LOS ANGELES — If politicians write memoirs to generate online buzz and headlines, California Gov. Gavin Newsom is getting plenty of both — favorable and not.
Just a few days into a national book tour, the two-term Democrat who is widely expected to seek the presidency in 2028 is taking heat from conservatives who say some recent remarks were racist and from LGBTQ+ advocates bristling at his calls for the Democratic Party to be more ''culturally normal.''
Newsom's kickoff swing for ''Young Man in a Hurry: A Memoir of Discovery'' comes as he's sought to position himself as the leading Democratic adversary to President Donald Trump and a capable player on the international stage.
The book, released Tuesday, focuses heavily on carefully crafted biography over policy and is designed to introduce Newsom to a national audience who may be unfamiliar with the former San Francisco mayor and lieutenant governor. It's been argued that all publicity is good publicity, but the six-city tour is also testing those limits as Newsom seeks to shake off the image, fair or not, of a liberal elitist out of touch with Main Street.
Remarks on his own academics draw pushback
Newsom's middling academic record and lifelong struggles with dyslexia are a key piece of his narrative as he seeks relatability with audiences. But conservatives have seized on comments about those struggles made Sunday during a conversation with Atlanta Mayor Andre Dickens, who is Black.
''I'm just trying to impress upon you: I'm like you, I'm no better than you, I'm a 960 SAT guy,'' he said, referring to a lower-than-average score on the commonly used college entrance exam.
Republicans said Newsom was disparaging Black people by suggesting they weren't smart, an assertion Newsom and his office forcefully denied.