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For Newsom, Prop. 50 could prove pivotal
Los Angeles Times
|November 04, 2025
The governor, while weighing presidential run, takes yet another big political gamble.
GOV. GAVIN NEWSOM tries to fire up voters at a Proposition 50 rally Saturday.
ERIC THAYER Los Angeles Times
Gov. Gavin Newsom stepped to the microphone at the state Democratic headquarters in mid-August with the conviction of a man certain he was on the right side of history, bluntly saying California has a moral obligation to thwart President Trump's attempt to tilt the balance of Congress.
Over the next 2½ months, Newsom became the public face of Proposition 50, a measure designed to help Democrats win control of the U.S. House of Representatives by temporarily redrawing California's congressional districts.
Newsom took that leap despite tepid support for a gerrymandering measure in early polls.
With Tuesday's election, the fate of Proposition 50 arrives at a pivotal moment for Newsom, who last week acknowledged publicly that he's weighing a 2028 presidential run. The outcome will test not only his political instincts but also his ability to deliver on a measure that has national attention fixed squarely on him.
From the outset, Newsom paired his conviction with caution.
"I'm mindful of the hard work ahead," Newsom said in August, shortly after lawmakers placed Proposition 50 on the ballot.
It was familiar territory for a governor who has built a career on high-stakes political bets. As San Francisco mayor, his decision to issue same-sex marriage licenses in 2004 made him a progressive icon. It also drew accusations he'd energized conservative turnout that year in the presidential election that ended with George W. Bush winning a second term.
This story is from the November 04, 2025 edition of Los Angeles Times.
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