Democrats anoint Gavin Newsom as new party leader
Credit: YouTube/ California Governor Gavin Newsom
Democrats are lining up to throw their support behind Gavin Newsom and anoint him as the new leader of the party in the wake of the LA riots.
Donald Trump called for the arrest of the California governor earlier this week, prompting Mr Newsom to call his bluff – which attracted widespread praise from Democrats.
A former Los Angeles mayor commended him for 'standing up to a bully', while other Democrat figures said he had gone 'toe-to-toe' with Mr Trump and was 'fighting' for the state.
Commentators now think arresting Mr Newsom would turn him into a 'martyr' and cement his status as Mr Trump's most effective critic.
The 57-year-old governor, who on Tuesday night accused the US president of using the unrest to mount an illegal power grab in his state, has emerged as the figurehead of a party struggling to stand up for itself following last year's crushing election defeat.
Some Democrats are frustrated by the lack of 'resistance' from current party leadership, who fear isolating voters that flipped for Mr Trump by attacking the president.
Until his face-off with Mr Trump, Mr Newsom had been no exception to the problems gripping the party, with his poll ratings declining and a diminishing reputation as what Mr Trump would describe as a 'radical Left lunatic'.
'I've criticised him in the past… but I commend him for what he's doing,' Antonio Villaraigosa, a former mayor of Los Angeles, told Politico.
'You stand up to a bully. You don't let a bully take away our First Amendment rights.'
'We've been waiting to feel like the governor is standing up and fighting for California and every Californian, and he seems to be doing that,' said Lorena Gonzalez, the California Labour Federation leader.
Larry Ceisler, a Democrat strategist, told The Telegraph Mr Newsom was 'the first governor who has been given the opportunity to go toe-to-toe with President Trump and his advisers'.
'Democrats are just looking for leadership… Newsom becomes top of mind because his slot is based on real-time substantive and consequential stepping-up to confront a true crisis,' he said.
'He gave a kick-off to his 2028 campaign,' Steve Bannon, Mr Trump's former chief strategist, told The New York Times. Mr Newsom is often spoken of as a frontrunner to claim the Democrats' presidential nomination ahead of the next election.
Mike Madrid, a California-based Republican strategist, said he believed the protests were helping Mr Newsom, adding: 'Especially if he gets arrested.'
The Wall Street Journal, the centrist newspaper owned by Rupert Murdoch, said this week that the governor had emerged as 'leader of the opposition'.
Before Mr Trump sent the National Guard into Los Angeles last weekend, Mr Newsom was thought to have tarnished his brand among party allies by attempting to broaden his appeal ahead of a potential presidential run.
He has hosted a number of figures aligned with Mr Trump's Maga movement on his new podcast, including Mr Bannon and Right-wing activist Charlie Kirk, and labelled biological men participating in women's sports 'deeply unfair'.
Mr Newsom labelled Mr Trump a threat to democracy in a presidential-style address on Tuesday evening, where he spoke straight into a camera for around nine minutes.
'This is about all of us. This is about you. California may be first, but it clearly will not end here. Other states are next,' he said.
'Democracy is next. Democracy is under assault right before our eyes, this moment we have feared has arrived.'
Mr Newsom's administration filed an emergency motion with the courts on Tuesday, arguing Mr Trump overstepped his legal authority by mobilising the National Guard and US marines in California in response to the protests.
'Thanks to our law enforcement officers and the majority of Angelenos who protested peacefully, this situation was winding down and was concentrated in just a few square blocks downtown,' he said.
'But that's not what Donald Trump wanted. He again chose escalation, he chose more force. He chose theatrics over public safety,' Mr Newsom continued, labelling the president a 'failed dictator'
He claimed Congress had failed to stand up to Mr Trump as he took a 'wrecking ball' to the Constitution and 'our founding fathers' historic project'.
'There are no longer any checks and balances… The rule of law has increasingly been given way to the rule of Don,' he said.
Mr Newsom concluded with a call to arms for his party and disaffected voters: 'What Donald Trump wants most is your fealty, your silence, to be complicit in this moment. Do not give into him.'
Mr Trump and his 'border tsar', Tom Homan, have previously suggested Mr Newsom should be arrested – something the governor has quickly embraced.
'He's a tough guy. Why doesn't he do that? He knows where to find me,' he said of Mr Homan on Sunday. 'That kind of bloviating is exhausting. So, Tom, arrest me. Let's go.'
Mr Trump made political capital out of his own legal problems two years ago, when he returned from the political wilderness following a series of criminal indictments he blamed on a 'weaponised' justice system.
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Los Angeles Times
26 minutes ago
- Los Angeles Times
The gift Trump never meant to give: the spotlight to Democratic adversary Gavin Newsom
SACRAMENTO — President Trump craves attention and will stoop to any depth to grab it — even pour gasoline on a kindling fire in Los Angeles. But this time he unwittingly provided priceless attention for an adversary. Because Trump needlessly deployed National Guard troops and — more ridiculous, a Marine battalion to L.A. — California Gov. Gavin Newsom was granted a prime-time speaking slot on national cable television to respond. 'We honor their service. We honor their bravery,' Newsom said of the troops. 'But we do not want our streets militarized by our own armed forces. Not in L.A. Not in California. Not anywhere … . 'California may be first — but it clearly won't end here. Other states are next. Democracy is next. Democracy is under assault right before our eyes. The moment we've feared has arrived.' I'm not sure the 'democracy is under assault' message has much traction, but keeping armed combat forces off our streets must be a salable pitch. Regardless, governors almost never get national TV time to deliver entire speeches, even as brief as Newsom's. You've practically got to be nominated for president. But the publicity-thirsty sitting president provided the cameras for California's governor. Newsom's strong address probably boosted his stock within the Democrat Party and revived dormant speculation about a 2028 presidential bid. No longer was the Democratic governor playing respectful nice guy and tempering criticism of the Republican president. Now he was standing up to the bully who loves to use California, Newsom and our progressive politics as a punching bag. Trump's red-state supporters love every swipe at this 'left coast' state. Newsom rose to the occasion, using his greatest asset: invaluable communication skills coupled with telegenic looks. He laid out his version of what happened to turn relatively peaceful protests against federal immigration raids into destructive street violence. And it's the correct version by objective accounts. On Saturday, Newsom said, federal immigration agents 'jumped out of an unmarked van' near a Home Depot parking lot and 'began grabbing people. A deliberate targeting of a heavily Latino suburb … . In response, everyday Angelenos' exercised their constitutional right to protest. Police were dispatched to keep the peace and mostly were successful, the governor continued. But then tear gas, rubber bullets and flash-bang grenades were used — by federal agents, Newsom implied. Then Trump deployed 2,000 California National Guard troops 'illegally and for no reason,' the governor asserted. 'This brazen abuse of power by a sitting president inflamed a combustible situation … . Anxiety for families and friends ramped up. Protests started again … . Several dozen lawbreakers became violent and destructive.' Newsom warned: 'That kind of criminal behavior will not be tolerated. Full stop.' And hundreds have been arrested. But he emphasized: 'This situation was winding down and was concentrated in just a few square blocks downtown. But that's not what Donald Trump wanted … . He chose theatrics over public safety.' In Trump's twisted view, if he hadn't sent in the National Guard, 'Los Angeles would be completely obliterated.' Never mind that the violence was confined to a few downtown blocks, a fraction of a city that spreads over 500 square miles. 'We will liberate Los Angeles and make it free and clean again,' the president promised. Veteran Republican strategist Mike Murphy had it right, telling CNN: 'He's lighting the fire as an arsonist, then claiming to be the fireman.' It reminded me of President Lyndon B. Johnson's manufactured Gulf of Tonkin resolution in 1964 that Congress passed, enabling him to vastly escalate U.S. involvement in the Vietnam War. Johnson reported a North Vietnamese attack on U.S. destroyers that many experts later concluded never happened. But I think Trump mainly is obsessed with attracting attention. He knows he'll get it by being provocative. Never mind the accuracy of his words or the wisdom of his actions. Sending in the Marines certainly was an eye-opener. So is staging a military parade on his birthday — an abuse of troops for attention, personal glorification and exercise of his own power. He'll say anything provocative without thinking it through: Tariffs one day, suspended the next. He'll boast of sending San Joaquin Valley water to L.A. for fighting fires when it's physically impossible to deliver it. While Trump was playing politics with immigrants and L.A. turmoil, a poll finding was released that should have pleased him. Californians no longer support providing public healthcare for immigrants living here illegally, the independent Public Policy Institute of California reported. Adult state residents were opposed by 58% to 41% in a survey taken before the L.A. trouble erupted. By contrast, a PPIC poll in 2021 found that Californians favored providing state healthcare for undocumented immigrants by 66% to 31%. Polling director Mark Baldassare concluded the public opposition stems mostly from the view that California taxpayers can't afford the costly program — not that they agree with Trump's anti-immigrant demagoguery. In fact, Newson has proposed paring back the state's multibillion-dollar program of providing Medi-Cal coverage for undocumented immigrants because the state budget has been spewing red ink. Given all the rhetoric about the L.A. protests, the statement that particularly impressed me came from freshman Assemblyman Mark Gonzalez (D-Los Angeles), whose downtown district stretches from Koreatown to Chinatown. 'Rocks thrown at officers, CHP cars and Waymo vehicles set on fire, arson on the 101 freeway — have nothing to do with immigration, justice or the values of our communities,' he said in a statement Sunday. 'These are not protesters — they were agitators. Their actions are reckless, dangerous and playing into exactly what Trump wants.' Gonzalez is a liberal former chairman of the L.A. County Democratic Party who stuck to his point: Hoodlums can't be tolerated. And, thanks to Trump, Newsom was able to make a similar point about the president on national TV: His dangerous, self-serving actions can't be tolerated either.


New York Post
31 minutes ago
- New York Post
Federal judge questions constitutionality of Trump sending National Guard to LA riots: ‘President is, of course, limited'
WASHINGTON — A federal judge expressed skepticism Thursday about the constitutionality of President Trump's order to deploy thousands of National Guard troops to Los Angeles to quell anti-ICE riots. Senior San Francisco US District Judge Charles Breyer heard arguments from attorneys for Trump's Justice Department and California Gov. Gavin Newsom after the Democrat had sued the feds over dispatching roughly 4,000 Guard members to protect officers carrying out immigration enforcement operations. 'We're talking about the president exercising his authority, and the president is, of course, limited,' Breyer, the younger brother of liberal former Supreme Court Justice Stephen Breyer, said at one point in the hearing. Advertisement 3 AP 'That's the difference between a constitutional government and King George.' Brett Shumate, the head of the DOJ's Civil Division, disputed Breyer's characterization of the president's order throughout the hour-long hearing, arguing that the commander-in-chief had 'delegated' the federalizing of the Guard through California's adjutant general, as legally required. Advertisement Shumate also claimed that Newsom was merely a 'conduit' for that order as it passed through the chain of command from Trump to Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth to the state Guard. 'There's no consultation requirement, pre-approval requirement,' he argued. 'There's one commander-in-chief of the armed forces.' The California attorney general's office countered that allowing Trump's action to stand implied there would be 'no guardrails' for further abuse by the executive branch. 3 Clashes have erupted in LA over the last several days sparked by ICE raids. Barbara Davidson/NYPost Advertisement 3 A demonstrator points his finger towards members of the California National Guard during a protest against federal immigration sweeps in downtown Los Angeles. REUTERS 'The president, by fiat, can federalize the National Guard and deploy it,' an attorney for Newsom said, 'whenever there is disobedience to an order.' While Breyer took issue with the deployment of the National Guard, he appeared more inclined to let stand Trump's order sending around 700 US Marines to the Golden State to assist with the federal immigration crackdown. 'I don't understand how I'm supposed to do anything with the Marines, to tell you the truth,' the judge responded, quibbling with Newsom's legal team over whether their involvement violated the Posse Comitatus Act. Advertisement Breyer did not immediately issue a ruling, but said he hoped to put one out 'very soon.' This is a developing story. Please check back for more information.


The Hill
32 minutes ago
- The Hill
The post-Trump tax cliff
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