Gavin Newsom’s greatest threat isn’t Donald Trump. It’s 2007.
Before he was a polished, presidential contender, he was a young San Francisco mayor at the center of a scandal so personal,
so intimate, it nearly ended his career. Now, as Democrats quietly eye him for 2028,
that ghost is stirring again—reframed by #MeToo, amplified by partisan warfare, and waiting to det… Continues…
As Gavin Newsom’s star rises on the national stage, the story he most wants behind him is the one his opponents are most eager to resurrect.
His affair with Ruby Rippey Gibney, the wife of his close friend and aide Alex Tourk,
was not just a lapse in judgment; it struck at the core of loyalty, power,
and trust inside his own political family
. Newsom’s public confession and Tourk’s
resignation left a scar that time never fully erased—only buried beneath bigger offices and broader ambitions.
In a post-#MeToo era, that same scandal lands differently.
What was once framed as a private moral failing
now invites questions about
workplace power dynamics and character under pressure.
Layered on top of his more recent
incendiary rhetoric, a 2028 run would force
voters to decide whether
they see a flawed man who grew,
or a pattern they can’
t afford in a president.
His future may hinge
on which story they choose to believe.