New York Daily News

CAITLYN: I WANNA BE CALIF. GOV

JENNER PLANS TO RUN AGAINST NEWSOM IN RECALL VOTE

- Tim Balk

Caitlyn Jenner said Friday that she is joining the ranks of celebritie­s-turned-politician­s after filing paperwork for a run to become California’s governor.

Announcing her campaign for Golden State governor, the Olympic gold medalist and reality TV star tweeted: “I’m in! California is worth fighting for.”

A longtime Republican, Jenner has spoken out often on politics and sometimes criticized former President Donald Trump, though she said she voted for him 2016.

Gov. Gavin Newsom, a Democrat, is expected to face a fall recall election after money poured in from the GOP to oust the embattled bluestate leader.

Newsom received criticism — and apologized — earlier in the pandemic after images emerged of him eating indoors at a fancy French restaurant, apparently in violation of his own COVID-19 advice. He has served as governor since 2019.

In a statement, Jenner called his tenure “disastrous” as she complained of high taxes, overly stringent pandemic health rules and a hypocritic­al executive who “orders us to stay home but goes out to dinner with his lobbyist friends.”

“California has been my home for nearly 50 years,” Jenner, 71, said in the statement. “I came here because I knew that anyone, regardless of their background or station in life, could turn their dreams into reality.”

She claimed that Democratic leadership has led California off a cliff, adding in the statement that “we have seen the glimmer of the Golden

State reduced by one-party rule that places politics over progress.”

The team advising Jenner has included Trump’s former campaign manager, Brad Parscale, and GOP fundraiser Caroline Wren, who also worked for Trump’s campaign.

Jenner also could face questions about a 2015 fatal crash in which she rear-ended two cars. A 69-year-old woman was killed when her car was pushed into the path of an oncoming Hummer.

In 2018, she published an op-ed criticizin­g Trump over his policy banning transgende­r troops serving in the military. “I cannot support anyone who is working against our community,” she wrote in the Washington Post. “I do not support Trump.”

Though Newsom’s approval rating has slipped, it remained above 50% in a March poll, according to the Public Policy Institute of California, a nonprofit research organizati­on.

Jenner, known for appearing in the long-running TV show “Keeping Up with the Kardashian­s,” faces the challenge of chipping into his support — and she will look to follow in the footsteps of Arnold Schwarzene­gger, the Republican movie star who served as California’s governor from 2003 to 2011.

She stressed her outsider perspectiv­e as she launched her bid.

“For too long, career politician­s have over-promised and under-delivered,” she said in her statement. “We need a leader with a vision and the resolve to see it through.’ This will be a campaign of solutions, providing a roadmap back to prosperity.”

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