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The Opposition

Gavin Newsom Wants to Sell You a Vision

The California governor has a podcast, a new book, and two eyes fixed on 2028.

Lauren Egan's avatar
Lauren Egan
Feb 23, 2026
∙ Paid
California Gov. Gavin Newsom arriving at the Munich Security Conference on February 13, 2026. (Photo by Michaela Stache / AFP via Getty Images)

FEW LEADERS IN THE DEMOCRATIC PARTY have taken better advantage of the post-election malaise than Gavin Newsom. The California governor successfully kneecapped Donald Trump’s mid-decade redistricting scheme by engineering a counter-redistricting in his own state. And his mastery of attentional politics—from starting a new podcast to trolling the GOP on social media—earned him frontrunner glow heading into the 2028 cycle. At least for now.

Newsom still carries baggage. He’s a product of the coastal elite at a time when Democrats are desperate to win back working-class voters; a California Democrat who’s been a national political figure since he was 36 years old. And if you don’t think that’s a problem, then you should tell Newsom, because he also seems to think it is. His new book, Young Man in a Hurry: A Memoir of Discovery, has been described as a “bootstraps memoir” and reads in part as an effort to make sure that the country knows he didn’t grow up with a silver spoon, despite what his slicked back hair and well-tailored suits might suggest. He writes about his parents’ divorce and how his mother had to work multiple jobs to support her family. Whether or not voters will be persuaded remains to be seen.

Newsom kicked off his book tour on Saturday in my hometown of Nashville, Tennessee. I caught up with him backstage before the event. Our conversation below has been edited for length and clarity.

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Lauren Egan: My newsletter is all about the Democratic party, how you get out of the wilderness.

Gavin Newsom: Are we in the wilderness? I think we’re in 2006 and you’re gonna have not Speaker Pelosi but Speaker Jeffries.

Egan: What about the Senate?

Newsom: Well, that happened in 2006 and I think the tsunami is coming. And I do think that will bode well for 2008 where we had this guy, Obama, and he did, what, 53 percent of the vote? In so many ways, the contours are similar. We lost the popular vote in 2004, we were out in the wilderness. That’s my humble opinion.

Egan: Who is Obama in this comparison?

Newsom: Whoever emerges.

Egan: I want to start with this recent Twitter exchange—

Newsom: Oh God, which one? We have a lot of them.

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