The Mercury News

Does Newsom want to be president? Sounds like it

- By Mark Z. Barabak Mark Z. Barabak is a Los Angeles Times columnist. © 2022 Los Angeles Times. Distribute­d by Tribune Content Agency.

Gavin Newsom sounds like a man ready to jump on the next flight to Iowa or New Hampshire or wherever Democrats start their 2024 presidenti­al campaign.

After the leak of a draft Supreme Court decision portending the imminent demise of Roe v. Wade — and the end of legal abortion as the country knows it — California's governor delivered a blistering indictment.

Of his own party. “Why aren't we standing up more firmly, more resolutely?” he barked into a bouquet of microphone­s outside Planned Parenthood's Los Angeles headquarte­rs. “Why aren't we calling this out. … Where's the counteroff­ensive?”

Newsom also had a few scathing things to say about some of the folks Democrats love to hate, including Florida's Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis, Fox News fire starter Tucker Carlson and West Virginia Sen. Joe Manchin III.

“I can't take any more Manchins,” Newsom said of the center-right Democrat who has helped stymie much of President Biden's legislativ­e agenda.

It was the type of angry, impassione­d speech that might launch an upstart presidenti­al campaign and couldn't help but contrast with the wan performanc­e of Biden, whose response to the high court was a quick pivot into a legalistic discussion of the right to privacy establishe­d by the Roe decision.

For some Democrats, it was a welcome tonic for the sluggishne­ss that seems to have beset their party amid untamed inflation, futility on Capitol Hill and impotence against the reversal of abortion rights. Naturally, there was chatter about Newsom's possible designs on the White House.

“Thanks for your service — but please retire in 2024, Joe Biden!” tweeted one enthusiast. “And Democratic Party: nominate Newsom!”

There are, of course, any number of obstacles to the governor running for president, not least his hopes of winning a second term in Sacramento in November. Woe unto any politician — even one seemingly as well-positioned as Newsom — who seems to be taking voters and reelection for granted.

But the speculatio­n can't be helped; the office of California governor has the magical power of instantly transformi­ng each and every occupant into a presidenti­al prospect.

Those around Newsom say he has never openly hankered after the White House, and he has apparently never had any sort of in-depth discussion with his political team about running for president. Publicly, he insists nothing could be further from his mind.

“Literally 100% never been on my radar,” Newsom said in the afterglow of beating last year's recall attempt, when the inevitable presidenti­al talk bubbled up.

That's not to say the governor doesn't harbor national ambitions, but there are limits.

The Democrat in the White House may run again in two years and Newsom has no intention of challengin­g Biden. Should the president opt against a second term, Vice President Kamala Harris would be the frontrunne­r to replace him.

Despite a sometimes fraught relationsh­ip with Harris — who shares much of the same political and donor base from their days in San Francisco — Newsom also has no plans to take her on if she seeks the White House in 2024.

By loudly and brashly confrontin­g his own party, Newsom presented himself as someone Democrats need to reckon with, even if a presidenti­al campaign isn't in the immediate offing.

“What more do you need than this decision to wake us up and start asserting ourselves more aggressive­ly?” Newsom demanded as he stood in front of Planned Parenthood, coiled in anger.

Given the fighting mood of the Democratic base, Newsom could be well placed to help lead the party in a post-Biden era. Especially if Democrats lose the White House and the party is looking to rebuild.

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