Inland Valley Daily Bulletin

Newsom hurts himself with several unforced errors

- By Dan Walters CalMatters is a public interest journalism venture committed to explaining how California’s state Capitol works and why it matters. For more stories by Dan Walters, go to calmatters. org/commentary

The quarterbac­k drops back to pass, spots a receiver and cocks his arm to throw, but the football slips out of his hand, a lineman from the other team snatches up the loose ball and runs for a touchdown.

It’s called an “unforced error” and in sports it’s the worst kind of mistake, one that could mean the difference between winning and losing.

What’s true in sports is also true in politics and Gov. Gavin Newsom should confess, at least to himself, that he faces a recall election that could tank his political career largely due to his unforced errors.

Newsom characteri­zes the recall campaign as a desperate effort by right-wing kooks, but it was going nowhere until Newsom committed the grandmothe­r of all unforced errors — a very expensive dinner at Napa’s French Laundry restaurant with some lobbyists that plainly violated his pleas to California­ns to avoid gatherings and wear masks.

Were French Laundry an isolated example, Newsom would have probably not been seriously affected. But he has continued to do and say things that reinforce the recall campaign’s theme that he is an arrogant elitist oblivious to the concerns of ordinary citizens.

Another example popped up last week when he told a CNN interviewe­r he’s “been living through Zoom school,” a few days after telling California­ns in his State of the State address that he and his wife have struggled to help their four young children “cope with the fatigue of Zoom school, the loneliness of missing their friends, frustrated by emotions they don’t yet fully understand.”

He clearly was attempting to identify with millions of parents whose children have been kept at home for a year and whose angst has been one of the recall’s drivers. However, as journalist­s quickly pointed out, Newsom’s children attend a tony private school that reopened many months ago.

It was an unforced error, not on the scale of the French Laundry, but once again contributi­ng to the image of a governor who’s tone deaf.

And while we’re on the subject of education, Newsom, or at least the officials he commands, committed another unforced error regarding the resumption of high school sports, another sore point with the parents.

The Department of Public Health allowed games to resume, but said only one parent could attend and banned cheerleade­rs, who immediatel­y complained about the unfairness of the decree.

The rules were quickly revised to allow cheerleadi­ng, but the flap could have been avoided had Newsom and his advisors thought through the sports guidelines from the standpoint of parents and students by actually talking to them before issuing orders from on high.

Speaking of which, how about that Blue Shield deal?

With the state’s COVID-19 vaccinatio­n program bogged down, Newsom suddenly decided to offload supervisio­n to Blue Shield, a health care behemoth that has, as journalist­s quickly pointed out, a long history of donating to Newsom’s political campaigns.

However, what Newsom thought would be a move to smooth out the vaccinatio­n program turned out to be another unforced error. The shift immediatel­y attracted opposition from local public health officials who apparently had not been consulted and many of them refused to sign contracts with Blue Shield.

It forced the administra­tion to allow the refusniks to contract directly with the state, rather than Blue Shield. Rather than demonstrat­ing that Newsom was on top of the vaccinatio­n situation, it lent credence to an image of arrogant bumbling.

Newsom is still favored to avoid recall, but if he continues to make unforced errors, he could die the political death of a thousand small cuts.

 ?? JEFF CHIU — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Gov. Gavin Newsom wears a protective mask at Miss Ollie’s restaurant in Oakland on June 9. Newsom’s own unforced errors during the pandemic have led to the campaign to recall him.
JEFF CHIU — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Gov. Gavin Newsom wears a protective mask at Miss Ollie’s restaurant in Oakland on June 9. Newsom’s own unforced errors during the pandemic have led to the campaign to recall him.

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