liabilities. “Especially the vulnerability of that outstanding debt relative to the A.I. boom,” Winegarden said. “That’s not sustainable. Right now, the pension debt could be looking much bigger, simply because the terms are inflated and there is an A.I. bubble.” California needs to exercise some discipline after a spending spree, Winegarden told The Center Square. “It’s the equivalent of using your credit card to pay your utilities,” the economist added. “That risk is out there, so long as our spending levels continue to outpace our economy. The best thing the Legislature could do in terms of showing they’re serious on the debt is to show they’re serious on the spending.” Additional data from the commission shows California's monthly debt issuance skyrocketed to just over $100 billion by the end of 2025. By June 2025, it was already $49.82 billion – roughly $17.25 billion more than this month's debt. About $16.3 billion of that debt was issued by local governments for city and county projects, the commission’s latest report shows. Roughly $22.1 billion is long-term debt, according to the report. The state's bond debt is intended to pay for roads, infrastructure and other projects. But Winegarden said California taxpayers aren't getting their money's worth. “Look at the quality of the services we’re getting,” Winegarden said. “So much of our infrastructure is lacking roads, highways, bridges - the kinds of things we need to put our debt borrowing capacity to provide the services Californians expect.” The Center Square previously reported that the state’s bond debt exceeded $99 billion, largely from state and local bonds. And the California Treasurer’s Office previously announced efforts to save the state’s residents money by selling the bond debt, effectively refinancing bonds taken out to pay for essential services like K-12 schools, coastal protection services and safe drinking water. California state lawmakers did not respond to The Center Square's request for comment on Friday. Officials with the California Debt & Investment Advisory Commission also did not respond.

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The Center Square
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(The Center Square) – California’s bond debt has gone down 18.3% since 2025, new data from the California Debt & Investment Advisory Commission shows. A report from the commission shows that $32.75 billion of bond debt has been issued in 2026 statewide, compared to $102.91 billion in 2025. California’s 2026 bond debt issuance is the lowest reported since 2017, according to data compiled by the commission. The last year since 2017 that exceeded California’s 2025 levels of bond debt was 2021, which saw $103.62 billion of new bond debt issued, according to the commission. Despite the lower levels of bond debt issued just this year, Wayne Winegarden, senior business fellow and economist at Pasadena-based Pacific Research Institute, said he doesn’t see the state’s total indebtedness improving. “I’m not sure how much we’re actually changing, especially with all of the fund shifts and everything the governor has proposed,” Winegarden told The Center Square. Winegarden added he hopes state lawmakers look at paying down the unemployment insurance debt, as well as addressing pension liabilities. “Especially the vulnerability of that outstanding debt relative to the A.I. boom,” Winegarden said. “That’s not sustainable. Right now, the pension debt could be looking much bigger, simply because the terms are inflated and there is an A.I. bubble.” California needs to exercise some discipline after a spending spree, Winegarden told The Center Square. “It’s the equivalent of using your credit card to pay your utilities,” the economist added. “That risk is out there, so long as our spending levels continue to outpace our economy. The best thing the Legislature could do in terms of showing they’re serious on the debt is to show they’re serious on the spending.” Additional data from the commission shows California's monthly debt issuance skyrocketed to just over $100 billion by the end of 2025. By June 2025, it was already $49.82 billion – roughly $17.25 billion more than this month's debt. About $16.3 billion of that debt was issued by local governments for city and county projects, the commission’s latest report shows. Roughly $22.1 billion is long-term debt, according to the report. The state's bond debt is intended to pay for roads, infrastructure and other projects. But Winegarden said California taxpayers aren't getting their money's worth. “Look at the quality of the services we’re getting,” Winegarden said. “So much of our infrastructure is lacking roads, highways, bridges - the kinds of things we need to put our debt borrowing capacity to provide the services Californians expect.” The Center Square previously reported that the state’s bond debt exceeded $99 billion, largely from state and local bonds. And the California Treasurer’s Office previously announced efforts to save the state’s residents money by selling the bond debt, effectively refinancing bonds taken out to pay for essential services like K-12 schools, coastal protection services and safe drinking water. California state lawmakers did not respond to The Center Square's request for comment on Friday. Officials with the California Debt & Investment Advisory Commission also did not respond.

38 minutes

Mundiario
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La creciente división entre bloques, la dificultad para alcanzar acuerdos institucionales y la transformación del adversario político en un enemigo a combatir están debilitando la capacidad de las instituciones para responder a los grandes retos del país.

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Mundiario
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La creciente división entre bloques, la dificultad para alcanzar acuerdos institucionales y la transformación del adversario político en un enemigo a combatir están debilitando la capacidad de las instituciones para responder a los grandes retos del país.

(The Center Square) - In a reversal, Seattle Mayor Katie Wilson has ordered that surveillance cameras be turned on during the FIFA World Cup Tournament. Wilson said in a statement Friday that the decision to activate the cameras followed updated information from Seattle police and the FBI "on the current global and local threat environment." The first of six World Cup games begins in Seattle on June 15. Back in March, Wilson had put a pause on the city’s surveillance camera program. She agreed to have cameras installed by Lumen Field, home of Seattle's World Cup games, but said they would be turned on only in the event of a credible threat. At least three city council members, including the chairman of the Public Safety Committee, Bob Kettle, said the cameras needed to be turned on because defining what a credible threat was difficult. Wilson cited privacy concerns for her initial decision not to turn on the cameras. She said she was concerned that they could be used by federal immigration agents to conduct raids. The dispute centers on several dozen CCTV cameras that have already been installed in and around the stadium but have remained inactive. Kettle applauded the mayor’s announcement in his own statement. “This difficult decision is an important one to ensure our public safety readiness ahead of our 2026 FIFA Men’s World Cup matches,” he said. Another critic of the mayor's decision to keep the cameras off, Councilman Rob Saka, said Wilson made the right decision in turning them on. “My hope is that we can now transition to focusing on celebrating those amazing soccer events, while keeping everyone safe," he said in a statement. Saka recently spoke at a Seattle City Council meeting about how unexpected terrorist events can happen, such as when he and his wife ran the Boston marathon in 2013. Saka said as he and his wife were celebrating their finish, bombs began being set off. Kettle previously said Seattle was one of only 11 cities that would host World Cup games without using surveillance cameras. Seattle’s small network of surveillance cameras began in 2025. Wilson, in her mayoral campaign, had expressed concerns about the surveillance cameras. In her March announcement, she paused the expansion of the program but allowed cameras to be installed near Lumen Field, with the condition that they would only be turned on if there was a credible threat. She said Friday that her conversation with the police and the FBI had changed her mind. "The safety and security of residents, visitors, and fans is our highest priority, and I understand that many community members are deeply concerned about privacy, civil liberties, and the appropriate use of public safety technology," Wilson went on in her statement. “I share those values. While I have decided to have the cameras ready to help us quickly establish situational awareness near the stadiums if needed, we will continue honing our policies and protections to safeguard the data these videos capture.”

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The Center Square
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(The Center Square) - In a reversal, Seattle Mayor Katie Wilson has ordered that surveillance cameras be turned on during the FIFA World Cup Tournament. Wilson said in a statement Friday that the decision to activate the cameras followed updated information from Seattle police and the FBI "on the current global and local threat environment." The first of six World Cup games begins in Seattle on June 15. Back in March, Wilson had put a pause on the city’s surveillance camera program. She agreed to have cameras installed by Lumen Field, home of Seattle's World Cup games, but said they would be turned on only in the event of a credible threat. At least three city council members, including the chairman of the Public Safety Committee, Bob Kettle, said the cameras needed to be turned on because defining what a credible threat was difficult. Wilson cited privacy concerns for her initial decision not to turn on the cameras. She said she was concerned that they could be used by federal immigration agents to conduct raids. The dispute centers on several dozen CCTV cameras that have already been installed in and around the stadium but have remained inactive. Kettle applauded the mayor’s announcement in his own statement. “This difficult decision is an important one to ensure our public safety readiness ahead of our 2026 FIFA Men’s World Cup matches,” he said. Another critic of the mayor's decision to keep the cameras off, Councilman Rob Saka, said Wilson made the right decision in turning them on. “My hope is that we can now transition to focusing on celebrating those amazing soccer events, while keeping everyone safe," he said in a statement. Saka recently spoke at a Seattle City Council meeting about how unexpected terrorist events can happen, such as when he and his wife ran the Boston marathon in 2013. Saka said as he and his wife were celebrating their finish, bombs began being set off. Kettle previously said Seattle was one of only 11 cities that would host World Cup games without using surveillance cameras. Seattle’s small network of surveillance cameras began in 2025. Wilson, in her mayoral campaign, had expressed concerns about the surveillance cameras. In her March announcement, she paused the expansion of the program but allowed cameras to be installed near Lumen Field, with the condition that they would only be turned on if there was a credible threat. She said Friday that her conversation with the police and the FBI had changed her mind. "The safety and security of residents, visitors, and fans is our highest priority, and I understand that many community members are deeply concerned about privacy, civil liberties, and the appropriate use of public safety technology," Wilson went on in her statement. “I share those values. While I have decided to have the cameras ready to help us quickly establish situational awareness near the stadiums if needed, we will continue honing our policies and protections to safeguard the data these videos capture.”

La UCO cree que los cuadernos y libretas intervenidos a la exmilitante del PSOE reconstruyen el mapa de objetivos de la presunta trama que tenía en la mira a jueces, fiscales, mandos policiales, miembros de la Guardia Civil y procedimientos judiciales.

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Mundiario
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La UCO cree que los cuadernos y libretas intervenidos a la exmilitante del PSOE reconstruyen el mapa de objetivos de la presunta trama que tenía en la mira a jueces, fiscales, mandos policiales, miembros de la Guardia Civil y procedimientos judiciales.

43 minutes

Mundiario
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Francia, Inglaterra y España encabezan un ranking económico que refleja el enorme peso financiero del fútbol moderno, aunque la historia demuestra que el valor de una plantilla no siempre se traduce en títulos.

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Mundiario
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Francia, Inglaterra y España encabezan un ranking económico que refleja el enorme peso financiero del fútbol moderno, aunque la historia demuestra que el valor de una plantilla no siempre se traduce en títulos.

52 minutes

Mundiario
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Le vendrá bien el concurso de voluntades cercanas a la voz de León XIV para que esta Tierra sea habitable.

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Mundiario
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Le vendrá bien el concurso de voluntades cercanas a la voz de León XIV para que esta Tierra sea habitable.

58 minutes

Mundiario
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Desde sus orígenes como brigada aerotransportable hasta su actual papel al frente del Grupo de Combate Multinacional de la OTAN en Eslovaquia, la BRILAT simboliza la capacidad de adaptación, el compromiso con la seguridad colectiva y la vocación de servicio de las Fuerzas Armadas españolas.

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Mundiario
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Desde sus orígenes como brigada aerotransportable hasta su actual papel al frente del Grupo de Combate Multinacional de la OTAN en Eslovaquia, la BRILAT simboliza la capacidad de adaptación, el compromiso con la seguridad colectiva y la vocación de servicio de las Fuerzas Armadas españolas.

(The Center Square) – Republicans appear to have done well in this week's California primary, despite Democrats redrawing congressional districts in their favor. But an expert observing Tuesday's election say things may be a different story after the Nov. 3 general election. That is not only for congressional races but also for governor of California and mayor of Los Angeles. Sacramento political consultant Matt Rexroad said he thinks Democrats are “certainly on track to pick up seats in California” this year. “Redistricting plans are built for more than one election, and this election that's coming up is incredibly favorable to Democrats in California, actually across the entire country,” Rexroad told The Center Square. “People might say, well, look how the Republicans did or look how the primary turned out in June in California, but it’s about winning in November, and that's where you actually have seats for Congress.” Historically, the party in power in the White House loses control of at least one chamber of Congress in a midterm election, and Republicans currently have a razor-thin majority in the House. That's putting states like California and a state where redistricting is favoring Republicans, Texas, in the national spotlight. In November, it will be a much more partisan election, Rexroad said. “We're going to see Democrats pick up some seats in California, unfortunately." According to unofficial results on Friday, Republican Steve Hilton has a slight lead in the gubernatorial race with 27.2% of the vote, compared to Democrat Xavier Becerra’s 26%. Democrat Tom Steyer is close behind with 20.2%. Hilton is advancing to the Nov. 3 general election with Becerra so far destined to be his opponent. The question is whether Steyer will catch up. In the race for mayor of Los Angeles, Democratic incumbent Karen Bass hangs on to a lead with 35.08% of the vote compared to Republican Spencer Pratt’s 29.35%. Democratic Los Angeles Councilmember Nithya Raman is in third with 23.42%. Bass is advancing to the general election, and Pratt appears to be her likely opponent on Nov. 3, but voters are waiting to see whether Raman catches up as more ballots are counted. The numbers on the governor’s race come from a California Secretary of State's Office website. The Los Angeles figures are from the Los Angeles County registrar-recorder/county clerk. As The Center Square reported on Wednesday, several Republican incumbents maintained clear leads in congressional districts drawn to disadvantage them through the passage of Proposition 50. However, many Californians vote by mail, and ballots postmarked on or before Election Day have a few more days to arrive. The Center Square asked whether numerous options for Democratic voters aided Republicans running for office in the primary. “You can't have an outright winner in California,” said Rexroad about the primary. “Even if you and I were running against each other in California and I got 99% of the vote, you got one, or even if you didn't vote for yourself and you got zero, you still have the top two that go on to November, and that's the election you have to win.” Democrats during the primary had the disadvantage of having more candidates than Republicans, Rexroad said. The leading Democratic gubernatorial candidates ran for governor and divided up the pie eight ways, while one Republican, Steve Hilton, picked up more votes than any other candidate and faced only one other Republican candidate who was seeing some success in the polls, Riverside County Sheriff Chad Bianco. “But most likely those people who voted for other Democrat candidates who weren't with the top vote getter in our election on Tuesday, they're most likely to vote for the Democrat that's going to be on the ballot in November,” said Rexroad. “So when you total up the total number of votes cast for a Democrat running for Congress and the total number voting for Republicans, under those circumstances, I think Democrats will do quite well.” This includes the race for Congressional District 22. Republican David Valadao has 44% of the vote as of Friday, but he’s the only Republican candidate in a primary that features two Democrats. Randy Villegas has 30.2% as of Friday. Jasmeet Bains has 25.8%. “That's a troubling sign because come November, whichever Democrat it is, ends up being the top vote-getter,” said Rexroad. “They're probably going to get most of the votes that were cast for that other Democrat.” But in his opinion, Rexroad said, the national media waited too long to call some races during the primary. This includes the Congressional District 20 race in Bakersfield. According to Rexroad, the media could have announced two weeks ago that Vince Fong was going to win in the Republican stronghold. “He was the only Republican on the ballot," Rexroad said. "He was clearly going to win by a sizable amount, and he ended up getting about 70% of the vote. He'll end up with about 65% or so (in the Nov. 3 election).” Two Republican congressional incumbents ended up in California’s redrawn District 40, which could mean at least one fewer Republican in the U.S. House. But the District 40 race itself is on track to shutting Democrats out of the Nov. 3 general election because the top two vote getters, so far, are those two Republican incumbents. Republican Ken Calvert has 35.9% of the vote as of Friday, compared to Republican Young Kim’s 21.3% of vote. There are five Democrats in that contest with a combined 41.3% of the vote. Of that, 15.9% of that belongs to Esther Kim-Varet. Lisa Ramirez has 13.4%. The rest is split between Joe Kerr, Claude Keissieh and Francis Xavier Hoffman. The question is whether Kim-Varet will catch up during the next 35 days of ballot counting. Nina Linh, who has "no party preference," has 1.4%. The Center Square reached out to the California Republican and Democratic parties, but did not hear back by press time.

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The Center Square
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(The Center Square) – Republicans appear to have done well in this week's California primary, despite Democrats redrawing congressional districts in their favor. But an expert observing Tuesday's election say things may be a different story after the Nov. 3 general election. That is not only for congressional races but also for governor of California and mayor of Los Angeles. Sacramento political consultant Matt Rexroad said he thinks Democrats are “certainly on track to pick up seats in California” this year. “Redistricting plans are built for more than one election, and this election that's coming up is incredibly favorable to Democrats in California, actually across the entire country,” Rexroad told The Center Square. “People might say, well, look how the Republicans did or look how the primary turned out in June in California, but it’s about winning in November, and that's where you actually have seats for Congress.” Historically, the party in power in the White House loses control of at least one chamber of Congress in a midterm election, and Republicans currently have a razor-thin majority in the House. That's putting states like California and a state where redistricting is favoring Republicans, Texas, in the national spotlight. In November, it will be a much more partisan election, Rexroad said. “We're going to see Democrats pick up some seats in California, unfortunately." According to unofficial results on Friday, Republican Steve Hilton has a slight lead in the gubernatorial race with 27.2% of the vote, compared to Democrat Xavier Becerra’s 26%. Democrat Tom Steyer is close behind with 20.2%. Hilton is advancing to the Nov. 3 general election with Becerra so far destined to be his opponent. The question is whether Steyer will catch up. In the race for mayor of Los Angeles, Democratic incumbent Karen Bass hangs on to a lead with 35.08% of the vote compared to Republican Spencer Pratt’s 29.35%. Democratic Los Angeles Councilmember Nithya Raman is in third with 23.42%. Bass is advancing to the general election, and Pratt appears to be her likely opponent on Nov. 3, but voters are waiting to see whether Raman catches up as more ballots are counted. The numbers on the governor’s race come from a California Secretary of State's Office website. The Los Angeles figures are from the Los Angeles County registrar-recorder/county clerk. As The Center Square reported on Wednesday, several Republican incumbents maintained clear leads in congressional districts drawn to disadvantage them through the passage of Proposition 50. However, many Californians vote by mail, and ballots postmarked on or before Election Day have a few more days to arrive. The Center Square asked whether numerous options for Democratic voters aided Republicans running for office in the primary. “You can't have an outright winner in California,” said Rexroad about the primary. “Even if you and I were running against each other in California and I got 99% of the vote, you got one, or even if you didn't vote for yourself and you got zero, you still have the top two that go on to November, and that's the election you have to win.” Democrats during the primary had the disadvantage of having more candidates than Republicans, Rexroad said. The leading Democratic gubernatorial candidates ran for governor and divided up the pie eight ways, while one Republican, Steve Hilton, picked up more votes than any other candidate and faced only one other Republican candidate who was seeing some success in the polls, Riverside County Sheriff Chad Bianco. “But most likely those people who voted for other Democrat candidates who weren't with the top vote getter in our election on Tuesday, they're most likely to vote for the Democrat that's going to be on the ballot in November,” said Rexroad. “So when you total up the total number of votes cast for a Democrat running for Congress and the total number voting for Republicans, under those circumstances, I think Democrats will do quite well.” This includes the race for Congressional District 22. Republican David Valadao has 44% of the vote as of Friday, but he’s the only Republican candidate in a primary that features two Democrats. Randy Villegas has 30.2% as of Friday. Jasmeet Bains has 25.8%. “That's a troubling sign because come November, whichever Democrat it is, ends up being the top vote-getter,” said Rexroad. “They're probably going to get most of the votes that were cast for that other Democrat.” But in his opinion, Rexroad said, the national media waited too long to call some races during the primary. This includes the Congressional District 20 race in Bakersfield. According to Rexroad, the media could have announced two weeks ago that Vince Fong was going to win in the Republican stronghold. “He was the only Republican on the ballot," Rexroad said. "He was clearly going to win by a sizable amount, and he ended up getting about 70% of the vote. He'll end up with about 65% or so (in the Nov. 3 election).” Two Republican congressional incumbents ended up in California’s redrawn District 40, which could mean at least one fewer Republican in the U.S. House. But the District 40 race itself is on track to shutting Democrats out of the Nov. 3 general election because the top two vote getters, so far, are those two Republican incumbents. Republican Ken Calvert has 35.9% of the vote as of Friday, compared to Republican Young Kim’s 21.3% of vote. There are five Democrats in that contest with a combined 41.3% of the vote. Of that, 15.9% of that belongs to Esther Kim-Varet. Lisa Ramirez has 13.4%. The rest is split between Joe Kerr, Claude Keissieh and Francis Xavier Hoffman. The question is whether Kim-Varet will catch up during the next 35 days of ballot counting. Nina Linh, who has "no party preference," has 1.4%. The Center Square reached out to the California Republican and Democratic parties, but did not hear back by press time.

1 hour

法國國際廣播電台
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黎巴嫩總統奧恩(Joseph Aoun)周五直接向伊朗喊話說:“這不是你們的國家,而是我們的國家……你們無權干涉我們的事務。”

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法國國際廣播電台
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黎巴嫩總統奧恩(Joseph Aoun)周五直接向伊朗喊話說:“這不是你們的國家,而是我們的國家……你們無權干涉我們的事務。”