Mark Halperin Sug­gests Gavin New­som Lacks ‘Dri­ve’ For 2028 Pres­i­den­tial Bid

Mark Halperin Suggests Gavin Newsom Lacks ‘Drive’ For 2028 Presidential Bid

Polit­i­cal ana­lyst Mark Halperin expressed doubt on Tues­day about Demo­c­ra­t­ic Cal­i­for­nia Gov. Gavin New­som launch­ing a 2028 pres­i­den­tial cam­paign.

New­som holds 7% sup­port among Demo­c­ra­t­ic 2028 pri­ma­ry vot­ers for who they would like to be their party’s pres­i­den­tial nom­i­nee in 2028, trail­ing only Vice Pres­i­dent Kamala Har­ris, who is at 37%, accord­ing to a Novem­ber Emer­son Col­lege poll. How­ev­er, Halperin, on “Amer­i­can Agen­da,” sug­gest­ed New­som may lack both the ambi­tion and cir­cum­stances nec­es­sary to mount a White House bid. (RELATED: MSNBC Reporter Says Unde­cid­ed Vot­er Chose Trump Over Har­ris Because She Didn’t Go On Joe Rogan Pod­cast)

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“A lot of what Democ­rats want to see is some­one who will be tough and take the fight direct­ly to [Pres­i­dent-elect] Don­ald Trump in a telegenic way … I think objec­tive­ly he has some of those skills. I will say, I con­tin­ue to believe peo­ple over­state his will­ing­ness to make the per­son­al sac­ri­fices to run for pres­i­dent,” Halperin said. “And also run­ning for pres­i­dent from Cal­i­for­nia geo­graph­i­cal­ly in the space time con­tin­u­um is not easy to do. And again, I think if you com­bine that with the per­son­al chal­lenges, I think peo­ple, again, are over­stat­ing the like­li­hood that he’ll be a major play­er in ’28.”

“He’s got young kids. He’s got a wife who, by all accounts, is not super enthu­si­as­tic about this … I think it’s an under-dis­cussed real­i­ty that a lot of the gov­er­nors, includ­ing Gov­er­nor New­som, who are talked about as poten­tial ’28 can­di­dates … they’re just more ambiva­lent,” he added. “They don’t have the dri­ve. Most peo­ple I know who run for pres­i­dent effec­tive­ly wake up every morn­ing and say, what are the 10 things I need to do today to increase my chances of win­ning? And if one of them is chew through hand­cuffs, they’ll do it. I just don’t get the sense that that’s where Gavin Newsom’s head is at.”

Halperin recent­ly assert­ed on “The Morn­ing Meet­ing” that Vice Pres­i­dent-elect JD Vance’s will­ing­ness to con­duct inter­views across a vari­ety of plat­forms gives him “a huge advan­tage” over oth­er pos­si­ble 2028 pres­i­den­tial con­tenders.

“I think one of the smartest things JD Vance could do to con­sol­i­date his posi­tion … is to go on those shows reg­u­lar­ly. He can do it. He can devel­op per­son­al rela­tion­ships with those peo­ple, and peo­ple in the media, con­trary to pop­u­lar per­cep­tion, are human beings,” Halperin said. “And if the vice pres­i­dent of the Unit­ed States is stop­ping by your pod­cast every month and giv­ing you time, you’re gonna be favor­ably dis­posed towards that per­son.”

How­ev­er, for­mer CNN polit­i­cal ana­lyst Chris Cil­liz­za also recent­ly spec­u­lat­ed about the pos­si­bil­i­ty of Don­ald Trump Jr. run­ning for the White House in 2028, sug­gest­ing he could inher­it his father’s “polit­i­cal move­ment” rather than Vance.

“Look, I just think there will be an attempt at some point to hand off Trump­ism, and Don­ald Trump will want to be in con­trol of that hand­off,” Cil­liz­za said. “And the fact that his eldest son is stand­ing right there, is some­one who has shown that he gets the MAGA base in a way very few Repub­li­cans do, who has shown that he, in his own right, is extreme­ly pop­u­lar online, who gets the kind of social media trolling that goes hand in hand with being a Trump sup­port­er, that he is relat­ed by blood to Don­ald Trump — these are all things that I think you can­not rule out Don Jr. of run­ning in 2028.”

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