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This week, the US Supreme Court is hearing arguments in a case that could affect elections in more than a dozen states, including California, by requiring voters to mail in their ballots early.
The dispute is over a Mississippi law that allows election officials to count such ballots when they are marked on Election Day but received days later. The conservative-leaning Supreme Court appears poised to side with the state’s GOP and strike down legislation passed during the pandemic by Mississippi’s GOP-majority legislature, according to New York Times.
If rejected, laws in other states that allow late-arrival ballots could also be at risk. In California, mail-in ballots that arrive a week after Election Day are still being counted. Voters cast more than 400,000 of those ballots in 2024, or about 2.5 percent of the total, reports Los Angeles Times.
The lawsuit comes as President Donald Trump moves to restrict voting access ahead of the November election. Trump has expressed particular disdain for mail-in voting, often claiming, without evidence, that mail-in voting is fraud and the reason he lost the 2020 presidential election.
Speaking of Trump:
Be part of the conversations driving California forward at the CalMatters Festival of Ideas on May 21 in Sacramento. Get your tickets now.
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The company that supplies electronic tablets to 90,000 California inmates is causing a switch in supplier disruptions and headaches among usersCalMatters’ Joe Garcia reports.
Inmates in the state have access to tablets that they can use to call and text loved ones from their cells and access other services. Both prison staff and residents say these devices have made prisons feel safer because people no longer have to share limited phone resources and officers are no longer tasked with facilitating an understaffed system.
By the end of last year, the tablets had to be replaced with ones from the company Securus after it won a contract bidding war with the previous supplier, Viapath/Global Tel Link.
But the transition was difficult. Not only is it behind schedule, but in some facilities where Securus tablets have been rolled out, inmates have found that their messages aren’t costing 3 cents per message as thought, but rather a higher price based on the number of characters. Securus quietly adjusted its billing practice in March to 3 cents per message after inmates complained and CalMatters reached out about the fees.

More than 250 UC students from all nine undergraduate campuses were at the Capitol earlier this month, lobbying for bills that could have a remarkable effect on their lives as students, writes CalMatters’ Khadeejah Khan College Journalism Network.
As part of the UC Student Association’s Lobby Day, students pushed for an amendment to the state constitution that would add voting rights for second student regent. Right now only one of two student positions of the 26-member Board of Regents has such power.
To help students facing homelessness and food insecurityUC student leaders also advocated for two bills: One that exempts housing projects for students, staff and faculty on university campuses from environmental expertise to stimulate development and another that aims to increase student access to CalFreshfederally funded state food assistance program.
CalMatters columnist Dan Walters: Medi-Cal — a program that has grown to serve 14.5 million Californians and costs more than $200 billion a year — faces miscalculations in state revenue and tightened federal support.
The proposed tax on billionaires is not a threat to innovation, but rather a long-awaited public dividend from the class of people who got rich on the government’s backs, writes Dwayne Robertseditor and publisher of the Anaheim Investigator blog.
The Democratic candidates for California governor, who were encouraged to stay in the race, are overwhelmingly white and backed by significant financial networks — highlighting a deeper issue of how political legitimacy is determined, writes Catherine Pichardopresident and CEO of the Latino Victory Fund.
CA Legislature Proposes Income Tax Deduction for home owners insurance // The Orange County Register
Where CA states the workers next potential boss will work remotely? // The Sacramento Bee
The California gubernatorial debate sparked a backlash about who made the scene // The Mercury News
Immigrant Families in California fear of losing benefits amid confusion over public charges // EdSource
Hawaii faces more than $1 billion in storm recovery. CA still pushing for Los Angeles fire aid // San Francisco Chronicle
A new question appears for a local initiative that could change Shasta’s election law // Shasta Scout
Los Angeles’ premier homeless agency is at risk of federal audit deadline, auditor warns // LAist