CALIFORNIA
FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, MAY 2, 2023, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“NEWSOM’S
ODD CAMPAIGN FOR INFLUENCE, WHITE HOUSE”
Gov.
Gavin Newsom has spent much of the last year tossing figurative tea leaves
around where anyone and everyone who’s interested can try reading them.
His
advertising and name-calling against potential future presidential rivals like
Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis and Texas Gov. Greg Abbott drew stares during the
last campaign season, even though it cost him only a few hundred thousand
dollars, a political pittance.
His
get-tough and get-active advice telling fellow Democrats to end their
consistent passively defensive stances and instead take cultural battles to
Republicans in red states they dominate opened eyes nationally, as Newsom took
on the role of a party leader, a function largely abdicated by President Biden
and Vice President Kamala Harris.
But it
was his early spring tour of the Old South that drew the most attention and
speculation. He was variously described as meddling and inspirational, vain and
helpful.
Perhaps
it was all those things, made necessary by a political calendar that poses
unique challenges for Newsom, who cannot change it.
Like most
California governors, he plainly would like to be president, much as he denies
it. That’s been obvious since he ran for governor in 2018, espousing causes
like abortion availability, universal pre-school and more restrictions on
guns, combined with respect and trust for science and scientists, cultural
touchstones controversial in many places.
Newsom’s
tone didn’t change much while touring the South, including Florida, where even
Democrats chafed at his very direct comparisons between California and the
Sunshine State, where DeSantis regularly picks fights with everyone from local
officials to his state’s largest private employer, Walt Disney World.
Newsom
visited civil rights monuments in Alabama and encouraged Democratic politicians
in Arkansas.
He stayed
out of Iowa and New Hampshire, usual stomping grounds for early presidential
candidates.
Newsom’s
choices may be dictated by Biden’s stated plans to seek reelection, which no serious
Democratic politician will contest and now stymie his 2024 desires.
This
immovable political calendar (if Biden indeed runs next year) will see Newsom
without an office or active government title in 2027 and early 2028. That means
he must establish a voter base outside California and keep it supporting him
and his ideas until the 2028 primary season begins almost five years from now.
Why head
to the Old South in this circumstance? Newsom knows there is no major
Democratic presence in most of that region. DeSantis demonstrated this last
year, when his reelection landslide in Florida included carrying Miami’s
surrounding Dade County, the first Republican in a generation to manage that.
Newsom
stepped into this vacuum rather than visiting early primary states, trying to
lay a foundation for a national campaign later on.
It drew
mixed reviews in some places he visited.
Some
local Democrats said Newsom should instead just send campaign money. Others
were more positive. “We’re at a moment now where national Democrats are saying
‘Wait a minute, we have to look beyond the coasts and lean into the entire
country,’” said Chris Jones, an Arkansas Democrat and unsuccessful 2022
candidate for governor.
Neither
Biden nor Harris does much of that. Yes, Biden makes forays to factories and
construction sites where laws he pushed provide jobs. But he has largely
avoided Republican controlled states.
Newsom
seeks them out, likely because he knows they, too, send delegates to Democratic
Party nominating conventions – people who can further his presidential ambitions.
Republicans
do this all the time, figures like DeSantis and Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas making
California and New York forays to attract campaign donations and possible
delegate votes in Democratic states.
So
Newsom, like potential future opponents he so often derides, takes his ideas –
he calls them “California values” – to places like Jackson, Miss. and
Montgomery, Ala. He has drawn tart responses from GOP figures like Mississippi
Gov. Tate Reeves, who said “tourism
helps drive Mississippi’s economy, so I am glad to welcome Gov. Newsom. I
disagree strongly with his extreme COVID lockdowns, his insistence on letting
boys play girls sports, his advocacy for abortion all the way up until birth
and his enthusiasm for gun control, among other things.”
Through all this, Newsom maintains he’s not really running
for president. But they all say things like that, until they formally start
running.
-30-
Email Thomas Elias at tdelias@aol.com. His book, "The Burzynski Breakthrough: The Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the Government’s Campaign to Squelch It," is now available in a soft cover fourth edition. For more Elias columns, visit www.californiafocus.net
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