Are Gavin Newsom's Presidential Aspirations Limiting His Progressive Instincts?
He insists that he's not running for president, but his vetoes of the fringiest measures suggest otherwise.

If you're like me and simply want the government to leave us alone and tend to its basic tasks—providing public services, building infrastructure, etc.—then you no doubt follow every legislative session with foreboding. Progressive Democrats who control California are intent on regulating our lives and raising our taxes, which leads to a sense of vulnerability as hundreds of intrusive bills head to the governor's desk.
This year, however, Gov. Gavin Newsom pulled a few surprises. He insists that he's not running for president, but his vetoes of the fringiest measures suggest his promises aren't ironclad. He rejected nearly 20 percent of bills that reached his desk, which is an "unusually large percentage," per CalMatters. Many veto messages, it noted, include boilerplate language warning that some bills would add to the state's deficit. He seems to be channeling his predecessor, deficit-weary Jerry Brown.
Here are some of the main examples. Newsom vetoed a measure requiring public schools to provide free, easily available condoms to students. His budgetary argument was a stretch, but any governor with national aspirations wouldn't want such baggage. Can you see the TV ads from his opponents had he signed it? Likewise, with his veto of Amsterdam-like cannabis cafes and a measure that would have decriminalized some psychedelic drugs.
He also nixed a bill to provide one week of severance to laid-off grocery store workers for every year of work, noting that state law already provides myriad layoff protections. He rejected a cap on insulin co-pays, explaining the state already is working on a plan to lower costs. His veto of a ban on caste discrimination came with the sensible explanation that such discrimination already is illegal.
Newsom rejected a ludicrous bill that would have created a state agency to build and manage government-owned housing. He again raised the cost argument, but anyone who has followed the sordid history of public-housing projects in America would quickly realize that the government can't fix our state's housing woes (although it can make them worse)—and would produce terribly managed high-rise slums.
Sure, unions scored expected legislative victories, but Newsom at least vetoed a bill giving striking workers unemployment benefits—something that would have overburdened a system already facing insolvency. The governor rejected cash payments up to $1,900 a month for undocumented seniors—another decision that makes sense in the context of a national political campaign.
Progressives were understandably disappointed, but that should only hearten the rest of us. "While a lot of these bills may not fly in the Deep South, they're unremarkable in progressive California, and were on Newsom's desk in the first place because the state Legislature put them there—ostensibly carrying out the will of California voters," lamented CNN columnist Jill Filipovic. Yes, legislators put them there, but elected governors have the final say regarding the "will of the people." That's how our system works.
Newsom mostly vetoed bills that would have provided immense pushback for little gain. I have nothing against legalizing psychedelics, but critics far outnumbered beneficiaries. Newsom did sign several noxious measures. He OK'd a bill making it harder for landlords to evict troublesome tenants. He required companies to disclose greenhouse gas emissions. He banned certain food additives. That's par for the course in progressive California.
Newsom also signed a bill allowing Capitol staffers to join a union beginning in 2026. State workers belong to unions, but legislative workers are unique. Legislators need the flexibility to hire whomever they choose to implement their agenda. These mostly are political positions, with a high churn rate—not career jobs. I chuckle at that one for mischievous reasons, as it might remind union-friendly lawmakers of the burdens they place on other employers. I bet lawmakers will regret this one.
On the good-news front, Newsom signed a massive package of 56 bills to incentivize housing construction. Most notably, Senate Bill 423 streamlines housing approvals in coastal cities (reducing the power of the anti-growth California Coastal Commission) and applies loosened regulations to market-rate projects. Senate Bill 4 allows universities and religious groups to build—on a by-right basis—housing on their property.
Newsom touted a term I've never heard before: YIGBY (Yes In God's Back Yard). That's weird, but it probably will result in additional new housing. God bless him for that signing. He even signed legislation that clarifies the California Environmental Quality Act, thus making it harder for local NIMBY governments to abuse CEQA to limit housing approvals.
In his statement, Newsom quoted Sen. Scott Wiener (D–San Francisco), who is the driving force behind pro-housing reforms: "The era of saying no to housing is coming to an end. We've been planting seeds for years to get California to a brighter housing future, and today we're continuing strongly down that path." May it be so.
So it's been a less bad legislative session than expected. I still feel relief it's over.
This column was first published in The Orange County Register.
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Gavin is already a non-starter.
The Left will not like voting for another white dude. And you can look at where he has governed and simply ask "Is it better than it was before he was in charge?"
SF certainly is not. CA is not.
I think you're overstating how sincerely Dems believe their pro-diversity shtick. So many more diverse choices in 2020, and they still went with Biden. And this was after Obama proved "only white males can win" is no longer true.
We can't yet rule out Newsom shoving Kamala Harris aside by convincing Dem donors and voters that she's unelectable outside California.
I think that Kamala herself, and the fact that she was polling under 1% in the Dem primaries, even in CA, when she dropped out has proved that she's unelectable outside of California (and might have been unelectable within CA without the aggressive support of the State's Dem Party Machine. She got her start in SF with active support from Willie Brown (which she may or may not have earned while vertical), then moved on to running state-wide in an environment where just being the Dem on the ballot (or the one endorsed by the state party, when there's two Dems in the final election) guarantees at least 55% of the vote without having to campaign.
This is something that might have really lit a fire under Newsom to change his tack: "In a hypothetical matchup, DeSantis beats Newsom in California where 85 percent of the state's Republican voters would choose the Florida governor, who is also taking the lead among independents, Latinos and voters who are between 40 to 49 years old"
If a Democrat candidate for President might actually be in danger of putting CA into play (one which no Democrat can possibly win without, and which is generally also the source of the entire popular vote margins which the anti-electoral college crowd is obsessed with), it's hard to imagine the national party leadership would allow that person to be competitive in their primaries.
https://www.newsweek.com/what-polls-say-about-newsom-vs-desantis-hypothetical-2024-matchup-1743936
The bigger question might be whether any CA Dem could be electable nationally, though. Coming up in a one-party system is like being raised in near-zero gravity; when someone then tries to operate in a more "typical" environment, the "muscles" they need to do so are ones that they'd never had any reason to develop.
CA isn't better than when Newsom took over, but it's indisputably the outcome that should be expected from unchallenged "progressive" governance after 10+ years.
The problem is, to the left, Newsom is a "visionary" and the failures of their pet policies in CA are somehow all the fault of Grover Norquist and the fact that there are still some number of non-Dems holding a handful of elected offices around the state. L.A. county is populated largely with people who still believe that surgical masks "save lives" and who line up to have their 7 year old kids get Covid boosters within the first 3 days of whatever new formulation being apporved or when the interval since their last booster has expired (10 years ago, many of these same parents were filling out paperwork to get the older siblings of these kids exempted from required measles vaccines as a way to fight the "patriarchy" that dared question the medical credentials of Jenny McCarthy). Not to mention the ones who believe that the higher rates of covid infection and death in L.A. was primarily due to the "anti-mask" protestors in Orange County (where half the local populace wouldn't cross in L.A. on a bet when they're not being told to lock down).
The doublethink is strong with the west coast left (to use a mixed reference).
"Newsom touted a term I've never heard before: YIGBY (Yes In God's Back Yard). That's weird, but it probably will result in additional new housing."
WTF?
Is Newsom suggesting that my back yard belongs to a sky pilot (and one that he talks to)?
From the article, one may infer that it's about building on church property.
The creature standing behind Gnu Sum is really interested in that bear statue's ass. Creeping me out.
She’s visualizing the bear’s rectum as the people of California, a perfect metaphor for what the CA Democratic Party has planned for them.
I think he/she/they/them/those is/are actually staring at the pile of shit behind the bear and wondering if it is part of the statue, evidence of a homeless drug user, of the rest of Newsom's speech.
He insists that he's not running for president, but his vetoes of the fringiest measures suggest otherwise.
Ya think? Hell yes he's running! We all know Sleepy Joe at some point is going to shit his pants and start running his mouth about the underpants gnomes and that'll be the end of that pretense that he isn't a completely feeble pudding headed retard. And Kamala? If they can't talk her into stepping out of the way, the CIA will make her. They'll just show her those redacted JFK files.
"Are Gavin Newsom's Presidential Aspirations Limiting His Progressive Instincts?"
No. But it will briefly cause him to stop admitting to them.
He will only stop admitting to them, until he gets elected.
He was quoted, after the Chinaflu shutdowns, as saying they were an opportunity for a new progressive future.
As much as that has come true, he's got bigger things in mind.
I chuckle at that one for mischievous reasons
This article reeks of Steven Greenhut, not Eric Boehm. Isn't the Orange Country Register Greenhut's rag?
Yes, and Greenhut is the author of this article.
He wasn't an hour ago.
I can verify it said Boehm originally as well. Thought it was odd.
Same here.
And at the time I thought, why is Boehm writing just like Greenhut?
And greenhut is here every Friday.
Greenhut as a "judge" of someone's progressive instincts???
Like a fish judging if a towel is wet.
No, I don't want government to provide "public services", infrastructure is better provided by private industry, and your "etc" is about as limiting as the 9th and 10th amendments.
Beto O'Newsom.
Beto O’Newsom
“The Democratic Party Presidential Ticket America
NeedsDeserves”At least Beto had the stones to pretend he'd actually "come for your guns".
Newsom probably celebrated the passage of Prop 62 with a trip to Vegas and booking several of the "machine gun experience" packages at a tourist gun range for himself and his senior staffers, closing the place for half a day by booking all their lanes for his people to all pretend they're Rambo for the afternoon.
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I'm not sure that Newsom has any particular political instincts, "progressive" or otherwise.
He originally got involved in politics for relatively libertarian reasons; in reaction to the SF health code requiring him to install a "mop sink" in a wine store he was opening which has 100% carpeted flooring, and no moppable surfaces to be found.
His record since then has been fairly left-liberal and his rhetoric far more progressive than his policies, but that's the vector to be on when pandering to the majorities and state/local party leadership in CA and SF where he's been running so far. Changing vectors would make sense in the service of national ambitions, but that could as easily be shifting from one calculated pose to another instead of suppressing his actual nature (something which might well not exist in a man who sees himself as "self made" and from a "broken home", but whose father has steered Getty Foundation investments to provide seed money for every business venture he's ever launched).
As for vetoing the most extreme slate of bills passed by the CA legislature this year, it's worth keeping in mind that the idea that the legislature "represents the will of the populace" in this state is downright laughable. Since most (maybe all) of the seats in both houses are designed to be "safe" districts for one or the other party and the Dems have a structural super-majority in those allocations, the output of the legislature generally represents the will of the fringe-left wing of the State Dem party, and vetoing the bills which would cost the state a small fortune while the tiny group who they're depending on to pay for everything are really fairly reasonable. If he were really changing, he'd probably have vetoed the law which attempted to dictate what doctors could tell patients about Covid, which was clearly unconstitutional from jump, rather than waiting 8 months and then also signing the repeal of that law rather than risk the courts precluding any future attempts at similar overreach.
Denying SAG strikers (90-95% of whom didn't actually have a current job to walk off of to strike) unemployment benefits could be a strategic move, or just a payoff on an investment, since the WGA and SAG strikes are essentially pitting Hollywood against Silicon Valley Streaming platforms after the CEO of Netflix almost single-handedly funded the campaign against the recall.
"Are Gavin Newsom's Presidential Aspirations Limiting His Progressive Instincts?"
Not nearly enough.
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