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After Navalny: ‘They will arrest the activists . . .  then everything will die out’

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After Navalny: ‘They will arrest the activists . . .  then everything will die out’

Hours after learning her husband Alexei Navalny had probably died in a remote Russian penal colony, Yulia Navalnaya made an unplanned appearance at the Munich Security Conference to tell western leaders who she held responsible.

“If this is true, I want Putin and all of his entourage, Putin’s friends and his government to know they will be held accountable for what they have done to our country, to my family and to my husband. And that day will come very soon,” Navalnaya said.

Yet the death of the charismatic anti-corruption activist at 47, announced on Friday by prison authorities in the town of Kharp in the Arctic Circle, means the “beautiful Russia of the future” Navalny often spoke of as an ideal has never looked so distant.

Yulia Navalnaya, wife of late Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny, addresses the Munich Security Conference © Kai Pfaffenbach via Reuters

Vladimir Putin is set to extend his two-decade rule until at least 2030 in presidential elections next month. His few serious challengers are either dead, in prison or have been barred from running.

As his invasion of Ukraine draws closer to its second anniversary next week, Putin has never looked closer to victory, with western aid for Ukraine flagging and Russia’s forces making slow but steady progress on the battlefield.

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And his two, very different main rivals — Navalny and the late warlord Yevgeny Prigozhin — are both dead. The Kremlin has been widely accused of involvement in both fatalities.

“Putin isn’t supposed to have any competition. But he [did]. Not so much in the electoral sense, but the existential one,” said Andrei Kolesnikov, a Moscow-based senior fellow at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. “Now our commander-in-chief doesn’t have any competition.”

The deaths of Prigozhin last year and now Navalny have “just deepened the autocrat’s loneliness on Mount Olympus”, Kolesnikov added. “His power isn’t just safe, it’s absolute.”

Fiona Hill, a former official on the US National Security Council, said: “This is just [Putin] saying: ‘It’s just me, guys. You’d better get used to it.’”

The death must “terrify” Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskyy, said Hill. “[Putin] is saying: ‘I don’t care who I kill and how many people I kill. I’ll get whatever I want.’”

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In Moscow, dozens of people lined up to lay flowers at the Solovetsky Stone, a memorial to Soviet political prisoners outside the headquarters of the FSB security service, the KGB’s successor. Smaller memorials took shape in several other cities across the country, while anti-war Russians organised protests outside embassies around the world.

People in Moscow lay flowers to pay their respects to Alexei Navalny at the Solovetsky Stone monument to victims of political repression outside the headquarters of the FSB security service
People in Moscow lay flowers to pay their respects to Alexei Navalny at the Solovetsky Stone monument to victims of political repression outside the headquarters of the FSB security service © Dmitry Serebryakov/AP

The muted reaction to news of Navalny’s death in most of Russia, however, was a far cry from the huge protests he once led against Putin, underscoring how much had changed in the three years since he returned to Moscow after treatment for a nerve agent poisoning, and was jailed on the spot.

The Kremlin brutally suppressed nationwide protests calling for his release, outlawed his movement and effectively banned all dissent.

Though Navalny remained active in his Anti-Corruption Foundation, now based in exile in Lithuania, and fiercely criticised Putin and the war in letters his team regularly posted on social media, Russia’s totalitarian turn made it all the harder for him to be heard.

“Navalny hadn’t had a voice or a platform for a long time,” a former senior Kremlin official said. “There will be a wave of memorials for him, all sorts of mourning and protest events. They will arrest the activists. And then everything will die out.”

The Kremlin has tried to play down the news. Putin made no comments about Navalny’s death in a series of public appearances in Chelyabinsk, a rustbelt city in the Urals — though he made no effort to suppress a smile. State media received instructions to limit coverage of his death, according to independent site The Insider.

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Vladimir Putin on a visit to  Chelyabinsk
Vladimir Putin on a visit to Chelyabinsk after the news broke of Navalny’s death © Aleksandr Rjumin/Kremlin Pool via Reuters

“Putin treated Navalny as a worthless nobody. He did not consider him a dangerous enemy, a pretender to anything. He considered him a petty crook,” said Tatiana Stanovaya, a senior fellow at the Carnegie Russia Eurasia Center.

“He despised him. And the fact that he found himself in such harsh conditions reflected a lot of this contempt of Putin’s. And Navalny simply did not survive it,” she added.

Though the circumstances of Navalny’s sudden death remain unclear, his supporters have accused Putin of being ultimately responsible in any case.

He appeared healthy and in good spirits, though gaunt from 27 stints in solitary confinement, at a court hearing on Thursday, the last known footage of him alive, and during a visit from his mother three days earlier.

The increasingly harsh conditions of his imprisonment, which he had said amounted to torture, meanwhile, had taken a toll on his health.

A screen grab of Alexei Navalny, second left, while being sentenced on extremism allegations while incarcerated at a maximum-security penal colony in 2023
A screen grab of Alexei Navalny, second left, while being sentenced on extremism allegations while incarcerated at a maximum-security penal colony in 2023 © Alexader Nemenov/AFP via Getty Images

“It makes sense for them to get rid of someone who could have driven protests in the run-up to the election. The administration knows as well as we do what the real mood in society is, how sick people are of the war and how much they want an alternative,” said Ekaterina Schulmann, a Russian political scientist.

“People might be demoralised, but they won’t love the way things are any more from this. The unhappiness isn’t going anywhere — with the war, with poverty, with repression,” she said.

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Navalny’s death is also a serious blow for his foundation, which has attempted to carry out his work from exile through broadcasts on YouTube, the last freely available major social media platform in Russia, and by organising small protests in Russia through an underground network of activists.

Though his team have vowed to carry on his work, the foundation will be “much less functional” after his death, Schulmann said. “He had direct moral authority, and theirs came from him.”

Francis Fukuyama, a professor at Stanford university in the US and a member of the foundation’s advisory board, said losing Navalny’s regular messages, which urged Russians not to give up the fight against Putin with his typical brio, was a particular blow.

“The way that he was treated over the last couple of years was just horrible,” Fukuyama said.

“I guess Putin just wanted to cut it off at the head [ . . .] They’re now scattered all over Europe. And I think there’s going to be a real struggle, you know, for how to keep that group going, because it must be just horribly demoralising at this point.”

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Fukuyama suggested that Yulia Navalnaya, who largely shunned the spotlight during most of Navalny’s career, and his daughter Daria were best suited to carry on his legacy.

“There’s nobody, I think, that’s capable of filling his shoes even remotely,” Fukuyama said.

“[Yulia] is a very strong willed woman, so maybe she can take up the torch. But it’s going to be very, very hard. He had a unique sense of humour, and he was able to say things that were appealing to ordinary people in a way that a lot of other opposition figures were not. Whether she’s got any of that ability, we’ll have to see.”

Additional reporting by Guy Chazan in Munich

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California’s primary for governor is undecided as candidates vie to be in the top two

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California’s primary for governor is undecided as candidates vie to be in the top two

Xavier Becerra, Democratic gubernatorial candidate for California, and Steve Hilton, Republican gubernatorial candidate for California, shake hands while arriving for a gubernatorial debate at KRON Studios in San Francisco in April.

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SAN FRANCISCO — The primary election for California governor is too close to call, with vote counting continuing Wednesday. Democrat Xavier Becerra and Republican business executive Steve Hilton lead the field with Democrat Tom Steyer in third place.

In California’s unusual primary system, all candidates, regardless of party, appear on a single ballot open to any registered voter. The top two candidates then move on to the general election, even if they’re from the same party. This year, voters had 60 names for governor to choose from.

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The winner will lead the country’s most populous state, where leaders often take on national political prominence. Incumbent Gov. Gavin Newsom is at his two-term limit and could be a Democratic contender for president.

Becerra, former Health and Human Services secretary under President Joe Biden, pitched himself to voters as an experienced political leader who isn’t afraid of President Trump, but his lead caps one of the most surprising and dramatic comebacks in recent state political history. As recently as April, polls were showing Becerra — also a former member of Congress and California attorney general — languishing in single digits in a crowded field.

In his remarks at his watch party in Los Angeles, Becerra noted his underdog status.

“Here in Hollywood’s hometown, we love a good underdog success story,” he said, drawing parallels between his campaign and his immigrant parents’ success story in California. “Guess what? The underdog stayed in the fight. Like my parents, I never gave up. Never stopped putting one foot in front of the other. Never stopped believing in the beacon-like goodness of California. And thankfully, neither did you.”

Hilton is a former Fox News commentator who also served as a political adviser to former British Prime Minister David Cameron. He was endorsed by President Trump in April, helping him to pull ahead of Riverside County Sheriff Chad Bianco, the other major Republican in the race. Hilton has campaigned on the idea that California needs change after 16 years under total Democratic control.

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The race is narrowing down after a tumultuous campaign

At his watch party in Huntington Beach, the British-born candidate — who became an American citizen five years ago — said it was the “honor of his lifetime” to receive over 1 million votes so far.

“Change is coming to California and it’s long overdue,” Hilton said. “We’re not there yet, but it’s looking good. It looks very much as if Californians really will have the chance to vote for change in November and take our state in a new direction.”

Democratic billionaire activist Steyer spent more than $213 million of his own money to boost his candidacy and push a progressive, populist message. While he was trailing Becerra and Hilton on Tuesday night, he said at his watch party in San Francisco that he remains confident he can close the gap in the days ahead.

“Together, we’ve scared the hell out of the corporate interests used to getting their way,” Steyer said. “It might take some time to figure out where this is going. We’re going to wait until every ballot is counted. We’re gonna give democracy a time to work. And we know we finished really strong.”

The early results are not certain to hold, in part because of unusual voting patterns in this primary election: Ballot-tracking data heading into Tuesday evening showed that Republicans were more likely to vote early by mail, while Democratic voters in this deep-blue state held onto their mail-in ballots or chose to vote in person. That’s the reverse of recent elections, which saw more Democrats voting by mail and Republicans tending to vote in person on Election Day.

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The uncertainty on election night capped a race that remained crowded and unsettled to the end. To some extent, the race was defined by who wasn’t running.

Some of the state’s most high-profile Democrats — former Vice President Kamala Harris, U.S. Sen. Alex Padilla and California Attorney General Rob Bonta — all passed on a potential bid to succeed Newsom.

The race was disrupted in April when then-U.S. Rep. Eric Swalwell’s campaign for governor imploded amid allegations of sexual assault and harassment. Swalwell resigned from Congress shortly after the accusations surfaced and has denied assault allegations.

Swalwell had been gaining in polls and racking up high-profile endorsements, and his exit seemed to primarily benefit Becerra, who had been stuck in single digits in many polls. Ultimately, it quieted fears among Democrats who worried that the messy Democratic field could result in Bianco and Hilton winning the top spots in the June primary.

Marisa Lagos covers California politics at KQED and co-hosts the Political Breakdown show and podcast.

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Supreme Court reinstates Republican-favored Alabama congressional districts

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Supreme Court reinstates Republican-favored Alabama congressional districts

The U.S. Supreme Court

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The Supreme Court on Tuesday cleared the way for Alabama to use a congressional district map favored by Republicans.

The court, in an unsigned order, overturned a three-judge district court panel that found that the map is “tainted by intentional race-based discrimination.” The court’s three liberals publicly dissented.

The ruling means that Alabama’s 2026 midterm elections will feature six Republican-leaning districts and one Democratic-leaning one, as opposed to a map with only five safe Republican seats. Democrat Shomari Figures, who represents Alabama’s Second District, will likely lose his seat as a result of the high court’s ruling.

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The story of Alabama’s congressional map is long and tortured. It began in 2021, when the state implemented a new map to account for population changes in the census. The map featured only one majority-black district out of seven, even though the state is more than one-quarter Black.

Voters immediately sued, claiming the map illegally diluted minority votes in violation of the Voting Rights Act and the Constitution. Lower court judges agreed, ruling that the state must draw a map with two districts where Black voters have a realistic chance of electing their candidate of choice. The Supreme Court more than once has ordered Alabama to draw a compliant map.

But the state has refused and instead continued to litigate the case. On Tuesday, that tactic paid off.

What changed? In April, the Supreme Court’s conservative supermajority all but gutted what remains of the Voting Rights Act, ruling that states cannot purposefully draw districts that are majority-minority.

Alabama then asked the high court to reinstate the state’s old map, under the theory that this new ruling meant that it was permissible to use a map with only one majority-Black district. In an unsigned, unexplained order in May, the high court essentially reversed its previous opinions, and allowed Alabama to use the old map for the upcoming midterm elections.

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This set off a flurry of activity in Alabama. By the time the Supreme Court issued its May order, absentee balloting had already begun, using the court-drawn map. So Republican Governor Kay Ivey cancelled elections and scheduled a special primary for August for the affected congressional races.

The case, however, was not over.

In its ruling, the Supreme Court had ordered a lower court panel to continue evaluating Alabama’s map in light of its recent Voting Rights Act decision. And just 15 days after that order, the panel, composed of three Republican judges—two of them Trump appointees—concluded unanimously that even under the Supreme Court’s new standards, the plan for a single black district was “intentionally discriminatory.”

So, once again, Alabama returned to the Supreme Court, arguing that the map was partisan, not racially discriminatory. In short, that the Republican legislature simply drew the map to elect more Republicans. And that under the Supreme Court’s new interpretation of the Voting Rights Act, the GOP map should be allowed to stand.

The court’s conservative agreed, writing that the lower court “did not heed the presumption of legislative good faith.”

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The court’s three liberals publicly dissented, castigating the conservative majority for failing to abide by its 2006 decision in the case of Purcell v. Gonzalez. That decision declared that courts should not change election rules too close to an election.

Justice Sonia Sotomayor, in her dissent, said the court “debases the democratic process” and “corrodes the rule of law by rewarding Alabama’s gamesmanship and outright defiance of court orders.”

Tuesday’s decision is the latest in a series of Supreme Court rulings that could well reshape the 2026 midterm elections, making it much harder for Democrats to prevail.

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Map: 3.7-Magnitude Earthquake Shakes the San Francisco Bay Area

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Map: 3.7-Magnitude Earthquake Shakes the San Francisco Bay Area

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Note: Map shows the area with a shake intensity of 3 or greater, which U.S.G.S. defines as “weak,” though the earthquake may be felt outside the areas shown.  All times on the map are Pacific time. The New York Times

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A minor, 3.7-magnitude earthquake struck in the San Francisco Bay Area on Tuesday, according to the United States Geological Survey.

The temblor happened at 9:44 a.m. Pacific time about 4 miles southeast of Cloverdale, Calif., data from the agency shows.

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U.S.G.S. data earlier reported that the magnitude was 3.6.

As seismologists review available data, they may revise the earthquake’s reported magnitude. Additional information collected about the earthquake may also prompt U.S.G.S. scientists to update the shake-severity map.

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Aftershocks detected

Subsequent quakes have been reported in the same area. Such temblors are typically aftershocks caused by minor adjustments along the portion of a fault that slipped at the time of the initial earthquake.

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Quakes and aftershocks within 100 miles

Aftershocks can occur days, weeks or even years after the first earthquake. These events can be of equal or larger magnitude to the initial earthquake, and they can continue to affect already damaged locations.

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When quakes and aftershocks occurred

 All times are Pacific time. The New York Times

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Sources: United States Geological Survey (epicenter, aftershocks, shake intensity); LandScan via Oak Ridge National Laboratory (population density) | Notes: Shaking categories are based on the Modified Mercalli Intensity scale. When aftershock data is available, the corresponding maps and charts include earthquakes within 100 miles and seven days of the initial quake. All times above are Pacific time. Shake data is as of Tuesday, June 2 at 12:59 p.m. Eastern. Aftershocks data is as of Tuesday, June 2 at 1:59 p.m. Eastern.

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