Trump administration to sue Gavin Newsom over California’s new redistricting maps
The Trump administration is suing California governor Gavin Newsom after the state adopted new congressional maps last week.
The justice department is attempting to block the new boundaries, that voters overwhelmingly approved through Proposition 50 – the ballot initiative that would give Democrats in the Golden state five more seats in the House ahead of the 2026 midterms. This move was a response to the redistricting battle that started in Texas, when the state’s GOP-run legislature gerrymandered their own maps.
Attorney general Pam Bondi called the governor’s effort a “power grab”.
“Newsom should be concerned about keeping Californians safe and shutting down Antifa violence, not rigging his state for political gain,” she added.
Key events
Trump administration revokes Biden-era limits on Alaska oil drilling
The US Department of the Interior announced on Thursday that it was rescinding a 2024 Bureau of Land Management rule limiting drilling for oil in an Alaska area that is the nation’s largest tract of undisturbed public land.
“By rescinding the 2024 rule, we are following the direction set by President Trump to unlock Alaska’s energy potential, create jobs for North Slope communities and strengthen American energy security,” Doug Burgum, the interior secretary, said in a statement. “This action restores common-sense management and ensures responsible development benefits both Alaska and the nation.”
According to the Alaska Wilderness League, the so-called National Petroleum Reserve is the largest single unit of public lands in the nation, spanning nearly 23m acres across Alaska’s western North Slope that was set aside in the 1920s an emergency oil supply for the US navy.
It is home to millions of acres of wilderness with critical habitat for migratory birds, brown bears, caribou, polar bears, walrus and endangered beluga whales. The league notes that “Alaska Native communities that live in and around the reserve have maintained a subsistence lifestyle for thousands of years based on its living resources.”
Victoria Bekiempis
While Donald Trump’s justice department has downplayed the possibility that other men were involved in Jeffrey Epstein’s abuse of teen girls, an email released on 12 November as part of the House oversight committee’s Epstein investigation shows an exchange between the late financier and an associate where they discuss “girls” and travel.
Epstein sent an email asking “what is your schedule?” on 23 July 2010 to an associate. The latter responded the next morning saying: “the other girl name is [redacted].” The Guardian is withholding the associate’s name, as attempts to identify and contact him were unsuccessful.
That afternoon, the associate also wrote: “Can you call me/ I am with tigrane he would like to meet you he is here with me in Ibiza/with 8 top girls he said he would like to build some thing with you/can you come to Ibiza we have a huge house or how can we orgnise this/ meeting even Jean Luc could doo a great biz also/ he has the most amizing top models on stand by I told him not to do any/deals with anybody before he meet with you.” The Guardian could not identify the figure referred to as “tigrane”.
“He stoped working with IMG and Trump wi here please call me and let me/ know what is your plans/ warmest regards” the associate wrote, apparently referring to Jean-Luc Brunel, a French modeling agent and friend of Epstein.
Epstein wrote “i will be in paris tom000rw night” in the chain.
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Pentagon intelligence analysis calls sale of F-35 jets to Saudi Arabia risky – report
As Donald Trump prepares to host Mohammed bin Salman, the de facto ruler of Saudi Arabia, next week, Pentagon intelligence officials are warning that a deal to let US arms makers sell 48 F-35 fighter jets to the Saudis could give China access to the technology, the New York Times reports.
Pentagon officials told the paper that they fear “that F-35 technology could be compromised through Chinese espionage or China’s security partnership with Saudi Arabia”. The concerns were detailed in a report from the Defense Intelligence Agency, a part of the defense department.
Three weeks after Trump, reluctantly, left office in 2021, US intelligence agencies concluded that the crown prince, known as MBS, “approved an operation in Istanbul, Turkey to capture or kill Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi” and noted “the Crown Prince’s support for using violent measures to silence dissidents abroad”.
That intelligence assessment prompted then president Joe Biden to keep his distance from the Saudi leader during his first months in office, before dismaying human rights advocates by softening that stance later in his term, initially with a friendly fist-bump instead of a handshake. the crown prince to . Trump, in marked contrast, has warmly embraced the crown prince. During his visit to the Middle East in May, Trump effusively praised the crown prince in public remarks.
BBC apologizes to Trump for Panorama documentary, but rejects demands for compensation
My colleagues, Tara Conlan and Michael Savage, report that the BBC has apologised to Donald Trump over the editing of a Panorama that led to the resignation of its director general, Tim Davie, and the BBC News chief, Deborah Turness.
However, the corporation has rejected his demands for compensation, after lawyers for Trump threatened to sue for $1bn in damages unless the BBC issued a retraction, apologised and settled with him.
The BBC has also agreed not to show the edition of Panorama again.
“Lawyers for the BBC have written to president Trump’s legal team in response to a letter received on Sunday,” a BBC spokesperson said.
“BBC chair Samir Shah has separately sent a personal letter to the White House making clear to President Trump that he and the corporation are sorry for the edit of the president’s speech on 6 January 2021, which featured in the program.
“The BBC has no plans to rebroadcast the documentary Trump: A Second Chance? On any BBC platforms. While the BBC sincerely regrets the manner in which the video clip was edited, we strongly disagree there is a basis for a defamation claim.”
Here’s a recap of the day so far
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The Trump administration is suing California governor Gavin Newsom after the state adopted new congressional maps last week. The justice department joined a lawsuit, brought by California Republicans, to block the new boundaries that voters overwhelmingly approved through Proposition 50 – a ballot initiative that would give Democrats in the Golden state five more seats in the House ahead of the 2026 midterms. This was the governor’s response to the redistricting battle that started in Texas, when the state’s GOP-run legislature gerrymandered their own map.
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The federal government reopened today, after a record-breaking shutdown that lasted almost 43 days. Several agencies called their employees back to work, and the administration expects back pay to be issued to furloughed employees by early next week. Earlier, White House economic adviser Kevin Hassett said that the shutdown cost “$15bn a week”, and cited an estimate that 60,000 non-federal workers lost their jobs.
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The White House remains on defense after a trove of documents from the Epstein estate seemed to suggest that Donald Trump knew about the late-financier’s conduct. Press secretary, Karoline Leavitt, said that the latest tranche of emails – one of which said that Trump “spent hours” at Epstein’s home, and another which said the president “knew about the girls” – is part of a Democratic “hoax’ to distract “from the President’s wins”.
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A federal judge in Virginia said she would rule by Thanksgiving in a case brought by former FBI director James Comey and New York attorney general Letitia James – that alleges the prosecutor who indicted them was unlawfully appointed. Attorneys for the former FBI director and New York attorney general claim that Lindsey Halligan, who Donald Trump handpicked to be the new US attorney for the Eastern District of New York, was illegally installed because her role in office exceeds the 120-day for a role to filled by an interim appointee without confirmation from the Senate.
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John Fetterman, the Democratic senator from Pennsylvania, has been hospitalized after a fall during an early morning walk. According to his spokesperson, “out of an abundance of caution” he was “transported to a hospital in Pittsburgh”. Fetterman was one of the lawmakers in the Democratic caucus who split from the party to vote for the bill to reopen the federal government. “Upon evaluation, it was established he had a ventricular fibrillation flare-up that led to Senator Fetterman feeling light-headed, falling to the ground and hitting his face with minor injuries,” his spokesperson added.
Trump administration to sue Gavin Newsom over California’s new redistricting maps
The Trump administration is suing California governor Gavin Newsom after the state adopted new congressional maps last week.
The justice department is attempting to block the new boundaries, that voters overwhelmingly approved through Proposition 50 – the ballot initiative that would give Democrats in the Golden state five more seats in the House ahead of the 2026 midterms. This move was a response to the redistricting battle that started in Texas, when the state’s GOP-run legislature gerrymandered their own maps.
Attorney general Pam Bondi called the governor’s effort a “power grab”.
“Newsom should be concerned about keeping Californians safe and shutting down Antifa violence, not rigging his state for political gain,” she added.
Donald Trump signed his latest executive order today, but left the East Room of the White House without taking any questions from reporters.
After the first lady handed the podium over to Donald Trump, he praised his wife’s introduction.
“I think it’s very good, especially for someone that speaks five languages at least. I think that’s pretty amazing. I couldn’t do it,” he said.
Trump to sign executive order to help foster children transition to adulthood
Right now, we’re hearing from first lady Melania Trump as the president prepares to sign an executive order to help foster children access employment and education opportunities as they age out of the system.
“This executive order, fostering the future for American children and families, gives me tremendous pride. It is both empathetic and strategic. It will certainly be impactful,” she said.
Federal judge will issue ruling on whether prosecutor was appointed unlawfully by end of the month
A federal judge in Alexandria, Virginia said she would rule by Thanksgiving in a case brought by James Comey and Letitia James – that alleges the prosecutor charging them was unlawfully appointed. During today’s hearing, judge Cameron Currie did not issue a decision during the hour-long court hearing, but said she would probably rule by the end of the month.
Attorneys for the former FBI director and New York attorney general claim that Lindsey Halligan, who Donald Trump handpicked to be the new US attorney for the Eastern District of New York, was illegally installed because her role in office exceeds the 120-day for a role to filled by an interim appointee without confirmation from the Senate. Her predecessor, Erik Siebert, was also a temporary US attorney before he resigned from his position, stating he found insufficient evidence to prosecute Trump’s political enemies.