Consider This from NPR

Gavin Newsom says the Democratic party “must fight fire with fire”

11 min
Feb 24, 2026about 2 months ago
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Summary

California Governor Gavin Newsom discusses his national political strategy, new memoir, and potential 2028 presidential ambitions while touring the country to energize Democratic voters. He balances outreach to conservative audiences through his podcast with aggressive social media attacks on President Trump, framing it as "fighting fire with fire."

Insights
  • Newsom employs a dual-strategy approach: engaging conservative voices through his podcast while simultaneously attacking Trump on social media, suggesting Democrats are shifting toward more aggressive partisan tactics
  • The memoir serves as both a personal narrative and political positioning tool, emphasizing relatability through struggles with dyslexia and childhood insecurity while maintaining proximity to elite political networks
  • Newsom's extensive travel and media presence (book tour, podcast, international summits, grassroots campaigning) mirrors presidential campaign infrastructure despite avoiding formal announcement
  • Democrats are investing in local and state races in traditionally red states and rural areas, signaling a long-term strategy to rebuild party infrastructure beyond presidential cycles
  • The tension between Newsom's stated philosophy of unity and his combative social media presence reveals broader Democratic Party debate about engagement strategy with political opponents
Trends
Political figures using podcasts as direct-to-audience communication channels to bypass traditional media gatekeepingIncreased partisan polarization manifesting in simultaneous engagement and mockery strategies toward political opponentsDemocratic Party focus on local and state-level races as foundation for national power reclamationMemoir-as-political-positioning becoming standard practice for potential presidential candidatesInternational diplomatic engagement by state governors as part of national political positioningSocial media as primary platform for political messaging and personal branding among national figuresVulnerability narratives (dyslexia, bullying, insecurity) as political authenticity markers in candidate positioning
People
Gavin Newsom
California Governor touring nationally to energize Democratic voters, promoting new memoir, and widely considered lea...
Donald Trump
Subject of Newsom's aggressive social media attacks and primary political opponent; focus of Democratic midterm strategy
Charlie Kirk
Conservative guest featured on Newsom's podcast; late political organizer whose success with young men Newsom sought ...
Steve Bannon
Conservative guest featured on Newsom's podcast to engage with opposing political viewpoints
Ben Shapiro
Conservative guest featured on Newsom's podcast as part of Newsom's outreach to conservative voices
Nancy Pelosi
Family connection to Newsom through marriage; mentioned as example of insider political network proximity
Getty family
Wealthy family with proximity to Newsom during childhood; example of insider access acknowledged in memoir
Pierce Brosnan
Actor from Remington Steele whose appearance Newsom emulated as teenager to reinvent his image
Oscar Wilde
Quoted by Newsom regarding adolescent identity formation and "posing" as part of self-discovery process
Quotes
"I'm putting a mirror up to President Trump and I'm fighting fire with fire and I'm punching a bully back in the mouth."
Gavin Newsom
"I think it's really important for the Democratic Party not to give up on red states and rural parts of the country."
Gavin Newsom
"Divorce is not an option. It's just not. You have to get along, as a country. As human beings."
Gavin Newsom
"I'm not going to be a bystander to this moment. And I'm just doing everything I can to meet it head on."
Gavin Newsom
"This whole book is about humility. It's about grace. It's about, hey, I'm still that kid in the back of the room."
Gavin Newsom
Full Transcript
Gavin Newsom is finishing up his final year as governor of California. But lately, he's been touring the country to energize voters ahead of the midterm elections. This week, we caught up with him in rural South Carolina. He was stumping for Democrats in a county that voted for President Trump in the last two elections. Donald Trump knows he's going to get crushed in the midterm election. He knows he's going to get crushed. Newsom says this is the kind of grassroots work that will help Democrats reclaim power. County races matter. State races matter. You matter. City council members matter. Mayors matter. Now, Gavin Newsom has not officially announced that he's running for president in 2028. But his busy travel schedule certainly resembles that of a presidential hopeful. And he is, at the moment, widely considered a leading potential candidate. He's also out with a new memoir called Young Man in a Hurry. It tells a story of his childhood, his struggles with dyslexia, and his political rise. Consider this. Gavin Newsom is one of the loudest voices in the Democratic Party right now. He's pushing back on President Trump with his policies and his own viral all-capped social media posts. But what is the California governor's next move? From NPR, I'm Elsa Chang. It's Consider This from NPR. In his final year as governor of California, Gavin Newsom has been spending a lot of time outside of California. In just the last month, he was in Germany, meeting with global leaders at the Munich Security Conference. After that, he was in the UK, signing a new clean energy pact. And then, over the last few days, he's been touring the American South, talking about his new memoir, Young Man in a Hurry, all while folding in a string of events to rally voters for local Democratic candidates in places like Manning, South Carolina. I think it's really important for the Democratic Party not to give up on red states and rural parts of the country. And I've been doing this for years now. I had a PAC that's exclusively focused. Mississippi, Alabama, Arkansas, where, you know, we spend a day or two in the way someplace else. and make sure we're supporting local democratic causes. You're on book tour right now. Often when people are planning to run for president they write an autobiography Your new memoir is out this week Why does now feel like the right time to be telling everybody your life story Well, I appreciate the question. They may write an autobiography, but not like this. What do you mean? What's different about yours? This is a little different. I mean, this is pretty self-critical. This is very deeply reflective. And it's not, I'm not out of office when I'm writing this. This is not looking back in the rocking chair. But it was an opportunity to talk about my own journey in terms of discovering who I am. It's called Young Man in a Hurry, a memoir of discovery. One of the things that I learned about you for the first time when I was reading this book was how you kind of felt like a dork growing up. I mean, you were bullied in high school. you wondered how to remake your image, which led to the whole origin story of your now famous hairstyle. Oh gosh. Yeah. You read that. I read that. You decided. You should have skipped that. Well, this is what I want to ask you because you decided you wanted to look like Pierce Brosnan from the TV show Remington Steel. Who went? Explain why that was the solution to your teenage problems at the time. You use the word dork. It was also used by my sister who said I looked like one. when I started showing up. I mean, she said you weren't helping her luck in high school. I was actually, she said, literally, she gave me, she gave me money to buy jeans, because she was so embarrassed I was walking around in suits in high school. Look, I, you know, I think it was, you know, somebody once said, Oscar Wilde, I think he said in Boy's Life, he said, you know, the first phase of life, we all, you know, have a pose. And I guess I was posing, um you know and i didn't know who i was i was going through a process of discovery i mean quite literally there's a funny chapter in there about discovering dippity do which is you know whatever that substance whatever that just disgusting translucent but it stuck so to speak yeah and it was sort of a metamorphosis it was a you know i remember from sophomore to junior year and then i started you know put on a mask and quite literally put on a suit yeah put on you know and, you know, was sort of trying to emulate other people, just testing, you know, as kids do, trying to discover who I am. But, you know, that process continues to this day. I mean, you did live sort of a split screen reality between growing up with your single mom and then the occasional proximity to the gay family. And you do acknowledge, right, that you were a beneficiary of that proximity. And so I felt that in this book, you do take great pains to paint yourself in some aspects as an outsider, but you do also acknowledge that you've been on the inside as well, right? Like you have had these family connections to the Gettys, family connections to the Pelosi and frankly by this time Governor you been famous for half of your life So I guess my question my basic question for you is why should ordinary Americans feel that they can relate to you I'm not trying to force feed anything. I'm just sharing my story, my life, story of my mom's life, story of her struggles, story of my struggles as it relates to reading and learning disabilities. And, you know, I painted a picture that I paint in detail in the book of someone that always struggled academically, that was bouncing around different schools, that does not read a speech today because I couldn't read a speech today. I'm not suggesting anything, but I'm just offering a glimpse of some of the things that people may not see, of sweaty hands, of anxiety, insecurity, of trying to be someone I'm not, of making mistakes, learning from those mistakes, and painted a picture of also a family history that I knew nothing about until I wrote the book. You've not only written this book, you have launched a podcast about a year ago, a podcast called This is Gavin Newsom. And you've made a real effort to bring in conservative guests on this podcast, like the late Charlie Kirk, like Steve Bannon, Ben Shapiro. Why has that been important to you to bring conservative voices on this podcast? Because this is Gavin Newsom. It's who I am. Open hand, not a closed fist. I mean, I said it, And we just had a rally here. I said, divorce is not an option. It's just not. You have to get along, you mean, as a country. As human beings. It's just exhausting. But what do you make of the criticism that bringing guests like that onto your podcast is just pandering to the right? Well, I think it's fair. And that's why you don't have to listen. I started the podcast with quite literally not one download and not one listener. And I brought on Charlie Kirk because I wanted to understand what motivated him. I want to understand why he had built such a successful organization that powered young men, particularly young men who the Democratic Party have lost, to Donald Trump's side. And I thought it was important to understand that. And some people thought it was offensive. To have someone like him on. Yeah, but just because we don't want to focus on them doesn't mean they go away. And so it's who I am. I'm married into a big Republican family. And I love my Republican father-in-law. And that's why I'm here in a rural part of a red state. Okay, I want to understand who you are politically, because I'm trying to understand your overall strategy here. On one hand, you are bringing people like the late Charlie Kirk, like Steve Bannon onto your podcast. On the other hand, you're trolling President Trump on X. You mock his riding style. You mock his body. You are selling mega-branded knee pads. We shouldn't be body shaming. Let me double check that. All these MAGA branded knee pads, they're for all your groveling to Trump needs. Yeah no that for the universities the law firms That for major corporate leaders as well as major media companies Yes those knee pads are for them Okay How do you square those playground insults with the listening sessions that you having with these conservatives on the podcast? Because I think you can be both and. But what if you're confusing people as to what you sincerely believe? Like, why not present just one Gavin Newsom, one consistent tone across all platforms? I am. What's the consistent tone? I'm who I am. I'm consistently me. I'm interested in other people. I'm interested in what makes them work. I don't want to, I don't talk down or pass people. I believe all of us want to be protected, connected, and respective. All of us need to be loved and need to love. To me, that's universal. But you don't think you're talking down to President Trump on your ex account? I'm putting, well, I'm putting a mirror up to President Trump and I'm fighting fire with fire and I'm punching a bully back in the mouth. And at the same time, I'm the same guy who walked out on the tarmac to welcome him into LA so that he can support the people that were torn asunder because of those wildfires. I was the one who was in the Oval Office, the first Democrat for 90 minutes trying to do the same. That's who I am. Well, I'm just going to ask you, are you going to run for president or not in 2028? I honestly don't know. But you know, I made probably a mistake where I was asked a different question. Someone asked me, said, have you ever thought about it? And I got caught by saying, yes, I thought about it, but briefly, but briefly. So I don't know. What makes you back away from the thought? Just it's fate. It's, you know, there's humility. I mean, this whole book is about humility. It's about grace. It's about, hey, I'm still that kid in the back of the room. Well, I have to ask though, because you're widely considered one of the leading potential candidates for president in the next two years. So whatever you're doing right now, something seems to be working, at least right now. What do you think that might be? Just conviction. Just letting it go. It's putting it all out there. Calling balls and strikes. And I'm going to run the 110-yard dash. I've got to sell by date as governor. And we'll see what happens. But I'm not going to be a bystander to this moment. And I'm just doing everything I can to meet it head on. And some people will embrace it. And others will reject it. And that's okay. California Governor Gavin Newsom, thank you very much for your time. This was a pleasure. Thanks for coming out. This episode was produced by Janaki Mehta and Connor Donovan. It was edited by Christopher Integliata. Our executive producer is Sammy Yenigan. It's Consider This from NPR. I'm Elsa Chang. Want to hear this podcast without sponsor breaks? Amazon Prime members can listen to Consider This sponsor-free through Amazon Music. Or you can also support NPR's vital journalism and get Consider This Plus at plus.npr.org. That's plus.npr.org.