- Workers document Congressional activities overnight to produce the Congressional Record
- Morrisons to close around 100 convenience stores in the UK this year
- Six fatalities confirmed in Maldives diving accident at submerged cave
- Police investigate sexual misconduct claim against Prince Andrew in 2010
- Democratic primary in crucial California Latino district raises party concerns
- Police investigate Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor over allegations of sexual offences
- Banned UK vapes repurposed to create power sources for Ukrainian soldiers
- Trump announces deployment of 5,000 additional US troops to Poland
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Workers document Congressional activities overnight to produce the Congressional Record
Get you up to speed: Inside the making of the Congressional Record: How history gets recorded as D.C. sleeps
The Government Publishing Office in Washington, D.C., successfully produced the Congressional Record following sessions in both chambers of Congress. This daily publication serves as a comprehensive account of legislative activities and is delivered promptly to Capitol Hill.
The Government Publishing Office employs around 70 staff to ensure the timely production of the Congressional Record, which is typically completed by the following morning after Congress sessions. The Record’s physical print runs have drastically decreased from nearly 50,000 copies per day in 1970 to approximately 1,500 today, with most copies distributed to libraries and institutions rather than Congress itself.
The Government Publishing Office continues to adapt its operations to ensure the timely production of the Congressional Record, with director Hugh Halpern emphasising ongoing investments in modernising their publishing systems. Looking ahead, Halpern has acknowledged the necessity for the Congressional Record to evolve, stating, “It is an intricate process…something that’s not going away, and we need to sort of envision what that next generation…looks like.”
What remains unclear — It is not specified how exactly the Congressional Record will evolve to meet future demands.
Workers document Congressional activities overnight to produce the Congressional Record
Washington — Every night that Congress is in session, dozens of workers inside a hulking red-brick building blocks away from the Capitol pull off an unheralded feat, laying down the first draft of the history of Congress.
At the heart of the building is a wide-open expanse, with tall ceilings and exposed ducts and rafters. Bright, industrial-strength lights illuminate printers the size of minivans, with enormous rolls of paper flying through them. The constant din of the machines is punctuated by electronic chirps and whirs.
The building houses the Government Publishing Office, the agency responsible for producing the Congressional Record. Since 1873, the Record has served as the most complete daily account of what the people’s representatives on Capitol Hill accomplished, or didn’t, chronicling the monologues and the mundanities of the legislative process with precise formatting and meticulous editing.
Its production is one of the unseen cogs in the congressional machine — known by few, but depended upon by many. The process begins with the words spoken on the floor of the House and Senate. The work to compile it largely happens as the rest of Washington sleeps. It arrives, with little fanfare, like a newspaper on the Capitol’s doorstep every day.
This is how it comes together.
A “substantially verbatim” account of Congress
Recent copies of the Congressional Record. Kaia Hubbard / WTX US News 
Between the first Congress in 1789 and the lead-up to the Congressional Record’s first publication in 1873, information on the internal workings of the legislative branch was sparse. A smattering of coverage by newspaper reporters made up a piecemeal account of the floor proceedings.
“There was definitely a demand for what was going on on the floor of Congress,” said Daniel Holt, an associate Senate historian. “The problem was that there wasn’t a mechanism in place.”
A number of publications sought to fill that void, operating with a notably different dynamic than is shared between reporters and lawmakers today. One prominent newsman shared a snuff box with the vice president on the Senate floor.
Ultimately, frustration with incomplete and partisan accounts of what happened in the Capitol fueled a push for a more formal operation. On March 5, 1873, the Government Publishing Office produced the first copy of the Congressional Record, dedicated to chronicling what happened in the House and Senate.
There are “few documents more important than the Congressional Record,” Lyndon B. Johnson, then the Senate majority leader, said in 1956.
“Locked in its pages are the debate, the resolutions, the bills, the memorials, the petitions, and the legislative actions that are the reason for the existence of the Senate [and the House],” Johnson said. “It is a document which affects our laws, our precedents, and our judicial decisions.”
A printer watches over a printing press at what was then the Government Printing Office in Washington, D.C., in the early 20th century. FPG / Getty Images 
It does not beg to be read. It’s printed on 11 x 8.5 inch paper, with a formal cover affixed with the U.S. seal. Its thickness depends on how active Congress was the day before. On April 29, when both chambers were in session, the Record ran for 233 pages. On May 4, when both chambers were on recess and met in pro forma sessions, the Record was 22 pages.
Across its four sections, it offers a “substantially verbatim” account of the happenings on Capitol Hill, with everything said and done on the floor of each chamber, divided into three columns per page. It has a “Daily Digest” of chamber action and committee meetings, and a section for extensions of remarks, which allows House members to submit words they never spoke aloud on the floor — tributes to high school sports teams, their favorite recipes, the marking of anniversaries and so on.
The inclusion of words that were not spoken on the floor has served as the source of controversy for decades, underscoring the importance of what gets in the Record and what does not. In 1972, Rep. Hale Boggs of Louisiana died in a plane crash. Two days later, a speech attributed to him appeared in the Record.
“He obviously didn’t do that two days after he had passed. He did the arrangements before he was leaving town,” Holt said. “But this led to that question of, ‘OK, what is in the Record, and how is it related to what is actually said on the floor of Congress?'”
The chambers implemented formatting changes to indicate when a speech had been added to the Record. But lawmakers could work around those by simply delivering the beginning of their remarks on the floor and submitting the rest for inclusion later. Further reforms followed in the 1980s.
“The rules were essentially put in place that said speeches can still be edited for clarity and things of that sort, but they ought to not be edited for substance,” Holt said.
When cameras were introduced in the House in 1979 and in the Senate in 1986, the Congressional Record was no longer the sole account of the chambers’ inner workings. But it continued to give readers a fuller picture of the proceedings.
“Ultimately, the point of it is still what it’s always been, which is to provide readers with as comprehensive as possible record of the issues and debates about them and the different viewpoints that go into the lawmaking process,” Holt said.
The making of the Congressional Record
These days, the process of creating the Record begins in the Capitol, where every floor speech and action in each chamber is logged from gavel to gavel.
When a lawmaker speaks, a rotating team of floor reporters take down every word in shorthand. On the Senate floor, they can be seen maneuvering skillfully around lawmakers with stenotype machines hanging from their necks. Working in 15-minute shifts, they can tap 225 words per minute.
Off the floor, the reporters work with editors, called scopists, to convert their stenographic notes into polished documents. For every 15 minutes of floor time, the process takes about an hour and a half in the House, and between two and three hours in the Senate. Additional rounds of editing follow, and the transcripts are ultimately compiled with vote tallies, committee reports and other materials.
The process then moves up North Capitol Street, to the headquarters of the Government Publishing Office, where some 70 employees are involved in getting the final product out the door. Once the world’s largest printing plant, the GPO is housed in a seven-story red-brick Romanesque Revival building constructed in 1903. The building sits on the same spot that housed the GPO when it was established on the day of Abraham Lincoln’s inauguration in 1861.
The headquarters of the Government Publishing Office in Washington, D.C. Ajay Suresh / Flickr 
Once editing is finished on the Hill, the team of specialists sends the material to the GPO, both digitally and in paper form. Messengers carry stacks of paper from the Capitol to the GPO over the course of the afternoon and evening.
It’s not unusual for the copies to arrive with additions scrawled in the margins or on sticky notes directing a change. If there’s a discrepancy, it’s the paper copy that wins out.
“The document of record is paper,” GPO Director Hugh Halpern told WTX US News on a recent tour of the facilities. “They invest over there in a lot of computers and software and all of that kind of stuff. But ultimately, if you were looking for the source of truth, it is paper.”
The GPO’s congressional customer service office serves as the intake point for material from the Hill. It’s an unassuming office space. A board hanging below a clock on the wall notes when the chambers gaveled out of session, when copy has been received and how many pages came in. Most importantly, it specifies when the House and Senate convene next. The GPO aims to complete the Record before lawmakers come in the following morning.
A bulletin board at the Government Publishing Office tracks progress on producing the Congressional Record. Kaia Hubbard / WTX US News 
“We want to make sure that the Congressional Record is on time — that’s our number one priority,” said Natalya Panyan, who works in the customer service office.
The staffers communicate with official reporters and legislative clerks and check that all the documents are accounted for. The documents are then taken into the proof room, where workers are tasked with making sense of the stacks of pages sent up from the Hill. They compare the pages to digital files and mark them up with formatting instructions before a new round of corrections.
Stepping into the proof room is like entering a newsroom from a bygone era, with mountains of papers riddled with red markings and eyes poring meticulously over every page. It runs 24 hours a day, five or six days out of the week.
Work on the Congressional Record in the proof room starts late. Most of it is done between 3:30 p.m. and 6 a.m. The workers receive a number of “drops” of copy from each chamber throughout the evening. They get to work, grabbing copy from the “takeout counter” and beginning their mark-up process. The proofreaders use a series of red stamps to denote all the stylistic elements of the page, following intricate formatting rules for each section of the Congressional Record.
On a bulletin board labeled “improvement opportunities,” printouts remind the proofreaders to avoid common pitfalls: “Rep. Brittany Pettersen NOT Petterson,” one page says. Another reminds proofreaders to watch out for the capitalization in Rep. Chip Roy’s first name when it stands alone. Buckets labeled for the Record’s sections — “Senate,” “House” and “Digest” — hang from the sides of desks to collect pages.
A GPO proofreader compares a page with formatting notations to the final version. Kaia Hubbard / WTX US News 
“It takes a particular type of person who’s got both the skill, attention to detail and, frankly, disposition to do this kind of really detail-oriented work,” Halpern said.
Workers elsewhere in the proof room enter the formatting information into the electronic files to ensure they match, before they’re posted online and sent to the printers.
Another floor of the GPO building houses the printing operation. It’s a massive space where voices must ascend to new levels to overcome the whir of the machines. The scents of warm paper and ink swirl together. And despite the modern machines, the history of the space — lined in faded brick and tile — is palpable. The room was built to accommodate rows of heavy, metal rotary printing presses of another era. Soaring windows were needed to let in light and illuminate the space.
The space where the Congressional Record is printed in the Government Publishing Office. Kaia Hubbard / WTX US News 
Three different kinds of machines are responsible for printing the Congressional Record. While one printer spits out the thick, off-white covers, another feeds a massive roll of lightweight paper through a printer to create the Record’s double-sided pages. It’s capable of producing thousands of pages per minute. A third machine cuts, folds and staples each copy together to create the magazine-like Record, spitting out each copy in a satisfying line, ready to be delivered.
Finished copies of the Congressional Record, ready for delivery to Capitol Hill. Kaia Hubbard / WTX US News 
The printing process changed within the last decade from traditional presses that took eight or nine people to run, complete with metal plates and tons of waste. Now, the digital inkjet technology requires just two workers. Halpern said the process has “grown up over time.”
“It started from the beginnings of GPO in the 1860s — when we started on this very spot, where we were setting type by hand — and then to today, where the process is largely digital,” he said.
“Not going away”
In 1970, the GPO was printing nearly 50,000 copies per day, using 36 rolls of paper weighing more than 20 tons. Halpern said the number of copies fell in the 1980s and 90s to closer to 25,000 copies per day. Now, it’s about 1,500.
Most of those copies go to libraries and other institutions. But Halpern said “our primary customer is Capitol Hill — Congress.”
“There’s some folks who are still working in paper up there, but most of it is, they’re working off of our digital files,” he said.
The GPO has a major digital presence with govinfo.gov, which serves as a digital repository for all three branches of the federal government. Halpern said while many people tend to think that the agency is focused on producing paper products, most of their work is firmly situated in the 21st century.
“We do document conversion. So Congress gives us documents, whether it’s a bill or a piece of the Congressional Record or whatever, and we transform that into a digital file,” he said. “And then ultimately we output that digital file one of two ways. We either put it on the web or we create a print.”
Along with the Congressional Record, the GPO also produces a number of other products, including U.S. passports, the Federal Register, the president’s budget and the official pocket Constitution.
Looking forward, Halpern acknowledged that the Congressional Record may need to change to meet the times.
“It is an intricate process. It’s something that’s been evolving over time, and frankly, it’s something that’s not going away, and we need to sort of envision what that next generation, what that new Congressional Record looks like,” Halpern said. “We’re not there yet, that’s sort of the kind of thing that’s whispered about as we go along, but we’ve been making the investments.”
GPO Director Hugh Halpern on Capitol Hill on April 29, 2025. Chip Somodevilla / Getty Images 
The GPO takes its cues from Congress. Halpern said they’ve made the investments to ensure they’re ready to execute when Capitol Hill comes calling. The agency is working on modernizing its publishing system to streamline the document conversion process and move away from a software that Halpern said came out when he was 12.
“I am a long way from 12,” he said. “So we are in the process of replacing that piece of software.”
Halpern said he gets a lot of questions about AI, but “we have not yet found a technology that can replace one of our trained proofreaders.”
“Eventually, I would love to see a tool that’s sort of like Grammarly on steroids, that can cut out some of the more routine work for our proofreaders,” he said. “But we still haven’t found a good substitute for having these highly trained human beings in the loop.”
Standing in the massive expanse of the printing space, his voice competing with the din of the machines, Halpern said the operation’s evolution “has been a journey.”
“We’re still on that journey,” he said. “But it’s going in the right direction.”
Morrisons to close around 100 convenience stores in the UK this year
Get you up to speed: Morrisons to close 100 stores across the UK this year | News UK
Morrisons will close approximately 100 of its convenience stores, specifically the Morrisons Daily chain, across the UK over the coming months. This move is expected to affect hundreds of jobs, as these stores have been identified as loss-makers following a performance review.
Morrisons is consulting with hundreds of staff impacted by the upcoming closure of approximately 100 convenience stores, which are expected to shut over the next few months. The chain’s review has identified these stores as loss-makers, exacerbated by significant recent cost increases linked to government policies.
Morrisons confirmed plans to close approximately 100 of its Daily convenience stores in response to ongoing performance challenges, with hundreds of jobs affected as consultations for impacted staff begin. The company, which emphasised a need to focus on viable locations, noted that the closures are driven by long-term losses exacerbated by rising costs linked to government policies.
What remains unclear — The specific number of jobs affected by the closures has not been disclosed.
Morrisons to close around 100 convenience stores in the UK this year
Morrisons will close around 100 of its convenience stores in another hit to the UK high street.
The supermarket group’s company-owned Daily chain of shops are expected to shut over the next few months with hundreds of jobs affected.
According to The Grocer, the Morrisons Daily stores marked for closure are ‘the most challenged’ and loss-makers.
All Morrisons Daily stores are former McColl’s outlets, which were acquired by the firm back in 2022.
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Morrisons is currently consulting affected staff, according to reports.
The chain hires around 95,000 people and has around 1,700 convenience shops and 500 supermarkets.
It has also shut cafes, florists and fresh food counters in the past year.
A spokesperson for Morrisons confirmed the closures to WTX, adding that the ‘expansion of the company’s Convenience business is ‘a core part’ of Morrisons’ growth strategy.’
They said: ‘The performance of all company owned stores across our Convenience business is subject to continuous review.
‘This process has identified a number of stores, which were part of the McColl’s acquisition, whose performance has been challenged for a number of years and which are loss making, despite remedial action.’
‘This situation has been exacerbated in more recent years by significant cost increases resulting from Government policy choices,’ the spokesperson added.
‘Having completed the review, we are now proposing to take the tough but necessary decision to close a number of these stores over the next few months.’
‘The combination of the proposed closure of loss making stores and the continued addition of attractive new franchise openings will enable us to concentrate on those stores which work best for customers’.
What other high street closures have there been?
Dozens of high street shops, restaurants, and banks have been affected by closures this month.
Quiz Clothing fell into administration, while Poundstretcher warned it could be forced to file for administration.
Modella Capital suggested up to 150 former WHSmith shops could close under restructuring plans.
Restaurant chain Franco Manca confirmed it would close 16 of its chains across the UK while its sister restaurant The Real Greek announced nine closures.
Around 200 Brewers Fayre and Beefeater restaurants, all operated by Premier Inn owner Whitbread, were announced to close.
Santander confirmed 27 branch closures for this month with more to follow by the end of the year.
NatWest planned to shut 15 branches this month, and Lloyds Banking Group revealed it would shut several branches across the UK, including two major London locations.
Chains like GAME, The Original Factory Shop, Claire’s Accessories, and Poundland have closed stores this year.
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Six fatalities confirmed in Maldives diving accident at submerged cave
Get you up to speed: Inside the Maldives ‘shark cave’ where 6 people lost their lives | News World
Five Italian divers died during a research trip in the submerged cave system of Vaavu Atoll, Maldives, after they entered a 160 ft deep cave. Maldivian military rescue diver Mohamed Mahudhee also died from decompression illness during recovery operations, marking the incident as the largest diving accident in the country’s history.
The Maldives police and military, supported by Finnish divers, conducted a recovery operation that began on May 17, just three days after the accident on May 14. Investigation status remains ongoing, with authorities analysing GoPro footage recovered from the scene to understand the events leading to the accident.
Local authorities have described the incident as the largest diving accident in the Maldives’ history, while the Italian tour operator has denied any prior knowledge of the group’s deep dive that exceeded legal limits. Ongoing investigations aim to clarify the circumstances surrounding the tragedy, with authorities expected to review diving regulations and safety protocols in response to the event.
What remains unclear — Investigators have yet to determine how the divers were able to exceed the legal depth limit for commercial and recreational diving.
Six fatalities confirmed in Maldives diving accident at submerged cave

The Maldives cave claimed six lives (Picture: via REUTERS)
Five Italian divers died on a research trip in the Maldives last week, after they entered a 160 ft deep ‘shark cave’ in a submerged cave system in the Vaavu Atoll.
The bodies of ecology professor Monica Montefalcone, her daughter Giorgia Sommacal, researcher Muriel Oddenino, and marine biologist Federico Gualtieri have all been retrieved after extensive search efforts.
Their diving instructor, Gianluca Benedetti’s body was found last week.
Maldivian military rescue diver Mohamed Mahudhee also sadly died on Saturday from decompression illness during a recovery mission.
Local authorities are calling it the biggest diving accident in the country’s history.
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The footage, which dates back to 2014, shows the reality of the depths. It includes the cave being entirely pitch black and requiring the use of torches, and the small crevices that the divers had to navigate through.

The divers were rescued by a specialist team from Finland (Picture: REUTERS)
‘It is difficult because it is located deep,’ he said.
‘And this cave is accessible only for technical cave divers who have the appropriate preparation, the appropriate experience and who are planning correctly to dive this cave.’
Apparently, the name of the cave is ‘Dhevana Kandu.’ Though not officially, its name was deliberately changed by those specialist divers to prevent untrained or recreational divers from attempting to enter the hazardous cavern.
Vladimir continued: ‘There shouldn’t be any unprepared divers, and we even changed the name in order to save the inexperienced divers from the temptation to come in and take a look.’
Local authorities say the dive appears to have exceeded the legal depth limit for commercial and recreational diving.
A spokesperson for the Italian tour operator said the divers’ equipment appeared to be standard recreational gear, and not appropriate for deep dives.

Local authorities are calling it the biggest diving accident in the country’s history (Picture: EPA)
The Italian tour operator that managed the diving trip has denied authorising or knowing about the group’s deep dive, which exceeded local limits, its lawyer told Italian local publication Corriere della Sera.
On May 17 — three days after the tragic accident — three Finnish specialist divers arrived at the scene. They managed to locate the bodies of the remaining four Italians on May 18 in the deepest section of the caves.
Following the rescue, three expert divers who recovered the bodies handed over GoPro cameras which were found with the group.
While the footage has not yet been made public, it is hoped they could piece together the group’s final moments as investigators scramble to figure out what happened to the group after they dived deep below the recommended depth.
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Police investigate sexual misconduct claim against Prince Andrew in 2010
Police investigate sexual misconduct claim against Prince Andrew in 2010
Police are examining reports of a woman being brought to Windsor in 2010 for sexual purposes as part of the investigation into former prince Andrew.
The ongoing investigation into Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor highlights critical concerns regarding public perceptions of institutional integrity and trust in the royal family amidst serious misconduct allegations.
“We have engaged with the woman’s legal representative to confirm that, should she wish to report this to police, it will be taken seriously and handled with care.”
UK police prepared to probe sexual misconduct claim against former Prince Andrew

Published on
Police in the United Kingdom investigating former prince Andrew said on Friday that they are also open to probing a claim of sexual misconduct against King Charles’ brother.
Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor, the second of the late queen Elizabeth’s three sons, was arrested in mid-February after new revelations stemming from his ties to the late US sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.
Detectives at Thames Valley Police said they had been in touch with the lawyer of a potential victim following reports a woman was brought to Windsor, west of London, where Andrew was a resident on the royal family’s estate, in 2010 “for sexual purposes.”
The force is reportedly concerned that the public believes they are only focused on accusations of misconduct in public office by Mountbatten-Windsor.
They have been probing allegations that Andrew shared sensitive information with the disgraced financier Epstein during the former prince’s decade as UK trade envoy.
The force said their investigation was “examining a number of aspects of alleged misconduct following the release of files under the Epstein Files Transparency Act in the United States.”
In addition to the investigation into misconduct in public office, it stressed “the assessment of reports that a woman was taken to an address in Windsor in 2010 for sexual purposes is ongoing.”
“We have engaged with the woman’s legal representative to confirm that, should she wish to report this to police, it will be taken seriously and handled with care, sensitivity and respect for her privacy and her right for anonymity,” the statement added.
The force repeated its appeal for anyone with relevant information to come forward.
Royal titles stripped
After his arrest in February, Mountbatten-Windsor was questioned for hours at a police station on suspicion of misconduct in public office during his time travelling around the world as a UK trade envoy from 2001-2011.
Mountbatten-Windsor has denied any wrongdoing and has not been charged, but remains under police caution.
He was stripped of his remaining royal titles in October by the king due to the growing scandal around his brother’s ties to Epstein, who died in prison in 2019.
He was also ousted from his previous home at Royal Lodge in Windsor and has moved to the king’s private Sandringham estate, in eastern Norfolk.
Allegations of potential sexual misconduct at Royal Lodge emerged earlier this year.
Lawyer Brad Edwards of US firm Edwards Henderson told the BBC in January that one woman, who is not British and was in her 20s at the time, was given a tour of Buckingham Palace and tea after allegedly spending the night with Andrew at his Windsor residence in 2010.
“We’re talking about at least one woman who was sent by Jeffrey Epstein over to Prince Andrew,” the lawyer was quoted as saying.
Additional sources • AFP
Democratic primary in crucial California Latino district raises party concerns
Get you up to speed: Primary fight in key California Latino district highlights questions over Democratic Party’s future
In a competitive primary for California’s 22nd Congressional District, progressives are accusing the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee of supporting moderate Jasmeet Bains over Latino challenger Randy Villegas. The district, which is approximately 70% Latino, is seen as crucial for Democrats aiming to reclaim control of the House.
The Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee’s “Red to Blue” programme has shifted focus to California State Assemblymember Jasmeet Bains, following her previous electoral successes in a legislative district overlapping with the 22nd Congressional District. Recent polling from Data for Progress indicates that Randy Villegas is gaining momentum ahead of California’s primary on 2 June, as he leads among Democratic candidates in the pivotal race against Republican Rep. David Valadao.
The DCCC has defended its support for Jasmeet Bains, stating it provides the best chance to win a crucial congressional seat, while progressive challenger Randy Villegas and his supporters argue that the intervention undermines Latino representation in a district with a 70% Latino population. The Congressional Progressive Caucus PAC and the Congressional Hispanic Caucus’ campaign arm have issued statements opposing the DCCC’s decision, pledging to support Villegas as the race approaches the June 2 primary.
What remains unclear — The DCCC has not disclosed the specific criteria it used to determine candidate electability in this congressional primary.
Democratic primary in crucial California Latino district raises party concerns
Washington — The latest fight over the direction of the Democratic Party is playing out in a competitive California congressional primary, as progressives accuse party leaders of trying to muscle a moderate past a Latino challenger in one of the state’s most heavily Hispanic districts.
The late intervention by the House Democrats’ campaign arm has touched off an unusually public and persistent intraparty feud that began when the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee earlier this month added moderate California State Assemblymember Jasmeet Bains to its “Red to Blue” program. The program unlocks fundraising and organizational support for candidates the DCCC believes are best positioned to flip Republican-held U.S. House seats in November.
“This is just another perfect example of D.C. elites and industry being out of touch with what people are actually feeling on the ground,” Randy Villegas, the progressive challenging Bains in the race, told WTX US News.
The two Democrats are competing to take on Republican Rep. David Valadao in a Central Valley district that the University of Virginia’s Center for Politics rates a toss-up. The seat is seen as “the heaviest Democratic lift” of the five Republican-held California seats that were redrawn in the redistricting plan California voters approved last year.
The DCCC’s decision to intervene in the race highlights disagreements within the party over whether to back moderates or progressives. It also sends a mixed message about Democrats’ efforts to regain ground among Latino voters after Republicans made inroads in 2024. The dispute is playing out in a district that Democrats view as essential to winning control of the House.
A question of electability
The DCCC has defended its decision as the surest way to win a seat that could prove crucial to retaking the House.
DCCC chair Rep. Suzan DelBene of Washington praised Bains’ record as a Bakersfield physician and her overperformance in her 2024 state House race, where she ran more than seven points ahead of the top of the ticket. Bains has won twice in her state legislative district, which overlaps heavily with the 22nd Congressional District.
DelBene said Bains would fight to “lower costs, expand access to health care, and strengthen public safety.”
The DCCC’s Red to Blue program is also backing candidates with broader support, like retired firefighter and union leader Bob Brooks, who just won the primary in Pennsylvania’s 7th District. Brooks had the backing of progressives like Sen. Bernie Sanders of Vermont, the Working Families Party and the moderate Blue Dog PAC.
Villegas, meanwhile, has picked up support from leading progressives, including Democratic Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez of New York and the Congressional Progressive Caucus.
Progressive leader David Hogg has campaigned for Villegas, and contends that Bains’ fundraising and grassroots footprint don’t support the committee’s electability argument.
“There’s really no case to be made that she’s stronger,” Hogg said to WTX US News.
“Randy is the stronger Democratic candidate in fundraising, endorsements and campaign momentum,” Hogg added. “And yet, the DCCC is backing a candidate who was the only Democrat to vote with Republicans against Prop 50, shares nearly 60 corporate donors with the Republican incumbent, and couldn’t even show up to a vote forcing ICE agents to remove their masks. I mean, what are we even doing here?”
Bains’ supporters see her standing in her current legislative district as a boon. Delano city council member Mario Nunez, who said he’s known Bains since before she ran for the state assembly, told WTX US News that Bains has shown in the race that she “cared about what really mattered to Delano and people in the Valley.”
Bains declined to be interviewed, but said in a statement she’s proud to have the DCCC’s support.
Villegas seems unfazed by any concern that he’s too progressive to win the seat. He said his campaign has seen “a surge of support, both locally and all across the country.” He pointed to recent polling from Data for Progress, a group supporting his candidacy, showing him leading the Democratic field heading into California’s June 2 primary.
The Data for Progress poll shows the leading primary candidate is Valadeo. California uses a “jungle” primary system in which the top two finishers advance to November regardless of party.
Democrats Jasmeet Bains and Randy Villegas are running against Republican Rep. David Valadeo for California’s 22nd Congressional District. Jasmeet Bains / Jon Kopaloff/Getty Images for Connor Treacy / Irfan Khan/Los Angeles Times via Getty Images 
A Latino flashpoint
Villegas, the son of immigrants, called the DCCC’s intervention a slight to Latino voters in a district that is approximately 70% Latino. That figure was amplified after Proposition 50, California’s voter-approved mid-decade redistricting plan, changed the district’s boundaries and now juts from Bakersfield to the Fresno region.
“We’re the most Latino district here in California after Prop 50, and it’s one of the most important districts to make sure we take back control of the House,” Villegas told WTX US News. “Fortunately for us, D.C. insiders don’t get to choose who represents the Valley in Congress. Voters do.”
He argued the episode reinforces a broader complaint among Hispanic Democrats — that the party has repeatedly underinvested in Latino communities even as it tries to win back voters who shifted toward Mr. Trump in 2024.
“The Democratic Party has taken Latino communities for granted,” Villegas said. “Far too late, far too little for Latino communities. And this is just another example of that.”
The Congressional Progressive Caucus PAC, in a joint statement from co-chairs including Reps. Pramila Jayapal of Washington, Greg Casar of Texas and Maxwell Frost of Florida, said it “disagrees with the DCCC’s decision to attempt to tip the scales in this race.”
The Congressional Hispanic Caucus’ campaign arm called Latino voters “central” to the fight for the House majority and pledged to stand with Villegas “every step of the way.”
Republicans pounce
The National Republican Congressional Committee, House Republicans’ campaign arm, pointed to the 22nd District — along with the Pennsylvania race where Brooks took on Hispanic Democrat Carol Obando-Derstine — as evidence that national Democrats are “sidelining Latino voices in favor of handpicked establishment picks.”
NRCC Chair Rep. Richard Hudson of North Carolina told the committee’s members in a recent briefing that “Hispanic voters are the most important voting bloc” heading into the midterms.
The NRCC is highlighting a slate of Hispanic Republican candidates in battleground districts, including former federal prosecutor Eric Flores, longtime Webb County Judge Tano Tijerina in Texas and Marine veteran Greg Cunningham in New Mexico. If elected, they would join Hispanic GOP incumbents including Reps. María Elvira Salazar of Florida, Monica De La Cruz of Texas, Juan Ciscomani of Arizona, Gabe Evans of Colorado and Nicole Malliotakis of New York.
The DCCC has also touted its recruitment of Latino contenders in other frontline districts, including in Texas’ newly redrawn 15th District, where the Democratic nominee is moderate candidate and Tejano music star Bobby Pulido. He will face off against De La Cruz in the general election.
Recent polling suggests Democrats’ historical advantage with Hispanic voters has narrowed. A recent Economist/YouGov survey put Democrats just two points ahead of Republicans among Hispanic voters on the generic congressional ballot, down from a 40-point edge in 2018 and a nine-point edge as recently as 2024.
Mr. Trump carried roughly half of the Hispanic vote in 2024, a 12-point improvement over 2020, and flipped longtime Democratic strongholds along the South Texas border. The president also carried more than half of Latino men in 2024, exit polls showed.
But more recent data show slipping support for President Trump. The latest WTX US News poll, conducted May 13–15, found Mr. Trump’s job approval among Hispanic voters at just 34%, with 66% disapproving. That marks a sharp drop from the roughly half who approved of the job he was doing at the start of his second term, with affordability and inflation the dominant concerns.
Approval of the administration’s hardline deportation program among Hispanics has fallen by a similar magnitude over the same stretch, the WTX US News analysis found. Latinos now say they prefer the Democrats’ approach to both the economy and immigration.
Still, Villegas warns that Democratic leaders may be out of step with the district.
“Democratic insiders need to understand that we can’t just offer people ‘not Trump,'” Villegas said. “We have to be willing to offer people a vision for something better.”
Police investigate Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor over allegations of sexual offences
Get you up to speed: Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor ‘investigated by police over potential sexual offences’ | News UK
Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor was arrested in February over allegations of misconduct in public office, including links to sexual misconduct claims involving Jeffrey Epstein. The arrest took place at the Royal Lodge in Windsor, and he was subsequently released without any immediate confirmed charges.
Thames Valley Police are currently reviewing claims related to sexual misconduct involving Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor that date back to 2010. A formal request has been made to the US Department of Justice for the original documents related to Jeffrey Epstein, as officers analyse information recovered from recent searches.
Thames Valley Police are investigating additional allegations against Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor, including claims of sexual misconduct linked to Jeffrey Epstein, and have encouraged potential witnesses to come forward. A formal request has been made to the US Department of Justice for the original Epstein files as part of the ongoing misconduct investigation.
What remains unclear — The specific details concerning the allegations made by the woman and the timeline of events remain unverified by authorities.
Police investigate Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor over allegations of sexual offences
Detectives investigating Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor are also looking into claims of sexual misconduct with Jeffrey Epstein links.
The disgraced former duke was arrested in February on suspicion of sharing confidential information with the convicted late sex offender Epstein during his time as the UK trade envoy.
Now officers are also reviewing a claim made by a woman that she was sent by Epstein to Andrew’s home, the Royal Lodge, to have sex with him in 2010, followed by a tour of Buckingham Palace.
She was in her 20s when the allegations are said to have happened, according to her lawyer, Brad Edwards, who first spoke to the BBC.
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Detectives are said to have been concerned that the public thinks they are only focusing on accusations that Andrew shared information while serving as a trade envoy.
A misconduct in public office investigation can include a range of conduct like wilful neglect of duty and sexual misconduct.
Andrew served as the UK’s special representative for international trade and investment from 2001 until 2011.
He stepped down from the role following controversy over his friendship with Epstein.
Andrew has consistently denied any wrongdoing over his links to Epstein.
The former Prince Andrew was arrested on his birthday, with police spotted at the Sandringham Estate and at his previous home, Windsor’s Royal Lodge, before being released.
Thames Valley Police said: ‘We have engaged with the woman’s legal representative to confirm that, should she wish to report this to police, it will be taken seriously and handled with care, sensitivity and respect for her privacy and her right for anonymity.
‘We recognise how difficult it can be to speak about experiences of this nature, and any contact with police will be led by her wishes, when and if she feels ready and able to do so.’
Police have been sifting through information recovered during the searches in Windsor and Norfolk, it is understood.
A formal request has also been made to the US Department of Justice (DOJ) to get the original versions of the Epstein files.
Thames Valley Police Assistant Chief Constable Oliver Wright said a team is working through a ‘significant amount of information that has come in from the public and other sources.’
He encouraged anyone with information to get in touch with the force through non-urgent contact channels.
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