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Newsom Officially Launches Run For Governor

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Newsom Officially Launches Run For Governor

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SAN FRANCISCO (CBS 5 / AP / BCN) ― San Francisco Mayor Gavin Newsom formally announced his candidacy for California governor on Tuesday, offering himself as an heir to the same groundswell for generational change that helped send President Barack Obama to the White House.
 
"I'm running for Governor because California needs a new direction," said Newsom.

He touted his record in San Francisco on civil rights, environmental initiatives, working to prevent layoffs of teachers, and setting up a local economic stimulus plan for the city, while balancing the budget and preserving the city's bond ratings.

"State government is failing because the politicians in Sacramento spend all their time fighting each other instead of fighting for Californians," said Newsom. "We can't keep returning to the same old tired solutions and expect a different result."

Entering a race that could see him competing against men 15 and 30 years his senior, the 41-year-old Democrat pointedly used YouTube and the social networking sites Twitter and Facebook to disclose that he would seek his party's nomination to succeed Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger.
 
"New media certainly reaches every corner of the state," said campaign
spokesman Eric Jaye.

The move mirrors Obama's early efforts as a candidate to identify and mobilize supporters through the Internet. But Newsom, who campaigned for Hillary Rodham Clinton in the presidential primary, described it as emblematic of the "intuitive" comfort with technology, transparency and consensus-building he said he shares with Obama.

"There will be legitimate questions nationally is change an affectation of the personality of Barack Obama and is it exclusive to Washington, D.C. and the occupant of the White House? Or is that change, that generational mind-set, going to take shape across the rest of the nation, starting with the most populous state?" he said. "We'll see."

In next year's Democratic primary, Newsom could face state Attorney General Jerry Brown, who at age 71 is considering again seeking the office he held from 1975 to 1983, and Lt. Gov. John Garamendi, 64. Other Democrats mentioned as possible contenders include Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa, 56, and U.S. Sen. Dianne Feinstein, 75.

Among Republicans, state Insurance Commissioner Steve Poizner, 52, and
former eBay CEO Meg Whitman, also 52, have announced exploratory committees for governor.

Newsom planned more traditional appearances to tout his candidacy in Los Angeles Wednesday and in San Diego Thursday, according to Jaye. He was also set to speak at the California Democratic Party state convention in Sacramento this upcoming weekend.

"He's looking forward to telling the San Francisco story of accomplishment," said Jaye.

Newsom, who is a little more than a year into his second term as mayor of California's fourth-largest city, already has a level of name recognition that belies his office and experience. He made international headlines in 2004 when he unilaterally directed city agencies to issue marriage licenses to same-sex couples, a monthlong experiment in civic disobedience ultimately halted by the courts.

While his actions five years ago made him a hometown hero, political observers predicted they could hurt him if he chose to pursue statewide or national office. That sentiment was cemented during the contentious campaign over a constitutional amendment to ban same-sex marriage in California last year, when the backers of the ultimately successful measure presented an unflattering portrait of Newsom in one of their ads.

Newsom said that to broaden his appeal beyond the Bay Area, he plans to highlight his background as a successful businessman before becoming mayor, he founded a wine store that he parlayed into a string of restaurants and as a politician who has been fiscally responsible. For several months, he has been crisscrossing the state and meeting with voters in markedly less liberal areas such as Stockton and San Diego.

"I'm socially progressive, no doubt about that," he said. "People know I will fight for the things I believe in. But they may not know that other side."

To address the state's ongoing budget morass, Newsom said he supports convening a Constitutional Convention that would consider doing away with the two-thirds legislative vote required to adopt a budget. He said he thinks such a convention could also look at lifting the property tax cap on commercial properties that has been in place since 1978, but that he opposes eliminating the cap on residential properties.

His gubernatorial campaign will also promote some of the programs he has spearheaded as mayor, including one that made health care available to uninsured San Francisco residents, a universal preschool initiative, offering solar energy subsidies for homeowners and creating long-term housing for homeless people.

"California is a much wealthier state than San Francisco is a wealthy city, so I don't buy the arguments that it's an ungovernable state," he said.

The most recent statewide poll, released last month, showed Feinstein leading among the possible Democratic candidates with 38 percent and Newsom running a distant fourth, with 10 percent. Without Feinstein in the race, Brown led with 26 percent and Newsom rose to third-place, with 16 percent.

In deference to Feinstein, who like Newsom got her start in politics as a San Francisco supervisor-turned-mayor, Newsom said he would drop out of the governor's race if she got into it -- but only if Feinstein makes her move soon.

"I think she is still maintaining an interest and she certainly has the right at any time. But I'm not in a position to wait for that decision to be made and I've made that clear to the senator," he said.

Along with his close tie to the same-sex marriage issue, Newsom has another piece of possible political baggage that could be used against him. In January 2007, he was forced to reveal publicly he had an affair with the wife of his mayoral campaign manager and a drinking problem for which he sought treatment.

The disclosures did not impede him from being overwhelmingly re-elected later that year. Last summer, he married actress Jennifer Siebel, who is now four months pregnant with the couple's first child.

"This is the right time in every respect," Newsom said of his candidacy. "I think the experience is there, I think the perspective is there, I think the record is there. The time couldn't be better."

(© CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. The Associated Press and Bay City News contributed to this report.)

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