Ice protests spread to San Francisco.
Plus,
the World Bank considers a policy shift that could open the taps to funding for nuclear power.
And we'll hear from one of Europe's tech champions about why the continent's lagging behind in the global tech race.
We're very clear, just Europe is significantly behind the U.S. I mean,
when you look at public market liquidity, retail trading, it's 10, 20 times below.
So there just isn't enough funding, actually, for European upcoming companies.
And that's one thing Europe very particularly can change through government action.
It's Tuesday, June 10th.
I'm Luke Vargas for The Wall Street Journal, and here is the AM edition of What's News,
the top headlines and business stories moving your world today.
After days of unrest in Los Angeles over President Trump's immigration policies,
protests are spreading to San Francisco.
The city's police department says it made around 150 arrests on Sunday and that it was forced to declare an unlawful assembly yesterday evening after another night of demonstrations.
Meanwhile, we are learning more about a May meeting chaired by Stephen Miller,
the architect of President Trump's immigration agenda that sparked the L.A. migrant crackdown in recent days.
According to people familiar with the meeting,
Miller told top officials at the headquarters of Immigration and Customs Enforcement to drop the longstanding practice of developing target lists of immigrants suspected of being in the U.S. illegally,
and instead told them to, quote, just go out there and arrest illegal aliens, end quote,
directing agents to target Home Depot,