CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 2024, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“IF HARRIS WINS, WHITHER NEWSOM?”
There is no love lost
between ex-President Donald Trump and California Gov. Gavin Newsom. You could
see this as early as 2017, when the two joined then-Gov. Jerry Brown to visit
areas suffering wildfire damage in and near national forests.
The obvious distaste
between Newsom, then the lieutenant governor, and then-President Trump was
clear from their facial expressions each time they glanced at one another.
But irony occurs. And so,
for Newsom to have much of a political future, he needs Trump to retake the
presidency this fall and then leave peacefully at the end of what would be his
second term.
Right now, there is no
guarantee of either. As a result, there is no certainty today that Newsom has
much of a long-term future in politics.
Here is the basic reality:
Vice President Kamala Harris currently holds a narrow lead over Trump both in
most national polls and surveys of likely voters in the swing states that
figure to decide their autumn race.
Which raises the question:
If Harris wins, whither Newsom?
He can’t run for governor
again, ever, because of term limits, even though the current crop of 2026
candidates for Newsom’s current job can sometimes seem like pygmies beside him.
Newsom has sat astride California politics almost all-powerfully most of the
last six years. Whatever he’s wanted, he’s gotten. What he hasn’t wanted, has
not happened.
Of course, that’s the power of his office at work. Newsom was
not such a prepossessing figure in his previous job as lieutenant governor,
just as current Lt. Gov. Eleni Kounalakis has not seemed much of a presence –
yet.
If Trump were to beat Harris this fall, Newsom would have two
full years after the end of his term in Sacramento to travel the country
running for the 2028 Democratic presidential nomination. But if Harris wins and
then runs for reelection in 2028, Newsom would have to wait for 2032.
At 56, he’s young enough to wait that long, as he’ll be 64 by
then, a fairly typical age for presidential candidates.
The last California politician to spend six years running for
President while out of office was Ronald Reagan, who labored so long in part
because he lost in his bid for the 1976 GOP nomination. It eventually worked
for him, as he spent most of those years campaigning for fellow Republicans in
more than three dozen states, picking up chits for future favors. He easily
beat out George H.W. Bush for the 1980 GOP nomination, then took Bush as his
running mate.
Prior to President Biden’s sudden dropout from the current
campaign, Newsom looked like a very strong candidate for his party’s 2028
nomination for what would be an empty seat if Trump left office peacefully.
But things have changed. Just by making Minnesota Gov. Tim
Walz her vice presidential choice, Harris handed Newsom a major potential 2028
or 2032 competitor not previously on anyone’s radar. Her vetting process also
gave new prominence to governors like Josh Shapiro of Pennsylvania and Roy
Cooper of North Carolina. All could be future competitors for Newsom, as could
Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer.
One way for Newsom to remain nationally prominent would be to
get a job in a Harris cabinet, if she wins this fall.
Serving as secretary of state certainly helped Hillary
Clinton to the Democratic nomination in 2016.
But does Harris want Newsom around? The two maintained a wary
alliance through much of their twin careers, both starting as proteges of
former San Francisco Mayor Willie Brown and often sharing campaign managers,
never competing for the same jobs.
But Harris kept Newsom off the stage at the summer Democratic
National Convention, his only televised speech coming as he gave California
delegate votes to Harris, thus making her nomination official.
Where his future potential rivals all had podium speaking
slots, Newsom did not. This bodes poorly for a high-profile cabinet job like
secretary of state or treasury.
So there’s a definite possibility Newsom could be left in the
wilderness, much as Reagan was after Jerry Brown took over the governor’s
office in 1974.
Right now, no one knows whether an out-of-office Newsom would
have Reagan-style staying power, even if his hair is somewhat similarly thick
and slick.
-30-
Email
Thomas Elias at tdelias@aol.com. His book, "The Burzynski
Breakthrough," is now available in a soft cover fourth edition. For more
Elias columns, visit www.californiafocus.net
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