קאליפארניע גאווערנער ניוסעם זאגט אז ער גייט נאכאביסל אריינקוקן איבער לויפן פאר פרעזידענט אין 2028
 
							 
							California Governor Gavin Newsom has publicly acknowledged that he may pursue a presidential bid after the 2026 midterm elections, marking his clearest signal yet of future national ambitions.
In a CBS News interview, Newsom admitted he would “be lying” if he claimed he had no interest in running for president in 2028. The governor, long viewed as a leading figure within the Democratic Party, framed his comments cautiously, emphasizing his current focus on California’s ongoing crises — including wildfires, homelessness, and the housing shortage.
Newsom’s remarks come amid speculation about the Democratic Party’s post-Biden leadership field. Recent polling places him among the top potential contenders for 2028, with betting odds around +600, trailing only Vice President Kamala Harris and a handful of emerging governors.
Critics argue that Newsom’s national profile has risen more from media exposure and political theatrics than from tangible results in California, where high taxes, crime, and mass outmigration remain pressing issues. Nonetheless, his growing visibility — from debates with Republican leaders to high-profile visits abroad — suggests a deliberate effort to position himself as the face of the party’s next generation.
As Democrats search for new leadership amid internal divisions, Newsom’s comments reaffirm what many observers already suspected: his sights are set beyond Sacramento.
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