California
Mater Dei and Oxford Academy softball teams to open CIF Southern California Regional on the road
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Orange County’s softball pairings for the CIF Southern California Regional were not only light Sunday as expected.
They were challenging, too.
Mater Dei and Oxford Academy, the county’s lone automatic qualifiers to opt into the tournament — both received challenging road games for the first round on Tuesday, May 28.
Mater Dei (14-12) drew the No. 8 seed in the eight-team Division I bracket and a 61-mile road trip to top-seeded Murrieta Mesa (25-4).
In Division IV, Oxford Academy (25-6) received the No. 7 seed and a 64-mile trek to No. 2 Oceanside (22-6-1).
Mater Dei, the fourth-place team from the Trinity League, accepted its automatic berth after reaching the CIF-SS Division 2 semifinals.
Oxford Academy, the fourth-place from the 605 League, claimed its bid after finishing as the CIF-SS Division 7 runner-up to Eastside of Lancaster.
Eastside received the No. 6 seed in Division IV and would host Oxford Academy in the semifinals Thursday if both teams advance.
The dominate storyline leading up to the release of the brackets Sunday was the number of O.C. teams that declined either automatic bids or invitations to the fourth-year event. The reasons included the schedule, conflict with travel softball and lack of a state championship format.
Murrieta Mesa secured the No. 1 seed by reaching the CIF-SS Division 1 semifinals, where it fell to top-seeded Orange Lutheran.
Oceanside won the Division 3 crown in the San Diego Section as the No. 5 seed by overcoming an early loss in the double-elimination tournament.
The schools with the best seed serve as the host in each round of the week-long regional tournament.
Last season, Fullerton became the first O.C. school to win a regional title by capturing Division III. The No. 2 seeded Indians defeated No. 1 Otay Ranch 7-0 in Chula Vista.
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Did Prop 50 pass in California? What to know about redistricting measure
Californians cast Prop 50 ballots in fight over redistricting.
Redistricting and voting rights take center stage as Californians vote on Proposition 50.
California voters on Nov. 4 passed Proposition 50, a constitutional amendment that allows a redrawing of the state’s congressional district boundaries, a major win for Democrats.
The measure, which was pushed by Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom, permits California’s Democratic state lawmakers to temporarily redraw the state’s U.S. congressional districts to increase their party’s chances of winning more seats in Congress.
After the 2030 U.S. Census, the state will return to using a nonpartisan commission to draw their congressional district boundaries.
Prop 50’s passing essentially negates five new GOP-leaning congressional districts Texas created earlier this year at the urging of President Donald Trump. Here’s what to know.
Did Prop 50 pass?
Yes, Proposition 50 passed in California. The measure authorizes a temporary redrawing of the state’s congressional districts ahead of the 2026 midterms.
Democrats hope the amendment will offset a Republican-led redistricting in Texas. With California and Texas having the largest Democratic and Republican delegations, respectively, they hold more weight in who controls the U.S. House of Representatives. Republicans currently hold a razor-thin majority in the U.S. House.
Redistricting typically happens at the start of every decade, but some states are prohibiting more mid-decade changes.
“What a night for the Democratic party,” Newsom said after polls closed on Nov. 4.
Trump denounced the results in a post on Truth Social.
“The Unconstitutional Redistricting Vote in California is a GIANT SCAM in that the entire process, in particular the Voting itself, is RIGGED,” he wrote.
Prop 50 election results
Over eight million Californians turned out to vote for Prop 50, according to data from the California Secretary of State.
More than 63% of voters elected to pass Prop 50, while roughly 36% voted against it.
Melina Khan is a national trending reporter for USA TODAY. She can be reached at melina.khan@usatoday.com.
Contributing: Sarah D. Wire, Ramon Padilla and Ignacio Calderon, USA TODAY
California
California Quietly Kills Electric Bike Vouchers, Sending Money to EV Incentives Instead | KQED
“I think that’s really unfortunate that we’re responding to the current federal situation by limiting Californians’ ability to get really the cheapest and most economical, sustainable transportation option, instead of sort of doubling down and saying, ‘We have this really low-cost option that opens trips up for more people, and then we also have this other option for people who need cars,’” Ramsey said.
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“I found it a little bit surprising that the same entity would have two similar voucher programs run completely different ways … when they had an existing program that was already working, that was distributing a large amount of money as well,” Ramsey said.
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