GAVIN NEWSOM DESTROYED CALIFORNIA’S ECONOMY AND THEN HIRED PR SHILLS TO COVER IT UP

Gavin Newsom allowed himself to become the bitch of the Big Gay Silicon Valley Tech Cartel and he ignored everyone else in the state so he could go to fancy tech parties and fly around on private jets…

Gov. Newsom’s 1,200 Tiny Homes For California Homeless Remain Vacant

California’s economy has been increasingly struggling over the past several years as regulations, high taxes and poor governance have dampened business opportunities and sent citizens running, according to experts.

The unemployment rate in California jumped to 5.3% in February, the highest out of any state and Washington, D.C., according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. California employs some of the strictest labor laws, regulatory regimes and tax burdens in the nation, which has increasingly stifled economic growth and led businesses and citizens to flee, experts explained. (RELATED: ‘The River Is Essentially Dead’: How Enviros’ Push To Save Salmon Ended Up Killing ‘Hundreds Of Thousands’ Of Them)

“You can look at the unemployment numbers, and those really flag some severe underlying problems,” Will Swaim, president of the California Policy Center, told us. “California overregulates businesses and underregulates public safety. And those two things may seem unrelated, but when you allow people to engage in organized theft from stores or break into cars, for instance, it reduces the ability of markets to function.”

Retail theft, such as shoplifting, has exploded over the past few years, mostly in cities like Los Angeles and San Francisco, according to The Associated Press. Criminals are incentivized through relaxed crime policies like Proposition 47, which was passed in 2014 and reduced certain theft and drug offenses from felonies to misdemeanors.

The state’s economy has only increased the number of jobs in the state by 82,000 in the last year as of February, with 61,100 of those being government positions, according to the California Employment Development Department. California’s struggling employment market puts it last in terms of job growth over the last year out of all other states and D.C., according to the Orange County Register. 

“California job growth is struggling because of the state’s regulatory and tax policy,” Wayne Winegarden, senior fellow in business and economics at the Pacific Research Institute, told the DCNF. “The burdensome regulations on businesses discourage the formation of new businesses, which has been growing slower than the national economy. New businesses typically drive job growth, so fewer businesses forming is bad for job growth. Compounding these difficulties, burdensome labor regulations discourage those businesses that do exist from expanding hiring. The combination of the two reinforce one another, creating a difficult job growth environment.”

The state also has one of the highest tax burdens in the U.S., ranking fifth in 2020 with an effective average tax rate of around 13.5%, according to the Tax Foundation. California was only outdone by other blue states like Connecticut, New York and Hawaii.

“Policies such as expensive energy mandates, restrictive zoning regulations, high taxes, rent control, and high minimum wages all increase the cost of doing business and decrease families’ purchasing power,” Winegarden told the DCNF. “The higher cost of doing business makes California firms less competitive nationally, which harms economic growth. The affordability problems make it harder for families to thrive, encourage families to leave the state, and discourage new families from migrating to California. All of these trends reinforce one another, harming the state’s vitality.”

The state government is also struggling with a massive deficit, which California’s nonpartisan Legislative Analyst’s Office estimates would be a record $73 billion in 2024 under current fiscal circumstances. The huge deficit is in part due to a drop in income as people flee the state, with 27,000 tax filers with adjusted gross incomes of over $200,000 having moved out between 2020 and 2021.

The population of California declined by around 538,000 from July 2020 to July 2023 as residents flee blue states like New York and Illinois and head to places like Texas and Florida.

Democrats hope Gavin Newsom can replace Biden – but do they know about the sleazy California Governor’s infidelities, addiction, TEENAGE lover… and why allies say he ‘doesn’t have real friends’?

Democrats hope Gavin Newsom can replace Biden - but do they know about the sleazy

At a youthful 56, Newsom has risen smoothly up the ranks of Californian politics; a hop across to the White House certainly sounds like it should make sense. But, make no mistake, the political capital Republicans have made out of Biden’s troubled son Hunter would pale in significance to the mileage to be had from Newsom. For while he’s handsomely telegenic, the perma-tanned Californian is an undeniably oleaginous and sleazy character whose playboy past includes more than its fair share of infidelity, alcohol abuse and questionable business behavior.

Democrats hope Gavin Newsom can replace Biden – but do they know about the sleazy California Governor’s infidelities, addiction, TEENAGE lover… and why allies say he ‘doesn’t have real friends’?

Sprawled languidly on an ornate silk rug in the palatial home of oil-heiress Ann Getty for a 2004 magazine shoot, San Francisco’s new Mayor and his glamorous wife looked entirely deserving of the Harper’s Bazaar headline: ‘The New Kennedys’.

Clearly, the couple thought the glossy fashion mag’s Camelot comparison fitting, too.

‘Do I think he could be President?’ San Francisco’s First Lady wondered aloud. ‘Absolutely, I’d gladly vote for him.’

Whether she still might two decades later seems distinctly unlikely even if the question is, ironically, suddenly more relevant than ever.

For she is Kimberly Guilfoyle, now fiancée of Donald Trump Jr and a MAGA campaign stalwart. And he is Gavin Newsom, now the uber-progressive Governor of California and looking all the more likely to be the man who may yet run against Trump in this year’s presidential election.

For while Newsom publicly insists he is nothing more than an articulate surrogate for Joe Biden – readily telling reporters in Atlanta after the president’s disastrous debate performance on Thursday night that, ‘I will never turn my back on [him]’ – his private ambitions are no secret.

And as the Democratic party is gripped by an existential crisis over the clear ineptitude of their commander-in-chief, with left-wing voices finally questioning openly the suitability of Biden’s candidacy, Newsom’s name is among the first to be raised in conversations about a potential replacement ahead of the November 5 election.

Some polling suggests swapping out Biden for another candidate at the eleventh hour would be even worse than keeping him. But after Thursday night and the ensuing Democrat ‘freak out’ – with even the usually loyal New York Times now calling for Biden to resign – there might not be much choice.

At a youthful 56, Newsom has risen smoothly up the ranks to the top of California politics, making him on paper an obvious candidate for the White House.

But, as that toe-curling 20-year-old magazine shoot illustrates, the political capital Republicans have made out of Biden’s troubled son Hunter would pale in significance to the mileage to be had from Newsom.

For while he’s handsomely telegenic, the perma-tanned Californian is an undeniably oleaginous and sleazy character whose playboy past includes more than its fair share of infidelity, alcohol abuse and questionable business behavior.

And let’s not forget the complete mess he and his championing of hard-left policies has made of California, the luster of the Golden State endlessly tarnished by bad news: from crime, drugs and homelessness to high taxes, electricity and water shortages, and a sky-high deficit that has led to an exodus of businesses and citizens.

At the center of it all is a man who hails from California aristocracy.

At least Joe Biden can say he wasn’t born with a silver spoon in his mouth. Newsom had the biggest spoon in the cutlery drawer – the Getty family.

Although his mother struggled financially after divorcing his father – a state appeals court judge – when Gavin was just three, the family had powerful connections to the ultra-liberal Gettys (his father was also the Getty family lawyer) as well as the clan of Democrat powerbroker Nancy Pelosi.

Gordon Getty, son of oil tycoon Jean Paul – for many years, the world’s richest man – effectively adopted Gavin, publicly admitting that he treated him like a son, after his real father retreated from the picture.

Getty personally bankrolled Newsom’s early business career, starting in 1991 with a wine company which proved extremely lucrative. (Newsom obligingly named the business ‘PlumpJack Associates’ after an opera that his rich benefactor had written.)

By the time he won the California governorship in 2019, the Getty family had sunk at least $500,000 into funding Newsom’s political campaigns.

For all his outward bonhomie, energy and apparently boundless human compassion, insiders say Newsom is insular and prickly, his undoubted charisma only skin-deep.

As surely befits a man who looks like a corporate villain from a Hollywood thriller, he’s painfully superficial, critics have long whispered.

‘Gavin is always around pretty people. But he doesn’t seem to have many real friends,’ Katherine Munson, a childhood friend of Newsom, told the New Yorker magazine in 2018.

And a lot of those ‘pretty people’ have been women.

Newsom married the equally ambitious Kimberly Guilfoyle, a former lingerie model turned prosecutor and cable-news legal analyst, in 2001. They’d met at a political fundraiser seven years earlier.

Despite Guilfoyle telling Harper’s Bazaar in 2004 that she wanted as many as six children, the marriage was over by January 2005, when they jointly filed for divorce citing ‘difficulties due to their careers on opposite coasts’.

Certainly, Guilfoyle hadn’t helped Newsom’s image with a string of embarrassing public gaffes.

Newsom first made national headlines in early support for same-sex marriage, just weeks after becoming mayor, prompting speculation that he was gay himself.

Addressing an audience at a gay-rights awards dinner in 2004, Guilfoyle admitted there had been considerable speculation in that area, before taking a very smutty turn.

‘Is he hot? Yeah,’ she told the crowd. ‘Is he hung? Yeah.’

She went on: ‘Is he [waving her hand to suggest homosexuality]? Not unless you can give a better [mimicking eating a banana] than me.’

Guilfoyle later insisted she had not been referring to oral sex but members of Newsom’s inner circle were reportedly incandescent.

Their divorce was finalized in 2006 and six months later, Newsom – then 39 – raised eyebrows when he started dating a teenager half his age, the 19-year-old model and restaurant hostess Brittanie Mountz.

It emerged Mountz had changed her age on her ‘MySpace’ social-media page from 19 to 26, and her mayor lover faced further embarrassment when she was pictured with him at a gala holding a glass of wine – despite being under California’s legal drinking age.

‘If she was drinking, the Mayor didn’t notice,’ a spokesman was forced to say.

Newsom and then wife Kimberly Guilfoyle at an election night party in San Francisco, 2003.

In 2007, Newsom admitted to having an affair with the wife of his campaign manager Alex Tourk, Ruby Rippey-Tourk (pictured) who was also employed by him as a secretary.

But Newsom was soon embroiled in a far bigger scandal over his romantic life.

In January 2007, Newsom’s best friend and campaign manager, Alex Tourk, publicly confronted him after his wife, Ruby Rippey-Tourk, apparently in rehab for substance abuse at the time, admitted she and Gavin had an affair in 2005 when she was also employed by him as a secretary.

The following day Newsom openly admitted the affair, which destroyed the Tourk marriage, blaming a ‘personal lapse of judgement’ and saying: ‘I am deeply sorry.’

Days later, Newsom also announced he had stopped drinking and said he would seek professional help for ‘problems with alcohol’.

A ‘close personal friend and counselor’ told one local newspaper that Newsom had spiraled out of control and was ‘self-sabotaging’.

The New York Times called it a ‘scandal with all the sex and betrayal of a tawdry novel’.

For many observers, it was proof that Newsom had demonstrated a level of stunningly poor judgement that should prevent him from climbing much further up the political tree.

In October 2006, Newsom struck up a relationship with Jennifer Siebel, a blonde documentary director and investment manager’s daughter after they met on a blind date arranged by a mutual friend.

Siebel had previously dated George Clooney and had suffered an infinitely less pleasant brush with another Hollywood superstar, mogul Harvey Weinstein, who she has alleged raped her.

At trial in 2022, she said the convicted sex predator had lured her to a hotel room in 2005 under the pretense of wanting to discuss film projects.

Weinstein insisted the sex had been ‘consensual, transactional’ and the jury was unable to reach a verdict.

Newsom with his second wife Jennifer Siebel and their three children on election night, November 6, 2018, after being elected California governor.

Newsom and Siebel with their three children, 2018.

Newsom posted an Instagram celebrating Thanksgiving and dedicated to his wife, who he called ‘my love’.

Siebel has another cross to bear – the tragic death, when she was six, of her eight-year-old sister Stacy.

The little girls had been driving golf carts on holiday in Hawaii and Siebel hadn’t seen Stacy hiding behind her cart as she put it in reverse.

‘I felt the pressure to be perfect, to make my parents forget, by being two daughters instead of one,’ she told the Los Angeles Times last year.

She and Newsom married in July 2008.

They now have four children and a clutch of multi-million dollar homes in California. And, naturally, when he became Governor, they mutually decided that, true to their impeccable liberal values, she should become ‘First Partner’ not ‘First Lady’.

But if Newsom appears to have finally got his once rocky personal life under control, he hasn’t managed to do the same with his political career.

His deeply flawed judgement reared its head once again in November 2020, at the height of the Covid-19 lockdown, when it emerged he and Siebel had attended a fancy dinner party at Napa Valley’s super-smart French Laundry restaurant.

Newsom – who had just told ordinary Californians not to even sit down with friends for Thanksgiving dinner – initially insisted the party had been outdoors, but photo evidence quickly proved otherwise.

‘We’re all human. We all fall short sometimes,’ Newsom – whose lockdown measures were among the strictest in the country – blubbered to the LA Times.

But it wasn’t his only Covid scandal.

In December that year, it also emerged his wine and hospitality company ‘PlumpJack’ had received almost $3 million in low-interest federal loans, designed to help small businesses struggling with pandemic losses to pay their employees.

While there was no illegality, critics questioned the ethics of such a large taxpayer-funded windfall.

In 2018, the LA Times had reported that Newsom’s partial ownership of PlumpJack ‘raises the same conflict-of-interest red flags that continue to surround Donald Trump’s presidency’.

Post-Covid, California lurches from crisis to crisis under Newsom’s watch.

His approval rating recently sank to an all-time low (with 49 percent of Californians disapproving, and only 44 percent approving of him). This might be to do with the perception that he is putting his national ambitions ahead of his state’s growing troubles, jetting off to meet Benjamin Netanyahu in Israel or Xi Jinping in China.

Not many years ago, it would have been impossible to imagine anyone even wanting to leave the sunny climes of California.

Newsom with VP Kamala Harris in Oakland, California, in 2021.

Newsom is shown, left, sitting with ten others at The French Laundry on November 6, 2020, without a mask. The photos were obtained by Fox 11 LA via a Twitter user.

Now the state is increasingly a byword for disaster and even the locals have had enough. Between 2019 and 2022, more than a million Californians left.

Big names include Elon Musk and his Tesla electric car empire that de-camped from Silicon Valley to Texas in 2021.

Meanwhile, the state now has the highest unemployment rate in the nation, while poverty has rocketed and violent crime has grown over 6 percent in just three years.

His policies, say critics, are simply not thought through.

For instance, last year’s worthy decision to hike the minimum wage for fast-food workers by 25 percent to $20-an-hour was billed as a great silver-bullet to alleviate poverty. But not only has the move already raised food prices for poor people, it’s prompted many restaurants to close, unable to now pay their employees.

Meanwhile, Newsom has allowed homelessness to flourish as he pursues progressive initiatives to reduce sentences for criminals. And not just non-violent ones: Newsom has caused widespread anger by pardoning a string of convicted murderers.

And he’s not just soft on crime. Newsom has overseen the disastrous roll-out of a legal cannabis market in California, and is now looking to find ways of opening up psychedelic drug-usage to the public.

Newsom has also pursued some of the most aggressively pro-trans policies in the country.

He has signed bills that force schools to have ‘gender-neutral’ bathrooms for trans-identifying students, and has ardently defended controversial ‘drag queen story hours’ for children.

The rest of America has taken notice.

A recent LA Times poll found that 50 percent of US adults — including 30 percent of Democrats — believe California is too liberal.

He may look toned and trim on TV (or in magazine fashion shoots) but, as voters would soon be reminded if he got his party’s presidential ticket, Gavin Newsom comes with a lot of baggage.

 

 

 

Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom boasted of a $97.5 billion surplus in May 2022, which the governor then pledged to spend on drought mitigation efforts, abortion initiatives and to address costs from inflation, despite the current surging deficit.

California has also spent around $30 billion on homelessness alone under Newsom since 2019, despite the number of homeless people continuing to rise year-over-year in the state. On a single night in January 2023, there were 181,399 homeless people in California, a jump of more than 30% since 2007, according to a report from the Department of Housing and Urban Development.

The state also has one of the highest minimum wages in the country at $16 per hour, with specific industries like healthcare and fast food getting to set even higher minimum rates, according to California’s Department of Industrial Relations. California is set to raise its minimum wage for fast food workers at chains to $20 an hour on April 1, which has already led to businesses needing to cut staff in preparation to keep labor costs manageable.

“The pandemic lockdowns here in California lasted far longer than they did anywhere else,” Swaim told the DCNF. “And so the hit on retail, and particularly independently owned retail, has been disastrous — you know, small restaurants, independent stores. A lot of these have really struggled to come back. And the tech industry is now continuing to shed jobs.”

The tech sector, which boomed and expanded during COVID-19 pandemic lockdowns due to stay-at-home orders pushing more people online, is now having to lay off employees due to overextension, according to The Mercury News. Companies in the Bay Area, alone, cut more than 36,000 jobs in the tech industry from 2022 until early 2024.

WHORING-OUT-GAVIN-NEWSOM

Regulations in the state aimed at reducing carbon emissions and other environmental impacts have also weighed on several industries, particularly oil and gas companies. Chevron announced in early January that it was anticipating up to $4 billion in asset value reductions due to hostile attitudes toward oil production.

Climate initiatives also weigh on the state’s budget, including $600 million being spent on environmental reviews for a high-speed rail project 15 years after it was first approved.

“All of the activity on the employment side is embedded in this very hostile relationship between people who are very much in love with the idea of regulation and the people who have to live with that regulation, namely the businesses, of course,” Swaim told