Newsom’s White House chances undermined by tepid California poll

Alexei Fedorov
8 Min Read
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The non -Newsom for Presiding Bandwagon reached another routine this week.

A new survey by The La Times and UC Berkeley found that the registered voters of California believe, by a margin of more than 2 to 1, the governor of Gallivanting of the state is more focused on increasing their possibilities of winning the house of White Hee Huthethouo Thans.

Which is not great news if you believe in the best credential when Seijs a new job is a great praise for the one you are doing.

The respondents were decidedly mixed in Newsom, with a warm approval of 46% or their performance in their second and last period. (Pressable few, if any of them have been included in the political podcast Untttous of Newsom). The same percentage of registered voters said they caused their work performance.

That is not a great aspect compared to other Democratic governors who swirling over the Gossip Mill 2028.

Pennsylvania voters give their executive director, Josh Shapiro, a healthy approval index of 59% and Gretchen Whitmer from Michigan obtains favorable qualifications of 54% of its voters. Andy Beshear de Kentucky has a positive approval index of 68% in its deep red state, the highest of any Democratic governor in the country, according to the National Morning Consult survey.

Of course, Newsom insists not only on thought About running for president, he thought of a simple application of the duck test, if he moves and mocks like a duck, he can be reasonably safe from his aquatic bird status, he suggests otherwise.

In a recent interview with the Podcaster Mark Halperin video, the governor insisted that he is not decided on a 2028 race of what people think.

“I have to have an ardor why, and I have to have a convincing vision that distinguishes anyone else’s mouth. Without that, without both … I don’t deserve to be in the conversation,” said Newsom.

All the time pushing very on purpose in the conversation, which is like someone naked, standing in a department store and then asking why everyone looks.

But whatever.

The good news for the news is that California voters probably obtained the opportunity to evaluate their presidential candidacy, if it ran, even in the nomination contest. On March 7, 2028, the date currently established for the State’s presidential primary of the State will surely continue its year for more than 50 years of having very little relationship with the result.

Maybe the next century.

The complete political calendar of 2028 has not yet been determined. In 2024, the Democrats shook things at the request of President Biden, eliminating his launch caucus in Iowa and pushing South Carolina and Nevada. More changes can come, he thought that New Hampshire, which has celebrated the first presidential primaries for more than a century, can hold on to its initial place, which might not be something bad for Newsom.

Jim Demers, a lobbyist in Concord, the state capital, and a Democratic activist for a long time, said that the governor of California is an opportunity as decent as any Democrat who thinks about running.

“Either Gavin Newsom, or [Illinois Gov.] JB Pitzker, or Shapiro or Whitmer or [New Jersey Sen. Cory] Booker, whoever, people are ready to listen to them and want to see who will really be willing to face Trump and stand up, “said Demers, who is so far neutral in the contest.

Newsom, he said, is “practically a blank board” in New Hampshire. “The average person really doesn’t know much about him, apart from him,”.

In addition, Demers does not see the Newsom California return address as necessarily detrimental.

“Probable will have Republicans who will paint a California candidate as a left -handed liberal,” Demer said. “But I think you have many Democrats … that many of the policies that have occurred in California look and see them as progressive, but with a vision of the future.”

Dick Harpootlian is certainly not a republican. He is a former president of the South Carolina Democratic Party, state senator and veteran for decades or presidential policy.

His language is acute and spicy, such as the vinegar barbecue sauce favored in parts of his state and thought, he also does not have the first favorite Harpootlian that has little to say about the governor of California, or his 2028 PRASTAS.

“I think Gavin Newsom is what we all think when we think of a small and rich boy from the Playboy boy,” Harpootlian said his legal office in Columbia. “I mean, his hair is perfectly combed. His shoes are bright and probable Italian.

“Many of us,” Hey continued, “remember the duration of the duration when he had to not go out and was having a fabulous dinner in French laundry in Napa. I think he is out of contact with the people in a blue collar who need to top to to to to a to to to a to-to-to-back-back-back-back-back [Democratic] Party.

Nor, Harpootlian suggested, California is a particularly good place to provide politics. He cited the “huge population of homeless people” of the state, its store cities, an imminent budget deficit and the taxes that “are so high.”

“It is not,” said Seco, “a model that the rest of the country wants to follow.”

Iowa has probably lost its privileged place in the political calendar after the disastrous Caucus of 2020, which took days to generate a winner.

Even so, the Democratic strategist Jeff Link has an eye practiced by observing dozens of presidential candidates who pass over the years. He worked for half boxes.

“I do not believe that 2024 has helped the cause of California,” Link said about the possibilities that the Democrats turn, after Kamala Harris, to another Democrat raised in San Francisco, as his candidate. “But I don’t think it’s a death sentence.”

Newsom could get to Iowa carrying some luggage. (Assuming that it appears as a presidential hopeful). But “there is a real credibility by governing a state of that magnitude, even if you consider it too much liberal and too peculiar sometimes,” Link from Des Moines said. “I think people would be open to learn more.”

Which suggests that a Newsom inclination in the White House is not completely crazy.

Assuming that he first puts his own home in order.

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