Los Angeles Times

Jenner plans governor bid in California

Former Olympian and reality TV star announces a campaign to replace Gavin Newsom in a recall election.

- By Seema Mehta

At a time when transgende­r rights have become the new culture war in American politics, former Olympian and reality TV star Caitlyn Jenner announced a historic campaign Friday to replace Gov. Gavin Newsom in the recall election.

“As California­ns, we face a now-or-never opportunit­y to fundamenta­lly fix our state before it’s too late,” the 71-year-old Jenner, a Republican, wrote on Twitter. “Taking on entrenched Sacramento politician­s and the special interests that fund them requires a fighter who isn’t afraid to do what is right. I am a proven winner and the only outsider who can put an end to Gavin Newsom’s disastrous time as governor.”

The move comes as vocal segments of her party are pushing dozens of bills to curtail rights for transgende­r people across the nation.

The effort to recall Newsom is expected to qualify for the ballot soon, with an election in the fall. Other Republican­s who are running include former San Diego Mayor Kevin Faulconer, former Rep. Doug Ose and businessma­n John Cox.

Though transgende­r politician­s have been elected to office in recent years — notably Democrats Sarah McBride, a Delaware state senator, in 2020, and Danica Roem, a Virginia lawmaker, in 2017 — Jenner is the most prominent to try, as she seeks one of the most powerful offices in the country.

Her run is juxtaposed with dozens of efforts across the nation aimed at denying transgende­r rights, including barring transgende­r students from playing on girls sports teams and classifyin­g hormone therapy as child

abuse. These efforts are being advocated by former President Trump and Republican lawmakers across the country as part of a strategy some predict will help the GOP during next year’s midterm election.

“This is the largest, most widespread onslaught against trans rights and certainly specifical­ly trans children, that we have ever seen,” said Charlotte Clymer, an LGBTQ activist who is critical of Jenner. “Given Caitlyn Jenner’s interest in running for governor of California, you’d expect her to speak out on these things. But she hasn’t really been out there.”

It’s a familiar quandary for Jenner, who has said she has received more flak for being a Republican than for announcing that she identified as a trans woman in 2015. She describes herself as fiscally conservati­ve and socially liberal, and publicly supported Trump in 2016. (A recent Politico story found that she did not vote in that presidenti­al election, nor in about two-thirds of others she was eligible to cast a ballot in since 2000, including the 2003 recall.)

In 2018, after the president pushed anti-trans policies, Jenner said she made a mistake in backing him.

As Jenner builds a campaign staff, she is reportedly surrounded by some Trump loyalists, including a fundraiser associated with the rally that preceded the Jan. 6 U.S. Capitol riot. Jenner was spotted dining Thursday night at Tuscany il Ristorante in Westlake Village with former Trump campaign manager Brad Parscale, former state GOP chairman Frank Visco, actor John O’Hurley and others.

Newsom allies have sought to tie the recall to Trump and the insurrecti­on, a strategy driven by Trump’s unpopulari­ty in California. Though Trump lost the state by more than 29 percentage points, he won the support of more than 6 million California­ns — voters who will be key if the effort to recall Newsom is successful. Every prominent Republican running to replace the sitting governor supported Trump to varying degrees.

“We always knew the Republican recall would be a ludicrous circus full of Trump supporters, which only reinforces how much California­ns appreciate Gov. Newsom’s competent, compassion­ate, experience­d leadership during an unpreceden­ted series of crises,” said Dan Newman, a Newsom advisor.

Voters will be asked two questions in the election: Do they want to recall Newsom, and if he is recalled, whom do they want to replace him with? No prominent Democrats have announced plans to run, and Newsom is prohibited from being a candidate on the replacemen­t ballot.

Jenner previously toyed with challengin­g Sen. Dianne Feinstein in 2018. But this is the first time she has officially announced a run for office. In her announceme­nt, Jenner slammed Newsom’s pandemic closure policies, saying they have harmed schoolchil­dren and small-business owners.

“This isn’t the California we know. This is Gavin Newsom’s California, where he orders us to stay home but goes out to dinner with his lobbyist friends,” Jenner wrote, referring to a birthday dinner Newsom attended at the exclusive French Laundry restaurant.

Jenner’s campaign invites comparison­s to Arnold Schwarzene­gger, the former body-building champion turned movie star, businessma­n and reality TV host who was elected governor in the 2003 recall. That assessment ignores the difference­s between the two, who have been friends since the 1970s. Schwarzene­gger had been vocally involved in California politics, notably education issues, before he ran for governor. Jenner has not.

Don Sipple, a political consultant who produced advertisin­g for Schwarzene­gger’s 2003 campaign, burst out laughing at the prospect of Jenner’s candidacy.

“What credential­s are there?” he said. “What’s the groundwork that’s been laid in the public policy arena to suggest she would be a plausible candidate or a plausible governor?”

Jenner was born in 1949 in Mount Kisco, N.Y., and attended school in New York and Connecticu­t before going to college in Iowa. Jenner became a renowned decathlete and later moved to California, breaking records around the world and winning the gold medal at the 1976 Olympics.

Jenner’s triumphs turned the athlete into a celebrity; the star was pictured on the Wheaties cereal box, appeared on television shows and in movies, and posed for the cover of Playgirl magazine. In 1991, Jenner married Kris Kardashian. The couple had two children, while Kris had four children from her prior marriage to prominent attorney Robert Kardashian. The blended family has been part of the “Keeping Up With the Kardashian­s” reality television show on E! since 2007, reviving Jenner’s celebrity.

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