Rose McGowan endorses Larry Elder for governor: 'He's the better man'



Actress Rose McGowan endorsed California recall candidate Larry Elder for governor on Sunday, calling him the "better man" after she accused Gov. Gavin Newsom's wife of trying to silence her about Harvey Weinstein.

McGowan, a leading voice in the #MeToo movement, was one of the first women to publicly accuse Weinstein of sex crimes. Last week, she told BlazeTV host Dave Rubin that Jennifer Siebel Newsom reached out to her six months before the publication of a New York Times bombshell on Weinstein, seeking to buy her silence.

At a campaign event for Elder on Sunday, McGowan endorsed him as both "the better candidate" and "the better man." She said that she is no longer a "Hollywood Democrat," throwing her support behind Elder while acknowledging that they don't agree on every issue.

Elder welcomed the endorsement, criticizing the mainstream media for neglecting to scrutinize Newsom in light of McGowan's claims.

"This is all you guys would be talking about if the allegation were made about me or my significant other," Elder said.

In a Twitter thread published on Sept. 12, McGowan elaborated on her allegations, saying that in 2017 Siebel Newsom contacted her on behalf of Weinstein's lawyer, David Boies, telling her "David Boies wants to know what it would take to make you happy."

She posted what she says is an email from Siebel Newsom, in which the governor's wife allegedly admitted to contacting McGowan about Harvey Weinstein, but changes the word "happy" to "heal."

🧵The Newsom Weinstein Connection 🧵 PART 4 - After Weinstein was exposed publicly, Jennifer Siebel Newsom got into a… https://t.co/EURZ4TJpUW

— Rose✨McGowan (@rosemcgowan) 1631486799.0

A spokesman for Siebel Newsom told Newsweek the alleged email is a "complete fabrication" and has denied the allegations of trying to buy McGowan's silence on Weinstein.

"It's disappointing but not surprising to see political opponents launch these false attacks just days before the election. Their limited correspondence has been strictly as fellow survivors of sexual assault and in Jennifer's former capacity leading the Representation Project, an organization that fights limiting gender stereotypes and norms," the spokesman said.

Gov. Newsom, speaking to KTLA-TV, said the allegations were "extreme even by extreme standards."

"Those allegations are outrageous and false and says everything you need to know about [Elder's] campaign," Newsom said. He repeated his assertions that the recall election is "Republican-backed," a tactic he's employed to scare the state's strong majority of Democratic voters into showing up at the ballot on Tuesday to stave off an upset victory by Elder.

"Gavin Newsom has been able to switch this thing from a referendum on his behavior, his governance, into a 'Republican takeover,' as if that has anything to do with crime, as if that has anything to do with homelessness, as if that has anything to do with the outrageous cost of living," Elder said.

As KTLA observed, while at one point the election seemed close, it now appears that Newsom has successfully rallied Democrats to support him:

As of Friday, Newsom appears to be on track to stay in office, with more than 60% of likely voters saying they'll vote against the recall effort, according to a UC Berkeley Institute of Governmental Studies poll cosponsored by the Los Angeles Times.

Newsom isn't letting up, however. Advertisements against the recall have featured prominent Democrats like U.S. Sen. Elizabeth Warren and former President Barack Obama, and Newsom has been joined by Warren, U.S. Sen. Amy Klobuchar and Vice President Kamala Harris for rallies.

On Tuesday, President Joe Biden is scheduled to join the governor in Long Beach for an anti-recall rally.

California voters on Tuesday will be asked two questions on the recall ballot. The first is whether Newsom should be recalled. If a majority of voters say "yes," then whoever has the most votes for the second question — who should replace him? — will become governor.

Los Angeles County Sheriff says Larry Elder was victim of a 'hate crime'



Los Angeles County Sheriff Alex Villanueva said Thursday that the egg-throwing attack on California Republican gubernatorial candidate Larry Elder by a white woman wearing a gorilla mask was a "hate crime" and the only reason politicians aren't outraged about it is "woke privilege."

Elder, a black man, was campaigning in Venice on Wednesday when a masked woman who had been riding a bicycle next to his entourage threw an egg that narrowly missed his head. She then slapped one of the candidate's aides, viral video shows.

"QUESTION: How is this not a hate crime?" asked Villaneuva in a tweet about the incident. "ANSWER: Because 'woke privilege' means a white woman can wear a gorilla mask and attack a black man without fear of being called a racist."

"Where is the outrage from our politicians?" he demanded.

QUESTION: How is this not a hate crime?ANSWER: Because “woke privilege” means a white woman can wear a gorilla ma… https://t.co/oBhemtfwsg

— Alex Villanueva (@LACoSheriff) 1631211356.0

The Washington Examiner reported that Villanueva, a Democrat who is often critical of "woke" progressivism in his party, will investigate the assault as a hate crime.

"Just imagine the outrage if the roles had been reversed. We would never hear the end of it," Villanueva told the magazine. "People need to be held accountable on both sides of the aisle. What's good for the goose is good for the gander. Why didn't Gavin Newsom call out this reprehensible behavior? I distinctly remember John McCain defending Obama when someone said something. God bless him as a true patriot."

He added that the gorilla mask sends a clear message that the attack was racially motivated.

"It conveniently hides her identity, but there was a message there. She could've picked a Groucho Marx mask," he said. "I think the message was clear."

The Los Angeles Police Department has opened an investigation into the assault.

According to police, the woman in the gorilla mask threw the egg at Elder, then yelled profanities at his aide before she "struck the aide on the left side of his face with her open hand."

Police said another man wearing a gray T-shirt also attacked the aide, punching him in the back of the head.

After the assaults, Elder was escorted to a waiting vehicle and taken to another location in Venice.

No arrests have been made yet. Police are seeking the public's help in identifying the suspects.

Commenting on the incident, Elder told Fox News Thursday that the person who attacked him wasn't necessarily a racist.

"I'm not somebody who pulls out the race card the way Barack Obama does, the way Al Sharpton does, the way CNN does, the way Black Lives Matter does," said Elder. "Maybe it was just an idiot. Maybe it was just a fool. Maybe it was just someone who doesn't like Larry Elder."

"All I know is: If I were a liberal and somebody wearing a gorilla mask who was a white woman threw an egg at me, the left would be screaming about systemic racism," he added.

Video shows person wearing a gorilla mask throwing an object at California gubernatorial recall candidate Larry Elder



While California Gov. Gavin Newsom could be figuratively left with egg on his face if voters oust him from office during the state's gubernatorial recall election, it appears that someone threw a literal egg at recall candidate Larry Elder on Wednesday.

Video footage shows a person in a gorilla mask throwing an object at Elder from behind, and Kate Cagle of Spectrum News 1 tweeted that it was an egg that just missed the back of Elder's head.

"It kind of glanced his head," an Elder campaign staffer said about the projectile, according to the Los Angeles Times.

Breaking: A flying egg narrowly missed the back of recall candidate @larryelder's head after it was thrown by an ac… https://t.co/vdfVkT7Z8C

— Kate Cagle (@KateCagle) 1631130122.0

Elder, a conservative talk radio show host who is running in the state's recall election, is one of the dozens of candidates vying for the opportunity to replace Newsom. If he wins he would become the state's first black governor.

The RealClearPolitics poll average shows Elder with a large lead over other potential replacement candidates competing for the chance to take Newsom's job.

If a majority of votes are cast in favor of recalling Newsom, the candidate who receives the most votes will become the state's new governor and serve out the rest of Newsom's term. If Newsom is ousted from office, his removal will come more than a year before his current term is slated to end.

Should Newsom be ejected from office, he will not be the first governor recalled in the state. Back in 2003 California voters successfully recalled Democratic Gov. Gray Davis and replaced him with Republican Arnold Schwarzenegger.

Elder tweeted that he "voted early in person" on Wednesday.

Many prominent Democrats have rallied behind Newsom, including former President Barack Obama, who appears in an ad backing the Golden State governor.

Big news: @BarackObama is urging Californians to vote NO on the Republican recall in a new ad. Find your ballot a… https://t.co/2D2DCz00w3

— StopTheRepublicanRecall (@StopRepRecall) 1631137288.0

Greg Gutfeld: Sending Kamala Harris to campaign for Gavin Newsom before recall vote is like 'asking Charlie Sheen to be your sponsor at AA'



Fox News' Greg Gutfeld on Tuesday declared that sending Vice President Kamala Harris to campaign for Democratic California Gov. Gavin Newsom prior to the state's recall election is not a wise choice.

Well, Gutfeld was a bit more pointed than that: "Sending Kamala to help Gavin is like asking Charlie Sheen to be your sponsor at AA. This is not a good decision."

What are the details?

During a segment on "The Five," co-host Dana Perino had been discussing with the panel President Joe Biden's withering poll numbers when she turned to Gutfeld for his take.

"Greg, it used to be for a few months the president's worst [poll] numbers were on immigration — and they were really bad, like in the 30s — but now he's upside down on Afghanistan, COVID, economy, crime, and immigration," Perino observed. "So that's not a good trajectory."

"Yeah, everything he touches turns to poop," Gutfeld answered before apparently losing interest and heading right for the California recall election on Sept. 14 — and specifically Harris helping Newsom. "I want to talk about the recall. That excites me."

Gutfeld continued, saying that "Kamala is going to help him out" before asking "The Five" panel whether Harris is "the worst vice president in the history of vice presidents."

"Well, we've had some bad ones," co-host Jesse Watters jumped in.

And that's when Gutfeld went for the comedic kill shot: "Sending Kamala to help Gavin is like asking Charlie Sheen to be your sponsor at AA. This is not a good decision."

He added that Harris "has the persuasive skills of gout. She's able to do two things that no person could possibly do: Be invisible and unpopular. Like flatulence. She's political flatulence."

Gutfeld's merciless ribbing of Harris elicited much laughter around "The Five" table, after which co-host Jeanine Pirro went further, saying Harris hadn't been "present" and was merely the "cackler-in-chief."

Anything else?

Harris was set to assist Newsom late last month in his bid to stay in office but canceled a planned rally after the deadly terror attack in Afghanistan.

A Harris spokesperson said the vice president instead would return to Washington, D.C., after visiting the Joint Base Pearl Harbor-Hickam in Hawaii rather than going to the California rally.

But Harris on Wednesday was headed back to her home state for a campaign event in San Leandro to support Newsom during the final week of the gubernatorial recall campaign, KCRA-TV reported.

Leading Republican gubernatorial candidate Larry Elder last month picked up a major endorsement from Gloria Romero, the former Democratic majority leader of the California state Senate.

And left-wing billionaire George Soros has donated a total of $1 million to an organization backing Newsom.

(H/T: The Daily Caller)

Liberals lash out at CNN for interviewing Caitlyn Jenner during California recall



CNN viewers lambasted the cable news network on Tuesday after they interviewed Caitlyn Jenner, a California recall candidate, despite polling showing her with only 1% support.

Jenner was interviewed by Brianna Keilar on CNN with just one week before California residents decide whether to recall Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom on Sept. 14.

Many on the left took to social media to bash the network for giving Jenner a platform.

"If any other candidate was polling at 1%, they wouldn't be getting airtime. There is absolutely no reason why Caitlyn Jenner should be on any news network," said liberal activist Charlotte Clymer.

If any other candidate was polling at 1%, they wouldn't be getting airtime. There is absolutely no reason why Caitl… https://t.co/VP6iMtJ3Rv

— Charlotte Clymer 🏳️‍🌈 (@cmclymer) 1631022120.0

"Why would CNN have on Caitlyn Jenner, a candidate with 1%? Is this the cable equivalent of click bait?" asked veteran Democrat strategist Bob Shrum.

"It's fully possible to support Caitlyn Jenner's identity journey and be vehemently against her beliefs and politics. I don't even know why CNN is entertaining her viability as a candidate. How about we not give reality tv stars the spotlight for political office anymore?" tweeted activist Malynda Hale.

Others, like soap opera actress Nancy Lee Grahn, called for viewers to stop watching CNN.

"The only way to show them that a #CaitlynJenner shouldn't be on a supposed legit news program is to turn it off 4 a couple of days or even a week. The break would do us all good," she tweeted.

"Why in the f*** is Caitlyn Jenner on CNN this morning? She's a f***ing joke at 1% in the bigger f***ing joke of the California recall," tweeted another critic.

Keilar challenged Jenner on the low support for her candidacy on recent polling, which Jenner dismissed. Other viewers noted that Keilar spent much of the interview attacking the frontrunner among recall challengers, conservative talk show host Larry Elder.

Here's the latest about about the recall election:

Gov. Newsom, opponents continue intense campaign ahead of recall election in SFwww.youtube.com

Larry Elder picks up endorsement from former Democratic leader in California recall election



Leading Republican gubernatorial candidate Larry Elder picked up a major endorsement from the former Democratic majority leader of the California state Senate Wednesday in the recall election for Gov. Gavin Newsom (D).

Gloria Romero, who served as the Democratic majority leader in the state Senate from 2001 until 2008 before stepping down to serve on the Education Committee, endorsed Elder for governor in a video published Wednesday. An education reform activist, Romero declared her support for Elder's position on school choice.

"Our public schools need big change. I'm Gloria Romero; I was the majority leader of Democrats in the state Senate. I believe in charter schools and school choice. So does Larry Elder – but not Gavin Newsom. He shut our public schools while he sent his kids to private schools," she says in a video.

"Yes: I'm a Democrat. But the recall of Newsom is not about political party. It's about Newsom. Larry Elder for governor," she adds.

Democrat Gloria Romero, a former CA legislator & longtime charter school advocate, cut an ad supporting GOP candida… https://t.co/AUziQGZ9p1

— Laurel Rosenhall (@LaurelRosenhall) 1629838642.0

Elder, a libertarian-minded talk radio host, currently leads the pack of Republicans vying to challenge Newsom in the Sept. 14 recall election. While Democrats outnumber Republicans 2-to-1 in California, Elder is believed to have a strong chance of becoming governor under the rules of the recall election, should voters decide they've had enough of the current governor.

Newsom won the largest share of the vote of any Democrat in state history when he was elected governor in 2018. But his heavily criticized handling of the COVID-19 pandemic, as well as his scandalous hypocrisy in ordering Californians to observe the coronavirus restrictions while flouting those restrictions at a private birthday party in a French restaurant, gave his opponents enough support to trigger a recall election.

The recall ballot will ask two questions. First, should the governor be recalled? And if so, who should be governor? If a simple majority of voters answer "yes" to the first question, then the candidate with the most votes on the second question becomes governor. These rules enable any candidate with a plurality of votes to win the election, which gives Elder a real chance of becoming governor should Democrats split the vote among the more than 40 candidates on the ballot while Republicans stay united behind him.

Most California voters are not conservative. They don't share Elder's positions on the issues. But recent polls have shown that voters are split on whether Newsom should remain governor, with 47% saying he should be recalled and 50% saying he should stay. Other surveys have suggested that Republicans are more motivated to vote in the recall election than Democratic voters, who if they stay home could cause Newsom to lose the first ballot question and open the door for Elder to becoming governor.

With Democrats nervous and Republican rivals envious of his frontrunner status, opposition research is flying to take down Elder's candidacy before the election.

The Sacramento Bee and Republican candidates Kevin Falconer, the former mayor of San Diego, and Caitlyn Jenner, a reality TV star and former Olympic athlete, have each called on Elder to drop out of the race after his ex-fiancee claimed that he once waved a gun at her while high on marijuana in 2015, prompting her to break off their engagement.

Politico first reported the account of Elder's former fiancee, Alexandra Datig, 51, who said the incident occurred during an argument.

The alleged gun incident occurred in the midst of a heated conversation as their relationship was unraveling, according to Datig. "He was in the bedroom, and I was standing by the door," she said. "We talked to each other.'' He became silent, she said, and then slowly "walked over to the nightstand, opened the door, took out the gun,'' a .45 pistol.

"And he checked if it was loaded — while I was talking,'' she said. "He wanted to make sure I saw that he had it."

"It was an act of silent scorn — and anger,'' she said.

Elder denied the accusations, calling them "salacious" in a tweet thread condemning "this type of politics of personal destruction."

"I am not going to dignify this with a response — it's beneath me," he added.

The media attention on Elder, as well as the Newsom campaign's pivot to attack him as "to the right of Donald Trump," could very well backfire by signaling to Republican voters that Elder is the candidate Democrats fear most and therefore the man to rally behind.

The recall election will be held on Sept. 14. California has already sent a mail-in ballot to every active registered voter in the state. Returned ballots must be post-marked by Sept. 14 and received by Sept. 21 to be counted.

California police discover hundreds of unopened mail ballots, drugs, and gun in sleeping felon's car ahead of recall election



Police in Torrance, California, on Monday announced the discovery of hundreds of recall ballots in a vehicle where a felon was found passed out with narcotics, a loaded gun, and multiple driver's licenses in his possession.

Authorities found nearly 300 unopened mail ballots for the upcoming gubernatorial recall election in the vehicle, which was parked in the lot of a 7-Eleven convenience store on the night of Aug. 16, KTLA-TV reported.

According to a news release from the police department, officers also found a loaded firearm, methamphetamine, thousands of pieces of mail, a scale, and multiple California driver's licenses and credit cards that were in other people's names. The unidentified male suspect found asleep in the vehicle was also in possession of Xanax pills and is a felon, police said.

The man was arrested on suspicion of weapons, narcotics, and forgery violations. He was later released on his own recognizance, according to KABC-TV.

Police said the department's Special Investigations Division has partnered with the U.S. Postal Service and the Los Angeles County District Attorney's Offices Public Integrity Unit to investigate the matter.

"Investigators are trying to figure out how the election ballots ended up in the suspect's vehicle and what their intent was in having them," the police department said in a statement. "This is an isolated incident and is not related to any additional thefts of election ballots."

"We want to remind our #TorranceCommunity, to report any suspicious activity surrounding any elections at 310-328-3456," the department added.

Investigators are unsure why the felon was in possession of the ballots or what he intended to do with them.

"The election ballots, they were un-tampered with, unopened, a little over 300 of them found, primarily from addresses in Lawndale," said Sgt. Mark Ponegalek with the Torrance Police Department. "There were some from Compton. We're still trying to figure out where all these belonged to at this time so we're working with the Los Angeles (county) election office as well as the U.S. Postal Inspector."

The discovery was made on the same day that absentee ballots were mailed out to registered California voters for the gubernatorial recall election on Sept. 14.

The Los Angeles County Registrar's office assured KABC-TV that there is no indication the ballots were taken in an attempt to alter the results of the recall vote and noted that other stolen mail was recovered with them.

"There's nothing to indicate this was focused on the election," the county registrar's office said.

Black LA Times columnist blasts 'dangerous' Larry Elder as 'the Black face of white supremacy' amid recall showdown with CA Gov. Gavin Newsom



Erika D. Smith of the Los Angeles Times just penned a column that's getting quite a bit of attention. It's titled, "Larry Elder is the Black face of white supremacy. You've been warned."

The fact that Smith also is black underscores the breadth of pushback that Elder — a conservative political commentator — has been receiving since he announced his candidacy in the recall election of California Gov. Gavin Newsom.

TheBlaze on Friday noted that left-wing political groups are shocked and horrified that Newsom, a Democrat, could actually lose the recall to upstart Elder.

What did the columnist write?

Smith pulled no punches in her attempted takedown of Elder, pointing out his "smug smile of a Black conservative" and saying nothing angers her more "than watching a Black person use willful blindness and cherry-picked facts to make overly simplistic arguments that whitewash the complex problems that come along with being Black in America."

"Like a lot of Black people, though, I've learned that it's often best just to ignore people like Elder," Smith added in her column. "People who are — as my dad used to say — 'skinfolk' but not necessarily kinfolk."

More from her piece:

It's not just that Elder would be a Trump fanboy Republican trying to run a state dominated by Democrats. Or that he has zero experience in elected office and clearly doesn't have the temperament for governance. (He can't even take questions from journalists without losing his cool.)

It's that — perhaps out of spite or perhaps out of an insatiable need for attention — Elder opposes every single public policy idea that's supported by Black people to help Black people. This has been true for decades, but it's particularly problematic given the racial reckoning following the murder of George Floyd.

"We have been having a series of real uncomfortable discussions about systemic racism in institutions across this state," state Sen. Sydney Kamlager (D-Los Angeles) said, according to Smith. "About how to really peel back the layers of ignorance or ineptitude so that we can deal with them in very real ways. And Larry Elder is someone who just fundamentally doesn't believe that [systemic racism] exists."

She added that Elder "apparently doesn't believe that racial profiling exists," that he "scoffs at the many efforts to reform the criminal justice system and to root out racial bias in policing by requiring more transparency and accountability from officers" — but that he uses stats showing "that Black people are particularly prone to murdering one another."

"Do we still have the phenomenon where a young Black man is eight times more likely to be killed by another young Black man than a young white man?" Smith quoted Elder as saying to Orange County Republicans. "If the answer to those series of questions is yes, I submit to you that systemic racism is not the problem."

More from her column:

Elder mocks critical race theory, though I'm not sure he understands what it actually is. That doesn't bode well for ethnic studies in California.

If he's elected, the task force studying reparations for Black Californians would be toast. As would yet unsigned bills to allow police officers to be decertified for misconduct and to support community-based alternatives to 911.

Smith also ripped Elder's stance on vaccine mandates, promising that as governor he'll "repeal those before I have my first cup of coffee — and I don't drink coffee."

Anything else?

She added that Elder's "candidacy feels personal. Like an insult to Blackness," and that "Black people know better than anyone how dangerous Elder is. He is the O.G. troll that no one was supposed to feed. But here we are."

You can read Smith's complete column here.

Gov. Newsom warns that Republican Larry Elder is only 2 points away from winning California recall election



Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom took aim at the Republican front-runner, talk show host Larry Elder, in California's recall election as polls show Newsom's support weakening.

Newsom attacked Elder by aligning him with Trumpism during a campaign event at a Mexican restaurant Saturday.

"Though we defeated Trump, we didn't defeat Trumpism. Trumpism is still alive and well, even here in the state of California," Newsom told volunteers.

"If you don't believe me, just consider," he added, "the likely person to enter an oath of office, to enter in the governor's office in just a matter of weeks if we don't reject this recall."

Newsom was referring to Elder, a popular conservative talk show host from Los Angeles. In a recent fundraising email, the liberal governor warned that Elder was just 2 percentage points way from being California's next governor.

"Now hear this: Larry Elder is just 2 points from being our next governor. Sorry to scare you, but it's true," read the email, according to Politico.

Newsom only needs to garner 50% of the votes against the recall to stay in office, but because of the way the election is run, Elder does not need to gain 50% of votes to win. He only needs to obtain a plurality among Newsom challengers if Newsom loses.

An Inside California Politics/Emerson poll found that only 48% of registered voters in California would vote to keep Newsom in office, just 2 percentage points more than the 46% who said they would vote him out.

A CBS YouGov poll also found that Newsom faces an enthusiasm gap. Republican voters are not as numerous as Democratic voters in California, but more of them say they are excited to vote in the recall election.

Elder has said that he will oppose mask and vaccine mandates if he is elected governor.

"When I get elected, assuming there are still facemask mandates and vaccine mandates, they will be repealed right away and then I'll break for breakfast," he told his supporters.

California will hold the recall election against Newsom on September 14.

Here's more about the California recall election:

Larry Elder: Gavin Newsom is in 'serious trouble' and he knows itwww.youtube.com