Newsom appears onstage at Texas rally to celebrate Prop. 50 victory, take swipes at Trump
Gov. Gavin Newsom strode onstage in Houston on Saturday to a cheering crowd of Texas Democrats, saying Proposition 50βs victory in California on election day was a win for the nation and a firm repudiation of President Trump.
Newsom possessed the air of a politician running for president at the boisterous rally, a possibility the California governor says he is considering β and the location he chose was not happenstance.
Newsom accused Trump of pressuring Texas Gov. Greg Abbott to rejigger the stateβs congressional districts with the goal of sending more Republicans to Congress, an action that triggered Californiaβs Proposition 50. Newsom successfully pushed for a special election on the ballot measure to counter the efforts in Texas, which the governor said wasan attempt by Trump and the Republicans to βrigβ the 2026 midterm election.
Cheers erupted from the friendly, union-hall crowd when Newsom belittled Trump as an βinvasive speciesβ and a βhistorically unpopular president.β
βOn every issue, on the economy, on terrorists, on immigration, on healthcare, [heβs a] historically unpopular president, and he knows it, and he knows it,β Newsom said. βWhy else did he make that call to your governor? Why else did he feel the need to rig the election before even one vote was cast? Thatβs just weakness, weakness masquerading as strength. Thatβs Donald Trump, and he had a very bad night on Tuesday.β
Newsom was the main political force behind Proposition 50, which California voters overwhelmingly approved in Tuesdayβs special election. The statewide ballot measure was an attempt to counter Trumpβs push to get Republican-led states, most notably Texas, to redraw their electoral maps to keep Democrats from gaining control of the U.S. House of Representatives in the 2026 midterms and upending his agenda. Newsom and California Democrats hope the change will net an additional five Democrats in Californiaβs congressional delegation, canceling out any gains in Texas.
Newsom thanked Texas Democrats for putting up a fight against the redistricting effort in their state, saying it inspired an uprising.
βItβs dawning on people, all across the United States of America, whatβs at stake,β Newsom told the crowd. βAnd you put a stake in the ground. People are showing up. I donβt believe in crowns, thrones. No kings.β
Newsomβs trip to Texas comes as the former San Francisco mayor has been openly flirting with a 2028 run for president. In a recent interview with βCBS News Sunday Morning,β Newsom was asked whether he would give βserious thoughtβ after the 2026 midterms to a White House bid.
βYeah, Iβd be lying otherwise,β Newsom replied. βIβd just be lying. And Iβm not β I canβt do that.β
In July, Newsom flew to South Carolina, a state that traditionally hosts the Southβs first presidential primary. He said he wanted to help his party win back the U.S. House of Representatives in 2026. But South Carolina is a solidly conservative state and did not appear to have a single competitive race.
During that trip, South Carolina Rep. James Clyburn, the highest-ranking Black member of Congress and renowned Democratic kingmaker, told The Times that Newsom would be βa hell of a candidate.β Newsom received similar praise β and encouragement β when he was introduced at the βTake It Backβ rally in Houston.
Newsom now heads to BelΓ©m, Brazil, where representatives from 200 nations are gathering to kick off the annual United Nations climate policy summit. For Newsom, itβs a golden opportunity to appear on a world stage and sell himself and California as the antidote to Trump and his attacks on climate change policy.
The Trump administration this year canceled funding for major clean energy projects such as Californiaβs hydrogen hub and moved to revoke the stateβs long-held authority to set stricter vehicle emissions standards than the federal government.