
Gavin Newsom’s insane word-salad explanation when asked simple question about his politics
NY Post
Say what?
Gov. Gavin Newsom delivered a wildly rambling response when asked a straightforward question about his brand of politics — invoking MLK Jr., Gandhi and the “spirit of the ’60s.”
During an interview with comedian and podcast host Adam Friedland, the California governor served up a word salad when asked point-blank what he wanted to accomplish politically.
“I don’t have a tag, Make America Great, or the Great Society, or something like Medicare for All, butfor me, no bulls—t. It’s just standing up for ideals, striking out against injustice that defines my ‘why’ in every way, shape, form,” Newsom said.
He then veered even more off the rails, mentioning MLK, Gandhi and Nelson Mandela.
“Stand up for ideals. Strike out against injustice. I’m a Sargent Shriver Democrat. I mean, in that whole ’60s, the vernacular, the ’60s, solving for ignorance and poverty, disease and the spirit of the ’60s, the spirit of King, by the movement in Gandhi and Mandela, that whole set of moral authority space,” he continued.













