The Diary Of A CEO with Steven Bartlett - Gavin Newsom, The Next President Of The US? "America's At Breaking Point & Trump's Playing Dangerous Games!"
Episode Date: July 24, 2025Is Gavin Newsom America’s Next President?! The California Governor breaks his silence on the 2028 US presidential campaign, exposes the TRUTH about the Epstein files, reveals what Trump REALLY told... him after calling him 'Newscum', and uncovers Trump's plan to rejig the 2028 election! Governor Gavin Newsom previously served as Lieutenant Governor of California and Mayor of San Francisco, and famously survived a 2021 recall election with 62% of the vote. He is co-founder of the hospitality and business empire PlumpJack Group, and hosts the This Is Gavin Newsom podcast, where he has raw, honest conversations with critics and allies alike. He explains: Why Trump wants him arrested and is trying to stay in power for 2028 Why America is at a breaking point and creating broken, lonely males How Biden was pushed out by panic and pressure from the Democratic party Gavin’s personal story of being bullied, dyslexic, and broke growing up How his mother worked 3 jobs and rented out her own bedroom to survive 00:00 Intro 02:40 Can You Believe Your Life? 03:22 Are You the Next President of the United States? 06:11 Your Earliest Context 08:02 Struggling With Learning Difficulties 10:45 We Didn't Have Much Money 13:18 Dyslexia 14:44 Were You Bullied? 18:01 Principles Learned From Starting Your Own Business 22:40 Why Did You Leave Business for Politics? 27:52 Becoming Mayor of San Francisco 32:10 Your Mayoral Race and Your Mum's Diagnosis 37:20 Being With My Mum Through Her Assisted Dying 43:47 How Did You Mess Up? 48:05 Ads 49:14 What's Going On With Young Men? 52:42 What Did the Democratic Party Get Wrong About Men? 55:40 How Would Things Change if You Became President? 58:47 Inviting the Opposition to Your Podcast 1:02:26 Immigration 1:05:45 Who Does Trump Care About? 1:07:19 Does Trump Want You to Fail? 1:12:16 Trump Bribing the Elections 1:12:53 Trump and the Election Fraud 1:16:55 Democrats Not Helping Entrepreneurs 1:19:42 Elon Musk 1:23:24 Your Approach to Entrepreneurship and Tech as President 1:26:26 Is the World Safer Under Trump Than Biden? 1:27:59 Was the Democratic Party Trying to Overthrow Biden? 1:34:08 Am I Sitting With the Future President of the United States? 1:40:17 Homelessness Issues in California 1:43:26 Jeffrey Epstein 1:47:06 Have You Received a Sign From Beyond? Follow Governor Gavin: X - https://bit.ly/44JlVmN Instagram - https://bit.ly/4f1xsRM This Is Gavin Newsom Podcast - https://bit.ly/4m22KdA You can pre-order Governor Gavin’s memoir, ‘Young Man in a Hurry: A Memoir of Discovery’, here: https://amzn.to/40vvfbn The Diary Of A CEO: ⬜️Join DOAC circle here - https://doaccircle.com/ ⬜️Buy The Diary Of A CEO book here - https://smarturl.it/DOACbook ⬜️The 1% Diary is back - limited time only: https://bit.ly/3YFbJbt ⬜️The Diary Of A CEO Conversation Cards (Second Edition): https://g2ul0.app.link/f31dsUttKKb ⬜️Get email updates - https://bit.ly/diary-of-a-ceo-yt ⬜️Follow Steven - https://g2ul0.app.link/gnGqL4IsKKb Sponsors: Justworks - http://Justworks.com KetoneIQ - Visit https://ketone.com/STEVEN for 30% off your subscription order Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Epstein and Trump were close.
Sorry, Donald, just a fact.
And when Elon Musk tweets Trump's on the list
and a few days later, there is no list.
It begs questions.
So they dangled this in order to get votes.
And they lied to people.
And we're only six months in.
And the vandalization that he's done pushing the boundaries on the
rule of law.
This is darkness.
Really?
Because I hear this every election cycle.
No, it's a dangerous game and America is struggling and I really worry about our democracy but
Trump is likely to lose power unless they can rig the game.
Governor Gavin Newsom, are you going to try and become the next president of the United
States?
Yeah.
Governor of California, Gavin Newsom.
Gavin Newsom.
Who is the real Gavin Newsom?
I think most people see me as sort of a slick guy, grew up with a trust fund, but I didn't come from any wealth.
Like my mom was her single mom.
She was working two, three jobs.
She ran out of her own bedroom, sacrificed everything for two kids. And I was going nowhere academically,
but she never gave up on me.
And as your sort of political career starts to accelerate,
she was diagnosed with breast cancer.
Yeah.
And she was in so much pain, suffering,
she's going to do an assisted suicide.
And I was holding her hand, and she's gone.
And her last breath.
But look, everything that finds the best of me,
grit, hard work, is reflected in her.
And that led to me sitting here with you
as governor of California in politics.
Is there any company in government
that look at the job he's doing?
He's a stone called liar.
There's always conflict between you and Trump.
I think he enjoys sparring with me.
I know he thrives on it, but I'd be lying if I didn't say it.
Every time I have a conversation, it's unbelievably cordial.
He says, you need anything, call me.
Including the night before he, quote unquote,
federalized the National Guard, but then calls me news.
He wants to take me out.
Do you think he's going to try and stay in power?
So I don't think I'm exaggerating,
but when people close to Donald Trump
send the governor of California, hey, they're not being around.
Just give me 30 seconds of your time. and the governor of California, hey, they're not in a route.
Just give me 30 seconds of your time. Two things I wanted to say.
The first thing is a huge thank you for listening
and tuning into the show week after week.
It means the world to all of us.
And this really is a dream that we absolutely never had
and couldn't have imagined getting to this place.
But secondly, it's a dream where we feel
like we're only just getting started.
And if you enjoy what we do here, please join the 24% of people that listen to this podcast
regularly and follow us on this app. Here's a promise I'm going to make to you. I'm going
to do everything in my power to make this show as good as I can now and into the future.
We're going to deliver the guests that you want me to speak to and we're going to continue
to keep doing all of the things you love about the show.
Thank you.
Governor Gavin Newsom.
Can you quite believe your life?
You're running one of the most consequential states in America, arguably the most
consequential state in America, but also I read that it's the fourth highest GDP in the world.
It's always in the headlines.
There's always conflict between you and Trump.
I just wanted to start with this question.
Can you believe your life?
If you talk to my 10 year old self, this is impossible.
I couldn't even dreamt it.
I don't know if it was a dream or a nightmare at 10.
I mean, I'm not sure a dream or a nightmare at 10.
I mean, I'm not sure this is what I wanted at 10. I'm not sure I wanted this at 20 or even 30.
And I know you're going to continue to shoulder roll what I'm going to say, but many of the bookmakers, the odds have you as being the next president of the United States in
2028. I'm going to throw that I know you're going to shoulder roll it and tell me California.
Well, that's surreal.
I mean, that's ridiculous.
I mean, that's something that even in those higher moments,
not low moments, where I may have had a little bit more
confidence, million years would never imagine
that I would be at this moment.
And yeah, that creates a lot of humility.
I have a lot of grace around that.
I mean, the idea that you're even in the conversation,
I know that sounds rote and cliched,
a little humble brag.
The fact that I'm in the conversation is extraordinary.
Is it a reality?
I don't know.
I mean, that's fate will determine.
I totally understand that,
but I wanna just get clear on one thing,
which is you would be honored to play the
role as president of the United States if and when that opportunity called or presented
itself.
Yeah, I mean, I don't know about playing the role, but if it if it, you know, if the moment
meets you and you meet the moment, if you can express with congruency the why and you
can do without the pretense and you could do it without the pretense and the, you could do it with authenticity.
And you truly believe that you add value
against others that may be lined up.
Yeah, but you know, I won't go through the motion.
I don't need to be something to do something.
For me, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's got to, I mean,
got to feel it.
It's got to be in my core, my soul. It's got to be a. It's got to be in my core, my soul.
It's got to be a burning need and desire to be accountable
and to reflect the moment and reflect the aspirations
and the dreams of millions and millions of people
and have enough confidence that you feel
you can deliver in that respect.
Do you think you could deliver in that respect?
Increasingly, which is strange.
I don't know that I could have said that a few years ago.
I mean that.
I feel like things for me have radically changed and we can get into why.
I mean, I've gone through—they're working on the seventh recall against me right now.
I went through a recall process.
I've been on the receiving end of a national effort to try to do everything to undermine
what I'm doing.
And going up against Trump and Trumpism and the surround sound and these propaganda networks 24 seven,
I'm more resolved now.
I mean, in an intense way, ways I'm discovering myself
in this process.
I'm in the other side of where I ever expected to be,
even a year ago.
And I feel deeply accountable and deeply responsible
and deeply motivated. I don't know where that
takes me, but I know I have a responsibility over the next 18 months. And I'm going to run the 110
yard dash. I'm not going to run the 90 yard dash on the way out of here. And so that's what I know.
I've got to sell by date and I'm going to put everything on the line. Let's get into it then
in terms of your early context
and your childhood, because I think you have to understand
that to understand the person and the complexities
of the person that I'm sat in front of today.
So can you give me the specifics of your earliest context?
You know, I think shaped like so many people watching.
I mean, how many of us, over half of us
had similar experiences of, you know,
a 19 year old who's pregnant with her firstborn me.
And a few years later, she's on her own with two kids.
She came from no wealth, no real privilege.
Her father committed suicide, was a prisoner of war coming out of World War II.
She struggled with her own identity, her own confidence.
She struggled raising two kids.
My father, who left us, not in disgrace, was an extraordinary figure
but an elusive figure growing up and sort of marked so much of my early
childhood as sort of longing and trying to connect. But the anchor, the rock, was
this rock star single mom. And everything defines the best of me and
the worst of me. This notion of grit, hard work, you got a manifest, nothing's
gonna be handed to you, is reflected in her. This notion of grit, hard work, you've got to manifest, nothing's going to be handed
to you is reflected in her.
At the same time, a lot of the anxiety and fear, sense of, you know, I mean, sometimes
loneliness.
I mean, she was a very lonely person.
Tessa.
Yeah, Tessa passed away almost two decades ago.
And I'm now older than she was when she passed away.
And, you know, I just, I never fully appreciated her to the degree I do now.
As a father, as a mother struggling with not only herself, just trying to be a good mother,
trying to have a career in life, but also struggling to support her kids and support
a kid, in this case me, who was struggling in every way, particularly with
pretty severe learning disabilities, with self-esteem, and never fully appreciated her sacrifice.
Give me the color on the learning disabilities, because someone looks at you, someone so
accomplished in both business and in politics, and you say that you had learning difficulties
as a child. I mean, I was a guy in the back of the class.
I was a guy with my head down.
I was a guy soaking wet sweating.
I was a guy shaking underneath, not physically shaking,
desperate not to be called on in the class.
I'm someone who still can't read a speech.
You're in the wrong business, I think, politics.
You can't read a speech.
You could do a teleprompter, but you'll never see me.
Haven't seen me go up and down looking at a speech. I can't. you can't read a speech, could do a teleprompter, but you'll never see me,
haven't seen me go up and down looking at a speech,
I can't, still struggle to read.
If I read, I have to underline everything,
I have to organize everything through,
not only underlining, highlighting,
and then I go back and reread what I underlined
in order to understand it.
Once I understand it, boy, I understand it.
I mean, then it becomes part of who I am,
which is the other side of dyslexia.
But I was a guy that was going nowhere academically.
I was that kid.
And I had a sister that was the exact opposite.
Well, I'm getting my 960 in American SAT.
She was getting 1380.
It was easy for her.
Everything was easy for her.
And so that contrast and that anxiety
that came from that contrast and that anxiety that came from that contrast
and the struggle that my mom had of trying to sort of work with me, work in, you know,
that was, that marked so much of, you know, my memories and decades of my life.
And at that early age, sub 10, what did you think of yourself? What was your self perception,
self image?
The thing that, you know, I don't think I've shared is the thing that is
most indelible in my life when my mother struggling with me, and I'll never
forget it, and I don't recall if I responded to her at the time, but it's
marked half a century of my life when she said it because I couldn't, I was
just, I was giving up, I couldn't read this chapter, whatever it was. She said it's okay to be average.
And I think about that all the time, man.
And I forgive her, I think, for that.
I think because she was struggling with me.
But that's a hell of a thing to say to a kid.
And I think she was just saying, it's okay.
You don't have to be your sister.
You're not your dad.
You'll never be that person.
I loved her deeply, and I'm here because of her.
But that shapes a lot of the early, that person.
And it's shaped who I've become, because I've
done everything in my power to overcompensate for the struggle and
for that mindset where I could have easily believed that and I could have easily become
that.
In terms of money in the home, I sometimes think of when I think about my own childhood,
money was almost this other person. You know it's funny we talk about attachment styles
and we say some people have like this avoidant attachment style, this anxious attachment
style, the secure attachment style. And I think of money in the same way. It's in homes,
it's a person, sometimes it's distant and never there. Sometimes it's causing the argument.
What was money in your household? Like what was the relationship that you'd formed with
it?
Well, I had interesting experience with money, because we didn't come from any wealth.
But my father, his relationships were attached
to extraordinary wealth, abundance of wealth.
His closest friends in the world
were some of the richest families in the world.
And while he didn't have himself tremendous amount of wealth,
he led a very wealthy lifestyle
Meanwhile my mom and I and my sister were there
Doing you know our Swanson's, you know frozen food. No, we're doing our crap macaroni and cheese We're doing our you know, but money was always the source of the stress because he didn't have much to give her
She didn't have much period so she was working two three jobs
And when I say two three jobs when. And when I say two, three jobs, when I say that, I mean literally two, three jobs. We had guests
always living at the house. I didn't understand what guests living at the house mean. She moved
out of her own bedroom to rent out the bedroom. If you wanted something, I had a paper route,
worked for Jeff Hicks Construction. If you want a basketball hoop, you're going to have to work
for it. There was nothing handed, nothing given. And so she was grinding. She's working in part-time waitress. I got in the restaurant business. I was
a busboy. And there's some moments that changed my life there that I'll never, ever, ever, ever,
ever forget. And so money was a source of stress, but also some evil in the context of too much
and seeing the abundance with people I knew, with trust funds,
with the relationship to money,
where they lost their motivation,
they lost their purpose, their meaning, their mission.
And so when I started getting a business,
it was never about making money,
it was about making a difference.
It was about building something, a brand.
It was about adding some value.
And that pursuit, I think, created a mindset
where the businesses actually really
thrived because it wasn't about the money, it was about something more important, it
was bigger than that. And so my relationship to money in that respect really became a gift,
a guide in terms of my entrepreneurial pursuits. Dyslexia certainly was the greatest gift in
relationship to the entrepreneurial suits. And that led to this, led to me sitting here
with you as governor of California in politics.
And when did you find out you had dyslexia? Because I read that your mother...
She didn't tell me. And I wonder, I think about this, because I've got a couple kids that are
struggling. And we made the mistake with one of them to tell him, yeah, I think you got it. And
now he uses it as a crutch. And she never wanted it as a crutch.
She never told me.
She said, I found out about it.
I was home early one day, came back from school.
And I don't know why, I ended up in her room.
And I'm looking, she's got a little desk
and there's a file open.
And I'm like, looking through files.
And then I saw the word dyslexia.
I'm like, the hell is this?
And I remember she got home, I said, mom, what is this?
And she goes, put that away. I'm like, what is it? And I remember she got home, I said, Mom, what is this? And she goes, put that away.
I'm like, what is it?
She goes, no, I said, and we had this conversation.
She said, I didn't really want to talk to you about it.
You've been struggling with it.
I said, I know, I can't read and I'm stupid, Mom.
And she said, no, you're not stupid.
We're working through all that.
And she just didn't want to create the stigma.
She didn't want me to use this as a crutch, as an excuse.
I think, and I'm angry back to the sort of dialect in my own brain about good bad. I appreciated
that because it was an excuse, not a victim. Decision is not conditions, term our fate
and future, this notion that we can shape things. And I wasn't stigmatized in that
respect so I can make excuses around it. I to work around it I had to work through it and
I think that was the path she she chose and I'm many ways grateful that she did
were you bullied by other children yeah we had a Baltimore Street I told the
president this too I speaking to Trump he we were talking a few weeks ago and
he goes hey hey, this new
scum thing, you know, because he calls me new scum, Gavin new scum.
He goes, pretty original, right?
I said, it's not, Mr. President, it's not particularly original.
And he goes, what do you mean?
What do you mean?
I said, well, there was the bully on Baltimore Street in Cortamodera, California, used to
call me new scum.
He goes, ah, hey, well, you know, what?
Yeah.
That's so good.
He was 7, 8, or 9.
You're 79, Mr. President.
I told him that, too.
And he moved immediately off on another topic.
Yeah, so I was the bowl cut guy.
The hair, the Dutch boy look.
You remember that, I don't know if you remember the old Dutch boy stuff.
Sort of American, iconic American brand.
And it was easy to see why I might've been bullied.
I've got a picture here of you looking at me.
In fact, isn't that great?
So you get the haircut, you get the vibe.
This is my father trying to insert,
so Irish Catholic family, my dad went to Catholic schools and so by
definition I went to Catholic school.
My mother who loved the sailor outfits, knee-high black socks.
Yeah, you're likely to get bullied going to the bus.
It's not the best cut, but we've all been on a journey with our haircuts.
It's good.
When I hear your story and the context you grew up in with your mother, with the bullying,
with the challenges at school, with the dad that's away and I know the stats around young boys that
grew up in particular that don't have a father figure at home. That for me that's a perfect
recipe for like small t maybe big t trauma in some capacity. Later in your life you talked about
having challenges with alcohol.
Yeah, oh yeah, no.
And I wondered if that picture, that's part of the same picture, which is putting the
mask on various forms of escapism.
Yeah.
No, 100% of what my grandfather that took his life was an alcoholic.
And my mother struggled a little bit.
And it was more self-medicating.
For me, I started discovering that as well.
Of course, look, I got in the wine business.
So I'm neatly attracted to the business side of it.
Opened a wine store right out of college.
Opened a number of restaurants.
Had seven or eight restaurants.
Have four wineries as I speak today.
So wine became ubiquitous in my life.
It was also my connection back to my dad, which is a whole other journey.
And you started that business in 1992, which was the year I was born. And as I sit here
32 years later, the business still exists, you've placed it into a trust.
It still exists and grew about, there were 22 or four businesses at peak, about a thousand
employees at peak.
Came from that one business.
I was the only full-time employee for almost two years.
Yeah, man, I'll tell you,
just the greatest training for politics in life,
just opening your own business, small business.
And those were some special days.
And went from that to a restaurant up the block.
A few years later, a hotel, a winery, now four wineries. We had five or
six hotels and nine restaurants at peak and businesses are still around.
I was reading that you had this sort of scheme where you gave employees $500 for a magical
moment award.
Well, it was a failure award.
A failure award.
And then it became, my sister took over because I got into politics and she said, I don't
like this failure framework.
I said, well, it's the best.
I love failure.
I'm good at it.
Dyslexics are the best at it.
I mean, there's nothing linear about our lives.
It's fail forward fast, missed 100% of shots you don't take.
So you were giving employees $500 to fail.
Yeah, I had a great, just a very brief example.
So I had a little hotel up in Squaw Valley, Lake Tahoe area,
and a lot of mosquitoes during the summer months.
It's an old motel built for the Winter Olympics,
the 1960 Winter Olympics, built in 1959 for the delegates.
It was supposed to be torn down.
It sort of patched together, and we held it together,
but it had no air conditioning.
So you'd keep the doors open, you'd keep the windows open.
But in the summer, the mosquitoes came in, drove the guests crazy. So we had this night
clerk, you know, those crazy night clerks come in, and he was getting complaints
all the time about the mosquitoes. And he on his own decided one day to go before
he went to work, get in at 11 o'clock at night, and he bought a bunch of catfish at
the store because there's a bunch of ponds around the business. And he
figured that's where all the mosquitoes are starting. So the catfish will eat the larva of the mosquitoes, and he'd solve the problem.
So he just on his own decided to buy a bunch of catfish, dumped them in the ponds all around
the hotel.
Well, about four in the morning, this engineer calls me, gruff guy, says, the raccoons had
a feeding frenzy and ran through the hotel because the doors were open with a bunch of, you know, flying fish in their mouths and fish everywhere.
And Ludo said, you got to fire that son of a bitch, this goddamn idiot.
And I started laughing, went up there the next morning, met with him and I said, this is a magical thing.
You tried to solve a goddamn problem.
And we created the failure award.
And I gave the biggest screw up every single month a bonus.
And at the end of the year, we'd put them all together,
January screw up, February screw up,
and we'd have the failure of the year award.
And did that for years until my sister said,
we'll call it the magical moment award.
But it was about initiative, taking initiative,
taking responsibility, taking ownership,
trying new things, seeing what works, iteration, entrepreneurial mindset.
It's not linear.
It's thinking creatively outside the box.
It's what a dyslexic by definition has to do.
And that's what I thought a successful business needed to do.
And it literally empowered our employees loved it because they felt seen and heard.
And safe, I guess.
And safe.
Because they were like, as long as they do it with you,
no one's jumping off cliffs here.
We're not encouraging recklessness, but risk taking.
And it literally allowed the business not just to survive,
but to start to thrive in ways I could never imagined.
I think that's really important.
It's just such an important lesson
to so many business owners, especially
in these changing times where everything's moving so quickly
in AI and technology, that most people are incentivized just to business
as usual. Protect our position if we're successful or to prolong convention or whatever that
might mean, but businesses that adopt that approach clearly have an edge in these rapidly
changing times.
Yeah, no. And look, I mean, back to just, you know, I remember there was a book Tom
Peters wrote called The Pursuit of Wow.
I mean, if there was one book that just hit me in the core, that sort of expressed everything
I wanted to become, he talked about hire the smile, train the skill, about finding these
superstar leaders and developing owners with your leadership team that they you know
He talked about I remember the Ritz Carlton at the time gave literally cash
To the folks that were cleaning the rooms and gave them the ability to use the cash as needed to solve a problem
For their customers they created ownership with frontline employees that were undervalued or devalued
He talked about I remember diversity as a business essential.
With all the anti-Woke, anti-DEI stuff we're dealing with in the United States of America,
I mean, from a business perspective, there's a business imperative to advance diversity.
But it was Peter's decades ago that really created that mindset for me in the business,
diversity broadly defined in every way, shape, or form.
And so the business became this sort of the pursuit of wow, of awe, of surprise, iteration,
of daring, energy.
So the core ideology just kept growing in that space.
Restaurants, hotels, wineries, and audacious adventurous people that wanted to sort of
build a brand,
build something that was special.
It wasn't about money.
It was about pursuit of meaning and purpose, moments.
So why did you leave that and do politics?
I know.
There was two things happen.
I got a phone call.
I was running the wine store, closing it up, doing bookkeeping, accounting.
The warehouse was in my apartment.
One night right before I'm closing up, this guy runs in to the store, and a very nervous guy.
And he's like, can you help me?
What's a good champagne?
I gotta get a call.
He's like, thank you.
Put it away.
I'm like, it's good.
He goes, can you wrap it?
I said, yeah, I gotta wrap it.
He says, thank you, man.
About 30 minutes later, the guy comes back.
I'm like, oh, damn.
Like, I screwed up or something.
But he's got this girl with
him. And he's knocking on the door and I open the key back up, he comes in, he goes, I just
want to introduce you to my fiance. And I said, wow, he goes, well, your champagne, I just
asked her to marry down the block at the Palace of Fine Arts. And we love the champagne. And
I just want to say thank you. You were so nice to me. I remember literally sitting there crying after he left. Like that's
everything that this is like, this is this is this is business, man. It's not a transaction.
It's relationships. Talk about moments, magic, man. That's that's it. To your point, I thought
this is it. This is my bliss. This is I'm going to keep doing this forever. And then I got a damn
call from the mayor of San Francisco. Can I just ask you on that question?
When that guy came in with his fiance, why was it so meaningful to you?
I can literally still see the emotion in your face some 20 years later.
Because what I did had meaning.
It mattered in a way I never thought I thought it was a transaction.
I thought he was buying something, I was selling something.
Wasn't that man?
It was marking a really important moment in his life.
Business changed after that.
It wasn't business.
It was just, it was a different proposition.
Then you get a phone call.
And I get a phone call and screwed everything up.
Willie Brown says, hey, you've been, you know, you just opened this store and, you know,
I've been reading you were complaining, getting those permits, it was taking too long.
And he's Willie Brown, Willie Brown, the mayor of San Francisco, former speaker of the California
Assembly, one of the most dynamic, one of the most extraordinary politicians in California
history, I would argue American history. And I don't say that lightly, some of the world's
great leaders will identify as Willie Brown as one of the most transformative political leaders.
And so there's a couple articles in the paper about me bitching about permits and parking
or something.
And he calls me and goes, listen, it's Willie Brown.
I'm like, oh, Mr. Mayor, he goes, hey, come on down next Wednesday.
I'm going to put you on the Film Commission.
I'm like, this is amazing.
I'm going to be on the Film Commission.
I'm 20-something years old, got a wine'm like this is amazing. I'm gonna be on the film commission I'm 20 something years old got a wine store about to open a restaurant
I was working on and now he's put me on the film commission. I go down to City Hall that next Wednesday
It's a group of 20 or 30 people
He's swearing a bunch of people in the commissions and he says and Gavin Newsom, you know
Opened a wine store down the block blah blah blah blah, blah, goes the new chair of the Parking and Traffic Commission.
I'm like, I thought I was going on the Film Commission.
Literally didn't tell me or anyone.
I didn't even know what chair meant.
And all of a sudden, 26, seven years old, I'm now the president of San Francisco's Parking
and Traffic Commission.
He just randomly put me in that position.
Inspiration, desperation.
What the hell I was doing. And that was how my political career began. Literally that phone
call, that appointment, not to film but parking in traffic. And that marked a pretty significant
moment in hindsight in my life.
And that was a pivotal moment in your trajectory because you were on course to continue being an entrepreneur probably for the rest in my life. And that was a pivotal moment in your trajectory
because you were on course to continue being an entrepreneur
probably for the rest of your life.
Yeah.
Could have been somebody.
So give me the whistle stop between that moment when
he places you in this role to here.
I know whistle stop is a tough word
to use to describe that journey, but what is the whistle stop?
Well, I just put my head down.
I learned everything I could, back to sort of the humility
of not knowing what you don't know
and recognizing success leaves clues.
And you can learn from everybody.
And I started listening, learning from people, absorbing.
And I applied myself as parking traffic commissioner.
So much so, nine months later, there
was a vacancy on our board of supervisors, our city council. And Willie Brown goes, you know what, you've
been doing a pretty decent job here, man. I'm gonna give you a shot. So I was a relatively
young guy. Now is the entrepreneur business person on our city council slash board of
supervisors. And I just hit the ground running. I opened, I by
that time, open a few extra businesses, it was a part time
job, but I started applying myself a little bit more full
time, had to put together a management group to start
managing the business and started applying myself more as
a supervisor spent almost seven, eight years doing that. And as
a relatively young guy 33, four, and Willie Brown was termed out as mayor and there was an open with the
mayor's seat. And I think at 33, I announced, why the hell not?
You know, give it a shot, miss 100% of shots you don't take.
And it was I think, pulling third or fourth, and decided to
go for it and ran for mayor of San Francisco.
You became mayor of San Francisco, you had a big impact.
While you were mayor of San Francisco. You became mayor of San Francisco. You had a big impact while you were mayor of San Francisco. One of the things people remember you a lot for
is your attitude towards same-sex couples
and the Defense of Marriage Act,
where you took a quite controversial stance at the time
by enabling, I believe it was same-sex couples in the state
to get their marriage licenses.
Well, it was same sex couples in the state to get their marriage licenses. Well, I was, yeah, it was 2004.
And my party, the Democratic Party, was not, people were not enthusiastic, weren't even
promoting.
In fact, they were almost universally opposed to same sex marriage.
And I had an experience in Washington, DC, Nancy Pelosi, the Speaker of the House, invited
me as a new mayor to listen to George Bush give his final State of the Union speech.
And I was there with an extra ticket, her husband's ticket, and I was up there in the
rafters listening to George Bush give his speech.
And in the speech, he's talking about Iraq war, he's talking about a lot of interesting
things.
And he ends with, it's time for a constitutional amendment to ban same sex marriage.
And everyone starts applauding.
And the people around me are applauding.
I'm like, Jesus.
I walk back out, and you had to put your cell phones,
early cell phone days, and we're all in line
waiting to get our cell phones back.
And I remember the couple right next to me,
as I'm waiting in line after the speech goes,
that was a hell of a speech the president gave.
I'm so sick and tired, I'll never forget these guys said,
I'm so sick and tired of the homosexual agenda.
And I'm like, and I literally turned homosexual,
that was pejorative.
And all I thought about is, man, I want to introduce myself
as mayor of San Francisco.
I didn't say a word.
I hadn't even thought about marriage equality.
When I ran for mayor, no one asked me about it.
They were talking about domestic partnerships.
It was literally that moment that I walked outside,
used that cell phone, called my chief of staff,
and said, we need to do something about it.
He goes, well, what do you mean?
And I said, well, I'm gonna come back tomorrow, man.
Let's do something.
So I just got elected mayor and made the decision then,
and it unfolded a few weeks later
to start marrying same-sex
couples.
And we married Phyllis Lyon and Del Martin.
They'd been together almost 50 years.
You talk about faith, love, and devotion, constancy, what marriage should be about.
They were denied the ability to marry for only one reason.
They were a same-sex couple.
And we decided to test the law and was told that people found out and they were not going to allow us to move forward
with this marriage.
We were gonna do a simple ceremonial marriage
and then file a lawsuit.
Courts opened at nine o'clock.
They were gonna do a temporary restraining order.
I realized I was mayor.
I could open City Hall earlier.
So we opened City Hall at eight.
We married Phyllis and Lyon, Phyllis and Lyon, and nine o'clock the courts opened and we waited for the decision and the judge said there's no irreparable harm.
There's no reason to have a temporary restraining which meant that we could keep marrying same-sex couples, which was not what we had imagined.
Fast forward what we call the winter of love in San Francisco,
not the summer love. February 2004, 4036 couples from 46 states and eight countries came to San
Francisco to live their lives out loud,
to say I do in this magical experience that just shook me to the core
and changed just my relationship to my party.
They were pissed.
They were furious.
The Democratic party.
Yes.
And I got an earful from all of them, people I adored, revered, the same people, the same
people said, all of them, I mean, this, revered, the same people, the same people, said, all of them, I mean,
it's just the rote advice that everyone goes,
whatever you do, just do the right thing,
do what you think is right.
I remember that's what they, you know,
hey young man, congrats on being mayor,
just do what you think is right.
You do what you think is right, who the hell are you?
I mean, I remember those, who the hell are you
to do what you just did?
And it sort of shook my confidence
in this whole racket of politics.
Like, what am I doing?
What did I just do?
But it was a hell of a first impression as mayor
to do that, and that sort of started my political life.
When I overlap the dates here,
you win your mayoral race in 2003.
Your mother was sick in the lead up to that.
She was diagnosed with breast cancer.
So you're contending with the woman in your life who's clearly had the most impactful
role on shaping who you are and being there for you when the odds were against you and
when no one else was.
In the lead up, as your political career starts to accelerate, she is suffering with breast cancer. Yep. And also suffering with her son being
in politics. She did not want me to go in politics. In fact, the biggest regret she had is that I was
walking down the path that my father was interested in that led to their divorce in the first place.
He pursued politics and lost in two elections for state senate and for county supervisor.
Ironically, the seat that I held lost both races, was in debt, was humiliated, defeated,
said he had a breakdown and left.
That's when they got divorced.
And she saw me walking down his path.
And she loved seeing me in business.
She ended up working for me as our bookkeeper.
And she saw my passion in the business.
She said, why the hell you get in politics?
Don't do this to yourself.
And she literally, near deathbed,
said just please don't do this.
Don't keep doing this.
She was really upset that I ran from there.
Something I think about, you know,
there are days where I'm like, I go, she told me so.
You know, when you're sitting there facing a recall,
and you're like, told you so.
A recall for anyone that doesn't know is?
Well, they just, you know, in the middle of,
you know, you get a four year term,
and two years later they say you,
and they get a petition and try to get rid of you.
And I faced that just second time in half century
in California.
I defeated it overwhelmingly.
But that was a hell of a thing to experience
and to see the nationalization of that recall.
I mean, the entire Republican Party
came out to try to take me out politically.
And you think about what your mom said,
you're like, she may have been right.
When did you realize that your mother wasn't going to make it with her breast cancer?
She went through so often as a case, she fought back, it was in remission and then boom it
hit again and it metastasized and it was, and she did, it was, I'll tell you, this I
will never ever, ever, ever recommend for anyone and this is just my own personal experience.
She called me, left a voice message.
Imagine getting this voice message.
I was very busy doing all this stuff and obviously not attentive enough to her and she was making
the point.
She goes, Hi honey, it's your mother.
I know you haven't seen me in a while, but next Thursday I won't be around.
So you may want to come next Wednesday because it will be my last day."
Literally left a voicemail like that.
I called my sister.
I'm like, what the hell is this?
She goes, she's crying.
She said she just told me she's going to do an assisted suicide because it's so bad.
She left a voicemail.
And so that next week I was there.
My sister and I were in her room.
Doctor comes in, gives her some what turned out to be oxycontin, I remember like early
on, like what are these pills?
She had to take those an hour before he got there.
She takes them.
God, it's my wife going through fucking photos like this, man.
It's all she wanted to see.
All the old photos of us growing up.
And we're sitting there, my sister on the left, I'm on the right, my mom there, took these pills,
waiting for the doctor, and she's going through all these old photo albums of us growing up,
talking about these moments. Yeah, come on, man. So, yeah.
But wanted to be there for her.
Doctor comes in and ministers and she starts gasping.
My sister runs out.
The doctor had already left.
And I was like, she's gasping for air.
And I'm just sitting there and holding her hand and she's, and her last breath.
And I just sat there, my sister, no one walked in,
I felt like for a day, it felt like hours,
but it was just probably 10 minutes
before someone finally came in.
Just sitting there with my mother, passed away,
and not realizing that moment, what it represented,
what it ultimately meant.
I regret that was hard.
I don't...
Being there for assisted suicide.
By the way, it's proud we changed the law in California.
That was probably done illegally.
I don't even want to know, and if you want to come after me, come after me.
She needed to do it.
She was in so much pain, suffering.
Now it's legal to do that, but it wasn't at the time when she did it. She was in so much pain, suffering. Now it's legal to do that, but it wasn't at the time when she did it. So that was a moment. And that was, you know, just became
mayor. It was back to just making stupid mistakes, man. You're a brand new mayor. You're overwhelmed.
You're trying to figure yourself out. You lose your mom. No excuse. Was it a marriage that was going south? You know, it was, you know.
What did she say to you when she, I had no idea that you sat there as she was administered
the drugs that took her life. What were those conversations? What do you say to someone
in such a situation where it's the last conversations you're having?
It was, you know, you say the perfunctory things, you know, just know how much you meant
to me, how much I love you, and all she cared about is just don't forget me.
She said that.
That was the last word she said.
God is my witness.
Don't forget me.
And one of the things I'm most proud of, my sister, we started through our Plump Jack.
We started a foundation.
So every year we raise money to cancer research in my mom's name.
And we've never forgotten her.
But she was someone that could have easily been forgotten, man.
She's just you
know sacrificed everything for two kids. She left us her character
experience, no money nothing. I mean she was just she struggled her own life and
just gave it all to us and so you know those are and we all have people in our
lives like that what a gift and you know I was blessed, and we all have people in our lives like that, what a gift, and you
know, I was blessed.
Were there any words unsaid?
Sometimes once people have moved on and you mature as an adult and a man, you see things
differently in you.
I mentioned earlier being perhaps way too candid, I imagine.
After this is over, my folks are like, what the hell were you, you know, who cares, life's
too short.
But when I said, you know, when she talked about being average,
I didn't confront her on that.
That was for me, perhaps more than her.
It wasn't about me, this moment.
It was about just, it was so important for her
to walk through all these memories.
And again, that's what it's about, man.
It's memories, moments. It's about nothing else.
When you later you win the race to become governor of San Francisco, do you think about her?
Do you think, do you wish she could have seen?
Yeah, I wish she could see my four kids.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Come on.
Yeah. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Come on. Yeah. I got sworn in as governor of California.
And my wife's there. And we got a three year old. He's got his pacifier and he's got his
blanket. And he in the middle of my speech runs up. I'm giving the speech stressed out
again. I don't read speeches. So it was a read. I had to read. So I'm like, I can't look, because I'm
going to lose my sight on the teleprompter.
And my son runs up.
My wife was nervous to run up on stage,
because it was like, this is a big damn deal.
And he comes right up, grabs me.
And everyone is moving around the audience.
I'm like, what do I do?
And I just instinctually lifted him.
And he put his head right on the side and started to fall asleep. And I read the speech
with my son. No one remembers a damn word I said. I don't remember a word. Everyone
remembers what it felt like. And I thought about that moment. If my mom was around to see that, it wasn't the governor.
It was the parent.
Yeah, sorry, man.
It's unbecoming.
Forgive me.
But that, I wish she was around for them.
Boy.
Well, I wish I could thank her for being an extraordinary parent. I never did
I told you I took her for granted. I never knew how hard it was until I had my own kids, but I I
think she'd be so proud of
Of our you know
Nine year old Dutch fifteen year old Montana. I think she'd be proud of me in that respect
I think she wanted me to be happy.
She wanted me to be a good husband.
I got this incredible rock star wife, Jennifer.
I got these four unbelievable kids, man.
Just filled me with joy.
I struggled to be a better parent, husband, politics, but that's all she wanted for me.
When you're in the public eye, as I guess I kind of am now because people watch me a
lot, there's always this balance between what people see, which is a very two-dimensional
thing, which is what people see of me, and then there's the imperfect messy home life,
which I contend with every single day.
Even on the way here this morning, I'm like, I'm going to be late for Gav and Newsom
because my girlfriend's having like period cramps.
And I'm like, I don't want to leave my girlfriend,
but I need to go, I'm going to be late.
And I'm like trying to, you know,
and then we had the alarms going off in the house
and then all the lights flickered
because we just moved in as you know.
And then the just craziness.
And then you look at my phone and there's business problems
and then there's my family problems are going on.
And then I come here and I interview you.
I'm sorry.
I feel like I got in your way.
No, no, no, but obviously it's a great, it's a tremendous honor as you know, but it's just,
I say that because there is a behind the scenes and the behind the scenes is not as perfect
as the exterior.
No, no, man.
You're alluding to the season of your life being filled with imperfection.
Yeah.
Tell me about the human imperfection that was taking place behind the scenes as you
were excelling professionally.
I think there was a magazine, The Economist did a headline said young man in a hurry,
he wants to be governor seriously.
And it wasn't question mark, it more there we are it was more like
like he's serious he actually thinks he could be governor it was kind of a
snarky headline and piece but the headline struck me a young man in a hurry
that's who I was was the entrepreneur I'm sure just trying to you know just
trying to make things happen trying new new things, seeing what works, having a little bit more success
than failure, learning from mistakes, moving on,
move pretty quickly, relatively young age.
I mean, I was, I think, one of the youngest mayors
in San Francisco history, my 30s,
and losing my mom, a relationship, my first wife,
it ended extraordinarily well. She's, I have nothing negative to mom, a relationship, my first wife, it ended extraordinarily well.
She's – I have nothing negative to say, et cetera, but it ended.
That was embarrassing.
It's in the public.
Everything's in the – I'm growing up in the public.
I'm growing up with this just bright lights.
How did you fuck up?
Yeah, I just – I got – I didn't – I wasn't situationally aware.
I wasn't emotionally mature in terms of,
I remember a good friend of mine, Mevy Silver,
who's just a rock star, got my, just got my act,
she is the one who got me to get my act together.
She goes, I said, she goes,
"'You're the mayor in San Francisco.'"
I said, "'Yeah, I know.'"
She goes, "'Well then start acting like it.'" I said, yeah, I know. She goes, well then start acting like it.
I said, what are you talking about?
I said, when I go on a ride,
I don't need to be in the front row.
She goes, you need to be in the,
I said, I don't need to,
I don't like being in the front row.
I don't like, I don't need to be right.
She says, the fucking mayor.
And you'll be in the front row
and you'll have people watch you in the front row
because that's what they want from their mayor.
And I'm like, I remember her saying this.
I'm like, what?
I just say, she's like, no, I'm good. She says, it's not about you. I said,
well, no, I don't need that. I don't need to. I like the job. I don't. That's not part
of the job. That's the pad. That's like the press conference side. I'd like, I don't.
And it was such a, she literally had such a, I remember that I remember sitting there with
dinner with her at Delancey street when she said that to me and it sort of hit me in the core.
There was a lack of maturity that I was just the entrepreneur that happened to be mayor.
And I, this is ironic, based on our conversation, needed to play the role a little bit more
than I was.
And I needed to mature.
And I needed to get my act together.
And I, you know, and that, I went through a process.
There was a couple years there, a year,
where, you know, a lot of things happened all at once.
And I was able to get through it, get reelected.
What were those things that happened all at once?
Well, I mean, divorce, you lose your mom, divorce,
dealing with a new job,
dealing with high profile
decisions that became very national.
All of a sudden I'm punching above my weight as a young elected official in ways that many
people didn't necessarily imagine.
Marriage quality issues being one of them, other things that I was involved in, to your
point about drinking a little too much.
And after the divorce, making some stupid mistakes
that I owned up to and regret,
and having to work through all that.
I mean, it's around this time.
And what I could tell this kid.
What would you tell him?
Get your shit together.
You're referring to an extra marital affair
which you owned up to?
Yeah, I wasn't married but she was.
And it's funny, I've got a little memoir that I'm putting out, ironically called Young
Man in a Hurry, next year.
I love the title, you can relate as well.
That I'm very, you know, I reflect on that and dive deeper in a very self-critical way
and I hope very honest way and I hope people can appreciate that.
I think people will because I think every normal human being understands that they too
are imperfect and especially when life takes hold and you're growing and you're learning,
we all make mistakes.
I've made mistakes and I expect to make a lot more.
Yeah.
But I think it's in the admittance of those mistakes and acknowledging them that that's
where we find out who we actually are.
Yeah.
You know?
And humiliated. Humiliated.
I had no knowledge of any of this stuff. So when you say humiliated, I mean...
I just humiliated. My dad, he said something, and I'll tell you, he carried forward with me.
He told me at the time, he was so disappointed in me.
And he said, you go home with the one who brought you to the dance.
He was so disappointing to me. And he said, you go home with the one
who brought you to the dance.
Fuck him.
And that was the impact I had on one of my friends
because of that very, and I don't know,
it's not a way, it's just like the shortest,
it wasn't even a relationship,
it was like just some stupid stuff.
And I've just tried to,
the fact that we're friends today is like really important to me,
like one of the most important things,
like to sort of reconcile.
And that's been really profoundly important
as part of the journey.
But yeah, I let him down.
I embarrassed my dad, I embarrassed myself.
I wasn't myself.
And I had to give my shit together.
And did, just a drop of the dime. I mean, back to just
Mimi Silbert, just a rock star. And she told me, you know, I remember she said, you're
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At that age, you were a very young man.
I mean, you still look like a young man now.
God bless you, brother.
But young men are in particular, have a particular set of struggles in the modern world.
And you've used certain words that sort of parlay into that.
You've used the words purpose and meaning.
And if we look at some of the stats around how young men are doing in the country, it's
not great.
And even young boys are doing terribly across the world
for a variety of reasons.
And when we think about the political climate
and what's happened in this last election cycle
and how young men are voting increasingly
for a certain set of ideas, what do you
think is going on with young men?
And what is the solution or answer that will
lead them to a better outcome?
I'm really proud.
My wife, who's been a real leader.
She's done a half dozen documentaries.
She did one that was particularly well received, called
A Misrepresentation About the Miss and Disinformation
Around Women and Girls.
She followed up with two years later in 2015
with a documentary called The Mask You Live In about masculinity.
In 2015, she was highlighting all the things, the trend lines a decade ago that are headlines
today as it relates to the crisis of boys and men.
And she was noting the suicide rate.
She was talking about deaths of despair.
She was talking about educational attainment.
She was talking about all these issues
that were a next level crisis.
And it was so ahead of her time in so many respects.
And she's come back to me on that over and over again,
particularly with our two boys and their maturation
versus my two girls in the relationship
we have to our deeper understanding of how men
and girls and women and boys are different.
And so this is code red in this country, around the world increasingly.
And if it was happening to any minority group, particularly my party, the Democratic Party,
we'd be all over it.
Instead, we've been timid about it because men have this sort of hierarchical benefits
in society that go back hundreds and hundreds of years of men are really struggling,
really.
Men still dominate in all these key positions of power and influence.
But when you see all what's happening underneath, it is a crisis.
And as a consequence, the Republican Party, Donald Trump in particular, and I think some
respects, what's happening in this sort of manosphere, and I don't mean that pejoratively,
but there's been not an exploitation,
at least there's a recognition and a relationship to it that has attracted a lot of young men that
are seeking meaning, purpose, and mission. And as a consequence, it's also been weaponized,
particularly by one party in a way that I don't think is ultimately beneficial or positive.
Our party needs to own up to that that and we need to address these realities.
Richard Reeves is doing amazing work on it.
Scott Galloway is doing amazing work on it.
So many folks in this space, you know, and Kat's been doing a decade ago talking about
it.
But Democratic Party, my party, needs to own up in this space.
And just so I'm not, you know,
accused of preaching and not practicing, I've worked for the last six months on
an executive order that we're about to release in this space that goes to
issues around education. It can't be what you can't see in a lot of these
kindergarten, elementary teachers. Most of them are women. It's so about recruiting
more men to become teachers, focusing
on caregiving, focusing more broadly on very intentional interventions to begin to address
this crisis.
The Democratic Party, I think it's fair to say, most certainly played their hand wrong
in this regard. And the word played is obviously again comes loaded. But very much, I think people could fairly say, to some degree, turned against or misunderstood men, is probably
a better way of saying it, misunderstood the plight of men and boys. And the Republican Party, I think the message that they offered, although there's shades of behavior or narrative that is not productive, at least spoke directly to men.
100% we didn't.
What do you think the Democratic Party got wrong as it relates to appealing to young men?
What's the narrative that the Democratic Party projected but shouldn't have?
I think there was just deep lack of empathy, care, any compassion to what was going on,
and recognition, even deeper understanding. I think it's still something I still have
conversations with folks and people are very uncomfortable in my party talking about this, particularly
members of my party in leadership positions, particularly women that just feel like, come on,
we just went through Me Too. We're struggling with gender equality, inequality. We still don't have
equal representations in all these CEO positions. And obviously, we're struggling in legislatures.
We continue to have this glass ceiling we can't break.
And what more proof do you need than Kamala Harris
and Hillary Clinton?
We don't even get paid for the same amount as men.
And what the hell are you talking to me about?
The unique plight and challenges of men.
And then you start saying, well,
there's gonna be two to one graduates
coming from our UC system here in California
in the next six years.
They're like, that's not true.
And then they see the dads, women,
and they go,
oh, I didn't realize that.
Or two to one women graduating versus men.
Yeah, I mean, we're on that track.
I mean, we're moving down that path.
Same in the UK.
You see the suicide rates are just off the chart.
You see the deaths of despair, meaning overdoses,
off the charts.
And you see all of these indexes of unhappiness,
and loneliness, and isolation.
You see, I mean, Scott, he's the best.
I mean, talking about what this means in terms of just
the inability for boys to ever become men,
to be caregivers, to be those warriors,
to be those role models, to even have the masculine traits
of just being able to be engaged in a real relationship,
as opposed to attached to some notion of relationship
online porn or something.
And so it's a comprehensive strategy
that needs to be engaged.
And for me, politically, it's, as I said,
it's code red, not just the substance, the morality of it,
but also the politics attached to it,
because the other parties weaponize this,
and it's multicultural, it's multi-ethnic. It's not just white male grievance that's being expressed in this
space.
If and when you become president in 2028 or another year, how is the attitude towards
men going to shift and what are the practical ways that you get there?
Well, I don't think you wait for that moment. I think we have to shape that moment.
I think we have to take responsibility.
We have to take account.
We have to have a sober, first of all,
you have to have a deeper sober reflection
of why the hell Democratic Party is at 27%
in polls just a few months ago.
I mean, it's a toxic party in terms of its brand.
Why?
Exactly.
We need to understand that.
I can give you 25 theories.
Can you give me a super,
because I'm not a politician, so I don't understand a lot of
political talk, but like that is staggering. Yes.
And why did it happen? Yes.
Thank you. That's the question.
It's one of the reasons I started my own podcast. It was part of that exploration. Again,
back to humility and grace. Two words I'll use over and over and over and over again, seek first to understand before you're understood. I listened to all the punditry
hours after the election results, and everyone was an expert. I'm like, that's amazing. You're
an expert. It was Israel, for sure. No, it was inflation, for sure. No, it was interest rates,
for sure. No, it was incumbency, for sure. No, it was woke, for sure. It was trans, for sure. No, it was woke for sure. It was trans for sure. Everyone was for sure. They
knew exactly what it was. I'm like, this is amazing. Everyone just knows what's going
on. Meanwhile, I'm like 20 pages in writing this down saying, oh, it's about the loss
of man. Oh, no, it's about the man. No, it's about Joe Rogan. We didn't go into, oh, for
sure. It was about, she didn't say this or she was of the view for sure. I was about she didn't you know, she didn't say this or she didn't was with a view for sure
She could have separated from Biden. No is it it was a cut and and then I'm like, well, wait a second
I I need to really understand this more fully
well, you know
and so that became my own journey back to the entrepreneur the
Trying to iterate and deciding to get some folks that I vehemently disagree on
With it on my on a new podcast Charlie Kirk,
because you know, for sure, he was successful in convincing a lot of young men to turn out
in record numbers for Trump. I wanted to learn about that back to notion of success leaves
clues. I want to pick his brain. What are you doing right, man? Show some humility and grace
as it relates to not try to be argumentative in the interview. I'm trying to pick, I want to know why you're so successful.
That offended a lot of people.
What did you discover?
He's got a plan.
He's executing a plan.
He's got a strategy.
He's got a date that he's identified
with a goal attached to it.
He's got a dream with a deadline.
He's there in places people don't expect him to be.
He's meeting with folks without any filter. He's willing to confront people
he disagrees with and agrees with. He's willing to be out there on the field.
He's organized a construct and he's been very deliberative of building a sense
of community and this notion of community. We all want to be connected to
something bigger than ourselves. It's a big part of this as well, part of the MAGA movement.
And particularly with people feeling disconnected, you're naturally going to want to find your
way back to something bigger than themselves that sort of moors you and gives you a sense
of purpose and meaning as well.
And when people are lost, they do go in search of someone who resonates with them and someone
who speaks directly to their plight.
And my observation as someone that's not an American, when I think about someone like
Charlie Kirk versus Kamala Harris, it's the absolute opposite approach.
Kamala Harris, lots of people say she avoided going on Rogan, she wanted him to fly to her,
she wanted Rogan to fly to her, she was going to give him a tiny short time window, it was
probably going to be a bit sanitised in all respects.
And then Charlie Kirk sits on campuses across the US and has students come up and ask him tiny short time window, it was probably going to be a bit sanitized in all respects.
And then Charlie Kirk sits on campuses across the US and has students come up and ask him
any question and his response is, he shows you his response to his credit and he doesn't
care about sanitization or being politically correct.
Correct.
And he puts it on YouTube for hours and hours and hours and hours.
And I think in a glass box world where we get to see inside now because of technology,
the black box approach where your PR team paints, paints, tries to paint an image on
the outside is over.
And we saw it in the selection cycle.
And you're doing it, you're leading the, I have to give you credit, you are leading
the charge there because I can't think of another key political figure globally, who has started
a podcast where you literally invite the other side on. So you're doing, I think you're playing
the glass box approach.
I love the way you describe that and everything you said resonated with me. Had Steve Bannon
on, which is just, you know, itself was interesting.
Look, these folks exist and persist.
You can deny it.
My party can deny it at its own peril.
Back to your point about what the hell's happened to my party.
And so trying to understand that, trying to unpack that.
But you know, it's interesting, just I think, you know, coma is an old friend of mine.
I don't want to get into a coma.
And I say old friend and people roll their eyes in politics.
People say, you know, old friend,
that means they're frenemies.
But we go back before we were both in politics.
We both share that Willie Brown, the former mayor,
in common in terms of a relationship that we both had.
And as a consequence of the relationship we had with him,
we were able to get to know one another
as sort of this cohort.
And I think a lot about, you know,
what we've just gone through.
I wish I'd love to see Kamala on your show.
I'd love to see your picture of mom and dad.
And I know her as well or better than most.
But I would love to see that side of her.
I would.
So this notion of, what'd you say, glass box?
Glass box versus black box.
Black box.
Hey, I'm on here for a reason.
It's like I'm out of any excuse.
Look, you are who you are.
And let it all out there.
And I think people, I think we claim
we long for authenticity.
I still mostly believe that.
Sometimes I question that, because people want you to be your authentic self, but they're like, well, don't swear as much. Or still mostly believe that. Sometimes I question that, because people
want you to be your authentic self, but they're like, well, don't swear as much or be your
authentic self, but don't be so emotional or be your authentic self. But there's a but.
But I think at the end of the day, I think we've crossed that. I think we're on the other
side. People just want more of you, whoever the hell you are.
Regardless of what it is. Because even the crazy thing I observe about Trump is even the imperfect things he says
that would once upon a time have revolted some people and would have had adverse reactions,
the fact that he's willing to say them creates the impression in my mind that I know who
he is.
And you don't have to like someone, but if you trust that you know who they are,
then you feel, I think, safer in predicting what they'll do.
Totally.
Now, if I don't see Kamala sat on Joe Rogan or someone
like this getting to know her unfiltered,
you know, your team didn't tell me this.
Your team didn't give me any parameters.
They didn't say, you can't ask him about this.
Don't talk about this.
There was no parameters.
At least people will know who you are.
Yeah. And I think most people don't. They see me as sort of a slick guy that, you know,
was like they think I grew up with a trust fund, everything was handed to them. People
don't know my entrepreneurial background. I don't think they believe what they may have
seen on Fox News out here or so, you know One American News, and the weaponization of that.
And so it's critical.
I think for our party generally, I think for both parties now,
you've just got to get out of that bubble.
I give Trump, to your point, credit in that respect,
in every way, shape, or form.
You criticize him for many things.
You can't criticize him for accessibility,
for at least appearing to be authentic in terms
of his approach, his willingness to confront and engage.
And I think that's very refreshing.
How do you think America is doing?
I think we're struggling.
Our identity, I think Trump has made us feel free to shove
again.
It's not our better selves.
The sort of John Meacham language,
the soul of America is struggling.
And I really worry about our institutions.
I worry about our democracy.
I worry about neighbors turning on neighbors, people forgetting the universal truths that
we all want to be loved.
We all need to be loved.
I talked about everybody needing to be connected.
We also need to be respected.
And I think people are talking down to each other, talking past each other.
That's again why I want platform people I disagree with.
And Newt Gingrich on, former speaker Gingrich, who led my recall effort against me.
You know, I just I'm trying to just find some balance in that respect because, you know,
they're good people that vehemently disagree with us.
I don't know that it benefits any of us to demean or belittle folks.
That's my thing with Trump.
He attacks vulnerable communities.
My mom, her real, early, indelible inspiration for me,
in terms of one of those two, three jobs she had,
wasn't just working as a waitress
and doing the bookkeeping, but she
worked for aid to adoption of special kids
with the DeBolt family.
They had kids with intellectual and physical disabilities.
And I remember spending time with these kids. And I hate bullies. I mean, forgive the word
hate. I know I just, I dislike, I hate bullies. I don't like people demeaning other people.
I don't like people scapegoating, scapegoating vulnerable communities. My why is standing
up for ideals and striking out against injustice. It defines nine
out of ten things for me, personal, professional, standing up for ideals striking out against
injustice. And it's just to me unjust to see people demeaned and belittled and to use to see
vulnerable communities used as pawns to talk about, you, whatever, in Florida, and talk about immigrants and
demeaning in ways, and they have to zig and zag if they want to avoid getting killed by
an alligator or something, or mocking people with disabilities.
That's where I stand firm.
And right now, my biggest fear, you asked about how our country is.
I feel like Trump has opened that overton window in a way that I'm very concerned about
our ability to get back to find our better humanity.
Who does Trump care about?
Himself, period, full stop.
It's not complicated.
He doesn't care if he's the healer, the hero, as long as he's the star.
I mean, it's, and that's just anyone that's spent time with him, I spent time with as much or more
than any Democrat, certainly any Democratic governor in the country period, full stop.
I did it through COVID, my first term and certainly even in the second term.
And what surprised you?
Nothing. The surprise me now is that he's a very different guy than he was in the first term.
He's, there's no limits now. It's, There's a megalomania there.
Megalomania.
He feels no limits now. And you feel that in every way. He can say and do whatever the
hell he wants. And there's no oversight. There's no advice and consent. There's no co-equal
branch of government. Speaker of our House of Representatives completely abdicated that.
The question is, do the courts hold up, or are we the people?
And I'll tell you that we're celebrating
our 250th anniversary of the founding fathers,
the best of the Roman Republic, Greek democracy,
and this notion of system of checks and balances,
popular sovereignty, and I think it's on life support now.
And I don't say that lightly.
I say that very thoughtfully.
And I say that as a guy that's watched
the President of the United States not send military
in his first term or his first six months
anywhere in the world except to an American city
where there's 5,000 military in the streets of Los Angeles,
a war within.
So I say this very soberly and mindful of the moment we are in American history.
Do you think he wants to see you fail?
I think he wants to take me out and down at the same time I think he enjoys the sparring with me.
I think he thrives on it. I know he does.
Because he calls you Gavin new scum.
Yes.
But then meets with you privately.
Yeah.
And what are those meetings like?
Unbelievably cordial, unbelievably. It drives people crazy when I say this, you gather new scum, but then meets with you privately. And what are those meetings like?
Unbelievably cordial, unbelievably, it drives people crazy when I say this, but I'd be lying
if I didn't say it.
Every time I have a conversation, including the night before, he quote unquote, federalized
the National Guard.
We had an unbelievably good conversation.
And we were going back and forth.
He said, use this cell phone, keep calling me on the cell phone directly.
You need anything, call me. You need anything, call me, which is an amazing final statement
as I hung up only to read eight hours later that I knew scum. I read him the riot act,
which he never did, completely made 100% made it up and then federalizes the guard. It's
a game. It's a show. It's a dangerous game, and it's a very exhausting show, and
it's becoming derivative and more dangerous.
Isn't this just how politics goes in America?
No, it shouldn't.
Look, I used to have my beef with George W. Bush, George H.W. Bush, we'd have our beefs
on the other side.
Republicans, certainly, with Clinton or Obama or even Biden, long for
those days. University, I go in the office of Ronald Reagan's old office, Governor Ronald Reagan,
that's my old office, is governor of California. I mean, you know, his last speech in the Oval
Office, his last speech was about the life force of new Americans, Lady Liberty's torch,
our better angels. I mean, what happened to that Republican Party? And this is different. This is darkness.
Really?
Darkness.
Because I hear this every election cycle.
No, this is, this is dark. We're only six months in. The vandalization that he's done to this
democracy and institutions. I mean, eliminating oversight. I'm not just talking about a co-equal
branch of government.
What does that mean for the average person that doesn't know?
It means there's no, he's eliminated the inspector generals, auditing capacity. He's going after
political opponents, removing them from key positions of power and influence and putting
in acolytes, putting out people that just do his bidding.
He's pushing the boundaries on the rule of law.
He's threatening to recall not just people he disagrees with.
He wanted my arrest.
Remember, the president of the United States said Newsom should be arrested.
They said on what grounds?
He got elected.
He said he doesn't like the fact that his political economy got elected.
He doesn't say that lightly.
And once a mind is stretched, it never goes back to its original form. It means he doesn't say that lightly.
Once a mind is stretched, it never goes back to its original form.
So every time he does this, he's sort of testing these boundaries.
And this is what makes me more concerned.
I'll give you a proof point.
God is my witness.
We're sitting here.
When we do this today on this podcast, I just read this morning that Donald Trump was on
the phone with the Texas legislature, and they're going through a redistricting thing to basically
get five more seats for the midterms, because they're likely to lose the midterms. And Trump
is likely to lose power unless they can change the districts and rig the game so he stays
in power.
Do you think he's going to try and stay in power?
When people close to Donald Trump,
when people close to Donald Trump send the governor of California
a hat that says Trump 2028, they're not being around.
They sent you a hat saying Trump 2028.
2028. They're not screwing around.
I sat in the Oval Office for 90 minutes with Donald Trump, first Democratic governor to
do that.
And he looked around and said, hey, who's behind you?
I looked around the pictures and I'm like FDR.
And I literally turned, I'm like, oh, seriously?
He goes, yeah.
Because what do you think, three terms, four terms?
I said, oh, come on.
And then he just starts laughing.
Because he's just lighting, he's having fun.
But again, he's throwing things out.
He's yes, he's iterating.
Do you think he would stay for a third, fourth, or fifth?
I mean, he, I think still he's the guy that tried to wreck this country, tried to light
our democracy on fire.
He said it was a day of love, January 6, so much so that he literally, as you know, pardoned everybody
that participated in that melee.
I mean, that happened.
That is grounds in and of itself to question whether or not I'm overstating anything.
That was first week in office.
This is shock and awe.
We have people in masks going to car washes without identifying, and people are disappearing
in the streets of America today.
Thousands of people disappearing on the streets of America today based on what you look like,
your skin color, on the streets of America today that's happening that is not normal.
And every day he's able to shape shift and distract us to move someplace else.
I've got a big announcement, huge announcement on Putin.
I'll do major sanctions in 50 days.
Really?
I mean, this ability to distract, it's serious.
What lies underneath is serious.
And I don't think I'm exaggerating it.
And I'm very, very cautious when it comes to this kind of language because
you're right. When you tend to say, you know, start crying wolf here, I don't think we're
overstating the seriousness that we have to push back, the seriousness of purpose to which
this moment needs to be met, that is.
Really? This is not just another president comes in,
they do a bunch of changes, a bunch of executive orders,
and then they leave in three and a half years.
He tried to stay in the office.
He called the elections chief in Georgia
and asked, I just need a few thousand votes.
He wasn't fucking around.
He was not joking about that.
He was dead serious about that.
And had they found that, he would have rigged his own election.
What more evidence do you need?
He's quite literally, they're so concerned about taking over the House.
Now Democrats were on path to do it.
They have to re-rig the game.
And you think if they don't take back the House of Representatives, they won't move
from some form of voter suppression, the likes of which we've never seen in this
country, threats of martial law.
What do you think this whole experiment with 5,000 military, weeks and weeks and weeks,
doing nothing, by the way?
They're sitting in the armory.
They're doing nothing.
They're there for show, but he's pushing the boundaries of what they're capable of doing,
testing the courts and the constitution.
That's for a larger purpose.
And I'm not trying to be, you know, I'm not trying to be, it may not be intentional purpose
yet but they'll place an opportunity to utilize the lessons learned here today to extend their
reach and power tomorrow. And I very much yes, I worry
about our democracy in three and a half years. And I worry about that election if they maintain
their power in the House of Representatives. I'm that deeply concerned, dead serious.
On the balance of probability, do you think it's likely Trump will stay try and stay in
office in 2028?
On the balance probability? No.
No, okay.
But I can see a scenario, but not on the balance probability. And that's on the basis of one thing, time of life.
Oh, okay.
If he was 69, not 79.
Look, he, this is the great grift.
He did what he never did in the first term. He played in the margins.
He was able to take advantage of his brand and his businesses and make a few bucks here and there but not the money
He's making now. I mean the crypto everything he's doing
I mean, I mean the kids now selling cell phones the whole thing monetizing everything coming out with new brands and new plant
I mean he finally is
Doing what he didn't do the first term. He's now President of the United States,
but now he's going to make a fortune.
So when he's no longer president,
he'll have a $400 million plan that
has a billion dollars of upgrades on it.
That will be donated to the foundation
that he can use for the rest of his life,
thank you to the Qataris.
He will have billions and billions of dollars.
He'll make the vast majority of his wealth
in just a few years as President of the United States.
He will set himself up in that
respect. He'll have hundreds and hundreds of millions of dollars of excess campaign cash,
which he'll be able to use for whatever luxurious lifestyle he ever needs. And I imagine that may
satisfy him, as long as he gets his person in to replace him so they can continue that grift going
forward. The American people elected him. They said, that's our guy.
That's why my party needs to own up to that.
And this is existential.
We need to do better and we need to.
I'm, that's correct.
Are you, are you faithful, hopeful that the democratic party are going to wake
up in time to field a serious campaign that can compete with that very sort of
dominant prevailing narrative?
I think it starts yesterday. It's not about the guy or gal on the white horse to come save the day.
It's not about 2028. It's about the midterms, which we just talked about.
It's also about what happens to be now in the midterms. It's about the rule of law. It's about courts.
It's about governors. It's about states. It's about mayors. It's about we the people, citizens.
I mean, look, I was inspired in the No Kings Day.
I mean, you guys know a little bit about kings.
I mean, the No Kings Day, five million people showed up on Trump's birthday.
That gave me hope.
Which was a sort of a protest against authoritarianism?
Yeah, against, yeah.
It was, look, it was, Justice Bray and I said, in a democracy, the most important office
is not office of president, governor, mayor, office of citizen. You're an entrepreneur.
How do you think your party have done with appealing to entrepreneurs?
Terribly.
You preside over San Francisco, which is globally, we think of as the center point of innovation
and technology.
Terrible.
But I think the perception is that the Democratic Party don't like entrepreneurs and the Republicans,
it's the home of entrepreneurship.
In fact, all of my friends that are entrepreneurs, if they were being honest in private, they would say that they lean towards the Republican
Party as it relates to entrepreneurship.
It's amazing. But you know what's interesting? Since 1989, the end of the Cold War, in the
United States of America, there's been 52 million jobs created. There have been three
Republican administrations, three Democratic administrations. So it's fair to say, how
do we do Republican administrations, Democratic administrations? Since 1989 in the Cold
War to the end of last year, 52 million jobs. And you'd say, well, it's maybe 50-50,
maybe Republicans on the basis of your entrepreneur friends. Republicans
probably did 60% of those jobs were created. Well, 50 of the 52 million were
created under Democratic administrations. 1.9 million jobs created during
Republican administrations. You look at the last three Republican presidents, they have
one thing in common, recessions. During the last administration under Joe Biden, created
16.6 million jobs. And I know a lot of those were COVID jobs, but he blew past that after
18 months. He created eight times more jobs than the last three Republican administrations
combined.
This economy does better.
Job creation thrives during Democratic administration.
But perception is exactly what you said.
Yes, so you gave me the logic.
I know.
But the brain isn't orientated towards logic.
It's narrative.
Where's the economy in this country?
Why are we the fourth largest economy in the world?
We have four of the top seven market cap companies in the world. Nvidia just came with four trillion dollar market cap.
We dominate 32 of the top 50 AI companies are right here in California. We dominating every key industry.
We're the biggest manufacturing state. We dominate name an industry. California dominates.
So why entrepreneurs are pissed off?
Why entrepreneurs in your state pissed off?
71% of the GDP in this country are blue metro counties.
Elon left, he went to Texas.
He left and came right back.
Where's Grok?
Where's his R&D headquarters, world headquarters?
Where are the vast majority of his jobs?
They're SpaceX and Tesla.
He did that because he wanted to make a buck so he can avoid capital gains and avoid income
tax as he cashes out on 20 years of largesse by the taxpayers in
California that created a regulatory environment that created the industry because of our vehicle
emission standards and subsidized that industry with billions and billions of dollars of taxpayer
money to make Elon rich.
And then he turned his back so he didn't have to pay capital gains.
But you know what I think that-
And by the way, he's back all his AI
Where's all his AI? It's in California. Where all of his research and development folks all in California
Everything you said might be true and I don't know the details of it
So I can't comment on that but again perception
I know come back to perception agree when I in my you know over in the UK when I watch the Democratic Party
Attacking these really successful individuals, and Biden
attacking Elon Musk.
Look, I'm not going to go into the details of Elon Musk's and his infections.
Elon's unique in that aspect.
He makes it easy to attack both parties.
But let's just try and hit this point, which is the Democratic Party tend to be the ones
who are criticizing the world's most successful
people and saying that they're this and this and never pausing to say, actually, they did
something good as well.
And it's the lack of nuance for me where I go, I can't trust that these people are just
pure evil.
I can't trust that they're just pure evil and only bad things, which is all I hear.
But on the right side, you might hear the opposite.
Where is the nuance here?
Can you say something positive about Elon Musk?
I've been, there's been no bigger champion of Elon Musk
for 20 years than I have.
I've been his biggest supporter.
In fact, I have one of the first Teslas
right off the factory floor.
I've been his biggest promoter and supporter
for decades and decades.
So I've said that over and over and over again.
It all tends to be negative about these entrepreneurs.
You can understand from left politics around the world does seem to have a certain disdain
for successful entrepreneurs.
So let's talk about that.
It is the worst part of my party.
I can't stand it.
I do not begrudge other people's success.
I'm inspired by it.
I admire it.
We opened this conversation up all these heroes of mine.
Richard Branson is a hero of mine.
I love his success.
I love his audacity.
I love his ability to compete.
I love his ability to promote, create jobs, opportunity, wealth.
I think it is a big problem in the Democratic Party.
And we do not do enough to make this fundamental point, you know, that you cannot be pro job
and anti-business, period.
And we need to say that and we need to demonstrate that.
Look, it drove me crazy.
Half my friends were up there,
like maybe not even half, a lot more than half,
were up there with Donald Trump when he got sworn in.
And the symbolism of that was he's got the back
and they have his back of entrepreneurs
and dream makers in this country.
And I thought, Jesus, I mean, just that alone.
Where the hell was my party?
Why are we making a case for entrepreneurs and business
leaders?
Do you respect Elon?
I've long respected him, but he's
changed in the last seven, eight years.
He just has.
And I say that with so many mutual friends, universally
saying that.
In fact, I was one of the last to come around.
I'm like, no, he's all right.
Even after he left, quote unquote, Tesla left,
which they never did.
They didn't move a job.
They just changed the corporate headquarters.
He came back a few months later.
You can go online and you can see a press conference I had
when he moved his world R&D headquarters back to California.
And I praised Elon.
And that wasn't that long ago.
That was after, quote unquote,
he left the state of California
But he's different now something's changed and and now of course that's been exposed across the spectrum
It's not just from a prism of left and right but I've long admired him
He created this entire market and he's a hundred percent right about this big beautiful bill
He's a hundred percent right that we're doubling down on stupid and we're investing in the past as
the rest of the world is leaping forward.
China's going to clean our clock as it relates to electric vehicles.
They're going to clean our clock in terms of the future and dominate it because of some
of what Donald Trump has just done and rolling back progress that was made over the last
decade or so, particularly as it relates to what just occurred with the IRA and notably
with the infrastructure bill
that the President of the United States, previous president passed.
So I agree with him on a lot of things, but some character issues that I question.
I use his name, I guess, because he's now so influential in this country, but he's
also like a figurehead of like a certain, you know, of entrepreneurship and innovation.
So he's, and now he owns X as well, so the platform's so big.
If you are ever to become president
How what's your attitude gonna be towards entrepreneurs like him?
And how is that different to the Democratic?
Celebrate a revere their entrepreneurialism. We celebrate them. We celebrate their contributions again. We don't we don't I mean I just the idea
That our party is branded by begrudging other people's success,
it's devastating to, I think, to the aspirations of what it means, so much of what it means
to be an American.
California is the dream.
It's attached to this notion of social mobility, that there's a limitlessness in terms of being
and doing anything.
And so my job as governor, and my job in any position,
would be to create the conditions where people feel included,
feel seen, where they can live their lives back,
what I said earlier, out loud, and we create the conditions
where their success becomes inevitable or irresistible.
And I think a lot of what leadership is,
is climate control, not in the sustainable sense,
and it's no longer command and control.
What I concern about now is the command and control of crony capitalism coming back
into the United States of America because of Donald Trump. You got to kiss
the ring. You don't kiss the ring, it's gonna be punitive. You want an exemption
on the tariffs, just make a call or rather better yet make a contribution.
Maybe you make a contribution indirectly by buying some crypto. And that contribution then gets the benefit.
Maybe you make a deal overseas on weapons and we'll take care of the golf course.
Maybe we'll take care of the new two towers for the family.
That's what's happened under Trump in just six months.
To a degree, never.
It's unimaginable in the United States to see it at this scale, at this level. And that's, to me, not free enterprise.
I've just invested millions into this
and become a co-owner of the company.
It's a company called Ketone IQ.
And the story is quite interesting.
I started talking about ketosis on this podcast
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have improved my endurance, have improved my mood and have made me more capable at doing
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later, these showed up on my desk in my HQ in London, these little shots and oh my God,
the impact this had on my ability to articulate myself, on my focus, on my workouts, on my mood, on stopping
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And I'm so honored that once again, a company I own can sponsor my podcast.
Is the world safer now under Trump than it was under Biden?
There's nuance to that.
I don't think it's a binary safe.
I mean, I think in terms of war and the probability of a world war three, I think it's more unpredictable
than it's been.
I worry about nuclear proliferation.
I worry about AI.
Biden wasn't doing so well.
When I watched that debate and he was struggling over his words and couldn't be coherent with sentences, I did...
I was his chief surrogate that night.
Chief surrogate?
Yeah. I was there representing the campaign to make a case for the...
Oh, so you were there? I actually think I saw you afterwards doing interviews.
I was doing my best to have... and go home with a guy who brought you to the dance. And I was proud to support him, but that was a difficult night.
Did you realize, was that the moment you realized that he wasn't doing well?
Right when he walked out on stage.
I was in the back, I'll never forget physically standing up as I was watching and going,
and I turned to my staff and said, something's off, right when he walked on stage.
Felt it.
It was the only time I saw that was at a fundraiser here
that he had after he had no sleep.
And we all just literally assumed it was just jet lag,
and he had flown back and forth and over a week
back and forth to Europe twice, and he had a late night.
And I thought, boy, he's just not on.
And that was in private, not just his public comments with President Obama that night.
There was a lot of talk rhetoric that there was an internal desire to overthrow him around that time,
because you could see on TV he was struggling in the polls and Donald Trump was reveling in it.
And then I heard this narrative coming up that Nancy Pelosi and the Democratic Party were having private conversations
and telling him to step down and forcing him out.
All cards on the table, 100% truth.
Is there any truth in that?
Yeah, no, a lot of that was happening.
I mean, a lot of people were,
I mean, there was a phone tree that lit up that night.
There was a text tree, phone tree, email, just blew up.
Saying?
People were in panic, total full-fledged panic.
And there was a need and desire to know that he was okay and that this was momentary or
discover there was something else, maybe had a cold, maybe there's some other issue.
And it led to those kinds of conversations that many have been made public, many private, led to meetings with Democratic governors
in the White House with the president around a table.
Including you.
Including me.
Mr. President, tell us, you know, what's your path?
How are you feeling?
Some honest back and forth with a few governors
that challenged them a little bit more
than one would have expected
with sort of protocol within the party.
And yeah, a real desire, obviously, to turn the page and ultimately that manifested with a decision he made and led to obviously, our nominee, his vice president.
He was effectively pushed out of the party by pressure.
Because he wanted to continue, that was clear. He said that.
Yeah, he believed he was the only one that could beat Donald Trump. Having beat him once,
he was convinced he could do it again. He believed that his record of the lowest black
unemployment, Hispanic unemployment, lowest unemployment for women, the best economy in
60 years as it relates to jobs and GDP growth, inflation that was cooling from 9.1 and was
moving in the right direction with the Chips and Science Act, with the infrastructure bill, the IRA, 400
bipartisan bills. He felt lowest uninsured rates. They felt like things
directionally were moving despite the inflation scars and then he can make
that case. He felt that he really did feel that way. A lot of the narrative was
that you were going to step in potentially at last minute and that I
know in your head you must have been mulling
and thinking about going back and forward
about different possibilities and outcomes.
Things were moving so quickly
and there was such little time.
I saw your name mentioned all the time
associated with stepping in to replace him.
No, but I was also the one that was out there
still campaigning for him after everyone else had turned his back.
You must be in your head at night thinking things could change.
You talked about what shaped me, those moments.
When I say no daylight, when I say I got to make up
for disappointing this guy and myself, when I'm in, I'm in.
And I'll tell you, the coin of the realm in politics
is loyalty, period, full stop. Willie Brown taught me that. And Joe Biden, I was going to have his
backside. Literally, I'm telling you, look me in the eye, because I know it's cynical, did not
think along those lines. After he dropped out, those minutes later, and my cell phone blew up,
he dropped out those minutes later and my cell phone blew up, I confess that there were a number of people that wondered.
And I imagine you can, you know, there
were plenty of people sort of circling go, well, maybe,
maybe this is the moment.
And what were you thinking once he dropped out?
To be candid, I'm going to get in trouble for saying this
because I haven't said it in public.
I was a little angry.
I didn't get heads up.
You didn't get a heads up that he was dropping out. I was just getting like a text, saying this, because I haven't said it in public. I was a little angry. I didn't get heads up. You didn't get a heads up.
I was just getting like a text two minutes,
because I was embarrassed.
I was sitting with a group of people.
I was, and I was like, my phone rang.
I was like, wow.
So I was, my first reaction honestly was like,
geez, all this stuff I did for this guy,
and not even a heads up.
And first missed call, true story.
I didn't even know it was unknown number. I didn't even look at it for about six hours and it was Kamala.
Kamala? She already made the call to me.
Saying what? Just a voice mail. Love to talk.
About what? Well, she was running. So it's, you know, and a few hours later I put out a press release
supporting her candidacy. What should the Democratic Party have done with the
wisdom of hindsight in that moment
instead of just putting Kamala straight in?
All geniuses in hindsight.
I don't know what you could have possibly done with just such a short runway.
You had the vice president of the United States, you had the apparatus that was built within
the party, you had the legal ability for her, because it was the Biden-Harris campaign to
transfer a lot of that.
You had little time.
You would have opened up to a circular firing squad
as it relates to the party.
In hindsight, it didn't work.
What could you have done with the benefit of hindsight
that might have worked?
Yeah, it could have, should have.
I don't live in that.
But I live where we were exploring a moment ago.
And that is in reflection more broadly of where the party is.
Less the individuals, and I think
that's our biggest mistake.
We're so consumed by the individual.
Identity politics.
Yeah, well, issues related to identity politics broadly.
But it's not just the person.
It's who we represent.
And there's a word we didn't use earlier,
but you used it in relationship to Trump,
weakness versus strength.
And I'll tell you, to me at the core, the end of the day, to me, it's that distinction
that perhaps says more things in more ways on more days about where our two parties are.
Donald Trump exudes, strangely, strength.
I think he's weakness masquerading as strength.
Our party
appears weak for many, too many. And I remember Bill Clinton after shellacking,
we got crushed in a midterm, and he said, given the choice, Bill Clinton said, the
American people always support strong and wrong versus weak and right. There's
something about that. I think this notion of strength, I think it goes to young
boys, I think it goes to Trump and Trumpism, what he sells, what he represents to people,
I think in that distinction, maybe is a pathway for our party.
And my last question before I get to the book, which is the question left by our last guest, is
there's a high probability, which I'm aware of, that I'm sat with the
future president of the United States. There's a probability. Even if it's a 1% probability,
it's an extraordinary opportunity to ask this question.
I'll give you 1%.
Even if it's a 1% probability. But I looked at the odds before I walked out, so I know
it's higher. If I took that men in black little pen thing that erases memory, and I
erase my memory of the Democratic Party, and I erase the memory of the Democratic Party for all of my audience
watching, and you have a clean slate to redefine that party, and we don't remember or we don't
reflect on the past, and that party is coming up in 2028 against the Republican MAGA-centric
party, maybe led by JD Vance.
What is that proposition? I'm a
young man, but not just for young men, for everybody. What is the proposition you're
putting forward? What does it sound like? And I don't want any of the political stuff
because I'm not. What does it sound like?
And you can appreciate, I hope, that I don't have the kind of answer that's worthy of that question.
Because it's a spectacular question.
And it's fundamentally the question that needs to be answered by whoever is running for President
of the United States.
And it needs to be done so congruently.
It can't be to your point bullshit.
It can't be a poll-tested focus group.
Bunch of words and pablum.
What does your heart say?
You have to feel it. poll tested focus group, bunch of words and pablum. What does your heart say?
You have to feel it.
In so many respects, what we just ended on, I think this notion of the dream, I think
there's something about why we're together that is sort of the intersection of entrepreneurialism, aspiration, inspiration, growth, opportunity, inclusion, that begins to answer and flesh
out, create an answer that fleshes out.
And it's in that space that I'm consumed.
I'm consumed by contribution and service, this notion of service, communitarianism,
this notion that we're all better off, we're all better off. I think public service should be a requirement, national service. But it's in that space that
ultimately I think an answer will emerge.
And there's lots of, it's funny because politics, what I've learned about it is this battle
between rationality and logic and then
just emotion and perception, I guess.
Exactly, right.
So you talked about some of the great things the Democratic Party have done, but it's crazy
how the headlines will be dominated by some issue around quote unquote woke ideology.
100%.
And it almost becomes the case that people care, they're more emotionally compelled by
this idea that their kids in schools are being taught something that is corrupting their mind versus how the economy is doing or jobs.
I know. And it was, it's, and I think we struggled to recognize that.
How do you recognize that?
They were shape shifting, CRT, ESG, DAI, any of them, three letters. I mean, we were on our heels, we were on receiving end of all this, we're constantly on the defense. We've got to, I love what President Obama just said.
He said, we've got to get more aggressive,
get on the offense.
I've been saying this for years.
What does that mean?
Meaning we've got to shape the narrative.
Illusion rules, facts don't matter.
You've got these propaganda networks weaponizing grievance
24-7.
And we're constantly responding to these culture wars.
And let me be specific on that.
I think the governor of Utah said it best,
never has so much attention been focused on so few
as it relates to the issue of trans athletes.
He's 100% right.
But there's also truism,
and it's part of being in business.
You're nothing but a mirror of your consistent thoughts.
Whatever you focus on, you're gonna find more of.
And so if 24-7, that's all that's coming from you, California, this, that California crackup,
everyone's leaving the worst place to do everything else, you start to believe it, you start to
shape your conversation, then you start finding proof points.
So there's an enormous encampment, oh, I just read about this crime down at the Walmart,
and it's just, everyone's leaving because Elon left everyone.
So I think narrative matters to your point.
Trump understands that better than anybody.
He repeats things over in the vernacular of my buddy, Marshawn Lynch, over and over and
over and over and over and over and over again.
So I think flooding the zone in that respect, you are a master at it.
I mean, dealing with Jesus, seriously.
I mean, of all people should hire you my friend that understand data and analytics
communication how to target
broader message values brand strength
And how to sell you got to sell it. You mean we've sitting there talking about the chips and science act
No one knows what the hell you're even talking about. We didn't sell what we were delivering
I think we have to have a- We need to rebrand it.
Yeah.
And it's also, look, part of the answer to the question you asked earlier is also, and
Ezra Klein and others talk about, but abundance mindset.
We've had this scarcity mindset, this sort of zero-sum mindset.
And as an entrepreneur, you don't have a scarcity mindset.
And I think as part of the brand building of our party, it's not just in terms of housing
and issues related to what Ezra speaks in terms of abundance mindset party, it's not just in terms of housing and issues related
to what Ezra speaks in terms of abundance mindset,
but it's that growth abundance mindset.
And I think that's part of when I talk about the dream,
I'm also saying this, by the way,
from the prison that no other governor can like claim,
you have the American dream
and you have the California dream.
There's no other state that's attached to a dream.
And I think there's something evocative in that
because that inspires a journey that
we can be on, a journey that we can go on together.
And so I'm captured by the vernacular of the 60s.
And Bobby Kennedy was my political hero, Sarge Shriver and Kennedy, everything about that,
solving for ignorance and poverty and disease and this notion of going on a journey together,
that was what the moon was all about.
And we can see ourselves on that journey.
Right now is the blue versus the red team.
This is a war within in this country.
And I think whoever runs the next four years or three years, it's about stitching this
back together and going on a journey together.
Because as I say all the time, divorce is not an option.
There's just two other things that sprung to mind as you're talking is, I've always
wandered in California, specifically in LA.
I told you I moved here, just moved into my place yesterday in fact.
I was in a CVS I think it was, and I was trying to get some toothpaste.
Horrible, right?
Yeah, I couldn't believe it.
I said to the team, this was like six months ago, I was like, I went to a CVF to get some
toothpaste and I got to the toothpaste and it's in a cage.
And I said to the lady there, I was like, why is the toothpaste in a cage? And she goes, look.
And she points down the aisle, and there was a gentleman, a homeless gentleman,
who was stuffing things in his sock. And I thought, fucking hell, like, if I look over there,
there's these mansions in the hills.
And if I'm in the CVS, the toothpaste in a cage because the homeless people are stuffing
things into their socks.
Is that fixable?
Yes.
And what caused it?
Well, now you're dealing with larger systemic issues that go back decades and decades and
the has have nots and that goes to drug addiction.
Yeah. And the specific issues around homelessness and that gets to deep versus about
mental health, behavioural health issues, affordability, housing crisis. But look,
is it fixable? Yes, by definition.
Why does no one fix it? It's being fixed and progress is
literally being made. We're seeing significant reductions back to back years in crime. We're
seeing significant reductions in organised retail theft. We're seeing significant reductions back to back years in crime. We're seeing significant reductions in organized retail theft. We're seeing significant reductions, including just here in LA. They
announced 17 and a half percent decline over two years in the number of people out in the
streets and sidewalks and unsheltered homeless that was literally announced yesterday by
the mayor. So there is progress in all these cases. So absolutely.
You're getting more radical on this point as well, because I saw the announcement you
made and I watched very closely a couple of years ago
when you announced that you're gonna have to get
these encampments off the street.
I'm done with it, it's exhausting.
Clean them up, it's the job of a mayor.
My job as mayor, former mayor of San Francisco.
Do your job, clean them up.
Get people off the street, there's nothing,
stepping over people on the streets and sidewalks
is not compassion.
And so we have flooded the zones
in terms of support and resources, now it's about performance.
I have the great honor of working with Prince William in the UK on a homelessness initiative.
So I know the complexities of it. And some people think of it as just a housing issue,
but having spent time with people at risk of homelessness, I know it's a confidence
issue, it's a mental health issue, it's a jobs issue, it's a pathways into employment
issue. It's a very, very complicated issue. So that's actually blown my mind, homewards have in terms of-
I mean, I said all the time, shelter solves sleep, housing and supportive services solve
homelessness. You've got to deal with the underlying reasons people are out in the streets
and sidewalks in the first place. And so it's about this comprehensive integration of care,
whole person care, as we describe it. We've just gone through the most significant mental health reforms in US history.
We have flooded the zone with more support, 26,000 new units of behavioral health housing.
We are producing and procuring in the state of California in real time with zoning reforms
so we can cite them, workforce development reforms, and we're reorganizing the integration
around mental health in the silos and people with drug
and alcohol addictions and the integration. And this is the source to me of so much of my real
passion in terms of my day job and you're going to see real progress in this day.
Well, I did do some research beforehand and I can see that there's some really significant actions
taken and they are nuanced and complex in their solution. So that's very, very encouraging. And
it's encouraging to meet someone who understands the complexities of this problem, because actually the narrative
that will win out in an election cycle is going to be emotional, it's going to be simple.
And so I think everybody should look out for emotional and simple answers and exclude them
whenever you hear them. Last question before I ask you this one is all the headlines at
the moment are about Jeffrey Epstein. And the way that that's been handled, really,
is the thing that I find so fascinating.
Because on the way into the presidential office
and into those big roles, there were certain promises made
about the Epstein files, and it would be released.
And if you vote for me, then I will release these files.
And now there's nothing to see.
What happened there?
Well, they lied to you then, or they lied to you now, period.
Someone lied about this.
They dangled this in order to get votes.
And they lied to people.
They used people.
And someone needs to be held to account.
And look, I could be cynical about it.
I could be very political about it
and say it's interesting when Elon, we brought up Elon,
when Elon Musk tweets something out saying Trump's on the list.
And a few days later, there is no list.
You can be cynical about that.
It leads to some open-ended questions.
What would you have done if you were Trump in that situation?
So say that you'd been elected and the public demanding to see this list.
What would you have done?
One thing is obvious. I know Pam Bondi well, the Attorney General.
We've known each other over the years. She doesn't move without Trump.
If she's fired, she's the fall person because there's no question
she was directed by Trump to say what she said.
She would not have, period, full stop,
done something independent of the president on the Epstein files.
So Trump is the person that's...
So one has to acknowledge that.
So then it begs additional questions.
Why was she told not to release the files?
Unless, A, there's no files, and they made it up the entire damn time,
just like they made up
Obama's birth certificate just like they make up most things most days
My humble business. I think that's very plausible. It could be very simple to be as simple as that They started the conspiracy and up they started they're covering their ass and they're just like shit. We got caught
We use this we squeeze this out. We got everything we needed. We're in power
We use this we squeeze this out. We got everything we needed. We're in power or
It's more insidious than that. And look the one thing is just not even there's this it's just simple truth
Epstein and Trump were close. They were wasn't just a few photographs. They were close. That's a fact. Sorry, Donald
Just a fact. So look I get why this this outrages folks. I think it's interesting.
It's outraged some of the core base.
I enjoy the hell out of it.
I'm just, I spoke, that was my private voice out loud as a Democrat.
And yeah, and I hope our party gins us up much more as they would.
If you get into office, people are going to say, release the list.
I mean, if there's a problem, I will commit to release the list.
Or what?
Yeah.
Unless there's some national security secret here or something.
And I know that leads to speculation about Massad
and other speculation about was he on the foreign intelligence list?
And is there real implications to our national security?
Why did he make all this money?
I mean, I've got enough problems with homelessness and housing
in California worried about Jeffrey Epstein but hey they created this mess
now they got to clean it up. Governor we have a closing tradition on this podcast
where the last guest leaves a question for the next guest not knowing who
they're leaving it for. Good. And the question left for you is, have you received a sign
from beyond? A sign? In the spirit of Epstein and sort of conspiracies, I immediately go to...
Yeah, look, I don't know about that, but there's a spiritual aspect to me, meaning I'm a person of faith.
I grew up in the church, went to a Jesuit university, I quote the Bible often, many
parts one body.
So I feel that connection to something bigger than myself, and for no other reason than
I'm desperate for it.
The person who wrote the question, I'll tell you, give you a little bit of a clue,
they're referring to a late loved one that passed away.
More specific.
Yeah. Fascinating.
I've never, you feel people's presence when you hear a song.
You feel people's presence when you, you know,
during season of the year and, you know, I will say, all you know I will say,
all right, I will say, you've got me.
And this was uncanny.
My father passed away in his house in San Francisco.
I came after in this case, there was no assisted suicide
but I came right after and visited
him.
Right outside the window was a Peregrine Falcon.
Can't make this up.
My father was passionate about Peregrine Falcon.
I've never seen a Peregrine, I grew up in San Francisco in my life.
It was a Peregrine Falcon right on the balcony, right after his death.
My sister and I looked at each other so you can't, that was the sign.
True story.
There's my answer.
Thank you.
Thank you so much.
I am, I'm really encouraged by the example you're setting for so many reasons.
And the reason, one of the biggest reasons that I'm super encouraged by the example you're setting for so many reasons. And one of the biggest reasons that
I'm super encouraged by the example you're setting is because you're doing what I've
wished for so long, so many people in your position, your political position would do,
which is to speak to the other side, but also to get out there and to have conversations
like this in this new medium of podcasting that is unfiltered, uncensored and is long
form. And I just, I always longed
to see that from the Democratic Party, but they've hidden behind PR and sanitized messaging
for so long, and you're bucking the trend. I was so happy when you sat down with Charlie
Kirk, because those are the conversations I want to see. And actually, you being in
the same room made me both realize that there's a lot you have in common, and also allowed me to compare the fundamental differences
in person.
But also, it's so wonderful to get to know you as a man
and where you come from.
I appreciate it.
Because now I understand.
I understand your motivations.
I understand the decisions that I
think you'd make going forward as president.
And it feels like a great honor for you
to have given me this time.
But also, as I said, for your team not to tell me,
you can't talk about this, you can't talk about that.
And just to let me talk about whatever I wanted
to talk about.
So thank you so much.
And thank you for having me in your home state now
of California.
I guess I'm kind of a half semi resident or something.
And yeah, I'm gonna be watching with much curiosity to see how it
plays out and you present a new vision for America. I highly recommend everybody goes and checks out
your podcast as well. I'm going to link it on the screen down below. This is Gavin Newsome,
where you do exactly that. You sit with people and have these conversations that are so
unfortunately rare with people you often disagree with. It's a fantastic show and it always has me
absolutely hooked.
And your book here as well, I'm going to recommend because it really shaped how I think about your philosophy.
It's called Citizenville, How to Take the Town Square Digital and Reinvent Government, which talks a lot about social media and the role it plays.
Thank you so much, Gavin. It's been an honour.
It's been my honour.
Thank you so much.
Really grateful.
Thank you so much for the time. Appreciate it.
Just give me 30 seconds of your time. Two things I wanted to say. The first thing is
a huge thank you for listening and tuning into the show week after week. It means the
world to all of us and this really is a dream that we absolutely never had and couldn't
have imagined getting to this place. But secondly, it's a dream where we feel like we're only
just getting started. And if you enjoy what we do here, please join the 24% of people that listen to this podcast
regularly and follow us on this app. Here's a promise I'm going to make to you. I'm going to do
everything in my power to make this show as good as I can now and into the future. We're going to
deliver the guests that you want me to speak to and we're going to continue to keep doing all of the things you love about this show. Thank you. Bye!