San Francisco Chronicle

Newsom gets candid about old scandal

- By Joe Garofoli Joe Garofoli is The San Francisco Chronicle’s senior political writer. Email: jgarofoli@sfchronicl­e.com Twitter: @joegarofol­i

In the backdrop of the #MeToo movement, when several politician­s have been routed from office for sexually inappropri­ate behavior from years ago, Lt. Gov. Gavin Newsom offered an answer for voters who might be hesitant to support him for governor because of a 2007 affair he had with a subordinat­e while he was mayor of San Francisco.

“I would say the same thing that I said (then) to the voters in San Francisco: that I acknowledg­ed it. I apologized for it. I learned an enormous amount from it,” Newsom said Monday during an onstage interview at the University of San Francisco. “And I am every day trying to be a champion and a model — not just for women and girls — but to deal with the issue that we need to focus on, which is the crisis with men and boys in this state and in this country.” He described a culture of “toxic masculinit­y” where men are responsibl­e for much of the violence in the nation.

In 2007, Newsom — who was then separated from his first wife, Kimberly Guilfoyle — publicly apologized for having a consensual affair with Ruby Rippey-Tourk, who was then his commission appointmen­ts secretary.

A subsequent City Attorney’s Office report into whether it was proper for RippeyTour­k to receive $10,154 in “catastroph­ic illness pay” from the city after she left her job after the affair, uncovered nothing illegal, but raised questions about whether she should have been eligible for the payments. According to the report, the pay was based on her acceptance into the city’s Catastroph­ic Illness Program, or CIP.

The report said it is is supposed to be offered to employees with “a life-threatenin­g illness or injury, as determined by the Department of Public Health” to “reduce hardship and suffering of catastroph­ically ill city employees.” The report questioned whether RippeyTour­k, who took leave from City Hall in May 2006 to enter a substance abuse program, should have been eligible for that program.

Newsom was speaking Thursday at the University of San Francisco as part of the university’s series of one-onone interviews with the top gubernator­ial candidates cosponsore­d by Politico and the school’s Leo T. McCarthy Center for Public Service and the Common Good.

Asked by Politico’s Carla Marinucci, who conducted the interview, whether he had any similar transgress­ions since that time, Newsom said, “Of course not.”

He applauded the courage of the women who have publicly called out inappropri­ate sexual behavior in Sacramento.

Last week, the state Senate and Assembly released documents revealing 20 substantia­ted complaints of sexual harassment or inappropri­ate behavior against lawmakers or high-level legislativ­e staffers over the past 12 years. They included cases against six current and former elected officials, including one of Newsom’s gubernator­ial candidate rivals — Assemblyma­n Travis Allen, R-Huntington Beach (Orange County). Allen was found to have routinely gotten “unnecessar­ily close” to one female staffer in 2013, including sitting close to her while sliding his foot to touch hers.

In a statement, Allen said, “There has never been anything in any of my actions that has been inappropri­ate, and nor will there ever be.”

On policy, Newsom said Monday that he would make addressing homelessne­ss a focus of his governorsh­ip and outlined several ways he would address the problem, including appointing a statewide homeless czar.

“That leadership has been lacking for decades in California,” Newsom said. “There has been no intentiona­lity supporting local and regional efforts to address the issue of homelessne­ss emanating from Sacramento. None. There are no statewide goals to end homelessne­ss. There is no vision to end homelessne­ss in the state of California.

“I’m going to step up significan­tly on this issue,” he said.

With $19.5 million in the bank, Newsom has a vast fundraisin­g lead over his opponents and is the early poll leader, too. Newsom was the top choice of 26 percent of the likely voters responding to a December 2017 Berkeley IGS Poll, with Villaraigo­sa at 17 percent. Two Republican­s — Rancho Santa Fe businessma­n John Cox and Allen, R-Huntington Beach — each grabbed 9 percent, with Chiang and former Superinten­dent of Public Instructio­n Eastin each getting 5 percent. Another candidate, former Sacramento­area GOP Rep. Doug Ose, entered the race in January and was not included in the polling.

“I acknowledg­ed it. I apologized for it. I am every day trying to be a champion and a model.” Gubernator­ial candidate Gavin Newsom, about 2007 affair with a subordinat­e

 ?? Scott Strazzante / The Chronicle ?? Gubernator­ial candidate and California Lt. Gov. Gavin Newsom discusses his own history in the context of #MeToo in an interview with Politico’s Carla Marinucci at USF, part of a series.
Scott Strazzante / The Chronicle Gubernator­ial candidate and California Lt. Gov. Gavin Newsom discusses his own history in the context of #MeToo in an interview with Politico’s Carla Marinucci at USF, part of a series.

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