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Why actor Jane Fonda is going door-to-door to support local candidates in 2024

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Imagine hearing a knock on your door and opening it to find actor Jane Fonda campaigning for a local election candidate. 

That’s how the 86-year-old actor and activist is spending her time this election season. She’s campaigning around the country for local candidates who support action on climate change, building on her years of climate-related protests.

Fonda told CBS News that the campaigning work felt so necessary that she told her agent she wouldn’t be taking any acting jobs this year, to make sure she had time to canvass. 

“This year I said to my agent ‘I’m sorry, I can’t work.’ When the election is happening that’s going to determine the future, I couldn’t do it,” Fonda, a two-time Academy Award winner, explained. “I couldn’t do it. Next year I’ll do it.” 

Fonda has hand-picked over 130 lower-level candidates who will stand up to the fossil fuel industry using her political action committee, JanePAC. 

“This is the last election that can have a major effect on climate,” Fonda said. 

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Jane Fonda (L) with California State Assembly District 26 candidate Tara Sreekrishnan (R) and campaign staff.

CBS Saturday Morning


Supporting “climate champions” 

Many of the candidates Fonda is supporting are running for under-the-radar offices like Portland City Council or a school board seat in Virginia. She’s already raised $4 million to help those candidates get elected. 

“That low-level candidate could, first of all, could rise up and become governor of the state. You want to groom them to rise into leadership positions as climate champions,” Fonda said. “If we have the right people elected to office, we can do it.” 

It’s far from the first time Fonda has stepped into the world of activism. In 1972, she made a controversial visit to Vietnam opposing the war, and in the 1990s, she marched to support women’s reproductive rights. 

In 2019, she launched her Fire Drill Fridays, a protest series inspired by Swedish environmental activist Greta Thunberg, to draw attention to global warming. She was arrested five times during those protests, even spending her 82nd birthday behind bars.  

“It was aimed not at the government. It was aimed at the great unasked,” Fonda said of that protest series. “There’s like 70% of Americans that are really concerned about the climate crisis, and when they’re asked why they don’t take action, they say, ‘Well, nobody asked.'” 

Activists Hold Climate Change Rally At U.S. Capitol
Actress Jane Fonda is arrested for blocking a street in front of the U.S. Capitol during a Fire Drill Fridays climate change protest and rally on Capitol Hill, October 18, 2019 in Washington, DC. 

/ Getty Images


“You need people in the halls of power” 

Now, Fonda has made the move from protest to politics. 62% of Americans think that politicians should do more to fight climate change, according to the Pew Research Center, many politicians on both sides of the aisle vote against legislative solutions. Her hope is that helping elect people who think differently will make a difference. 

“Nonviolent civil disobedience and protests historically have changed history, but you need people in the halls of power with ears and a heart to hear the protests, to hear the demands,” Fonda said. 

Going door-to-door and working to raise money for the local candidates she supports has been “so fun,” she said. 


Jane Fonda on her climate activism and message for young voters: “Show us your power!”

02:30

“It’s a lot of work. Oh, it’s so much fun. Ever since I’m doing 100% of what I’m capable (of) in confronting the climate crisis, I don’t get depressed anymore,” Fonda said. “I get angry, but I’m not depressed. Hope is a muscle. It’s like the heart. It’s a muscle, and you have to activate it to feel it.” 

Fonda said that the work of campaigning has helped her feel hopeful and fulfilled. 

“I wouldn’t be doing it if I wasn’t hopeful,” Fonda said. “Everybody needs meaning in their life. I’m old, so I think a lot about being on my deathbed and I know that when you’re on your deathbed, you want to feel that it’s been worthwhile.”  



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Serial killer Rodney Alcala’s secret photos

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Huntington Beach Police Dept.


When Huntington Beach, Calif., detectives searched Rodney Alcala‘s Seattle storage locker during the murder investigation of 12-year-old Robin Samsoe in 1979, they discovered a cache of photos, many of them young women in suggestive, and even pornographic poses.

In March 2010, after a third jury in 30 years handed Alcala a death sentence, Huntington Beach police released more than 100 of those photos hoping to identify the women and some children, and learn if Alcala claimed still more victims.

Most of those who have been identified are alive and well. 

Serial Killer’s Secret Photos

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Huntington Beach Police Dept.


An unidentified woman in an image from Rodney Alcala’s photo cache.

Serial Killer’s Secret Photos

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Huntington Beach Police Dept.


Unidentified women in an image from Rodney Alcala’s photo cache.

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Huntington Beach Police Dept.


An unidentified woman in an image from Rodney Alcala’s photo cache.

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Huntington Beach Police Dept.


An unidentified woman in an image from Rodney Alcala’s photo cache.

Serial Killer’s Secret Photos

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Huntington Beach Police Dept.


An unidentified woman in an image from Rodney Alcala’s photo cache.

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Huntington Beach Police Dept.


Unidentified women in an image from Rodney Alcala’s photo cache.

Serial Killer’s Secret Photos

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Huntington Beach Police Dept.


An unidentified woman in an image from Rodney Alcala’s photo cache.

Serial Killer’s Secret Photos

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Huntington Beach Police Dept.


An unidentified woman in an image from Rodney Alcala’s photo cache.

Serial Killer’s Secret Photos

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Huntington Beach Police Dept.


An unidentified woman in an image from Rodney Alcala’s photo cache.

Serial Killer’s Secret Photos

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Huntington Beach Police Dept.


An unidentified child in an image from Rodney Alcala’s photo cache.

Serial Killer’s Secret Photos

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Huntington Beach Police Dept.


An unidentified child in an image from Rodney Alcala’s photo cache.

Serial Killer’s Secret Photos

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Huntington Beach Police Dept.


An unidentified woman in an image from Rodney Alcala’s photo cache.

Serial Killer’s Secret Photos

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Huntington Beach Police Dept.


An unidentified woman in an image from Rodney Alcala’s photo cache.

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Huntington Beach Police Dept.


An unidentified woman in an image from Rodney Alcala’s photo cache.

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Huntington Beach Police Dept.


An unidentified woman in an image from Rodney Alcala’s photo cache.

Serial Killer’s Secret Photos

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Huntington Beach Police Dept.


An unidentified woman in an image from Rodney Alcala’s photo cache.

Serial Killer’s Secret Photos

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Huntington Beach Police Dept.


An unidentified woman in an image from Rodney Alcala’s photo cache.

Serial Killer’s Secret Photos

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Huntington Beach Police Dept.


An unidentified woman in an image from Rodney Alcala’s photo cache.

Serial Killer’s Secret Photos

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Huntington Beach Police Dept.


An unidentified woman in an image from Rodney Alcala’s photo cache.

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Huntington Beach Police Dept.


An unidentified woman in an image from Rodney Alcala’s photo cache.

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Huntington Beach Police Dept.


An unidentified woman in an image from Rodney Alcala’s photo cache.

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Huntington Beach Police Dept.


An unidentified woman in an image from Rodney Alcala’s photo cache.

Serial Killer’s Secret Photos

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Huntington Beach Police Dept.


An unidentified woman in an image from Rodney Alcala’s photo cache.

Serial Killer’s Secret Photos

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Huntington Beach Police Dept.


Unidentified women in an image from Rodney Alcala’s photo cache.

Serial Killer’s Secret Photos

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Huntington Beach Police Dept.


An unidentified woman in an image from Rodney Alcala’s photo cache.

Serial Killer’s Secret Photos

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Huntington Beach Police Dept.


An unidentified woman in an image from Rodney Alcala’s photo cache.

Serial Killer’s Secret Photos

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Huntington Beach Police Dept.


An unidentified woman in an image from Rodney Alcala’s photo cache. 

Serial Killer’s Secret Photos

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Huntington Beach Police Dept.


An unidentified woman in an image from Rodney Alcala’s photo cache.

Serial Killer’s Secret Photos

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Huntington Beach Police Dept.


An unidentified woman in an image from Rodney Alcala’s photo cache.

Serial Killer’s Secret Photos

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Huntington Beach Police Dept.


An unidentified child in an image from Rodney Alcala’s photo cache.

Serial Killer’s Secret Photos

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Huntington Beach Police Dept.


An unidentified woman in an image from Rodney Alcala’s photo cache.

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Huntington Beach Police Dept.


An unidentified woman in an image from Rodney Alcala’s photo cache.

Serial Killer’s Secret Photos

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Huntington Beach Police Dept.


An unidentified woman in an image from Rodney Alcala’s photo cache.

Serial Killer’s Secret Photos

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Huntington Beach Police Dept.


An unidentified woman in an image from Rodney Alcala’s photo cache.

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Huntington Beach Police Dept.


An unidentified woman in an image from Rodney Alcala’s photo cache.

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Huntington Beach Police Dept.


An unidentified woman in an image from Rodney Alcala’s photo cache.

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Huntington Beach Police Dept.


Unidentified people in an image from Rodney Alcala’s photo cache.

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Huntington Beach Police Dept.


An unidentified woman in an image from Rodney Alcala’s photo cache.

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Huntington Beach Police Dept.


An unidentified woman in an image from Rodney Alcala’s photo cache.

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Huntington Beach Police Dept.


An unidentified woman in an image from Rodney Alcala’s photo cache.

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Huntington Beach Police Dept.


An unidentified woman in an image from Rodney Alcala’s photo cache.

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Huntington Beach Police Dept.


An unidentified woman in an image from Rodney Alcala’s photo cache.

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Huntington Beach Police Dept.


An unidentified woman in an image from Rodney Alcala’s photo cache.

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Huntington Beach Police Dept.


An unidentified woman in an image from Rodney Alcala’s photo cache.

Serial Killer’s Secret Photos

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Huntington Beach Police Dept.


An unidentified woman in an image from Rodney Alcala’s photo cache.

Serial Killer’s Secret Photos

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Huntington Beach Police Dept.


An unidentified woman in an image from Rodney Alcala’s photo cache.

Serial Killer’s Secret Photos

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Huntington Beach Police Dept.


An unidentified woman in an image from Rodney Alcala’s photo cache.

Serial Killer’s Secret Photos

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Huntington Beach Police Dept.


An unidentified woman in image from Rodney Alcala’s photo cache.

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Huntington Beach Police Dept.


An unidentified woman in image from Rodney Alcala’s photo cache.

Serial Killer’s Secret Photos

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Huntington Beach Police Dept.


An unidentified woman in image from Rodney Alcala’s photo cache.

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Huntington Beach Police Dept.


An unidentified woman in image from Rodney Alcala’s photo cache.

Serial Killer’s Secret Photos

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Huntington Beach Police Dept.


An unidentified person in an image from Rodney Alcala’s photo cache.

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Huntington Beach Police Dept.


An unidentified woman in image from Rodney Alcala’s photo cache.

Serial Killer’s Secret Photos

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Huntington Beach Police Dept.


An unidentified woman in image from Rodney Alcala’s photo cache.

Serial Killer’s Secret Photos

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Huntington Beach Police Dept.


An unidentified woman in image from Rodney Alcala’s photo cache.

Serial Killer’s Secret Photos

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Huntington Beach Police Dept.


An unidentified woman in image from Rodney Alcala’s photo cache.

Serial Killer’s Secret Photos

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Huntington Beach Police Dept.


An unidentified woman in image from Rodney Alcala’s photo cache.

Serial Killer’s Secret Photos

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Huntington Beach Police Dept.


An unidentified woman in image from Rodney Alcala’s photo cache.

Serial Killer’s Secret Photos

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Huntington Beach Police Dept.


 An unidentified woman in image from Rodney Alcala’s photo cache.

Serial Killer’s Secret Photos

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Huntington Beach Police Dept.


An unidentified child in image from Rodney Alcala’s photo cache.

Serial Killer’s Secret Photos

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Huntington Beach Police Dept.


An unidentified woman in image from Rodney Alcala’s photo cache.

Serial Killer’s Secret Photos

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Huntington Beach Police Dept.


An unidentified woman in an image from Rodney Alcala’s photo cache.

Serial Killer’s Secret Photos

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Huntington Beach Police Dept.


An unidentified woman in an image from Rodney Alcala’s photo cache.

Serial Killer’s Secret Photos

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Huntington Beach Police Dept.


An unidentified woman in an image from Rodney Alcala’s photo cache.

Serial Killer’s Secret Photos

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Huntington Beach Police Dept.


An unidentified woman in an image from Rodney Alcala’s photo cache.

Serial Killer’s Secret Photos

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Huntington Beach Police Dept.


Unidentified women in an image from Rodney Alcala’s photo cache.



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San Francisco Mayor London Breed concedes race, congratulates Daniel Lurie on victory

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San Francisco Mayor London Breed gives concession speech


San Francisco Mayor London Breed gives concession speech

09:53

San Francisco Mayor London Breed conceded the mayoral race to Daniel Lurie Thursday afternoon with a social media post that congratulated her competitor.   

The mayor also thanked the city and its residents for “the opportunity to serve the City that raised me” in the post on X just after 4:30 p.m. Thursday.

There had been rumblings that Breed might concede the race earlier Thursday having come in behind Lurie in the last vote count released Wednesday morning

“Today, I called Daniel Lurie and congratulated him on his victory in this election,” the post read. “Over the coming weeks, my staff and I will work to ensure a smooth transition as he takes on the honor of serving as Mayor of San Francisco. I know we are both committed to improving this City we love.”

Breed spoke at a press conference less than an hour after the social media post to answer questions from reporters about her decision, reiterating some of what she said in her social media post.

“The city is on the rise. The office is bigger than just one person, and I called Daniel Lurie earlier today to congratulate him,” the mayor said. “And made it very clear my team and I stand ready to support him during his transition. We will always do everything we can to ensure the success of the city and that there is a smooth transition, so that the important work that has been done and needs to continue in San Francisco moves forward.” 

When asked if this was the hardest speech she’d ever given, Breed quickly dismissed that idea.

“No, it’s not. There’s been other harder speeches. I mean I had to make a hard decision to close the city down during a global pandemic. I had to deal with…the racial reckoning that happened after the tragic death of George Floyd. I had to go out in the middle of the night and tell people that Mayor Ed Lee had passed away. There are numerous occasions.”

Six years ago, incumbent London Breed became the first Black woman to serve as mayor of San Francisco after the death of Mayor Ed Lee in late 2017. The then president of the San Francisco Board of Supervisors was automatically appointed as the city’s acting mayor early the morning after Lee’s death.

In June of 2018, Breed won the special election that was held to fill the office, defeating her main opponent, former state senator Mark Leno.  

Breed faced a number of major challenges during her first term in office, including the COVID-19 pandemic, the city’s ongoing issues with drug abuse and homelessness, rising housing costs and a spike in retail crime that some chains cited as the reason behind closing stores in San Francisco.

While Breed has touted progress in reducing the number of homeless encampments and pushed programs to fill vacant business spaces downtown, the mayor’s struggles have led to 11 other candidates entering the race to challenge her for the job.

“Over the coming weeks, I plan to reflect on all the progress we’ve made. But today, I am proud that we have truly accomplished so much and my heart is filled with gratitude,” Breed’s message said in closing. “During my final two months as your Mayor, I will continue to lead this City as I have from Day One – as San Francisco’s biggest champion.”  

Daniel Lurie has announced that he will speak to the media about the latest developments Friday morning.





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What Democrats should focus on ahead of a Trump presidency

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What Democrats should focus on ahead of a Trump presidency – CBS News


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The transition of power began following President-elect Donald Trump’s win, while Democrats worked to understand what went wrong in the 2024 election. Trump picked his chief of staff, Susie Wiles, on Thursday. CBS News chief Washington correspondent Major Garrett reports.

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