Santa Fe New Mexican

Allegation­s fly as election looms

- By Michael R. Blood and Eugene Garcia

LOS ANGELES — In a blitz of TV ads and a last-minute rally, California Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom urged voters Sunday to turn back a looming recall vote that could remove him from office, while leading Republican Larry Elder broadly criticized the media for what he described as double standards that insulated Newsom from criticism and scrutiny throughout the contest.

The sunny, late-summer weekend was a swirl of political activity, as candidates held rallies, continued bus tours and cluttered the TV airwaves with advertisin­g offering their closing arguments in advance of the election that concludes Tuesday.

Newsom — who is expecting President Joe Biden on Monday for a capstone get-out-the-vote rally in Long Beach — was in a largely Hispanic area on the northern edge of Los Angeles, where he sought to drive up turnout with the key voting bloc.

Elder also was in Los Angeles, where he was joined by activist and former actress Rose McGowan, who repeated her claims from recent days that Newsom’s wife, Jennifer Siebel Newsom, attempted to persuade her in 2017 not to go public with her allegation­s of sexual misconduct against Hollywood producer Harvey Weinstein.

Siebel Newsom’s office described the allegation­s as a “complete fabricatio­n.” In a brief interview with the Associated Press, Newsom characteri­zed McGowan’s claims as a “last-minute classic hit piece” from one of Elder’s supporters.

The governor called Elder desperate and grasping, saying McGowan’s claims about his wife “just shows you how low things go in campaigns these days.”

He echoed his earlier criticism of Elder, saying the conservati­ve talk show host and lawyer “doesn’t believe that women have the right to their own reproducti­ve freedoms, he’s opposed to Roe v. Wade, doesn’t believe there’s a glass ceiling, doesn’t believe in pay equity laws.”

During her appearance, McGowan spoke warmly of Elder and lambasted Hollywood Democrats who she said traumatize­d her life. She now lives in Mexico.

“Do I agree with him on all points? No,” McGowan said. “So what? He is the better candidate. He is the better man.”

The last-minute exchange highlighte­d growing tensions in the election, which largely grew out frustratio­n with Newsom’s pandemic orders that shuttered schools and businesses during the pandemic. Voting concludes Tuesday. Recent polling shows Newsom is likely to hold his job.

As Newsom’s “first partner,” Siebel Newsom, an actress turned documentar­y filmmaker, has championed gender equality and society’s treatment of women and families.

McGowan, 48, who is known for her role in the Scream movie franchise, was one of the earliest of dozens of women to accuse Hollywood producer Harvey Weinstein of sexual misconduct, making her a major figure in the #MeToo movement.

Elder, who could become the state’s first Black governor, targeted some of his sharpest remarks at what he described as skewed media coverage.

Earlier this week, his walking tour of homeless encampment­s in LA’s Venice Beach neighborho­od was cut short after a woman on a bike wearing a gorilla mask threw an egg toward Elder and then took a swing at a member of his entourage. The confrontat­ion set off strong reactions on Twitter, with conservati­ves charging the incident wasn’t immediatel­y branded a racist attack because Elder is a conservati­ve.

If he was a Democrat, “it would have been a major story,” Elder said. He also said McGowan’s accusation­s largely have been ignored by the media, but argued that if similar charges had been made about him “that’s all you guys would be talking about.”

“This is a double standard,” he said. “I’m sick of it.”

Emails posted on Twitter by McGowan showed she had contact with Newsom’s wife, which her office confirmed but said their communicat­ion was “as fellow survivors of sexual assault and in Jennifer’s former capacity leading the Representa­tion Project, an organizati­on that fights limiting gender stereotype­s and norms.”

One of McGowan’s key claims is that during a 2017 phone conversati­on, Newsom’s wife referenced a law firm that was working with Weinstein and asked her what the firm could do “to make you happy.”

McGowan said Sunday she didn’t recognize the firm’s name at the time. “I had no idea who that was. So, I just said nothing and hung up on her. That was my last contact with her,” she said.

 ?? RINGO H.W. CHIU/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? California Gov. Gavin Newsom gives a TV interview Sunday before a rally in Sun Valley, Calif., for a recall election against him.
RINGO H.W. CHIU/ASSOCIATED PRESS California Gov. Gavin Newsom gives a TV interview Sunday before a rally in Sun Valley, Calif., for a recall election against him.

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