Wednesday, November 11, 2020

11-11: Colleges Have Shed a Tenth of Their Employees Since the Pandemic Began; Trump's legal fights: "all noise"

Walters: Orange County’s stubborn conservative streak
-- Ronald Reagan chose Mile Square Park, in the heart of Orange County, for a Labor Day rally in 1984 to kick off his final push for a second term as president. Dan Walters CalMatters -- 11/11/20 
     With Donald Trump seeking another term, this year’s election appeared to be another opportunity for Democrats to expand their Orange County presence, and in a sense they did. Orange County again voted Democratic for president and two Republican state senators, John Moorlach and Ling Ling Chang, were ousted by Democratic challengers. 
     However, two Democrats who had won previously Republican congressional seats in 2016, Gil Cisneros and Harley Rouda, lost them after serving just one term. And in other ways, this year’s election indicated that Orange County is still, relative to other coastal counties, fairly conservative. 
     Joe Biden walloped Trump by a nearly 2-to-1 landslide in California, but in Orange County, based on the unofficial returns, Biden’s margin was much narrower, just 10 percentage points…. 
     Clearly, Orange County is no longer the impregnable Republican fortress it was in 1984, but neither is it as blue as Democrats have hoped. One could say that it’s purple with a stubborn streak of conservatism that sets it apart from the rest of coastal California. 

—CHE 

—Inside Higher Ed 
     Nearly every state lost higher education jobs during the pandemic, according to a report from the Pew Charitable Trusts published Tuesday. The education sector is among the hardest hit by the pandemic. 

—CHE

UCLA, UC Irvine nurses rally over COVID exposure, staff shortages -- Registered nurses employed by UCLA rallied Tuesday to demand that medical workers be informed when they’ve been exposed to COVID-19 and be properly tested — the way UCLA athletes are tested. At the same time, nurses working at UC Irvine Medical Center in Orange held a rally to alert the public to what they consider insufficient staffing at the facility. The item is in the Orange County Register -- 11/11/20 

In liberal California, election shows Prop. 13 tax revolt is alive and well -- With the failure of Proposition 15, the $140 million campaign to hike property taxes on businesses across the state finally comes to a close. Now begins a new statewide competition to explain what the results really mean. Ben Christopher CalMatters -- 11/11/20 

First openly gay justice confirmed to serve on the California Supreme Court -- Martin Jenkins, appointed by Gov. Gavin Newsom, won unanimous confirmation Tuesday to the California Supreme Court, becoming its first openly gay member and the fifth Black justice in the court’s history. Maura Dolan in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 11/11/20 

Schiele and his wife died in the
flu pandemic, 1918. He was 28.
Biden, planning his administration, says GOP leaders ignoring his win are ‘intimidated’ by Trump -- President-elect Joe Biden said Tuesday he is hoping to name several Cabinet-level nominees before Thanksgiving and downplayed the difficulties that his team is having amid a lack of cooperation by President Trump in the transfer of power. Annie Linskey in the Washington Post$ -- 11/11/20 

Fighting Election Results, Trump Employs a New Weapon: The Government -- President Trump, facing the prospect of leaving the White House in defeat in just 70 days, is harnessing the power of the federal government to resist the results of an election that he lost, something that no sitting president has done in American history. Peter Baker and Lara Jakes in the New York Times$ -- 11/11/20 

‘It’s all noise’: The reality behind Trump’s legal fight -- The court fight over election results, which has yielded few results, is as much about pleasing the base as it is about making coherent legal arguments. Anita Kumar Politico -- 11/11/20 

In liberal California, Black Lives Matter protests in some towns meet with ‘scary’ backlash -- Pastor Nelson Rabell-González knew that “livable, lovable Lodi,” as locals call it, had a problem when men carrying a noose and baseball bats with American flags attached shouted racial slurs at him in September as he helped lead a peaceful protest in this San Joaquin Valley town. Anita Chabria in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 11/10/20

OC Covid numbers: heading up

Roy's obituary in LA Times and Register: "we were lucky to have you while we did"

  This ran in the Sunday December 24, 2023 edition of the Los Angeles Times and the Orange County Register : July 14, 1955 - November 20, 2...