Los Angeles Times

The new governor’s conflicts

Gavin Newsom doesn’t have a Trump-like empire, but his family business raises similar issues.

- Daniel Elroi Rancho Palos Verdes

Gov.-elect Gavin Newsom’s family wine and hospitalit­y business, the PlumpJack Group, is not in the same league as the billion-dollar Trump Organizati­on, whose brand encompasse­s hotels, resorts and golf courses around the world. All the same, PlumpJack is a healthy multimilli­on-dollar enterprise, with some 800 employees at 23 properties around the state — wineries, restaurant­s, hotels and retail stores — that has made Newsom and his family wealthy. And his partial ownership of the company raises the same conflict-of-interest red flags that surround Donald Trump’s presidency.

When he became mayor of San Francisco in 2004, Newsom sold the PlumpJack-owned wine stores and restaurant­s within the city so that there would be no question he was making decisions for the public’s benefit rather than his own. He retained a stake in PlumpJack businesses outside the city, including a Napa County winery and a Lake Tahoe-adjacent resort. When he left the job, he bought back ownership in the San Francisco properties and earned millions during his two terms as lieutenant governor.

Now that he’s becoming governor, Newsom is reluctant to sell his interest in PlumpJack again. “It’s my life,” he told The Times’ editorial board this year, adding that if he was elected he would find some way to wall off the family business to ensure there’s no whiff of conflict, including partially divesting himself of company assets.

Now that Newsom has won the election, we’re eager to hear what his lawyers cook up. But we worry that anything short of complete divestitur­e will not produce a truly conflict-free portfolio. It certainly hasn’t worked for the president.

Before his inaugurati­on in 2017, Trump announced that he was turning control of the business over to his children and putting his assets in a blind trust. That was hardly an arm’s-length separation, however, and it did little to address concerns that Trump would gain financiall­y from his actions as president. Compoundin­g the concern, Trump refused to follow four decades of presidenti­al tradition and release his tax records. We have only the clues that his financial disclosure forms provide to what the potential conflicts may be, not the degree to which he might be feathering the family nest with his policies. Meanwhile, Trump properties have seen regular business from political groups, including the Republican National Committee, and foreign interests.

“I’m no Donald Trump,” Newsom told the editorial board in April when asked what he intended to do with PlumpJack after the election. “I won’t be asking the Democratic Party to do events at my hotel.”

We certainly hope not. Newsom, who has been a harsh critic of the president, should be the last person to take a page from the Trump ethics playbook. Neverthele­ss, there are a lot of uncomforta­ble similariti­es between the two leaders’ potential conflicts. Like Trump’s, Newsom’s family business is run by a close relative — his sister, who seems unlikely to maintain radio silence with her brother for his four-year term. There’s also the potential that lobbying firms or interest groups wishing to curry favor with or grab the ear of the governor might arrange to spend a ski vacation at the PlumpJack Squaw Valley Inn or a rejuvenati­ng long weekend at the Ingleside Inn in Palm Springs, book a party at one of the company’s event spaces or order cases of wine from one of the wineries.

To his credit, Newsom has shared his tax returns with reporters, and his spokesman said he will continue to do so when he is governor. In addition, state law requires all statewide constituti­onal officers to fill out annual statements of economic interest, though they offer limited details about holdings and business arrangemen­ts.

And unlike U.S. presidents, California governors are subject to the state’s conflict of interest rules, at least in theory. In practice, the requiremen­t that officials recuse themselves from decisions on matters in which they have a financial interest is easier to apply to local government officials, such as city council members whose votes on land-use rules and business regulation­s could have a more direct impact on their personal finances. Furthermor­e, the state’s conflict of interest laws don’t apply to policy decisions that affect the “public generally,” which is how most of a governor’s decisions could be described.

No one expects elected officials to give up their livelihood­s for a term-limited position that doesn’t pay all that well. But we do expect them to ensure that there is no question about whose interests they’re serving. California’s next governor is no exception.

I watched Trump’s news conference, and I had a different take.

Acosta asked the president a question regarding the use of the word “invaders” to describe the migrant caravan. The president answered the question and then went further, saying that the two of them disagree. The president then called on another reporter.

Acosta wanted to argue and would not give up the microphone. If I had been the other reporter who wanted to ask a question, I’d have had some harsh words for Acosta. What about my turn and my question? Jeffrey Whitfield Santa Ana

A presidenti­al attack on Acosta and CNN is an attack on your news outlet and your journalist­s as well, and ultimately an attack on all Americans.

It was unconscion­able for the rest of the journalist­s at Wednesday’s news conference to just watch the abuse of power and of our Constituti­on and remain in the room under the guise of “someone must remain to report.” This is akin to a herd watching a member get taken by a predator.

I would have preferred to see every single journalist with a shred of honor stand up and walk out. We can’t complain that lawmakers do not have the guts to call out the president if reporters will not stand up to this threat to the 1st Amendment.

You have my support to stand up and walk out next time.

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