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Newsom denies meddling in Activision lawsuit. How much influence does the company wield?

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Newsom denies meddling in Activision lawsuit. How much influence does the company wield?

Gov. Gavin Newsom is pushing again on claims that he unduly interfered with a discrimination case being introduced in opposition to Activision Blizzard Inc. after an legal professional on the state company dealing with the lawsuit recommended Newsom was doing the bidding of the online game large.

“Claims of interference by our workplace are categorically false,” mentioned Erin Mellon, Newsom’s communications director.

Melanie Proctor resigned from her place as assistant chief counsel for the state’s Division of Truthful Employment and Housing on Wednesday in protest of the governor’s current firing of her boss, Chief Counsel Janette Wipper. In an e mail to colleagues, Proctor wrote that over the previous few weeks Newsom’s workplace “started to intervene” with a swimsuit the company was bringing in opposition to Activision, pushing for early discover of the company’s authorized methods and “mimicking the pursuits of Activision’s counsel.”

Proctor and Wipper stopped engaged on the Activision case earlier this month.

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Mellon mentioned that the governor’s administration “helps the efficient work DFEH has carried out … and can proceed to assist DFEH of their efforts to struggle all types of discrimination.”

The DFEH swimsuit accuses Activision, a Santa Monica-based firm that just lately agreed to be acquired by Microsoft in a $69-billion deal, of working a office awash with sexual harassment, wage discrimination and misogynist administration.

Alexis Ronickher, the lawyer who’s now representing each Proctor and Wipper, mentioned in a press release that Wipper is now “evaluating all avenues of authorized recourse,” together with a state legislation that protects whistleblowers.

Ronickher wrote that Newsom’s workplace fired Wipper on March 29, “within the midst of her success in pursuing DFEH’s intercourse discrimination and sexual harassment case in opposition to Activision.” On Wednesday, Wipper’s final day with the company, Proctor resigned in protest of her boss’ dismissal, she mentioned.

“For there to be justice, these with political affect should be compelled to play by the identical set of legal guidelines and guidelines,” Ronickher wrote.

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It’s not clear what is likely to be the premise of Activision’s alleged political affect. The Instances was unable to determine any members of Newsom’s administration who’ve skilled ties to the online game firm, or vice versa. Nor have executives at Activision Blizzard made any notable donations in assist of Newsom’s current political endeavors.

Nevertheless, one member of the corporate’s board of administrators, Casey Wasserman, put ahead $40,200 for Newsom’s 2018 gubernatorial marketing campaign, and a further $100,000 to counter the marketing campaign final yr to recall Newsom. Activision didn’t reply to a request for remark from Wasserman.

Activision’s controversial chief govt, Bobby Kotick, contributed $29,200 to Antonio Villaraigosa, one among Newsom’s main opponents in 2018.

Activision can also be a member of the Leisure Software program Assn., a commerce group of the online game trade comprising the 31 high recreation publishers within the U.S. that has lengthy lobbied the federal government in opposition to online game regulation. The group contributed greater than $48,000 to Newsom’s 2018 marketing campaign for governor and, to this point, $20,000 to his 2022 marketing campaign. It additionally donated $50,000 in opposition to the recall.

Roughly $40,000 of Activision’s group dues have been used for political contributions or expenditures throughout fiscal yr 2020, Activision wrote in a political actions disclosure report.

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Microsoft has been extra energetic in California politics.

As an organization, Microsoft donated greater than $45,000 to Newsom’s 2018 and 2022 election campaigns, and a further $15,000 by means of a political motion committee. A member of its board of administrators, Reid Hoffman, has donated over $57,000 to Newsom’s campaigns.

Proctor‘s and Wipper’s exits come lower than two weeks after one other authorities company, the federal Equal Employment Alternative Fee, settled its personal, comparable lawsuit in opposition to Activision for $18 million. The choice included a proviso that any staff who take a payout from the fund need to waive their proper to obtain no matter damages that come out of the state-level DFEH swimsuit.

The 2 businesses have been locked in a turf battle over the case since final yr. The DFEH strenuously objected to the EEOC’s federal settlement because it was filed, claiming it might hamper the state’s case. On the day the decide signed the consent decree, DFEH lawyer Jahan Sagafi reiterated the company’s objections, claiming that “the EEOC by no means ought to have filed this case.”

The EEOC received the day, and received in some jabs in opposition to the California company alongside the way in which. Final fall, because the DFEH was trying to intervene within the federal case, the EEOC filed an objection alleging that two DFEH attorneys concerned within the Activision case labored on the EEOC investigation earlier than switching jobs — a battle that might have run afoul of the State Bar of California’s guidelines {of professional} conduct. The decide denied the DFEH’s intervention on different grounds.

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The 2 attorneys who allegedly moved from the EEOC to the DFEH went unnamed within the filings. Wipper labored for the California department of the EEOC till she was appointed chief counsel on the DFEH in 2018. Proctor hasn’t labored for the EEOC within the final 5 years.

A former deputy legal professional normal mentioned the governor’s involvement within the Activision case is just not notably uncommon and didn’t represent interference.

The company works in tandem with the governor and legal professional normal’s places of work and should get approval for its lawsuits and authorized actions, the previous deputy legal professional normal famous.

What’s uncommon, this particular person mentioned, is the dispute between DFEH and EEOC — two businesses that always collaborate on instances and consider one another as “companions.” The previous deputy legal professional normal speculated that the battle might have spurred Newsom’s workplace to pay nearer consideration to DFEH’s dealing with of the case.

Kevin Kish, director of the DFEH, mentioned the company continues to pursue its legacy of litigating “groundbreaking” civil rights instances with the “full assist” of Newsom’s administration.

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“Our instances will transfer ahead primarily based on the details, the legislation, and our dedication to our mission to guard the civil rights of all Californians,” he mentioned in a press release.

Instances workers author Phil Willon contributed to this report.

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All illegal migrants held in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba have been sent to Louisiana

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All illegal migrants held in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba have been sent to Louisiana

All 40 illegal migrants held at the Guantánamo Bay U.S. naval base in Cuba have been sent back to the United States and are now being held in Louisiana, two U.S. defense officials told Fox News.

The group includes 23 “high-threat illegal aliens” who were held at the detention facility on base and 17 migrants who were held at the migrant operations center on base. 

The illegal migrants were transported to Louisiana via Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) aircraft and there are currently no migrants being held at the base and no flights scheduled to arrive with more migrants, the officials said. 

Migrants boarding a military flight to Guantánamo Bay earlier this year. All 40 illegal migrants held at the Guantánamo Bay U.S. naval base in Cuba have been sent back to the United States and are now being held in Louisiana, two U.S. defense officials told Fox News. (Department of Homeland Security)

‘WEAPONIZED MIGRATION’: US FACES DEADLY CONSEQUENCES WITH MADURO IN POWER, VENEZUELAN OPPOSITION WARNS

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The U.S. defense officials were not told why the 40 migrants were sent back to the United States, and Homeland Security and ICE have not yet responded to any inquiries about why they were sent back and where in Louisiana they are being held. 

It is unclear if the U.S. will continue to hold migrants at the base, commonly known as “Gitmo.” None of the 195 tents that were set up to hold migrants have been used because they do not meet ICE standards, according to several U.S. defense officials, such as having air conditioning and other amenities.

In late January, President Donald Trump instructed the Pentagon to prepare 30,000 beds at the base to house “criminal illegal aliens” who pose a threat to the American public, adding that putting them there would ensure they do not come back. The president said the move would bring the U.S. one step closer to “eradicating the scourge” of migrant crime in communities, once and for all.

Trump Guantanamo Bay migrants

News of the migrants being sent to Louisiana comes as President Donald Trump is reportedly expected to invoke the Alien Enemies Act of 1798 in an effort to pave the way for faster mass deportations of illegal immigrants.  (Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images, left, DOD via AP, right.)

VANCE TAKES VICTORY LAP IN BORDER VISIT AS ILLEGAL IMMIGRANT NUMBERS PLUMMET 

But the operation to build more tents was halted back in February, just several weeks after it started.

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Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth visited the base in late February and met with troops serving there. 

The 45-square-mile base, located about 430 miles southeast of Miami, is best known for detaining terrorism suspects, including those behind the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks. It’s been leased from Cuba since 1903 and serves as a key operational and logistics hub for maritime security, humanitarian assistance and joint operations. 

Pete Hegseth at Guantanamo Bay

Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth met with troops at the base last month. (U.S. Army photo by Staff Sgt. ShaTyra Cox)

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News of the migrants being sent to Louisiana comes as President Donald Trump is reportedly expected to invoke the Alien Enemies Act of 1798 in an effort to pave the way for faster mass deportations of illegal immigrants. 

Trump will use the law to target members of the violent Venezuelan Tren de Aragua gang, the New York Post reported, citing two sources close to the administration. 

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Trump campaigned on invoking the wartime law, which allows the president to detain or deport the natives and citizens of an enemy nation. 

Fox News’ Louis Casiano contributed to this report. 

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Contributor: NPR faces a real threat in defunding fight that's coming

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Contributor: NPR faces a real threat in defunding fight that's coming

In February, Elon Musk and his Department of Government Efficiency put the nation’s public radio network on notice. “Defund NPR,” he wrote on X. “It should survive on its own.” Musk’s tweet was the latest indication that the Trump administration intends to alter the way the broadcaster operates. In January, Federal Communications Commission Chairman Brendan Carr announced an investigation into the legality of underwriting — the public media equivalent of advertising. Meanwhile, the Department of Defense ordered NPR and other news organizations to give up their offices at the Pentagon. Breitbart News will occupy NPR’s space.

During its 55-year history, NPR’s funding scares have come almost on schedule, heralded by the arrival of a new Republican administration (Ronald Reagan, 1981), a rightward shift in the Congress (Newt Gingrich, 1995) or a decision by network executives that angers conservatives (the firing of commentator Juan Williams, 2010).

The previous threats have been serious, but none as serious as what’s unfolding now.

The network is vulnerable. In 2024, former NPR business editor Uri Berliner posted an essay on the Free Press substack site accusing the organization of adopting a left-wing stance in which “race and identity” were “paramount.” NPR pushed back, but the “bias” allegations received extensive coverage. Simultaneously, the network has been losing its audience. It started during the pandemic, as commuters who had tuned into “Morning Edition” and “All Things Considered” abandoned drive-time for radio-free walks down the hall to home offices. Listenership dropped — from an estimated 60 million in 2020 to 42 million in 2024.

In mounting its defense, NPR should look back at its earlier wins and losses.

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By far the worst incident sprang from the recommendation of a Reagan-appointed panel to cancel the entire budget of the Corp. for Public Broadcasting, the agency that oversees both NPR and PBS. Although David Stockman, Reagan’s budget czar, ultimately opted for a less drastic 25% cut, Frank Mankiewicz, then president of NPR, viewed even the lower amount as potentially ruinous.

In 1982, Mankiewicz tried to free NPR from government funding altogether by monetizing a number of embryonic online delivery systems that would beam stock reports, sports scores and news headlines to handheld devices while transmitting NPR shows to home computers and inventory and pricing information to business customers. The technology, however, had yet to be fully developed. Within a year, Mankiewicz was gone and NPR was $9.1 million in debt.

The CPB bailed out NPR, but not before extracting concessions. Since the network’s founding in 1970, it had received grants from the agency to pay for programming. Now, the grants would go to NPR stations, enabling them either to continue buying “Morning Edition” and “All Things Considered” from the network or shows such as “Marketplace” from independent suppliers.

NPR executives bemoaned the change but the advantage of giving federal money to the stations became apparent in 1995 after Gingrich, the newly elected speaker of the House, announced plans to “zero out” the CPB. Where in the past this proposal would have been seen as a threat to NPR and PBS, it was instead seen as endangering beloved local stations. “If you were attacking NPR,” a network executive later said, “you were attacking your own community.” When an amendment to eliminate CPB funding came up in the House, it lost by a two-to-one margin.

By 2010, when NPR dismissed Williams, the media world was beginning to fracture in ways that anticipated the current environment, and the firing of a conservative commentator became a litmus test. NPR’s rationale for letting Williams go, which was that he’d made what it considered Islamophobic remarks while appearing on Fox News, fell flat. Fox lambasted NPR and handed Williams a $2-million contract. NPR investigated the executive who fired Williams and she resigned. Jon Stewart mocked the network on “The Daily Show” with a reference to a gentler public radio commentator: “NPR, you just brought a tote bag full of David Sedaris books to a knife fight.”

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In 2011, the Republican-controlled House — responding to the firing of Williams and to a later controversy involving a right-wing video sting that captured an NPR executive seemingly agreeing to publicize shariah law — voted 228 to 192 to defund the network. The Democratic-controlled Senate, however, did not go along. President Obama, who signed the bill that kept the funding alive, nevertheless aimed a barb at NPR during that year’s White House Correspondents Dinner: “I was looking forward to new programming like ‘No Things Considered.’ ”

The defunding effort shaping up in 2025 promises dangers harder to joke about. During his first term, Trump stated that the CPB should be defunded. In his second term, he is unleashing an assault on the very idea of public agencies.

NPR’s defense will likely be that since it now gets just 1% of its budget from the government, it presents no threat to the national purse. But it’s not that simple. According to its own reporting on “All Things Considered,” while the stations indeed get more government money than does NPR itself, they end up spending a lot of it for NPR programs. With a president who openly despises the mainstream media, and with all branches of government in Republican control, the CPB will not be coming to the rescue.

Yet there are reasons to hope that NPR will survive. First, regardless of Berliner’s critique, NPR has always been a source of ground-breaking journalistic practices and superb reporting. It has established a solid foothold in American culture.

In 1972, NPR named Susan Stamberg host of “All Things Considered,” making her the first woman to front a national news show. In 1973, NPR assigned reporter Josh Darsa to the Russell Senate Office Building to cover the Watergate hearings. No other broadcaster had a reporter in the room each day. In 2003, NPR was the only American broadcast network to keep a correspondent (Anne Garrels) in Baghdad during the aerial assault that launched the Iraq War. NPR’s current efforts are similarly strong, whether they be dispatches by Jerusalem reporter Daniel Estrin about the conflict in Gaza or those by Berlin reporter Rob Schmitz about threats to NATO. Ari Shapiro, now the cohost of “All Things Considered,” recently contributed a thorough piece from Panama about reaction to Trump’s stated hopes to reclaim control of the Panama Canal.

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Another reason for hope is that as opposed to 1995 — or even to 2011 — the American media landscape is in such poor shape that NPR is more necessary than ever. Across the country, print journalism has imploded. Commercial TV and radio news operations are also in decline. Especially in red states, NPR is sometimes the only source of local news. True, people everywhere now get information from cable channels, random websites or social media, but many still want what NPR offers.

As Bill Siemering, the creator of “All Things Considered,” put it in the organization’s 1970 mission statement:

“In its journalistic mode, National Public Radio will actively explore, investigate, and interpret issues of national and international import. The programs will enable the individual to better understand himself, his government, his institutions, and his natural and social environment.”

This is as good an idea now as it was more than half a century ago. Today’s political climate, however, is even harsher than that during Richard Nixon’s embattled presidency. In the coming fight, NPR will not only need more than a tote bag of David Sedaris books. It will need to rally support at the national and local level. It will need to bring a knife.

Steve Oney is a Los Angeles-based journalist and the author of “On Air: The Triumph and Tumult of NPR,” published this week.

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Video: ‘I Love My Job’: Laid-Off Federal Worker on DOGE Cuts

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Video: ‘I Love My Job’: Laid-Off Federal Worker on DOGE Cuts

new video loaded: ‘I Love My Job’: Laid-Off Federal Worker on DOGE Cuts

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‘I Love My Job’: Laid-Off Federal Worker on DOGE Cuts

Jasmin Dominguez, a former U.S. Forest Service employee, was fired weeks after helping fight the Los Angeles wildfires. Her termination was part of the Trump administration’s efforts to shrink the government.

“This was given to me for working the Eaton Fire. We all got one. And this is a huge honor to have received. My name is spelled wrong, but it’s OK. After working these fires, I got a termination email. It made me feel like the rug was pulled out from under me. They said it was based on my performance, but this was copy and pasted for everybody. So I know for a fact that that wasn’t it because I always tried my best in every job I had. The firefighters and the whole operation — it is reliant on these maps. It shows the progression of the fires or the fire perimeter, and then it shows all the operations surrounding the fire. I love my job and I love all the aspects that came with it. So I responded to the Eaton fire. It was raining ash there. Very hazy. I worked about 12 to 16 hours a day, and I worked 11 days with the G.I.S. Eaton team. Our G.I.S. trailer was like right, straight forward here. This is really interesting to see this area, that it’s so lively because during the fire operations, it was really stacked with a bunch of resources for fighting these fires. So all this was at my desk. Cleaning up my desk, that was very difficult. Emotionally, just the memories of it. It was very sad.” “My guest Jasmin is from Lancaster, and she was working for the Forest Service until she was unjustly terminated. You made the effort to come all the way out here. The least I could do is to get you to the House chambers.” “The president of the United States.” “My administration will reclaim power from this unaccountable bureaucracy.” [cheering] “Hearing Trump’s speech and sitting close enough to where I can see Elon Musk’s reaction, it was infuriating. All the people that were terminated, the federal employees are all valuable in so many ways to the public, and it’s sad that they don’t see it yet. They won’t see it until they need that person that they let go and the work isn’t done.”

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