It’s over, and Donald Trump won. But it’s also just beginning. Here’s what we’re watching:
- Protests in California and major cities across the nation
- Multiple California and L.A. races and ballot propositions haven’t been called yet. See our maps.
- How Trump won.
- It’s now legal in California to smoke marijuana recreationally.
- Yesterday, from start to finish.
‘Calexit’ movement says Trump win helps their calls for California to secede
A group trying to get California to secede from the United States said the results of the presidential election gave their cause new momentum.
As they held a protest outside the state Capitol on Wednesday night, members of the Yes California Independence Campaign said they wanted Californians to vote on the issue. Their aim: a 2018 ballot initiative to force a 2019 special election.
“The relationship between California and the federal system just isn’t working,” said Marcus Ruiz Evans, vice president of YesCalifornia.org.
He said the money California pays in federal taxes isn’t adequately supporting aging infrastructure and public programs in the state.
Evans and about a dozen other supporters paced the sidewalk in front of the Capitol on Wednesday evening, chanting, “What do we want? Calexit! When do we want it? Now!” Some wore dark blue Yes California shirts.
Yes California was one of several groups protesting the outcome of the election at the Capitol on Wednesday evening. Another group formed a large semicircle to share postelection feelings on the Capitol steps. Two women held “Free Hugs” signs. In the street, a group of dozens of protestors blocked traffic and chanted “F--- Trump” while waving posters that said “Not my president.”
Evans said the Yes California group planned the event months in advance and would have protested regardless of the result. But he said Donald Trump’s victory Tuesday strengthened their case and generated additional support.
“Now that America chose Trump, no one is debating with us that America is failing,” Evans said. “So then the question becomes, do you want to go down with the sinking ship, knowing that you have a ship that’s able to sail the international economy on its own?”
In conservative Utah, Trump underperforms, but so does McMullin
Seeing Utah’s electoral votes go to the Republican candidate on election day in any other year, Logan Sisam would have gone to bed and felt pretty good about that fact.
Utah knew exactly what it was and he knew what he was: a Republican Mormon living in a conservative state.
Donald Trump upended all of that for him.
Thousands protest Trump in New York
Although he lives in a penthouse high above the crowd, it might be tough for President-elect Donald J. Trump to get some rest when he gets home.
Thousands of protesters chanted “New York hates you” and “Not my president” in front of Trump’s flagship New York building, the Trump Tower.
Protesters filled Fifth Avenue for five blocks, essentially closing down an iconic, much-visited neighborhood of midtown Manhattan. Those who weren’t holding signs raised their middle fingers — many of them taking selfies of the gesture — toward the glassy, black 58-story tower that had become a symbol of the Trump candidacy.
Reaction from China: ‘President Trump Shocks America’
The front page of the Global Times, a Communist Party-run newspaper, led with the headline “President Trump Shocks America” on Wednesday.
Trump head burned in effigy outside L.A. City Hall
Assembly Speaker on Brown’s loss: ‘It’s a shame’
It’s a shame we lost a great member...As far as I’m concerned, it really says something about the top-two. It’s a pretty volatile system.
— Assembly Speaker Anthony Rendon (D-Paramount), on defeat of San Bernardino Assemblywoman Cheryl Brown
Still no call in U.S. House race between Ami Bera and Scott Jones
The race between U.S. Rep. Ami Bera (D-Elk Grove) and Republican challenger Sacramento County Sheriff Scott Jones is still too close to call.
“The race is far from over,” Jones said in a statement Wednesday. “The most important thing is for every vote to be counted.”
Returns Wednesday afternoon showed Bera ahead by 2,094 votes — a less-than 2-percentage-point lead. But elections officials in Sacramento County, which contains Bera’s district, have hundreds of thousands of ballots still to count, said assistant registrar of voters Alice Jarboe.
They may also be waiting on outstanding ballots. Ballots postmarked by election day that arrive by Monday can be counted, meaning the Northern California congressional race might not be called this week.
“I feel pretty confident about where we are,” Bera said, noting his last race took more than a week to call.
In Bera’s 2014 election, 39% of registered voters in his district were Democrats and 36% were Republican, according to data from the California Target Book, which analyzes state congressional and legislative races. Nearly 20% registered with no party preference.
Bera eked out a narrow victory in that election, winning by less than a percentage point.
“That is, in fact, a district that could swing either way,” said Target Book publisher Darry Sragow, a longtime Democratic strategist. “It is a genuinely competitive district.”
The California House race is one of two the Associated Press still had not called Wednesday afternoon. The other is between U.S. Rep. Darrell Issa (R-Vista) and Democrat Marine Col. Doug Applegate. As of Wednesday afternoon, Issa was leading Applegate by about 4,000 votes.
John Myers contributed reporting.
Bernie Sanders, with a caveat, says progressives ready to work with President-elect Trump
Both men tapped into a populist movement that eschewed establishment politicians this election.
And now, Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders says he is prepared to work with President-elect Donald Trump.
Trump “tapped into the anger of a declining middle class that is sick and tired of establishment economics, establishment politics and the establishment media,” Sanders, who gained a loyal and youthful liberal following in his bid for the Democratic presidential nomination, said in a statement Wednesday. “People are tired of working longer hours for lower wages.”
“To the degree that Mr. Trump is serious about pursuing policies that improve the lives of working families in this country, I and other progressives are prepared to work with him,” Sanders, a supporter of Hillary Clinton, the Democratic nominee, said.
But, he added, “to the degree that he pursues racist, sexist, xenophobic and anti-environment policies, we will vigorously oppose him.”
Throughout the presidential campaign Trump used charged rhetoric against, among others, Mexican immigrants, Muslims and women. Trump has insisted he will work to unite the country as president.
After decades of Republican victories, here’s how California became a blue state again
California hasn’t always been a lock for the Democratic presidential nominee. Republicans won the state in nearly every presidential election between 1952 and 1988. Ahead of an election that could see more blue in the Golden State than ever before, here’s a look at how Democrats gained, lost and won back California.
Khanna on his election to Congress: “I don’t think my parents would have ever imagined it.”
For decades, Mr. Honda has stood up for the rights of Arab Americans, Iranian Americans, Chinese Americans, Korean Americans and transgender Americans, even when it wasn’t the popular thing to do. That the son of Indian immigrants could run against a Japanese American survivor of internment to be the political face of Silicon Valley suggests just how far America has come. I don’t think my parents would ever have imagined it.
— Ro Khanna, declaring victory in the 17th Congressional District race over incumbent Michael Honda
Rep. Mike Honda on his loss: ‘Now is the time to come together’
All the work I have done in my career, every decision I have made, every action I have taken has been to give all Americans the tools and conditions to build a country that works for everyone.... I congratulate my opponent on his victory in this hard-fought campaign to represent the people of California’s 17th Congressional District. Now is the time to come together as a party and unite around the progressive values we hold dear.
— Rep. Mike Honda (D-San Jose), conceding to challenger Ro Khanna
Activists vow to fight Trump’s presidency
Less than a day after Donald Trump won the presidential election, some activist groups are vowing to fight his presidency.
Bend the Arc Jewish Action, a social justice organization, released a statement Wednesday saying it would accept Trump’s win as legal but “cannot call the idea of Donald Trump as president acceptable.”
The group said it was prepared to protest against his decisions as president after a “campaign of hate.”
“It is possible that actions of this administration will demand a response involving widespread use of peaceful direct action. The future is uncertain, the stakes are high, and we must be willing to be courageous because the consequences of our decisions will be great,” Bend the Arc Jewish Action CEO Stosh Cotle said in a statement.
The organization was among dozens of progressive faith groups that had come out against many of Trump’s campaign promises, including his proposed restrictions on Muslims immigrating to the U.S. and suggestion that he may encourage surveillance of mosques.
Leaders of the Black Lives Matter movement, which Trump has accused of calling for the death of police officers, and which he has said he would consider having investigated by the Department of Justice, said they were organizing on Wednesday for a long-term fight against Trump policies.
“Funders, and those in relationship to funders, encourage a meeting of the minds. A multi-year investment into the thought leadership of people of color and our committed allies. Please. Now,” Shanelle Matthews, the director of communications at the Black Lives Matter network, said in a Facebook post.
Color of Change political action committee, a racial justice organization, said it was emboldened by Trump’s win to amp up its efforts.
“Will not allow Trump and his dangerous political coalition to slow, much less stop, the fierce efforts of black communities to make our country more just and fair,” spokesman Rashad Robinson said in a statement.
Thousands of social media users were tweeting and posting to Facebook on Wednesday with the hashtag #NotMyPresident. Many of those posts were anti-Trump. But some celebrated his win by sharing images of Hillary Clinton with the same hashtag.
“See you in court,” the American Civil Liberties Union tweeted and boldly declared against a large image of Trump’s face on its website.
With more than two months before the presidential inauguration, there was already a link spreading via social media to a petition on the White House website to impeach Trump.
As of 1:30 p.m., it had around 15,000 signatures.
In New Hampshire, Sen. Kelly Ayotte concedes to Gov. Maggie Hassan
New Hampshire Republican Sen. Kelly Ayotte conceded late Wednesday to Democratic Gov. Maggie Hassan, giving Democrats a second seat formerly held by the GOP.
The race has still not been called by the Associated Press. With nearly all the precincts reporting, Hassan was outpacing Ayotte by about 700 votes.
In the final weeks of the campaign, Ayotte was assailed by Democrats for calling then GOP nominee, and now President- elect Donald Trump, a role model.
Other states held key Senate races. Here’s a look:
Pennsylvania
Sen. Pat Toomey (R) 48.9%
Katie McGinty (D) 47.2%
North Carolina
Sen. Richard Burr (R) 51.1%
Deborah Ross (D) 45.3%
Florida
Sen. Marco Rubio (R) 52%
Rep. Patrick Murphy (D) 44.3%
Illinois
Rep. Tammy Duckworth (D) 54.4%
Sen. Mark Kirk (R) 40.2%
Nevada
Catherine Cortez Masto (D) 47.1%
Rep. Joe Heck (R) 44.7%
2:04 p.m. This post was updated with Ayotte’s concession.
Prescription drug pricing measure Proposition 61 goes down to defeat
Proposition 61, the most expensive statewide initiative on the ballot this November, has been defeated by a 54-46 margin.
The ballot measure sought to lower prescription drug prices by requiring that state agencies pay no more for medicines than the federal Department of Veterans Affairs.
Proponents of the measure, funded almost entirely by the Los Angeles-based AIDS Healthcare Foundation, had argued that Proposition 61 would be a strong voter rebuke of pharmaceutical industry greed. Supporters included Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders, who campaigned up and down the state for the measure.
Drug companies led the campaign opposing the proposition, raising a record $109 million to defeat the measure. They argued the initiative could lead to higher drug costs for veterans and seniors if the pharmaceutical industry refused to sell the state medicines at lower prices.
Proponents of the measure raised more than $19 million to support it, and fundraising figures for both sides made it one of the priciest ballot measures in California history.
Senate leader McConnell suggests Trump can undo Obama actions ‘unilaterally’ without Congress
One way Republicans in Congress could avoid messy infighting on issues where they have differences with Donald Trump is to simply step aside and let the new president do the job.
Think of it as outsourcing Congress.
Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell suggested as much Wednesday when he told reporters that many of the GOP’s top priorities with the Trump administration could be done “unilaterally” by Trump – much the way some of President Obama’s top accomplishments were put in place.
“Much of this can be done alone because much of the problem has been created by this [presidential action] alone,” McConnell said at a news conference at the Capitol on Wednesday.
Repealing Obamacare, rolling back administration’s regulations — including the landmark clean coal plan and others — are among top priorities of Republicans. They believe reversing those will boost the economy.
“We need to undo much of that,” McConnell said.
But on one of the most contentious issues of the election — Trump’s promise to deport immigrants in the U.S. illegally and doing away with Obama’s executive actions that give some permission to live and work here — McConnell declined to address that divisive issue.
“I’m not going to discuss the immigration issue today,” McConnell said when asked about Trump’s ideas for those in the country illegally.
Before the election, House Speaker Paul D. Ryan rolled out an ambitious “Better Way” agenda — a hundreds-page-thick wish-list of proposed tax breaks, regulatory reforms and national security measures that could serve as the blueprint for a new GOP government.
But Trump and congressional Republicans have differences on many issues, and cobbling together agreement in the House and Senate has always proved difficult for GOP leaders.
McConnell does expect Trump to ask the Senate to confirm a nominee for the vacancy on the Supreme Court early in the administration. He also expressed hope for tackling tax reform, but said a big Pacific trade pact negotiated by Obama would not be voted on during the final weeks of this Congress.
McConnell said he had talked to Trump on Wednesday and “would like for him to get off on a positive start.”
“Where we have differences of opinion, I want to express them privately,” McConnell said. ‘We are going to be enthusiastically supportive almost all the time.”
California’s legislative leaders on Trump’s win: ‘We woke up feeling like strangers in a foreign land’
California’s two legislative leaders vowed Wednesday to fight any attempt by the administration of President-elect Donald Trump to roll back the state’s achievements, but also said they were shocked by the results on election night.
“We woke up feeling like strangers in a foreign land, because yesterday Americans expressed their views on a pluralistic and democratic society that are clearly inconsistent with the values of the people of California,” said the statement from Senate President Pro Tem Kevin de León (D-Los Angeles) and Assembly Speaker Anthony Rendon (D-Paramount).
The two men were staunch supporters of Hillary Clinton. De León traveled to swing states several times to campaign for the defeated presidential candidate.
On Wednesday, state-government watchers were already trying to assess the impact of a Republican sweep of the White House and Congress. Key issues, such as California’s embrace of the Affordable Care Act and aggressive climate change regulations, could face tougher scrutiny in the weeks and months to come.
“We will maximize the time during the presidential transition to defend our accomplishments using every tool at our disposal,” the two legislative leaders wrote.
They ended their joint statement with what could be the first salvo in the political and policy battles to come.
“America is greater than any one man or party,” they wrote. “We will not be dragged back into the past. We will lead the resistance to any effort that would shred our social fabric or our Constitution.”
Loretta Sanchez concedes -- and hints at a return
Orange County Rep. Loretta Sanchez conceded the U.S. Senate race Wednesday morning to Kamala Harris, congratulating the state attorney general for the win and pledging her support.
Sanchez made the announcement in press release, one night after declining to concede even after the Associated Press declared Harris the winner.
“Today, I called Ms. Kamala Harris to congratulate her on her win to the U.S. Senate,” Sanchez said in the statement. “As she prepares to head to Washington to represent the people of California, I offer my support.”
According to preliminary election results, Harris won the Senate race in a landslide -- beating Sanchez by 25 percentage points and winning 56 of California’s 58 counties, including Sanchez’s home county of Orange.
Sanchez, who has served in Congress for two decades, thanked her supporters and said she plans to spend the next few weeks with her family.
“Although we don’t know what our future will be, I can tell you that this is not the last that people will see of me,” Sanchez said.
Activists say vote in California and other states gives momentum to legalize marijuana elsewhere in the U.S.
Tuesday’s approval of marijuana legalization initiatives in California and three other states has given momentum to efforts to decriminalize pot in other parts of the U.S., national activists said Wednesday.
However, the proponents are concerned that the election of Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump could reverse the federal government’s past policies that have had the effect of encouraging states to legalize pot.
Recreational marijuana use ballot measures were also approved Tuesday in Massachusetts and Nevada, and another is ahead in Maine, although that one may face a recount. Arizona was the only state to reject an initiative that would have allowed possession of recreational marijuana.
Florida, North Dakota and Arkansas approved medical marijuana initiatives.
“It was really a remarkable set of victories last night,” Ethan Nadelmann, executive director of the Drug Policy Alliance, said in a conference call by activists with reporters.
“There is a massive sense of momentum in this regard,” he added. “I think Americans have become persuaded, by and large, that marijuana prohibition makes no sense.”
Lynne Lyman, California state director for the group, noted that 40 million people now live in states where recreational marijuana use is allowed.
In California, 56% of voters approved Proposition 64. It was approved in 37 of the 58 counties.
“We did something really significant last night in California,” Lyman said. “And we did it in a huge way.”
Kevin Sabet, president of the opposition group Smart Approaches to Marijuana Action, said it was no surprise that “deep pocketed pro-marijuana investors prevailed in California.”
But he held out hope for the new administration of Republican President-elect Donald Trump to change federal policies that have encouraged states to adopt legalization laws.
“We’re really in a whole new unknown world here,” he said.
The election is likely to put additional pressure on the federal government to address marijuana issues, but activists also are worried about the change of administration.
“What gives me real concern is the election of Donald Trump,” Nadelmann said. “Donald Trump is totally unpredictable on this issue.”
Trump said during the primary election that he would respect states that adopt their own marijuana laws, but some in his inner circle, including former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani, have pushed for tough enforcement of drug laws in the past, Nadelmann said.
That, he said, could “throw a wrench” into future efforts to legalize marijuana in additional states.
We don’t know how many ballots are left in California, and may not know until next week
California elections officials continued to sift through ballots cast by mail on Wednesday morning, and may not have a full handle on how many are left until Monday.
With the rise in absentee voting in California — it now accounts for more than half of the state’s voter registration — election day has largely become an election month. Voters are casting their ballots as early as two weeks before the day of the election. They are also holding them longer, many turning them in to elections officials right before the 8 p.m. closing of polling places on election night.
This year, a new state law has kicked in that allows ballots to be counted that arrive in the mail up to three days after the election, as long as they are postmarked by Nov. 8. Normally, that would mean ballots must arrive by the end of Friday.
But there’s a catch: Friday is Veterans Day, a federal and state holiday. State elections officials have extended the deadline to the close of business on Monday, Nov. 14.
A number of local and state races remained close as Tuesday night came to a close. Though those numbers will undoubtedly shift as ballots already on hand are counted, there’s no way to know how many more will show in mail deliveries by next week.
State begins to tackle cash-handling issue now that recreational pot is legal in California
The passage of Proposition 64 gives urgency to the need to find a system for handling the hundreds of millions of dollars now generated in cash by the marijuana industry in California, according to Fiona Ma, chairwoman of the state Board of Equalization.
The issue arises because federally regulated banks will not accept drug proceeds, so pot shops can’t write bank checks or use credit cards to pay fees and taxes to the state.
In addition to pot shops having difficulty handling their deposits, the state faces a difficult situation accepting up to $1 billion in annual taxes in cash.
“We are going to have to figure out the cash issue and how we are going to accept the cash.” Ma said. “We are working on different options right now to try to alleviate the cash problem.
One idea is to have a tax official stationed at branches of Bank of America, which handles tax proceeds for the state, so the official can accept cash payment of taxes and then deposit it as state revenue. Ma said she was also looking at possibly having Department of Motor Vehicles locations accept tax payments in cash.
The issue also affects other state agencies, such as the Department of Consumer Affairs, that are not set up to accept cash payments for license fees that would be paid by those getting state permits to grow, transport and sell marijuana.
Ma said her agency would probably try again to get legislation approved to allow her office to accept cash for other agencies’ license fees. “If you want to get a state permit from a state agency, the state agencies are not equipped to take cash payments,” she said.
There is one benefit under the measure for current holders of medical marijuana cards. Proposition 64 exempts them from state sales taxes.
Measure to speed up the death penalty leads, and the bid to end executions fails
California voters on Tuesday defeated a ballot measure to repeal the state’s death penalty, while a measure that would expedite and amend the death penalty process narrowly leads with more ballots left to be counted.
The final outcome will conclude a closely watched ballot race to address what people on both sides of the debate have agreed is a broken system.
Proposition 62, which would have replaced capital punishment for murder with life in prison without parole, garnered 46.1% of the vote.
Proposition 66 intended to speed up executions by designating trial courts to hear petitions challenging death row convictions, limiting successive petitions and expanding the pool of lawyers who could take on death penalty appeals.
With all precincts reporting, it currently has the approval of 50.9% of voters, but provisional and other ballots remain to be counted.
The outcome reflects similar findings by a USC Dornsife/Los Angeles Times poll, which found California residents, like the nation, remain very much divided on capital punishment, even as public opinion has shifted against the practice over the past 40 years.
This year, proponents of the measure to “amend not end” the death penalty system centered their campaigning efforts on emotional appeals from law enforcement and crime victims, who urged voters not do away with what they called the “last defense” against the “worst of the worst in society.”
But death penalty opponents, a diverse group of crime victims, celebrities and Silicon Valley entrepreneurs, argued the system could not be fixed. They pointed to a costly appeals process, the arbitrary application of the punishment and its impact on poor and minority communities.
Times staff writer Liam Dillon contributed to this story.
FOR THE RECORD: 11:11 a.m. This story and headline has been corrected to reflect that the Associated Press has not called the race for Proposition 66.
This story was originally posted at 6:31 a.m.
Muratsuchi defeats Hadley in Assembly race rematch
Assemblyman David Hadley (R-Manhattan Beach) was defeated in his rematch with challenger Al Muratsuchi, the Democrat he ousted in 2014.
Muratsuchi secured 53% of the vote with all precincts reporting, and the Associated Press called the race Wednesday morning.
The 65th Assembly District is a coastal swing district that tends to lean Democratic, and Hadley was widely considered to be one of the most vulnerable incumbents in the Assembly.
State and county Democratic committees spent nearly $3.3 million in an attempt to recapture the seat, which is key to their efforts to regain a super-majority in the Assembly. Muratsuchi was one of three Assembly candidates endorsed by President Obama.
The race had grown increasingly contentious, with Muratsuchi’s campaign filing a complaint alleging that Hadley’s campaign had illegally coordinated with an independent expenditure committee backed by Republican mega-donor Charles Munger Jr. That group, known as Spirit of Democracy, ended up dropping more than $1.5 million to oppose Muratsuchi and support Hadley.
Democrats tried to tie Hadley to Donald Trump, posting campaign signs that read “TRUMP HADLEY” and creating a website called hadleytrump.com. The Republican said earlier this year that he would not vote for Trump, and said Tuesday he cast a ballot for Libertarian candidate Gary Johnson.
Staff writer Liam Dillon contributed to this report.
Orange County voted for a Democrat for president for the first time since the Great Depression
It’s little comfort for Democrats who are devastated that Hillary Clinton lost the White House, but she managed to do something no Democrat has done since the Great Depression: win Orange County, a bastion of conservatism.
Clinton beat Donald Trump by nearly five percentage points, or 39,000 votes, in the county, which is a national symbol for the GOP — the home to Richard Nixon and the cradle of Ronald Reagan’s conservatism.
The last time a Democrat won the county was 1936. For decades, it was a GOP stronghold, with Republican presidential candidates routinely beating their Democratic rivals by double-digit margins.
But in recent years, as the county has grown more diverse and less conservative, the gaps have narrowed. President Obama came the closest to winning Orange County, losing to Sen. John McCain by 2.5 percentage points in 2008.
Front pages: Here’s how newspapers declared Trump’s presidential victory
Ellection coverage on the front pages of today’s newspapers are on display outside the Newseum in Washington, D.C. The victory of Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump surprised many in the country after weeks of polling data appeared to indicate Hillary Clinton was poised to win.
Raul Bocanegra will return to California Assembly
Assemblywoman Patty Lopez (D-San Fernando) has lost her seat to Raul Bocanegra, the former assemblyman she unseated in 2014.
Bocanegra received 61.1% of the vote with all precincts reporting, and the Associated Press called the race Wednesday morning.
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FOR THE RECORD
11:23 a.m.: An earlier version of this post said Lopez received 61.1% of the vote. Bocanegra received that amount.
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Lopez’s election to the Assembly was one of the biggest surprises of 2014. A local activist and political neophyte, she ran a bare-bones campaign funded in part by selling tamales and pozole, and shattered expectations that Bocanegra would coast to reelection.
It became a cautionary tale for incumbents who might be inclined to ignore their reelection races, with many who would typically be considered safe increasing their spending.
During her first months in office, Lopez faced calls to step down, struggled to retain staff and showed a distrust of the establishment.
She failed to win the endorsement of the California Democratic Party, which instead endorsed Bocanegra. In recent months Lopez had complained she didn’t “feel respected” by her Democratic Assembly colleagues, some of whom had endorsed and were campaigning for Bocanegra.
Los Angeles Times staff writer Liam Dillon contributed to this report.
Eloise Reyes ousts fellow Democrat Cheryl Brown from state Assembly seat
Assemblywoman Cheryl Brown (D-San Bernardino) has lost her long, expensive battle against fellow Democrat attorney Eloise Reyes.
Reyes secured 53.3% of the vote with all precincts reporting, and the Associated Press called the race Wednesday morning.
This was one of the most closely watched Assembly races of 2016, partly because it was seen as a proxy battle between environmentalists and labor unions, who supported the more progressive Reyes, and oil companies and business groups, who bankrolled committees supporting Brown.
Brown, who is a member of the Legislature’s informal moderate caucus of business-aligned Democrats, played a key role in watering down last year’s landmark climate change bill.
Labor groups and environmentalists helped fund an effort that spent more than $1.5 million in the general election to support Reyes and oppose Brown, dubbing her “Chevron Cheryl” and accusing her of doing the oil industry’s bidding.
Brown benefited from the bulk of the $6.1 million total independent expenditures in the race, most of it funded by Chevron and other oil companies and business groups.
Times staff writer Liam Dillon contributed to this report.
Dante Acosta defeats Christy Smith in Assembly race to represent Santa Clarita
Dante Acosta, a Republican and Santa Clarita city councilman, has defeated school board member Christy Smith, a Democrat, in their assembly race.
Acosta garnered 53.1% of the vote with all precincts reporting, and the Associated Press called the race Wednesday morning.
Democrats had hoped Smith could flip the seat held by Assemblyman Scott Wilk (R-Santa Clarita), who won his race for state Senate.
Less than two weeks before the election, Acosta faced allegations that he had sexually harassed a local GOP consultant, Jennifer Van Laar, who had worked for one of Acosta’s Republican opponents during the June primary.
The claims first came to light when local blog Sclarita.com published a partially redacted private email from Van Laar to Wilk’s wife discussing the allegations. The allegations threatened to touch two other competitive races in the Antelope Valley, those of Wilk and Rep. Steve Knight (R-Palmdale), both of whom were copied on the email.
The race in this reliably Republican district became a late surprise focus for state Democrats as they expanded their field of targets and their expectations of a negative “Trump effect” following favorable voter registration trends and Smith’s strong primary showing. State and county Democratic committees spent more than $1.4 million trying to help Smith win the seat.
When Wilk was reelected two years ago, Republicans had a more than 5-percentage-point edge over Democrats in voter registration in the district. By Tuesday’s election, that lead had dropped to just 1.7 percentage points.
Times staff writer Liam Dillon contributed to this story.
Trump’s victory assures a conservative majority on the Supreme Court
Donald Trump’s presidential victory preserves the Supreme Court’s narrow conservative majority by clearing the way for the new president to choose a jurist next year to fill the seat of the late Justice Antonin Scalia.
And with Republicans maintaining control of the Senate, Trump likely will have a free hand in selecting someone with strong conservative credentials, confident his nominee will be confirmed.
The election dashes the hopes of liberals, who lost their best opportunity in more than 40 years to create a majority on the high court.
It also provided a validation of sorts for the obstruction strategy of Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) and other Republicans, who refused for nearly nine months to consider President Obama’s nominee to fill Scalia’s seat, Merrick Garland, chief judge of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit.
The future of the Supreme Court’s ideological balance proved to be a crucial factor for many Republican voters. In exit polls, about 1 in 5 voters said the Supreme Court appointments were “the most important factor” in their decision, and those voters favored Trump by a 57% to 40% margin, according to ABC News.
Now, the court’s ideological balance should remain largely as it has been for the last decade, with Justice Anthony M. Kennedy holding the deciding vote in the court’s biggest cases.
Kennedy generally leans to the right on issues such as campaign spending, criminal law, the death penalty, religion, business regulation and gun rights. But he has joined the court’s four liberals to uphold gay rights and to protect blacks from housing discrimination.
Kamala Harris’ win may wind up as biggest landslide in a U.S. Senate race in California in more than 60 years
Ex-Assemblyman Anthony Portantino defeats longtime L.A. County Supervisor Michael Antonovich for state Senate seat
Longtime Republican Los Angeles County Supervisor Michael D. Antonovich lost a race for a state Senate seat against Democratic former Assemblyman Anthony Portantino.
Portantino garnered 57.5% of the vote with all precincts reporting and the Associated Press called the race Wednesday morning.
The race for the district representing parts of Burbank, Glendale, Pasadena and the San Gabriel Valley was a rare opportunity for Republicans to take a seat away from Democrats.
Outgoing incumbent Sen. Carol Liu (D-La Cañada Flintridge) was termed out.
Portantino was seen as the favorite, since Democrats hold a 15-percentage-point lead over Republicans among registered voters. But Antonovich’s long record in local government — he previously served in the state Assembly from 1972 to 1978 — and high name recognition had the potential to make the race close.
Stern and Bradford win L.A.-area state Senate races
Henry Stern, an environmental attorney and policy advisor to state Sen. Fran Pavley (D-Agoura Hills) won a race to replace his boss, beating Republican businessman Steve Fazio.
Stern has big shoes to fill; Pavley is a stalwart in the environmental wing of the state Democratic Party and was behind some of the state’s landmark climate change laws.
Fifty-five percent of voters picked Stern to take over for Pavley in the coastal 27th Senate District.
In the South Bay, former Assemblyman Steven Bradford beat another former Assemblyman, Warren Furutani, in a race for the 35th Senate District.
Incumbent Isadore Hall did not run for reelection, opting instead for a failed bid at an overlapping congressional seat.
Bradford won with 54.3% of the vote.
Times staff writer Liam Dillon contributed to this story.
Clueless or calculated? Some questions about Melania Trump’s fashion choices
Are Melania Trump’s wardrobe choices completely clueless or cunningly calculated? Based on the white Ralph Lauren jumpsuit she picked for her husband’s victory rally in New York City in the wee hours of Wednesday morning, we’re starting to think it’s the latter.
Multiple sources have identified the outfit as an Italian-made, ruffled, one-shoulder jumpsuit with an asymmetrical ruffled overlay. And although it’s not technically a pantsuit, it’s certainly close enough in silhouette to bring Hillary Clinton’s go-to look to mind. Throw in the fact that it’s white — the color that many women chose to wear on election day as a symbol of women’s suffrage — and the symbolism is all the more powerful.
Is this sheer coincidence? Possibly. But after a day that saw social media filled with hashtags like #pantsuitnation, #pantsuitstothepolls
and #WearWhitetoVote, it’s hard to imagine that the former model from Slovenia had absolutely no idea that her wardrobe choice would be seen as referencing (or, if you’re feeling less charitable, co-opting) the sartorial symbolism of the day.
GOP Assemblyman Scott Wilk wins state Senate seat
Republican Assemblyman Scott Wilk beat Democrat Johnathon Ervin in the race to fill a seat previously held by Sen. Sharon Runner (R-Lancaster), who decided not to run for reelection citing health reasons. She died this year at the age of 62.
Wilk received 54.8% of the vote with all precincts reporting, and the Associated Press called the race Wednesday morning.
The Antelope Valley has historically been a stronghold for Republicans, but Democrats have made recent gains and currently have a four percentage point lead among registered voters.
California billionaire and political donor Tom Steyer made a late investment in the race through his super PAC, giving Ervin an unexpected $433,000.
Times staff writer Liam Dillon contributed to this report.
Obama pledges himself to smooth transition, calls for unity after Trump victory
President Obama committed himself to a smooth transition of power to President-elect Donald Trump and urged Americans to unite after a bitter campaign as “one team.”
“We’re not Democrats first, we’re not Republicans first, we are Americans first,” he said in remarks in the Rose Garden moments after Hillary Clinton formally conceded defeat. “We are patriots first. We all want what’s best for this country.”
Obama noted that he and his Republican successor had no shortage of differences, but said he was now “rooting for his success.” He said he was “heartened” by the tone of Trump’s victory speech the night before, and in a private conversation between the two at 3:30 a.m.
“I hope that he maintains that spirit throughout this transition. And I certainly hope that’s how his presidency has a chance to begin,” Obama said.
It was a statement Obama never expected to give, but one he had promised he would make despite his deep reservations about Trump’s candidacy.
Clinton’s defeat is in many ways Obama’s, as well. He had staked his legacy on electing a Democratic successor who would cement his administration’s hardest fought accomplishments -- legislative, like the Affordable Care Act; diplomatic, like the Iran nuclear deal and international climate agreement; and those achieved through executive action, on immigration especially.
Obama campaigned aggressively on Clinton’s behalf -- more than any two-term president for his desired successor in recent history. He called Trump temperamentally unfit to hold his office, and urged his supporters to turn out to reaffirm his own victories.
“I may not be on the ballot this time, but everything we’ve done has been on the ballot,” he said at a closing rally for Clinton on Sunday in Kissimmee, Fla. Trump won Florida by one percentage point.
Now, Obama and his team will continue preparations long underway for a smooth transfer of power. Obama praised his predecessor, George W. Bush, for a smooth transition amid a global economic crisis, and committed himself Wednesday to do the same. The presidency “is bigger than any of us,” he said.
“The peaceful transition of power is one of the hallmarks of our democracy. And over the next few months, we are going to show that to the world,” he said.
On Thursday he will welcome the president-elect to the White House, a ritual of American democracy that will have added symbolic significance given the personal history between the two men. Trump spent years amplifying the lie that Obama was born outside the U.S., a tactic meant to undermine the legitimacy of the first black president.
California votes in favor of overturning Citizens United by passing Proposition 59
Voters approved Proposition 59, which instructs elected officials to overturn the U.S. Supreme Court’s landmark Citizens United decision that dramatically altered the way money can be spent on politics.
The Associated Press projects the ballot measure passed with 52.3% of the vote.
Proposition 59 is not legally binding and includes no punishment for California’s senators and representatives. While much of the delegation supports overturning the decision, some members have indicated they won’t comply with the voter instruction.
The Supreme Court’s 2010 Citizens United decision said money spent to influence voters that isn’t funneled through a candidate’s campaign is free speech, and the federal government can’t prohibit corporations and labor unions from doing it.
Elections since have become dramatically more expensive, with hundreds of millions of dollars pouring into campaigns in all levels of government by groups that don’t have to disclose their donors.
It took years of wrangling, two trips through the Legislature and a trip to the state Supreme Court for activists to get the measure on the ballot.
Gov. Jerry Brown let the bill that put the proposition on the ballot become law without his signature, saying in a 2014 message that he disagreed with the decision “but we should not make it a habit to clutter our ballots with non-binding measures as citizens rightfully assume that their votes are meant to have legal effect.”
Similar ballot measures have passed in Colorado and Montana. It also was on the ballot in Washington this year.
The Clintons wear symbolic pops of purple for her concession speech
Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton delivered her concession speech in a ensemble so symbolic and so perfectly framed in the TV screen that her message was loud and clear even if you couldn’t find the volume knob.
— Adam Tschorn, Times fashion writer
Clinton: ‘This is painful, and it will be for a long time’
Hillary Clinton never took the stage on election night at the Javits Center in New York, where she planned to declare its giant glass ceiling had been symbolically shattered. Instead, hours later she stood solemnly alongside Bill Clinton and running mate Tim Kaine at a nearby hotel, where she privately conceded the election.
On Wednesday morning, she offered some words of inspiration to the millions who supported her.
“I congratulated Donald Trump and offered to work with him,” Clinton said. “I hope he will be a successful president for all Americans.”
Clinton expressed pride in the campaign she ran but acknowledged the difficulty of the moment.
“I know how disappointed you feel, because I feel it to,” she said. “This is painful, and it will be for a long time. … We have seen our nation is more divided than we thought.
“We must accept this result and look to the future. Donald Trump is going to be our president. We owe him an open mind and the chance to lead.”
In a ballroom filled with campaign staffers, donors and close friends, she rallied her supporters not to despair, calling on them to fight for the constitutional values “we respect and cherish,” including freedom of expression and freedom of religion. The comments came following a divisive race that was overshadowed by Trump’s incendiary comments about women, Mexican immigrants and Muslims.
“We believe the American dream is big enough for everyone,” Clinton said. “For people of all races and religions, for men and women, for immigrants, for LGBT people and people with disabilities. For everyone. Our responsibility as citizens is to keep doing our part to build that better, stronger, fairer America.”
“This loss hurts,” Clinton said. “But please, never stop believing that fighting for what’s right is worth it.”
She also had a message directed at female supporters. “Nothing has made me prouder than to be your champion,” Clinton said. “I know we have still not shattered that highest and hardest glass ceiling. But someday someone will.”
“To all the little girls who are watching this,” Clinton said, “never doubt that you are valuable and powerful and deserving of every chance and opportunity in the world to pursue and achieve your own dreams.”
Speaker Paul D. Ryan promises unity between Trump and Republicans. Can he deliver?
House Speaker Paul D. Ryan campaigned for Donald Trump in the final days of the election on the promise of what a unified Republican government could accomplish in Washington.
Now he’ll have his chance to live up to the pledge.
“This is the kind of unified government we set out to deliver,” Ryan said Wednesday in a news briefing at his hometown of Janesville, Wis. “We’re going to hit the ground running.”
But Ryan’s promises for big deliverables from a government run by Republicans glosses over the challenges that have bedeviled the Republican Party since they took over the House in 2010 and the Senate in 2014.
Even with Trump in the White House, it’s no sure bet Republicans will be able to unify around specific legislative proposals.
For example, despite repeated promises to “repeal and replace” Obamacare, Republicans have never agreed on a proposal they could put forward for a vote.
Those challenges will only be intensified by Trump’s presidency because he is not a traditional Republican and has fluid positions on policy. Trump has broken with the party on key issues, including trade and federal spending on big-ticket items like infrastructure reform.
Democrats may see some areas of compromise with Republicans and a Trump administration. House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-San Francisco) on Wednesday mentioned infrastructure as one such opportunity. But on most policy proposals they are likely to mount a wall of opposition.
Ryan’s own future Wednesday appeared more secure. He said he had spoken twice to the president-elect as they plan the transition, despite their turbulent relationship.
Trump was never Ryan’s top choice for president. The buttoned-down speaker is the party’s top policy wonk, and he openly criticized Trump throughout the campaign.
Ryan once vowed not to campaign with Trump, only to ultimately spend the final days of the election urging voters to send Trump to the White House and Republicans to Congress.
“Trump heard a voice out in this country that no one else heard,” Ryan said Wednesday about the election upset.
Many Californians skipped voting in Senate race
The Democrat vs. Democrat U.S. Senate race between California Atty. Gen. Kamala Harris and Rep. Loretta Sanchez of Orange County failed to attract many voters.
How do we know?
Californians cast 1.1 million fewer votes in the Senate race than they did for president, according to results Wednesday morning with 99.4% of precincts reporting statewide in both elections.
While voters typically skip some down-ballot races, the Harris-Sanchez case seems especially stark.
For instance, in 2012 the margin between the presidential election and the U.S. Senate race between longtime Democratic incumbent Diane Feinstein and GOP challenger Elizabeth Emken was fewer than 500,000 voters. Feinstein won that election by more than 3 million votes.
Harris also has a strong margin of victory – an almost 2 million vote lead thus far.
The Harris-Sanchez race was a major test of the state’s relatively new open primary system where the top-two finishers regardless of political party advance to the runoff. This year was the first time since direct election of U.S. senators began in 1914 that there wasn’t a Republican in the runoff.
Supporters of the new system had argued that the plan would create more competitive races. But in this case, a lack of a Republican may have turned off more conservative voters.
Denham secures fourth term in Central Valley’s 10th District
With 52.4% of the vote, Rep. Jeff Denham has won another term in the Central Valley’s 10th Congressional District over Democratic beekeeper Michael Eggman, the Associated Press said.
The contest was initially considered likely a solid win for Denham (R-Turlock), but Democrats were emboldened in the final months of the race as nonpartisan election analysts gradually moved it to a “toss-up.”
While he never outright endorsed Donald Trump, Denham said throughout the race that he would support the Republican nominee, and Democrats worked to tar Denham with Trump’s rhetoric in the heavily Latino district.
This is the second time Denham and Eggman have faced off. Denham beat Eggman in 2014 by 12% and he insisted throughout the race that he’d win because his Modesto area constituents know he’s willing to break with his party on key issues, including immigration.
Voters there have historically tended to be Republican, but Democrats recently took the lead in voter registration in Stanislaus County.
Watch President Obama comment on the election
President Obama talks about the 2016 election and the future
Pelosi extends prayers, congratulations to Trump
House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-San Francisco) extended her congratulations and prayers to President-elect Donald Trump in a statement Wednesday.
“The peaceful transfer of power is the cornerstone of our democracy. After an election in which Donald Trump won the electoral college and Hillary Clinton won the popular vote, we have a responsibility to come together and find common ground. Only by recognizing and respecting the important contributions that all Americans make to our country’s success can we build an inclusive and stronger future for America,” she said.
Pelosi also hinted at a path forward on infrastructure needs, an issue both parties hope to address quickly.
“As President-elect Trump indicated last night, investing in infrastructure is an important priority of his,” she said. “We can work together to quickly pass a robust infrastructure jobs bill.”
Trump victory sparks protests across California
The election of Donald Trump to the presidency sparked protests early Wednesday across California, drawing crowds to city streets and college campuses.
The demonstrations reflected sadness, anger and bursts of rage. Crowds openly disavowed the president-elect and a few resorted to vandalism.
Shortly after Trump delivered a victory speech in New York, an estimated 2,000 people rallied at UCLA when two separate demonstrations merged into one, said UCLA police Sgt. Miguel Banuelos.
The group marched from campus through Westwood Village to a federal building on Wilshire Boulevard, Banuelos said. There were no arrests.
Bid to force porn actors to wear condoms in adult films fails
Voters rejected a measure requiring performers in adult films to use condoms during sex scenes by an almost eight percentage point margin, according to the Associated Press.
The measure was backed by the Los Angeles-based AIDS Healthcare Foundation and based on a similar initiative passed in Los Angeles County in 2012.
The group billed the measure as necessary to prevent the spread of disease on sets but found opposition, not only from the adult film industry, but also from both the state Republican and Democratic parties and groups like the San Francisco AIDS Foundation and AIDS Project Los Angeles.
Opponents argued that if the initiative became law, it would allow any Californian to sue adult film producers or others with a financial interest in a production if they thought condoms were not used, leading to frivolous lawsuits.
Others like state Sen. Mark Leno (D-San Francisco) said it would interfere with the work of a state advisory committee recently created to form new regulations that includes representatives from the adult film industry.
The foundation took a big jump into statewide politics this year, also backing Proposition 61, which seeks to lower the prices state agencies pay for prescription drugs. Proposition 61 also is losing.
Times staff writer Liam Dillon contributed to this report.
Pete Aguilar wins second term in San Bernardino area’s 31st Congressional District
Rep. Pete Aguilar (D-Redlands) won reelection to his 31st Congressional District seat in a rematch with Paul Chabot, a Republican military veteran who narrowly lost the 2014 contest for the then-open Inland Empire post.
The Associated Press called the race for Aguilar with 54.9% of the vote.
The district — and Aguilar — were thrust into the national spotlight in December after the shootings at the Inland Regional Center, the deadliest terrorist attack on U.S. soil since Sept. 11, 2001.
Chabot made his career in the military and combating terrorism a central part of his campaign, but Aguilar had early endorsements from San Bernardino Police Chief Jarrod Burguan and San Bernardino County Sheriff John McMahon.
Though the 2014 race was close, Democrats’ registration advantage in the district ballooned to about 12 percentage points this year. Aguilar’s campaign spent about $1 million more than Chabot, who they attacked for supporting Donald Trump in a district where 34% of voters are Latino.
Democrat Nanette Barragán wins bid in L.A.’s 44th District race to replace Hahn
Former Hermosa Beach Councilwoman Nanette Barragán won a heated race against Compton state Sen. Isadore Hall to replace Rep. Janice Hahn (D-San Pedro).
The Associated Press called the race with 51.2% of the vote for Barragán.
Hall entered as a favorite, but Barragán closed the gap, framing herself as a progressive outsider while relentlessly attacking Hall, a 15-year veteran of Los Angeles politics, for his ties to special interests in the alcohol and tobacco industries and for benefiting from contributions from petroleum interests.
Hall and his allies accused Barragán of making racist attacks during the campaign, including using a racial slur.
Hall won the backing of the state Democratic Party as well as Lt. Gov. Gavin Newsom, former Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa and Gov. Jerry Brown. The governor cut a radio ad for Hall in October.
Barragán was endorsed by several Latino members of Congress as well as the Sierra Club and the League of Conservation Voters. She benefited late in the race from a surge of independent expenditures paid for by Women Vote!, a super PAC tied to Emily’s List, the national group that backs Democratic female candidates.
Rep. Steve Knight reelected in Los Angeles area’s 25th District
Rep. Steve Knight (R-Palmdale), considered one of the most vulnerable incumbents in California, kept his seat in Congress after a bitter and expensive fight with Democratic lawyer Bryan Caforio.
Democrats targeted the seat hoping the growth of Democrats and Latino voters in the high desert district coupled with the baggage of Donald Trump could turn the once reliably Republican district blue and help them win control of the House.
The Associated Press called the race for Knight with 54.3% of the vote.
Both parties pulled out the stops in the race, House Speaker Paul D. Ryan visited the district to raise money for Knight last month while President Obama cut a television ad endorsing Caforio in October. About $7.5 million has been spent in the race between the candidates’ committees and outside groups.
Caforio was hurt by criticism for moving into the district shortly before launching his candidacy and anger from some activists who backed Lou Vince, a Democrat Caforio defeated in the primary and who later said he would vote for Knight, not Caforio. Republicans also attacked his legal career.
Knight, meanwhile, was hit with ads highlighting his staunch opposition to abortion as well as comments he made in a May debate calling Social Security “a bad idea.” After being dogged by his opponent for months about whether he supported Trump or not, Knight said in October he would not vote for Trump.
Across the globe, caution and dismay greet Trump victory
Donald Trump’s election was greeted around the world Wednesday with widespread expressions of consternation — and no small amount of glee in some quarters — as global leaders scrambled to assuage the shock of his victory in the U.S. presidential election.
Amid a popular explosion of derision and dismay across social media networks, key U.S. allies hurriedly sought to calm plunging financial markets and lay the groundwork for a working relationship with a divisive figure whose leadership many feared would usher in a prolonged era of unpredictability and instability.
The left-leaning French daily Liberation greeted the news with a one-word coinage often echoed elsewhere: “Trumpocalypse.” The Times of India, that country’s largest newspaper, offered congratulations to the president-elect, paired with a sly use of ellipses to refer to one of Trump’s best-known vulgarities. “Donald Trump grabs America by the …” it tweeted.
U.S. stocks open mixed after Trump victory; global markets fall
Major U.S. stock indexes were relatively calm Wednesday, well off steep overnight futures losses in the wake of Republican Donald Trump’s surprising presidential election victory.
The Dow Jones industrial average was up about 0.1% in early trading. That was a significant improvement over the 800-point plunge as Trump’s victory became apparent early Wednesday and investors duplicated the initial market turmoil that followed the stunning vote in Britain in June to leave the European Union.
The Nasdaq and Standard & Poor’s 500 indexes both were off slightly in early trading after similar steep futures declines.
“Markets tend to assume the worst and react immediately,” Brad McMillan, chief investment officer for Commonwealth Financial Network, said in a note to clients before the opening bell Wednesday. “Expect an immediate market pullback on fear, and then a pause.”