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Barabak: A solid Senate pick and a craven move by Gavin Newsom

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California Gov. Gavin Newsom announced Wednesday, July 19, 2023, that he’s sending state-approved elementary social studies textbooks — and possibly a $1.5 million fine — to the Temecula Valley Unified School District. The district’s board late Tuesday, July 18, 2023, rejected a curriculum that included the textbooks. (Rich Pedroncelli, AP file photo)




Gavin Newsom was in his element, hand-feeding dishy commentary to an eager political press corps.

As a marquee surrogate for the Biden campaign, California’s governor was gleefully taking down Republicans at last week’s caterwauling presidential debate in Simi Valley. He took particular aim at a longtime nemesis, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis.

The two have agreed to go mano-a-mano next month on Fox News, and Newsom was taking full credit. “If you can goad someone this easy, can you imagine what Kim Jong Un or Putin could do with this guy?” Newsom taunted.

Good question.

Newsom should ask himself: If he can be goaded that easily — caving to pressure and flip-flopping on a pledge to name a Senate caretaker to replace the late Dianne Feinstein — how would he ever stand up to a foreign potentate?

Newsom’s selection of Laphonza Butler, a Democrat with years of deep experience strategizing in campaigns and the labor movement, came as a surprise, mostly because her name was not among those widely bandied about.

Sworn in Tuesday by Vice President Kamala Harris — a friend and former client — Butler makes history as the first out gay person of color to serve in the Senate and the first LGBTQ+ senator from California. Beyond that, Butler, 44, brings a fresh and welcome perspective to a Senate heavily populated with geriatrics and the well-to-do.

But Newsom never should have appointed her — or anyone else — to fill Feinstein’s seat without a promise to serve the balance of the late senator’s term, then stand aside once voters made their selection. Just last month, the governor had said he would see to that.

“It would be completely unfair to the Democrats that have worked their tail off,” Newsom said on NBC’s “Meet the Press,” and he was absolutely right. “That primary is just a matter of months away. I don’t want to tip the balance of that.”

Um. Never mind.

Newsom went ahead and showed he was just fine upending that balance, assuming Butler decides to seek a full term. She has yet to publicly state her plans.

But if Butler chooses to run, she’ll get no opposition from the governor.

“If that person decides she wants to seek a full term in 2024, then she is free to do so,” spokesman Anthony York said hours before Newsom announced his pick Sunday night. “There is absolutely no litmus test, no promise.”

And no consistency from the governor.

Give credit where due: the flipping and flopping, the wilting under political heat, is all a product of his own ham-fisted making.

In March 2021, Newsom was facing a threatened recall. There was antagonism from some Black voters because the governor failed to appoint a Black woman to replace Harris when she became vice president. Instead, he chose Alex Padilla, who made history as California’s first Latino senator.

Seeking to make amends — and shore up his political base — Newsom rashly promised to appoint a Black woman if Feinstein’s seat came open. He amended that pledge to say his appointee would be a placeholder, which drew umbrage from Rep. Barbara Lee and her supporters.

Lee is one of those vying for the Senate seat, along with the front-running Reps. Adam B. Schiff and Katie Porter, and the only prominent Black woman in the contest. She and others suggested Newsom’s caretaker pledge was an insult to Black women.

They mounted an aggressive campaign urging Newsom to change his mind and appoint the Oakland lawmaker, giving Lee a substantial advantage in the March 5 primary.

Then came Newsom’s Sunday night pirouette, a reflection of one of his worst traits: a reactive, short-sighted impulse to act in the moment with little heed for longer-term consequences. It’s something voters should consider when, and if, he ever seeks the White House.

After Harris was elected vice president, Newsom spent weeks pondering his choice of a successor. He publicly wrung his hands, lamenting the quandary he faced. Inevitably, he knew, he’d end up antagonizing someone, regardless of who was chosen.

“This is not something that I wish even on my worst enemy,” Newsom said of the dilemma he faced.

The lamentation was cringey, in a small-violin way. After all, governors are called upon to make tough decisions all the time. Filling a Senate vacancy is one of them.

With any luck, Newsom will never have to do so again.

Because he sure made a hash out of this one.

Mark Z. Barabak is a Los Angeles Times columnist. ©2023 Los Angeles Times. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency. 


Originally published at Mark Z. Barabak

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