Tuesday, September 23, 2025

California: Newsom signs bill setting special election on new congressional maps – live

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‘They fired the first shot, Texas’, Newsom says before signing bill to put redistricting to California’s voters

California’s governor, Gavin Newsom, signed legislation on Thursday that will ask the state’s voters to decide in November if they approve of redrawn congressional districts that tilt heavily in favor of Democrats, as a way of neutralizing a similarly partisan map in Texas.

“They fired the first shot, Texas,” Newsom said before signing the bill, noting that California’s new map would only be used if Texas uses new maps tilted in favor of Republicans. “We wouldn’t be here had Texas not done what they just did; Donald Trump didn’t do what he just did. He went so far as to follow up and say that he didn’t just want those five seats, he said he’s, quote-unquote, entitled to those five seats. Just pause and reflect on that. Everything should have just stopped there. The president of the United States claiming he’s ‘entitled’ to five seats. That should put chills up your spine, every Republican, not just Democrat and independent, every American.”

Newsom also said that California would be “the first state in US history to, in the most democratic way, to submit to the people of our state the ability to determine their own maps”.

The map that could give California Democrats five more seats was drawn by Paul Mitchell, founder of Redistricting Partners, a nonpartisan local redistricting firm, who previously created maps for independent redistricting commissions across California.

“All of us support independent redistricting, here in California and in every state in this union” Mike McGuire, another Democratic state leader and senate president pro tempore, said. “One thing that we do not support is unilateral disarmament, when the fairness of the 2026 election is being threatened.”

‘They fired the first shot’: Newsom signs bill to put redistricting to California’s voters – video

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White House releases video of Trump mocking Biden in speech to federal agents and troops

The White House has released a social media video highlighting the start of Donald Trump’s remarks to law enforcement officers and National Guard soldiers on Thursday, which begins with the president mocking his predecessor, Joe Biden, for once falling as he walked up a flight of stairs to Air Force One.

The video, which was recorded by Margo Martin, a special assistant to the president and communications advisor, captures the beginning of Trump’s rambling 12-minute speech in which he essentially congratulated himself on successfully walking down a single step as he began his remarks.

“You gotta be very careful; you don’t want to slip or fall like somebody else I know”, Trump said, to laughter from the officers. “We don’t want that to happen”.

A White House edit of Donald Trump’s remarks to law enforcement officers and soldiers in Washington DC on Thursday.

The video then cuts, to omit the part of the original recording in which Trump turned to Martin and said, “Where are we going Margo, over here?”

The president then thanked the assembled officers, who are taking part in his federal takeover of policing in the district. “The numbers are down like we wouldn’t believe, but we believe it”, Trump added.

The administration has repeatedly suggested without evidence that data gathered by the DC police, and released by the justice department, showing that violent crime was at a 30-year low when Trump returned to office in January, and had declined by a further 26% since then, had been manipulated to hide what Trump has called a terrifying crime wave.

Video of Joe Biden falling, repeatedly, while boarding Air Force One in 2021, when he was 79, was widely seen and helped cement the idea that he was too old to be president.

In June, the week Trump turned 79, video of him stumbling and nearly falling while climbing the stairs to Air Force One was also widely seen.

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