A 32-year-old cleaning crew worker who went to the wrong home to work was shot and killed in Whitestown, Indiana, on Wednesday morning, police said. The worker, identified as Maria Florinda Rios Perez , according to NBC News and WTHR-TV, had tried to use keys in her hand to get into a new client’s home when she was shot.The home she intended to go into was behind the one where she and her husband went, The New York Times reported. Rios’ brother told reporters that his sister fell into her husband’s arms after being shot through the door of the home.”It’s so unjust. She was only trying to bring home the daily bread to support her family,” Rios told NBC News. “She accidentally went to the wrong house, but he shouldn’t have taken her life.”She was a mother of four children, with the youngest being 11 months old.Officers initially responded to a report of a possible home invasion about 20 miles outside of Indianapolis. Police are still investigating what happened. “This remains an active and ongoing investigation into the fatal shooting. The facts gathered do not support that a residential entry occurred,” the police department said in a statement on its Facebook page.
WHITESTOWN, Ind. —
A 32-year-old cleaning crew worker who went to the wrong home to work was shot and killed in Whitestown, Indiana, on Wednesday morning, police said.
The worker, identified as Maria Florinda Rios Perez , according to NBC News and WTHR-TV, had tried to use keys in her hand to get into a new client’s home when she was shot.
The home she intended to go into was behind the one where she and her husband went, The New York Times reported. Rios’ brother told reporters that his sister fell into her husband’s arms after being shot through the door of the home.
“It’s so unjust. She was only trying to bring home the daily bread to support her family,” Rios told NBC News. “She accidentally went to the wrong house, but he shouldn’t have taken her life.”
She was a mother of four children, with the youngest being 11 months old.
Officers initially responded to a report of a possible home invasion about 20 miles outside of Indianapolis. Police are still investigating what happened.
“This remains an active and ongoing investigation into the fatal shooting. The facts gathered do not support that a residential entry occurred,” the police department said in a statement on its Facebook page.
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A Wednesday storm brought morning rain to much of Northern California as the region prepared for a round of wet weather. KCRA 3’s weather team is issuing an Impact Day for Wednesday because the wet and windy conditions will likely slow down the morning commute and disrupt other outdoor plans during the day.Rain A line of steady, soaking rain moved across the Valley before sunrise on Wednesday morning. Places on the west side of the Valley, including Vacaville, Winters, and Colusa, saw rain by 5 a.m.Sacramento, Marysville, Elk Grove and Stockton saw rain by 6 a.m. Rain will then begin in the Foothills and Sierra after 6 a.m.The steadiest rain will be over by 9 a.m. with on-and-off showers for the rest of the afternoon. Below are the forecast amounts for Wednesday: Marysville .50-.75 inchSacramento .25-.50 inchStockton .10-.30 inchModesto .10-.25 inchPlacerville 1-2 inchesAuburn 1-2 inchesSonora .50-.75 inchBlue Canyon 1.5-2.5 inchesTruckee & South Lake Tahoe .25-.50 inchWindWinds will be strong as rain arrives early Wednesday morning. Gusts in the Valley could top 40 mph for a couple of hours. Winds will be even higher in the Sierra, especially on the east slope where gusts to 60 mph are possible. The National Weather Service office in Sacramento issued a Wind Advisory for the Sacramento Valley and delta region from 10 p.m. Tuesday through 4 p.m. Wednesday. The Sierra Crest and east slope will be under a High Wind Watch during that same time. Winds of this strength will toss around objects that aren’t secure, including holiday decorations and garbage bins. Isolated tree damage is also possible. Downed branches could cause isolated power outages.SnowSnow levels will likely stay above 7,000 feet, with areas such as Donner Summit and Echo Summit receiving less than an inch of snow. This could still be enough for brief chain controls. Anyone driving over Donner, Echo or Carson summit should have chains or cables packed and be prepared for delays.Ebbetts and Sonora pass could see several inches of snow Wednesday and Wednesday night. REAL-TIME TRAFFIC MAPClick here to see our interactive traffic map.TRACK INTERACTIVE, DOPPLER RADARClick here to see our interactive radar.DOWNLOAD OUR APP FOR THE LATESTHere is where you can download our app.Follow our KCRA weather team on social mediaMeteorologist Tamara Berg on Facebook and X.Meteorologist Dirk Verdoorn on FacebookMeteorologist Heather Waldman on Facebook and X.Meteorologist Kelly Curran on X.Meteorologist Ophelia Young on Facebook and X.Watch our forecasts on TV or onlineHere’s where to find our latest video forecast. You can also watch a livestream of our latest newscast here. The banner on our website turns red when we’re live.We’re also streaming on the Very Local app for Roku, Apple TV or Amazon Fire TV.See more coverage of top California stories here | Download our app | Subscribe to our morning newsletter | Find us on YouTube here and subscribe to our channel
A Wednesday storm brought morning rain to much of Northern California as the region prepared for a round of wet weather.
KCRA 3’s weather team is issuing an Impact Day for Wednesday because the wet and windy conditions will likely slow down the morning commute and disrupt other outdoor plans during the day.
Rain
A line of steady, soaking rain moved across the Valley before sunrise on Wednesday morning.
Hearst Owned
A line of widespread, soaking rain will move over the Valley before sunrise Wednesday.
Places on the west side of the Valley, including Vacaville, Winters, and Colusa, saw rain by 5 a.m.
Sacramento, Marysville, Elk Grove and Stockton saw rain by 6 a.m.
Rain will then begin in the Foothills and Sierra after 6 a.m.
The steadiest rain will be over by 9 a.m. with on-and-off showers for the rest of the afternoon.
Hearst Owned
Rain amounts will be highest to the north of Interstate 80.
Below are the forecast amounts for Wednesday:
Marysville .50-.75 inch
Sacramento .25-.50 inch
Stockton .10-.30 inch
Modesto .10-.25 inch
Placerville 1-2 inches
Auburn 1-2 inches
Sonora .50-.75 inch
Blue Canyon 1.5-2.5 inches
Truckee & South Lake Tahoe .25-.50 inch
Wind
Winds will be strong as rain arrives early Wednesday morning.
Gusts in the Valley could top 40 mph for a couple of hours. Winds will be even higher in the Sierra, especially on the east slope where gusts to 60 mph are possible.
Hearst Owned
Wind gusts over 40 mph are possible in the Valley Wednesday morning. Gusts will be higher in the Sierra.
The National Weather Service office in Sacramento issued a Wind Advisory for the Sacramento Valley and delta region from 10 p.m. Tuesday through 4 p.m. Wednesday.
The Sierra Crest and east slope will be under a High Wind Watch during that same time.
Winds of this strength will toss around objects that aren’t secure, including holiday decorations and garbage bins.
Isolated tree damage is also possible. Downed branches could cause isolated power outages.
Snow
Snow levels will likely stay above 7,000 feet, with areas such as Donner Summit and Echo Summit receiving less than an inch of snow.
This could still be enough for brief chain controls.
Anyone driving over Donner, Echo or Carson summit should have chains or cables packed and be prepared for delays.
Ebbetts and Sonora pass could see several inches of snow Wednesday and Wednesday night.
Meme stocks soared through the first hours of Wednesday’s trading session as investors once again piled into speculative trades amid a wider choppy market.
Shares in Beyond Meat (BYND) rose by more than 95% Wednesday morning before paring gains. Krispy Kreme (DNUT) and GoPro (GPRO) rallied by more than 20% and more than 14%, respectively.
“This is a throwback to 2021 — the hope, dreams, themes, and memes kind of environment that we were navigating in that time frame,” said Northwestern Mutual Wealth Management chief equities portfolio manager Matt Stucky.
Beyond Meat, one of the newest entrants to the meme stock market, has surged by more than 900% over the past five days. The meat alternatives company on Tuesday announced a deal with Walmart (WMT) that will see Beyond Meat’s product distribution expanded throughout the big chain’s storefronts.
The stock was also added to the recently relaunched Roundhill Investments MEME ETF (MEME) on Tuesday, sparking a round of frenzied retail buying.
Retail traders bought almost $35 million in Beyond Meat stock on Tuesday, notching the stock’s biggest single-day purchase ever, according to data from Vanda Research cited by Reuters.
“[The rush into meme stocks] has really been led by, you know, these types of opportunities or in my opinion, risks in the market where companies that don’t have any positive earnings, maybe they’re losing money, really leading markets higher over the last 12 months … It is a speculative kind of risk that’s starting to build up in markets,” Stucky said.
Glazed or confused? Krispy Kreme’s signature doughnuts. (AP Photo/Chuck Burton, file) ·ASSOCIATED PRESS
The stock has also garnered intense short interest. As of Wednesday morning, Beyond Meat had a short float of more than 64%, according to data from FINVIZ, meaning well over half of the company’s outstanding shares have been used to bet on a fall in price — strong conditions for a short squeeze, the darling of retail meme stock trading.
Krispy Kreme, which had its biggest day of stock buys since July, according to Vanda Research, and GoPro boasted short interest of 30% and 13%, respectively.
Opendoor Technologies (OPEN), perhaps the headline meme stock of the year, was down by more than 8% Wednesday morning. The stock is up nearly 300% since the start of 2025 as hedge fund manager Eric Jackson has waged a sustained campaign to pump up the price.
Roundhill Investments announced earlier this month that it is restarting its MEME ETF after shuttering the fund in 2023. The ETF is down more than 17% over the last few days and lost 5% on Wednesday.
Jake Conley is a breaking news reporter covering US equities for Yahoo Finance. Follow him on X at @byjakeconley or email him at jake.conley@yahooinc.com.
1 dead, 2 hospitalized in shooting at Dallas ICE facility, police say
John All right, there is some breaking news this morning. We’re hearing reports of *** shooting at an ICE facility in Dallas. We happen to have with us the acting director of ICE, US Immigration and Customs Enforcement, Todd Lyons. Director, thank you for being here. I wanna say you were coming in. We were talking to you anyway. Obviously this event has sort of subsumed what we’re gonna discuss. What can you tell us about this incident in Dallas? Yeah, literally, as I was coming here we were notified that there were shots fired at our Dallas field office. Right now preliminary information is *** possible sniper. We have 3 individuals that are down at this time. We’re not sure on their condition. They’ve been taken to the hospital. Um, we’re hearing some reports that the shooter may be down from the Texas Department of Public Safety. The scene secure, you know, obviously right now my hearts and prayers are going out to my officers and agents. That’s my biggest concern, um, and as well as everyone in that area, but this just shows the violence that’s being. Uh, increased against ICE officers and, and agents. This is the 2nd time now we’ve had *** shooting at one of our facilities in the Dallas area, um, and really it’s, it’s, it’s. It’s just *** sad time that we have to worry about violence against law enforcement. So you’re hearing the reports you’re hearing at this point are coming from inside your your offices in Dallas at ICE. You’re hearing directly from them. Yeah, we’re hearing directly from the leadership on the ground there. The building is on lockdown, building secure. Initial reports are that our you know our offices are accounted for, but there are 3 individuals that are shot. Are they, are, are the 3 individuals ICE employees? We’re still working on that right now. Um, obviously it’s really chaotic. Uh, Dallas Police Department’s been great. They’re on scene. It’s *** large police presence there right now, um. You know, it could be uh employees, it could be civilians that were visiting facility, it could be detainees at this point we’re still working through that. We do know that 3 have definitely been shot. They’re en route to the hospital right now. Um, we had great support from locals on the ground. They’re helping us look for the active shooter. Like I said, right before I just walked on set, I got word that the shooter is down from self-inflicted gunshot wound. OK, so it may not be an active shooter situation anymore. You said *** possible sniper. Did this individual get inside the facility or all the shots outside? From *** preliminary reports it looks like shots came from outside and the victims are secure facility and the victims were also outside or the victims inside inside our sally port area. where we have our uh secured detainee location inside that location but again it’s everything’s still coming in so fast it’s just been ***, *** morning. I, I look, I, and I appreciate you giving us the details you have. It’s an unusual situation here. We’re getting preliminary reports that we had not yet been able to confirm. We have the acting director of ICE here telling us that you are getting these reports, uh, directly. And you mentioned the threats that you feel are being directed toward your agents. Talk to me about that in. What’s the environment in general? You know, I’ve never seen anything like this in my law enforcement career. I’ve never seen threats on law enforcement, specifically. ICE increased the way it is, you know, we’re up over 1,000% assaults on officers right now and really just *** lot of the. The talk that’s out there, *** lot of the rhetoric is just the violence directed towards law enforcement officers just trying to do their job and we just keep, just keeping seeing an increase step by step, you know, we had, we, like I said, we had that shooting at the Alvarado facility which is right outside Dallas, uh, on July 4th where they ambushed officers in military tactical gear, um, under the guise of fireworks, and now we have this, and it just seems like it keeps getting worse and worse and it has to stop. Um, you are, you’ve launched *** large recruitment effort. There are ads airing in *** lot of different places. To what extent have you found that the atmosphere is affecting your recruitment efforts? You know, you would think that it would affect it, but it hasn’t. We have over 157,000 applicants. It just keeps going up. There’s really, um, excitement for people that want to serve, not just necessarily nice but want to serve in *** federal law enforcement capacity, uh, especially at *** time when. assaults and attack on law enforcement are increasing. We are seeing, uh, *** great uptick in our recruitment. So people definitely want to do the job, but again, it’s just, it’s *** sad moment in time when we have to worry about the safety of law enforcement officers just out there doing their mission.
1 dead, 2 hospitalized in shooting at Dallas ICE facility, police say
Three people, including detainees, have been shot at a U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement facility in Dallas and the shooter is dead from a self-inflicted gunshot wound, federal authorities said. Acting ICE Director Todd Lyons confirmed the shooting during an interview on CNN on Wednesday.Homeland Security spokesperson Tricia McLaughlin later told Fox News that no ICE agents were injured.“We believe he was shooting at law enforcement and detainees from an apartment building,” McLaughlin said. ”Detainees were among the victims of the shooting.”Officers responded to a call to assist an officer on North Stemmons Freeway around 6:40 a.m. Wednesday and the preliminary investigation determined that a person opened fire at a government building from an adjacent building, Dallas police spokesperson Officer Jonathen E. Maner said in an email.The Dallas Fire-Rescue Department was also dispatched after a call reporting a shooting at or near the immigration office, department spokesperson Jason L. Evans said in an email.Video below: Heavy police presence after shooting at Dallas ICE facility Parkland Hospital has received two patients from the shooting, hospital spokesperson April Foran said by telephone. She did not have any details about their conditions.A third person died at the scene after the shooting, Maner said. The investigation is ongoing and a briefing was expected later in the day.Dozens of emergency vehicles were seen along a highway near the facility.The ICE facility is along Interstate 35 East, just southwest of Dallas Love Field, a large commercial airport serving the Dallas-Fort Worth metropolitan area, and just blocks from hotels catering to airport travelers.Traffic cameras near the scene showed six lanes of a normally busy freeway empty, with cars and semitrailers ground to a halt on an interstate exit.Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem said details were still emerging, but the agency was confirming there were “multiple injuries and fatalities” at the field office. Noem said the motive remained unclear, but noted there has been an uptick in targeting of ICE agents.ICE and Homeland Security didn’t immediately provide additional details.
DALLAS —
Three people, including detainees, have been shot at a U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement facility in Dallas and the shooter is dead from a self-inflicted gunshot wound, federal authorities said.
Acting ICE Director Todd Lyons confirmed the shooting during an interview on CNN on Wednesday.
Homeland Security spokesperson Tricia McLaughlin later told Fox News that no ICE agents were injured.
“We believe he was shooting at law enforcement and detainees from an apartment building,” McLaughlin said. ”Detainees were among the victims of the shooting.”
Officers responded to a call to assist an officer on North Stemmons Freeway around 6:40 a.m. Wednesday and the preliminary investigation determined that a person opened fire at a government building from an adjacent building, Dallas police spokesperson Officer Jonathen E. Maner said in an email.
The Dallas Fire-Rescue Department was also dispatched after a call reporting a shooting at or near the immigration office, department spokesperson Jason L. Evans said in an email.
Video below: Heavy police presence after shooting at Dallas ICE facility
Parkland Hospital has received two patients from the shooting, hospital spokesperson April Foran said by telephone. She did not have any details about their conditions.
A third person died at the scene after the shooting, Maner said. The investigation is ongoing and a briefing was expected later in the day.
Dozens of emergency vehicles were seen along a highway near the facility.
The ICE facility is along Interstate 35 East, just southwest of Dallas Love Field, a large commercial airport serving the Dallas-Fort Worth metropolitan area, and just blocks from hotels catering to airport travelers.
Traffic cameras near the scene showed six lanes of a normally busy freeway empty, with cars and semitrailers ground to a halt on an interstate exit.
Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem said details were still emerging, but the agency was confirming there were “multiple injuries and fatalities” at the field office. Noem said the motive remained unclear, but noted there has been an uptick in targeting of ICE agents.
ICE and Homeland Security didn’t immediately provide additional details.
3 people shot at Dallas ICE facility and the shooter is dead, official says
John All right, there is some breaking news this morning. We’re hearing reports of *** shooting at an ICE facility in Dallas. We happen to have with us the acting director of ICE, US Immigration and Customs Enforcement, Todd Lyons. Director, thank you for being here. I wanna say you were coming in. We were talking to you anyway. Obviously this event has sort of subsumed what we’re gonna discuss. What can you tell us about this incident in Dallas? Yeah, literally, as I was coming here we were notified that there were shots fired at our Dallas field office. Right now preliminary information is *** possible sniper. We have 3 individuals that are down at this time. We’re not sure on their condition. They’ve been taken to the hospital. Um, we’re hearing some reports that the shooter may be down from the Texas Department of Public Safety. The scene secure, you know, obviously right now my hearts and prayers are going out to my officers and agents. That’s my biggest concern, um, and as well as everyone in that area, but this just shows the violence that’s being. Uh, increased against ICE officers and, and agents. This is the 2nd time now we’ve had *** shooting at one of our facilities in the Dallas area, um, and really it’s, it’s, it’s. It’s just *** sad time that we have to worry about violence against law enforcement. So you’re hearing the reports you’re hearing at this point are coming from inside your your offices in Dallas at ICE. You’re hearing directly from them. Yeah, we’re hearing directly from the leadership on the ground there. The building is on lockdown, building secure. Initial reports are that our you know our offices are accounted for, but there are 3 individuals that are shot. Are they, are, are the 3 individuals ICE employees? We’re still working on that right now. Um, obviously it’s really chaotic. Uh, Dallas Police Department’s been great. They’re on scene. It’s *** large police presence there right now, um. You know, it could be uh employees, it could be civilians that were visiting facility, it could be detainees at this point we’re still working through that. We do know that 3 have definitely been shot. They’re en route to the hospital right now. Um, we had great support from locals on the ground. They’re helping us look for the active shooter. Like I said, right before I just walked on set, I got word that the shooter is down from self-inflicted gunshot wound. OK, so it may not be an active shooter situation anymore. You said *** possible sniper. Did this individual get inside the facility or all the shots outside? From *** preliminary reports it looks like shots came from outside and the victims are secure facility and the victims were also outside or the victims inside inside our sally port area. where we have our uh secured detainee location inside that location but again it’s everything’s still coming in so fast it’s just been ***, *** morning. I, I look, I, and I appreciate you giving us the details you have. It’s an unusual situation here. We’re getting preliminary reports that we had not yet been able to confirm. We have the acting director of ICE here telling us that you are getting these reports, uh, directly. And you mentioned the threats that you feel are being directed toward your agents. Talk to me about that in. What’s the environment in general? You know, I’ve never seen anything like this in my law enforcement career. I’ve never seen threats on law enforcement, specifically. ICE increased the way it is, you know, we’re up over 1,000% assaults on officers right now and really just *** lot of the. The talk that’s out there, *** lot of the rhetoric is just the violence directed towards law enforcement officers just trying to do their job and we just keep, just keeping seeing an increase step by step, you know, we had, we, like I said, we had that shooting at the Alvarado facility which is right outside Dallas, uh, on July 4th where they ambushed officers in military tactical gear, um, under the guise of fireworks, and now we have this, and it just seems like it keeps getting worse and worse and it has to stop. Um, you are, you’ve launched *** large recruitment effort. There are ads airing in *** lot of different places. To what extent have you found that the atmosphere is affecting your recruitment efforts? You know, you would think that it would affect it, but it hasn’t. We have over 157,000 applicants. It just keeps going up. There’s really, um, excitement for people that want to serve, not just necessarily nice but want to serve in *** federal law enforcement capacity, uh, especially at *** time when. assaults and attack on law enforcement are increasing. We are seeing, uh, *** great uptick in our recruitment. So people definitely want to do the job, but again, it’s just, it’s *** sad moment in time when we have to worry about the safety of law enforcement officers just out there doing their mission.
3 people shot at Dallas ICE facility and the shooter is dead, official says
Three people, including detainees, have been shot at a U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement facility in Dallas and the shooter is dead from a self-inflicted gunshot wound, federal authorities said.Acting ICE Director Todd Lyons confirmed the shooting during an interview on CNN on Wednesday.Homeland Security spokesperson Tricia McLaughlin later told Fox News that no ICE agents were injured.“We believe he was shooting at law enforcement and detainees from an apartment building,” McLaughlin said. “Detainees were among the victims of the shooting.”The FBI said during a news conference Wednesday morning that it was investigating the shooting as “an act of targeted violence.”“Early evidence that we’ve seen from rounds that were found near the suspected shooter contain messages that were anti-ICE in nature,” said Joe Rothrock, special agent in charge of the Dallas field office.Officers responded to a call to assist an officer on North Stemmons Freeway around 6:40 a.m. Wednesday and the preliminary investigation determined that a person opened fire at a government building from an adjacent building, Dallas police spokesperson Officer Jonathen E. Maner said in an email.Video below: Heavy police presence after shooting at Dallas ICE facility The Dallas Fire-Rescue Department was also dispatched after a call reporting a shooting at or near the immigration office, department spokesperson Jason L. Evans said in an email.Parkland Hospital has received two patients from the shooting, hospital spokesperson April Foran said by telephone. She did not have any details about their conditions.A third person died at the scene after the shooting, Maner said. The investigation is ongoing.Dozens of emergency vehicles were seen along a highway near the facility.The ICE facility is along Interstate 35 East, just southwest of Dallas Love Field, a large commercial airport serving the Dallas-Fort Worth metropolitan area, and just blocks from hotels catering to airport travelers.Traffic cameras near the scene showed six lanes of a normally busy freeway empty, with cars and semitrailers ground to a halt on an interstate exit.Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem said details were still emerging, but the agency was confirming there were “multiple injuries and fatalities” at the field office. Noem said the motive remained unclear, but noted there has been an uptick in targeting of ICE agents.ICE and Homeland Security didn’t immediately provide additional details.
DALLAS —
Three people, including detainees, have been shot at a U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement facility in Dallas and the shooter is dead from a self-inflicted gunshot wound, federal authorities said.
Acting ICE Director Todd Lyons confirmed the shooting during an interview on CNN on Wednesday.
Homeland Security spokesperson Tricia McLaughlin later told Fox News that no ICE agents were injured.
“We believe he was shooting at law enforcement and detainees from an apartment building,” McLaughlin said. ”Detainees were among the victims of the shooting.”
Officers responded to a call to assist an officer on North Stemmons Freeway around 6:40 a.m. Wednesday and the preliminary investigation determined that a person opened fire at a government building from an adjacent building, Dallas police spokesperson Officer Jonathen E. Maner said in an email.
The Dallas Fire-Rescue Department was also dispatched after a call reporting a shooting at or near the immigration office, department spokesperson Jason L. Evans said in an email.
Video below: Heavy police presence after shooting at Dallas ICE facility
Parkland Hospital has received two patients from the shooting, hospital spokesperson April Foran said by telephone. She did not have any details about their conditions.
A third person died at the scene after the shooting, Maner said. The investigation is ongoing and a briefing was expected later in the day.
Dozens of emergency vehicles were seen along a highway near the facility.
The ICE facility is along Interstate 35 East, just southwest of Dallas Love Field, a large commercial airport serving the Dallas-Fort Worth metropolitan area, and just blocks from hotels catering to airport travelers.
Traffic cameras near the scene showed six lanes of a normally busy freeway empty, with cars and semitrailers ground to a halt on an interstate exit.
Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem said details were still emerging, but the agency was confirming there were “multiple injuries and fatalities” at the field office. Noem said the motive remained unclear, but noted there has been an uptick in targeting of ICE agents.
ICE and Homeland Security didn’t immediately provide additional details.
After decades of debauchery and an untold number of conceptions, revelers at Burning Man celebrated a rare birth at Black Rock City on Wednesday morning, after a festivalgoer unexpectedly went into labor on the Playa.
Some longtime Burners have dubbed the infant “Citizen Zero.”
“Baby girl arrived weighing 3 lbs 9.6 oz and measuring 16.5 inches long,” the infant’s aunt Lacey Paxman wrote in a GoFundMe appeal for the family. “She is currently in the NICU, gaining strength every day. Mom and baby are both doing OK, but she will need to stay in the hospital until she is ready to come home.”
Family members said the woman did not know she was pregnant until she felt the baby coming early Wednesday morning. According to one Redditor, an obstetrician and a pediatric trauma nurse were both camped nearby and rushed to aid the delivery when she went into labor.
The parents then drove themselves to the campground’s medical facility before being airlifted to a major hospital where the baby could receive specialized intensive care, the Redditor said.
“Since this is their first child and the pregnancy was completely unexpected, my brother and his wife don’t have anything prepared — no baby supplies, no nursery, nothing at all,” Paxman wrote.
“On top of that, the unexpected circumstances have created a heavy financial burden: NICU care (with no release date yet), medical bills, and travel and lodging expenses while they are far from home,” she said.
Surprise deliveries are uncommon but far from unheard of, experts say. About 1 in every 500 pregnant women discovers she’s expecting more than 20 weeks along — a phenomenon known as “cryptic pregnancy.”
Cryptic pregnancies are more common among very young mothers, as well as those who may have other health conditions that mask pregnancy symptoms such as nausea, exhaustion and even missed periods. Like the Burner mother, a subset of such parents only discovers they’re pregnant when they go into labor.
Pregnant women, young children and even babies are a regular feature of the nine-day Burning Man festival, which draws tens of thousands of people each year to a desolate strip of the Nevada desert about 120 miles north of Reno.
Still, births are all but unheard at the celebration of “community, art, self-expression and self-reliance.”
The surprise delivery occurred just hours after a white-out dust storm ground incoming traffic to a halt as festivalgoers streamed in and attempted to set camp on Monday.
The dramatic weather recalled torrential rains that flooded the camp in 2023, leaving thousands stranded in deep, sticky mud.
Police responded to an active shooter incident at a Catholic school in south Minneapolis on Wednesday, with sources confirming there are multiple victims and that the shooter is now dead.
Crews at the scene reported seeing a large number of ambulances, according to CBS. Sources told ABC News that there are multiple victims from a shooting that took place during morning drop-off at Annunciation Catholic school in Minneapolis.
The city of Minneapolis’s official X account said there is “no active threat to the community at this time” as of 10:29am EST.
“The shooter is contained. Stay away from the area to allow emergency personnel to help victims – W. 54th Street between Lyndale and Nicollet Ave,” the city wrote.
The suspect is reportedly dead, according to Fox 9. The outlet also reported that the first call to law enforcement went through at 8.27am local time, shortly after a mass for students was slated to kick off at 8.15am.
The police department from Richfield, a suburb that borders Minneapolis, told Fox 9 there were 20 victims. It was unclear how many, if any, were dead.
“A man dressed in all black and armed with a rifle was reported at the scene,” the Richfield police department said.
Minnesota’s governor, Tim Walz, said he’d been “briefed on a shooting at Annunciation Catholic school” on Wednesday morning and would “continue to provide updates as we get more information”.
“The [Bureau of Criminal Apprehension] and State Patrol are on scene. I’m praying for our kids and teachers whose first week of school was marred by this horrific act of violence,” he wrote on X.
Minneapolis’s mayor, Jacob Frey, said he is “monitoring reports of horrific violence in south Minneapolis” and the “emergency response team has been activated”. Frey was also at the scene at around 10:15am EST.
The US secretary of homeland security, Kristi Noem, said on X that the Department of Homeland Security is monitoring the shooting.
“We are in communication with our interagency partners, and will share more information as soon as it becomes available. I am praying for the victims of this heinous attack and their families,” Noem said.
Donald Trump also said on Truth Social on Wednesday morning that he’s been “fully briefed on the tragic shooting” and that the “White House will continue to monitor this terrible situation. Please join me in praying for everyone involved!”
The Hennepin county sheriff’s office said in a statement that it was “actively assisting the Minneapolis Police Department and other law enforcement agencies” and urged “all residents to stay out of the affected area to allow emergency responders to operate effectively”.
“This is an evolving situation and we will continue to provide updates as more information becomes available. Our hearts go out to all those impacted by this act of violence,” it said.
Wednesday’s incident marks the fourth shooting in 24 hours in Minneapolis, Minnesota. Over the course of Tuesday into Wednesday, three people were shot and killed in three separate shootings. At least eight people also suffered gunshot wounds in those incidents.
Police in Minneapolis have responded to a reported shooting at a Catholic school during the first week of classes. Local media reports emergency responders were called to the Annunciation Catholic School on Wednesday morning in the city’s Windom neighborhood, about 8 miles west of Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport. Stream live video from the scene”I’ve been briefed on a shooting at Annunciation Catholic School and will continue to provide updates as we get more information,” Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz said in a statement on social media. “I’m praying for our kids and teachers whose first week of school was marred by this horrific act of violence.”In a social media post, the city of Minneapolis said the shooter is “contained” and there is no active threat to the community.It is unknown how many people may have been injured in this shooting. A person answering the phone at Annunciation School said students were being evacuated.Local and state police, FBI, federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms agents and other authorities converged on the school.Dating to 1923, the pre-kindergarten through eighth grade school had an all-school Mass scheduled at 8:15 a.m. Wednesday morning, according to its website. Monday was the first day of school, and social media photos from that day show students in green uniforms greeting each other at bicycle racks, smiling for the camera and sitting together.The gunfire was the latest in a series of fatal shootings in the city in less than 24 hours. One person was killed and six others were hurt in a shooting Tuesday afternoon outside a high school in Minneapolis. Hours later, two people died in two other shootings in the city.The Associated Press contributed to this story.This is a breaking news story. Check back for updates.
MINNEAPOLIS —
Police in Minneapolis have responded to a reported shooting at a Catholic school during the first week of classes.
Local media reports emergency responders were called to the Annunciation Catholic School on Wednesday morning in the city’s Windom neighborhood, about 8 miles west of Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport.
Stream live video from the scene
“I’ve been briefed on a shooting at Annunciation Catholic School and will continue to provide updates as we get more information,” Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz said in a statement on social media. “I’m praying for our kids and teachers whose first week of school was marred by this horrific act of violence.”
In a social media post, the city of Minneapolis said the shooter is “contained” and there is no active threat to the community.
It is unknown how many people may have been injured in this shooting.
A person answering the phone at Annunciation School said students were being evacuated.
Local and state police, FBI, federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms agents and other authorities were converged on the school.
Dating to 1923, the pre-kindergarten through eighth grade school had an all-school Mass scheduled at 8:15 a.m. Wednesday morning, according to its website. Monday was the first day of school, and social media photos from that day show students in green uniforms greeting each other at bicycle racks, smiling for the camera and sitting together.
The gunfire was the latest in a series of fatal shootings in the city in less than 24 hours. One person was killed and six others were hurt in a shooting Tuesday afternoon outside a high school in Minneapolis. Hours later, two people died in two other shootings in the city.
The Associated Press contributed to this story.
This is a breaking news story. Check back for updates.
Aug. 20—The doors were opened wide across the Austin Public Schools District on Wednesday morning as the district opened up its 2025-26 school year.
Complete with a celebratory atmosphere, students funneled through the doors of Austin High School on a day that staff sees as always being a happy one.
“The building’s different,” said AHS Principal Matt Schmidt. “When there are no kids it’s quiet. It’s not as fun in the summer. We get a lot done, but it’s so much better when there are teachers and kids in the building. Much different energy.”
Part of the reason for the energy on display for opening day is to create a welcoming atmosphere that students can get into, which of course includes a new class of incoming freshmen.
“We want to make it fun and inviting,” Schmidt said. “That’s what we’re trying to do. You’ve got kids at all different levels. You got kids in eighth grade going into ninth grade. It’s a big building. It can be a little scary so you want to make sure they are feeling welcome. You got seniors that have been here for a few years and kind of know what’s going on.”
“Just creating some excitement,” he added.
This marks a slightly earlier start from years past and that’s because of a pair of things. First, it allows the district to spread more breaks out through the year, especially during long periods of time where perhaps there are no holidays to break things up.
“When it comes to the spring, you have two months without a break. Those are hard,” Schmidt said. “Holiday breaks are a little bit longer (between) and it helps with learning.”
However, it’s also due to construction on Oakland Avenue West as well as work within the district.
After reaching a certain dollar amount in work, districts in the State of Minnesota are allowed to request a waiver from the state to start earlier before Labor Day.
To that end, the district has completed a large number of projects over the summer leading into the new school year.
In Austin High School alone, Hastings Gym received new flooring, Christgau Hall was newly painted as well as the third floor and the outside of the building was power washed.
Looking down the line, Schmidt said that they are eyeing a completion date for the weight room renovation toward the end of October. Funded through the Thielen Foundation, renovation will completely make-over the weight room.
“We’re getting wall wraps in the next couple weeks and then flooring is going in,” Schmidt said. “We’re ready to put that down and really, we’re just waiting on equipment.”
All that was left Wednesday was to get the new year under way.
They covered themselves with hazmat suits, gloves and masks and put plastic bags over their boots. That’s how dangerous the substance was that U.S. Customs and Border Protection officers were examining Wednesday morning.
A cadre of agents — veterans who had seized fentanyl, heroin and other illicit narcotics in previous raids — dug deep, hands and boots in a sea of pungent material, before hitting pay dirt.
What agents said they found was almost 2 tons of methamphetamine and cocaine — valued at $10.4 million — buried within dozens of vats of fiery jalapeño paste. The cargo was seized from a commercial tractor-trailer near the Otay Mesa border.
“It was an extremely spicy situation,” Michael Scappechio, a CBP spokesperson, told The Times. “You never really know what you’re dealing with just in terms of dangerous narcotics and then you throw in there all that organic material; we had to break out the full PPE,” or personal protective equipment.
A 28-year-old man with valid border-crossing credentials was stopped Wednesday around 10:36 a.m. by agents while hauling his cargo. The individual was a Mexican national, according to Scappechio.
His electronic shipment manifest listed only vats of jalapeño paste among his consignment.
Customs officers decided to review the man’s haul.
In total, 349 packages of methamphetamine and cocaine weighing 3,684 pounds were seized.
(U.S. Customs and Border Protection)
“We won’t expose the reasons that led to the further examination,” Scappechio said, “but agent suspicion is often used.”
The truck was moved from the border to the nearby screening facility, where a K-9 unit then screened the cargo and alerted agents for a full inspection.
There, they poured out barrel-sized drums of jalapeño paste, removing 349 suspicious packages from the vats. About 3,161 pounds of methamphetamine and 523 pounds of cocaine were extracted from the haul.
The driver was turned over to the Department of Homeland Security for arrest and processing while the CBP seized the drugs and trailer.
Never underestimate the power of a dog’s nose.
“Our K-9 teams are an invaluable component of our counter-narcotics operations, providing a reliable and unequaled mobile detection capability,” said Rosa Hernandez in a statement. The Otay Mesa port director said the CBP had stepped up its efforts “to secure communities and stifle the growth of transnational criminal organizations, one seizure after another.”
Last month, San Diego’s field office seized more than 14,000 pounds of narcotics at California’s land borders.
But what’s going to happen to all that jalapeño paste?
Scappechio said he couldn’t say for certain but noted that the agency was “not going to hold organic material for too long” before destroying it. He did say the owner could petition to retrieve the property.
“Since the jalapeño paste was laden with dangerous drugs,” Scappechio said, “I wouldn’t hold my breath.”
For as long as people have watched tents take over sidewalks and RVs deteriorate under freeways, politicians have been making promises about solving homelessness in Los Angeles.
And for just as long, those same politicians have been breaking them.
This is undoubtedly why, back in March, as Mayor Karen Bass was approaching her first 100 days in office, only 17% of Angelenos believed her administration would make “a lot of progress” getting people off the streets, according to a Suffolk University/Los Angeles Times poll. Far more — 45% — predicted just “a little progress” would be made.
I was thinking about this deep well of public skepticism while listening to Bass, all smiles in a bright green suit on Wednesday morning, enthusiastically explain why the progress she has actually made is a reason for renewed optimism.
Flanked by members of the L.A. City Council outside a school in Hollywood, she announced that her administration had, in its first year, moved more than 21,694 people out of encampments and into interim housing. That’s an increase of 28% over the final year of former Mayor Eric Garcetti’s administration, taking into account the work of various government programs, including Bass’ signature one, Inside Safe.
In addition, the majority of those directed to motel and hotel rooms, congregate shelters and tiny homes have decided to stay, rather than head back out onto the streets.
“We have tried to set a new tone in the city. This is an example of that new tone. Forty-one people used to sleep here, and now it’s clear,” Bass said Wednesday over the shrieks of schoolchildren. “Students and parents don’t need to walk around tents on their way to school, and the Angelenos who were living here do not need to die on our streets.”
It was a convincing message, backed up by a thick packet of numbers distributed to reporters at City Hall a few hours later.
But numbers are funny. They can be crunched in many ways and interpreted to mean many different things.
As my Times colleague David Zahniser pointed out, all of the people who now live in interim housing are still considered homeless by the federal government. And while Bass had originally thought most of them would be there for only three to six months, it’s now looking more like 18 months to two years. Permanent housing is that scarce.
So, numbers-wise, don’t expect a decline in the next annual homelessness count, which is scheduled for January. There might even be an increase, thanks to the expiration of pandemic-era tenant protections. As of the last count, there were more than 46,000 unhoused people living in the city, mostly in encampments.
But again, numbers are funny. They tend not to mean half as much as what people see and experience for themselves, just like the disconnect between public perceptions of crime and actual crime data.
So, when Bass declares at a news conference that “we have proved this year that we will make change,” and she talks about the encampment that used to be where she’s standing, and all the encampments that her administration has cleared, even if a few more tents have popped up down the street, skeptical Angelenos just might believe her.
And maybe, just maybe, that’s not such a bad thing.
“What I see most powerfully is increased hope,” Va Lecia Adams Kellum, chief executive of the Los Angeles Homeless Services Authority, told reporters on Wednesday. “Hope among the folks who are living in those encampments who had given up and [thought] they’ll always live in that level of despair. Hope that the community now believes that we could possibly get out of this terrible crisis.”
Kellie Waldon, 54, cries near what’s left of her encampment, left, as Skid Row West is dismantled under the 405 Freeway along Venice Boulevard in Los Angeles in October. Waldon was hoping to receive housing through the city’s Inside Safe program, like others in the encampment had. “You get your hopes up and you don’t know what to believe,” Waldon said.
(Genaro Molina/Los Angeles Times)
Hope is a thing difficult to quantify, especially among people who have been homeless for years, and have suffered so much and have been let down so often by government.
I’ve talked to some who took a chance and decided to leave their tents and RVs, and are now thrilled to be in a motel room with a door, running water and air conditioning. Others have had it with curfews and jail-like rules, and are getting tired of waiting on promised permanent housing.
I’ve also talked to those who have been booted out of interim housing for one reason or another, and are back on the streets. They are feeling hopeless, like many cash-strapped Angelenos who are on the verge of an eviction.
But peak hopelessness? That’s what we saw on the first days of December.
At a hastily called news conference, Los Angeles Police Chief Michel Moore announced that officers were searching for a man who had fatally shot three homeless people — one sleeping on a couch in an alley and another while pushing a shopping cart.
“This is a killer preying on the unhoused,” Bass said.
Moore and Bass didn’t know then, but their suspect, Jerrid Joseph Powell, had already been arrested by Beverly Hills police after a traffic stop in which his $60,000 BMW was linked to a deadly follow-home robbery.
Police have yet to elaborate on Powell’s alleged motive, but Bass brought up the horrific case several times on Wednesday — and with good reason. Violence and acts of cruelty against people living on the streets are increasingly common not just locally, but nationally.
Advocates blame this trend of nastiness on the pandemic-era surge in homelessness, particularly in unsheltered homelessness, and the subsequent spike in interactions between housed and unhoused residents. Fear and frustration can lead to dehumanization and that, in turn, can lead to violence, said Dr. Margot Kushel, director of the Benioff Homelessness and Housing Initiative.
“I do really worry that it’s become normalized in public discourse to speak about people experiencing homelessness as, like, a problem for those who are not homeless — as opposed to fundamentally a massive societal failure that’s left usually older, vulnerable people terrified and totally unprotected,” she told me. “And I do think that there is a connection, like the more we dehumanize people, the less protected they are.”
Stephanie Klasky-Gamer has watched this happen in real-time as president and CEO of L.A. Family Housing. The seeming permanency of encampments, and the trash, fires and unsanitary conditions they often generate, have led to what she describes as widespread impatience.
“I don’t mean big, systemic impatience, like ‘I wish we could end homelessness faster,’” she said. “It’s the ‘I’m just sick of seeing you in front of me’ kind of impatience.”
On some level, she gets it, though. As does Kushel. As do I.
“It has to be OK to say, ‘Yeah, this sucks that I’m walking my kids to school and I’m walking over people in tents,’” Kushel told me. “But there has to be a way to hold that with being able to recognize how we got to this position and also how we’re going to get out. And to sort of restore [our] collective humanity.”
For Klasky-Gamer, this has meant focusing on what has changed since Bass became mayor.
“I know how much good is getting done,” she told me. “The frustration I may feel at seeing the tent every day I turn the corner, at least I can temper it knowing that 10 people yesterday moved into an apartment. These three people haven’t. But these 10 did.”
RVs in an encampment along West Jefferson Boulevard near the Ballona Wetlands in Playa del Rey in 2021.
(Al Seib / Los Angeles Times)
The mayor has told me many times that getting people off the streets isn’t just a humanitarian imperative — and, as a serial killer reminded us, a safety imperative. It’s also a demonstration to a fed up public that progress is possible.
“What distresses Angelenos the most are encampments. That’s where people were dying on the street,” Bass told reporters. “And to me, what was clear, was that we come up with a way to get people out of the tents.”
Some will dismiss that. They’ll insist that all her administration is doing is reducing visible homelessness to score easy political points. And that instead of doing the hard work of actually helping L.A.’s most vulnerable residents get back on their feet, the mayor is hiding them so that they’ll be forgotten and abandoned in interim housing.
In this city, defined by its haves and have nots, I understand the cynicism and skepticism. But that’s why what Bass does next, namely expanding and stabilizing the city’s crumbling supply of permanent housing, will matter even more than what she has done thus far.
“We’ve got to somehow make people believe again that this is solvable,” Kushel told me, “and it is solvable.”
Hope can be elusive. But Annelisa Stephan was looking for it anyway when she came to the Ballona Wetlands on a recent Saturday morning.
She and more than 100 other volunteers — many of them from the nearby neighborhoods of Playa Vista and Playa del Rey — had descended on the Westside ecological reserve to dig holes, spread soil, and put in plants and trees.
Just a few months ago, RVs had been parked here along Jefferson Boulevard, bumper to bumper in a sprawling encampment that dozens of unhoused people had come to call home.
They built a close-knit community, looking out for one another and mourning one another after deadly fires. But they also decimated the Ballona Wetlands’ freshwater marsh with everything from battery acid to trash to human waste, and scared off nearby residents who once walked the trails.
And then one day, after almost three years, the encampment was gone, replaced by concrete barricades and metal fencing. The residents were mostly sent to interim housing and the RVs were mostly towed away.
“It’s like, hard to know what to think or feel,” Stephan told me. “I’m happy that the land is being stewarded, but just sad about the suffering that so many people face.”
She lamented the “fervent, anti-homeless mania” that she has heard from some of her neighbors.
“It’s just been really a painful time,” Stephan said.
Not far away, L.A. City Councilmember Traci Park, whose Westside district includes the Ballona Wetlands and got elected on promises to aggressively crack down on homeless encampments, was more circumspect.
“At the end of the day, everybody wants the same thing, which is to get folks off the streets and into safe settings and connected to the help that they need,” she said. “There’s a lot of different points of view about how we get there. And I think that’s where a lot of the conflict and the division lie.”
She paused, as traffic whizzed by on Jefferson Boulevard.
Starting in 2008, a widely circulated conspiracy theory was that Barack Obama was not actually born in America. Strivers on the political right scrounged around to try to produce a Kenyan birth certificate for him; they filed state and federal legal complaints alleging that Obama was not eligible to be president. But proof of this theory was never a requirement for subscribing to it; you could simply choose to believe that a Black liberal with a Muslim-sounding middle name was not one of us. And at several points during Obama’s presidency, almost a quarter of Americans did.
The country has not changed much. Theda Skocpol, a Harvard sociologist and political scientist who has studied the Tea Party movement and right-wing grievances of the Obama years, draws a straight line from that era to today’s “Stop the Steal” efforts. I talked with Skocpol on Wednesday morning about that connection, and the roots of resentment in America.
Now, as then, you can take the right’s scramble for evidence of fraud with a grain of salt, she told me. The election deniers who say they are perturbed by late-night ballot dumps or dead people voting are actually concerned with something else.
“‘Stop the Steal’ is a metaphor,” Skocpol said, “for the country being taken away from the people who think they should rightfully be setting the tone.” More than a decade later, evidence remains secondary when what you’re really doing is questioning whose vote counts—and who counts as an American.
This interview has been edited and condensed for clarity.
Elaine Godfrey: Tell me what connection you see between the Tea Party movement that you studied and the Trump-inspired Stop the Steal effort.
Theda Skocpol: There’s a definite line. Opinion polls tell us that people who participated in or sympathized with the Tea Party—some groups are still meeting—were disproportionately angry about immigration and the loss of America as they know it. They became core supporters of Trump. I’m quite certain that some organizations that were Tea Party–labeled helped organize Stop the Steal stuff.
Trump has expanded the appeal of an angry, resentful ethno-nationalist politics to younger whites. But it’s the same outlook.
Godfrey: So how do you interpret the broader Stop the Steal movement?
Skocpol: I don’t think Stop the Steal is about ballots at all. I don’t believe a lot of people really think that the votes weren’t counted correctly in 2020. They believe that urban people, metropolitan people—disproportionately young and minorities, to be sure, but frankly liberal whites—are an illegitimate brew that’s changing America in unrecognizable ways and taking it away from them. Stop the Steal is a way of saying that. Stop the Steal is a metaphor. And remember, they declared voting fraud before the election.
Godfrey: A metaphor?
Skocpol: It’s a metaphor for the country being taken away from the people who think they should rightfully be setting the tone. Doug Mastriano said it in so many words: It’s a Christian country. That doesn’t mean we’ll throw out everybody else, but they’ve got to accept that we’re the ones setting the tone. That’s what Hungary has in mind. Viktor Orbán has been going a little further. They’re a more muscular and violence-prone version of the same thing.
People in 2016 who were otherwise quite normal would say, There’s something wrong with those votes from Milwaukee and Madison. I’d push back ever so gently and say, Those are big places; it takes a while to count the votes. I’d get a glassy-eyed stare at that point: No, something fishy is going on.
They feel disconnected from and dominated by people who have done something horrible to the country. And Trump gave voice to that. He’s a perfect resonant instrument for that—because he’s a bundle of narcissistic resentments. But he’s no longer necessary.
Skocpol: He’s not necessary for an authoritarian movement to use the GOP to lock in minority rule. The movement to manipulate election access and counting is so far along. I think it’s too late, and we’re vulnerable to it because of how we administer local elections.
What’s happened involves an interlocking set of things. It depends not just on candidates like Trump running for president and nationalizing popular fears and resentments, but also on state legislatures, which have been captured, and the Supreme Court. The Court is a keystone in all of this because it’s going to validate perfectly legal manipulations that really are about locking in minority rule. In that sense, the turning point in American history may have happened in November 2016.
Godfrey: The turning point toward what?
Skocpol: Toward a locking-in of minority rule along ethno-nationalist lines. The objective is to disenfranchise metro people, period. I see a real chance of a long-term federal takeover by forces that are determined to maintain a fiction of a white, Christian, Trumpist version of America.
That can’t work over the long run, because the fastest-growing parts of the country are demonized in that scheme of things. But a lot of things liberals do play into it: Democrats are the party of strong government, and they’re almost as fixated on the presidency as Trumpists are. People on the left started bashing Joe Biden less than a year into his presidency. Why won’t the president just exert his will? Well, that doesn’t work.
The hour is late. This election this fall is critical.
Godfrey: Why so?
Skocpol: We’ve got about five pivotal states where election deniers—the culmination of the Tea Party–Trumpist strand of the GOP—are close to gaining control of the levers of voting access and counting the results. If that happens, in even two of those places, it could well be enough. The way courts are operating now, they will not place limits on much of anything that happens in the states.
Godfrey: So what would you say is on the ballot in 2022?
Skocpol: The locking-in of minority authoritarian rule.
People talk about it in racial terms, and of course the racial side is very powerful. We had racial change from the 1960s on, and conservative people are angry about Black political power. But I wouldn’t underestimate the gender anger that’s channeled here: Relations between men and women have changed in ways that are very unsettling to them. And conservatives are angry about family change.
This is directed at liberal whites, too. Tea Partiers talked about white people in college towns who voted Democratic the way the rulers of Iran would speak of Muslims that are liberal—as the near-devil.
Godfrey: What are the roots of that resentment?
Skocpol: The suspicion of cities and metro areas is a deep strand in America. In this period, it’s been deliberately stoked and exploited by people trying to limit the power of the federal government. They can build on the fears that conservatives have—about how their children leave for college and come back thinking differently. As soon as you get away from the places where upper-middle-class professionals are concentrated, what you see is decay. People see that. They’re resentful of it.
Anti-immigrant politics is very much at the core of this. Every time in the history of the U.S., when you reach the end of a period of immigration, you get a nativist reaction. When the newcomers come, they’re going to destroy the country. That’s an old theme in this country.
Godfrey: The 2016 election was surrounded by a lot of discussion about whether Trump’s supporters were motivated by racism or economic anxiety. What’s your view on that?
Skocpol: That whole debate tends to be conducted with opinion polls. I’m in a minority, but I don’t find them very helpful for understanding American politics. Even when well conducted, polls treat the American political system as a bunch of potatoes in a sack—so you can pull out What women think, for instance, but not which women and where. And in American politics, everything is about the where.
If you drive into a place in Iowa or Nebraska where immigration is happening, it’s changed the shops downtown, it’s changed the language, it’s changed the churches, it’s changed the schools. And people’s jobs have changed—so it’s also about economics. In our 2011 interviews, Tea Party members were angry about immigrants. I’m not saying everybody in those communities is angry at newcomers, but it creates tensions that rabble-rousing politicians can take advantage of.
We know that Trump supporters, Stop the Steal supporters, are much more likely than other Republicans and conservatives to resent immigrants and fear them. In my 2017–2019 period of research, I visited eight pro-Trump counties. Tea Party types were just furious about immigrants. Trump’s emphasis on immigration interjected the idea that the debate is about what the nature of America is.
Trumpism is nativism. It’s also profoundly resentful of independent women, and it’s resentful of Black people whom it considers out of place politically. Trump channeled that and fused it into one big, angry brew.
Godfrey: How organic have these movements been? At a certain point, we heard a lot about how the Tea Party movement became a Koch-funded operation, not a true grassroots movement.
Skocpol: The Tea Party was not created by the Koch brothers; it was taken advantage of by the Kochs. But the Kochs were not anti-immigrant. The Tea Partiers really were. The Kochs didn’t control the results. The Kochs didn’t select Donald Trump. They didn’t even like him. Marco Rubio was their guy. The Chamber of Commerce crowd wanted a Bush. Both were easily dispatched by Trump.
Republican leaders could have done something—and they still could. The real story is about Republican Party elites and their willingness to go along with what they’ve always known was over the top. That’s a mystery that’s a little hard to completely solve. A lot of the opportunists think they can ride that tiger without it devouring them, even though sometimes it does. But nobody seems to learn.
At this point, what does resistance in the party consist of? Mitch McConnell taking a day to start denouncing the FBI. That’s it. Just discernibly different from Kevin McCarthy.