Los Angeles Times

California Gov.-elect Gavin Newsom faces high expectations and the peril of falling short

SACRAMENTO, Calif. - Within an hour of being elected California's 40th governor, Gavin Newsom cast the occasion as not just a win, but also a watershed.

"As Californians, we've been granted the extraordinary opportunity to write history's next chapter," he told supporters on election night, with the ornate former Los Angeles Stock Exchange as a backdrop. "And the extraordinary obligation to help every Californian write their own California story - even from the darkest of circumstances."

The soaring rhetoric was fitting for a man who had campaigned in all-caps and boldface, offering lofty promises to tackle health care, housing and other obstinate problems facing the state.

Now, he'll have to deliver.

When Newsom is sworn in as governor on Monday, he'll do so with the wind at his back: a robust state economy and flush budget, a forceful electoral victory and a Capitol brimming with Democratic allies. With that good fortune comes great expectations for success, brought on by Newsom's "something for everyone" campaign that left key constituencies hungry for follow-through.

It can't get much better for Newsom, and it's almost certain to get worse. An economic contraction, a natural disaster, a rebellion among Democratic lawmakers - all threaten the incoming governor's footing.

"All governors have to be somewhat fatalistic," said former Gov. Gray Davis, who started his term in 1998 riding the dot-com boom and ended it in

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Los Angeles Times

Los Angeles Times6 min readAmerican Government
Young Voters Don't Give Biden Credit For Passing The Biggest Climate Bill In History
President Joe Biden spent his Earth Day in a national forest this year with an explicit pitch to young people: a climate jobs corps intended to excite Gen Z the way John F. Kennedy's Peace Corps inspired their grandparents. Biden took a selfie with R
Los Angeles Times3 min readAmerican Government
LZ Granderson: Trump's Racist 'Welfare' Dog Whistle Is Nonsense Just Like Reagan's
Donald Trump took his dog whistle down to Florida last weekend, where he reportedly told a room full of donors: "When you are Democrat, you start off essentially at 40% because you have civil service, you have the unions and you have welfare." He the
Los Angeles Times6 min read
A Tale Of Two Downtowns In LA: As Offices Languish, Apartments Thrive
By many measures, downtown Los Angeles’ newest apartment tower is over the top with such gilded flourishes as stone tiles from Spain lining the elevator cabs and hand-troweled Italian plaster on interior walls. Hummingbirds have somehow found the fru

Related Books & Audiobooks