Le Journal

Current political climate takes center stage on MLK Day in the Bay Area

Titans reportedly finalizing deal to hire 49ers DC Robert Saleh as head coach

South Bay cities, businesses enter final preparations for Super Bowl LX
While the 49ers are packing up their lockers, Super Bowl LX preparations, which is just less than three weeks away, are in full swing inside and outside Levi’s Stadium. South Bay cities and businesses are in the final stretch of getting everything ready to welcome in visitors, while signs are up outside of Levi’s Stadium as the game inches closer and closer. Just minutes away from Levi’s Stadium, Birk’s, a classic American steakhouse in Santa Clara, is ready to welcome in guests. NBC Bay Area’s Jocelyn Moran has more in the video report above.

Brooklyn Beckham speaks out against parents in scathing Instagram post

Warriors star Jimmy Butler sustains season-ending torn ACL vs. Heat: Source

Power restored after PG&E planned outage in San Francisco's Richmond District
Power was restored early Tuesday morning for all customers in and near San Francisco’s Richmond District after a planned overnight outage, PG&E officials said. According to PG&E, the outage was needed to help return its Mission Substation and the related electric grid to normal operations. The power company announced the service restoration around 12:25 a.m. The Richmond District outage had been scheduled to begin shortly after midnight and affect about 14,000 customers. A small portion of the Sunset District, between 19th and 27th avenues just south of Lincoln Way, was also expected to be affected. The work followed another planned outage that affected about 3,600 customers near the Civic Center. Electricity was restored by Monday morning, PG&E officials said. Both outages are linked to repairs and testing at the Mission Substation, where a fire on Dec. 20 knocked out electricity to roughly a third of the city for up to three days. After that, PG&E has used temporary generators and alternate grid configurations to keep power flowing while permanent fixes were completed.

Trump speaks at White House press briefing to mark one year in office
President Donald Trump appeared at Tuesday’s White House press briefing to mark the one-year anniversary of the start of his second term. Trump took to the podium holding a book of what he said are his administration’s accomplishments over his first 365 days in office. But what was billed as a celebration of his achievements quickly pivoted to immigration enforcement in Minnesota. The president spent most of his opening remarks showing off mugshots of undocumented immigrants his administration has arrested while denigrating immigrants from Somalia. “Somalia is not even a country,” he said. “They don’t have anything that resembles a country. And if it is a country, it’s considered just about the worst in the world.” Trump claimed that the individuals were all “criminal illegal aliens that, in many cases, they’re murderers, they’re drug lords, drug dealers.” But an analysis of immigration arrests by The Associated Press shows the vast majority have no criminal records or only low-level offenses. While speaking about ICE operations in Minnesota Trump said that people who work for U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement are “going to make mistakes sometimes.” “They’re going to make mistakes sometimes,” Trump said. “ICE is going to be too rough with somebody, or, you know, they’re dealing with rough people, they’re going to make a mistake. Sometimes it can happen. We feel terribly,” he said. Trump said he “felt horribly” when he heard about the fatal shooting of Renee Good by an ICE officer two weeks ago in Minneapolis. “It’s a tragedy. It’s a horrible thing. Everybody would say ICE would say the same thing.” He said he learned her parents, her father in particular, “was a tremendous Trump fan,” adding, “He was all for Trump, loved Trump, and you know, it’s terrible. I was told that by a lot of people. They said, ‘Oh, he loves you.’ … I hope he still feels that way.” The rare appearance comes as the president has faced extraordinary pushback from America’s European allies over his planned tariffs over Greenland, tensions he’ll face in person this week at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland. Since returning to the White House in January 2025, Trump has also overturned decades of U.S. trade policy — building a wall of tariffs around what used to be a wide open economy. His double-digit taxes on imports from almost every country have disrupted global commerce and strained the budgets of consumers and businesses worldwide. They have also raised tens of billions of dollars for the U.S. Treasury. Trump has argued that his steep new import taxes are necessary to bring back wealth that was “stolen” from the U.S. He says they will narrow America’s decades-old trade deficit and bring manufacturing back to the country. But upending the global supply chain has proven costly for households facing rising prices. The taxes are paid by importers who typically attempt to pass along the higher costs to their customers. That includes businesses and ultimately, U.S. households. And the erratic way the president rolled out his tariffs — announcing them, then suspending or altering them before conjuring up new ones — made 2025 one of the most turbulent economic years in recent memory.

« Hamnet » : une plongée lyrique et intime au cœur de la famille Shakespeare
Avec "Hamnet", la réalisatrice Chloé Zhao délaisse les grands espaces de "Nomadland" pour explorer la cartographie intime d'un deuil impossible. Adapté du best-seller de Maggie O'Farrell, ce drame puissant met en lumière Anne Hathaway, l'épouse de William Shakespeare, dans une fresque où l’art naît des larmes.

Carlos Alcaraz told it like it is when responding to Samuel Lopez decision

Jannik Sinner spilled the tea on brutal Australian Open first-round victory

Gaël Monfils: «Je suis venu chercher du kiff»

