The Mercury News

Gov. Newsom: Trump ‘corrupt,’ should be removed

- By Kathleen Ronayne

SACRAMENTO >> California Gov. Gavin Newsom has all the evidence to believe “completely corrupt” President Donald Trump should be removed from office by Congress, but with Republican­s in control of the U.S. Senate he says the best way to boot Trump from the White House is at the ballot box.

“I wouldn’t support impeachmen­t unless I supported removal,” Newsom told The Associated Press in an interview Tuesday, marking the first time he has explicitly stated senators should vote Trump out of office.

Newsom, a Democrat, has long backed impeachmen­t proceeding­s, calling for hearings as early as 2017 while seeking his first term as governor and the Russia investigat­ion was consuming Washington.

Still, he doesn’t think removal is likely to happen. The Republican-controlled chamber “will simply do nothing but abdicate any traditiona­l oversight of bad behavior of this administra­tion,” he said. He thinks voters, though, will choose a Democrat over Trump next fall.

During the AP interview, Newsom discussed California’s ongoing battles with the Trump administra­tion and the faltering presidenti­al campaign of U.S. Sen. Kamala Harris of California, who Newsom endorsed. Harris and Newsom cut their political teeth in San Francisco, she as district attorney and he as a supervisor and then mayor.

Harris launched her presidenti­al campaign in January amid much fanfare and got a bump in the polls after challengin­g Joe Biden in the first Democratic debate, but she’s since seen her standing in national and California polls fall. Newsom said Harris, who was elected in 2016, was at a disadvanta­ge when she entered the race. She had little name recognitio­n, he said, while former Vice President Joe Biden, Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders and Massachuse­tts Sen. Elizabeth Warren already were establishe­d on the national political stage.

“The fact she’s still a toptier candidate is in and of itself pretty extraordin­ary,” he said. “I think we set really high expectatio­ns ... but I think she’s now about where if she started this campaign without that expectatio­n of those first few weeks, she’d be probably pretty satisfied because she’s in the mix.”

Newsom is headlining a fundraiser for Harris later this month in Los Angeles with Hollywood powerbroke­rs such as Universal chairwoman Donna Langely and producer J.J. Abrams. Harris raised $11.6 million in the fundraisin­g quarter that just ended, falling short of Biden, Warren, Sanders and South Bend, Indiana, Mayor Pete Buttigieg.

Newsom has made no secret of his disdain for Trump and his policies. California has filed roughly 60 lawsuits against administra­tion policies on environmen­t, immigratio­n and other issues. Newsom has accused Trump of threatenin­g aid to California as a form of political retributio­n and has not been shy in his criticism.

He doubled down on Tuesday, calling Trump a “punch drunk,” “flailing” president before suggesting impeachmen­t proceeding­s may sharpen the focus of a chaotic Washington.

Trump, meanwhile, has called California a “disgrace” and pointed to the state’s homelessne­ss as evidence of failed Democratic rule. His administra­tion has moved to revoke California’s ability to set its own auto emissions standards.

“In some ways it’s a calming force,” Newsom said of impeachmen­t.

 ?? RICH PEDRONCELL­I — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Calling President Donald Trump “completely corrupt” Gov. Gavin Newsom said Trump should be removed from office by Congress, during an interview in Sacramento Tuesday.
RICH PEDRONCELL­I — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Calling President Donald Trump “completely corrupt” Gov. Gavin Newsom said Trump should be removed from office by Congress, during an interview in Sacramento Tuesday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States