- California Gov. Gavin Newsom signed the CARE court bill on Wednesday, aiming to help the mentally ill and unhoused.
- “We are giving them hope," Newsom said on his sweeping plan to address the homeless issue.
- Newsom also spoke to CNBC exclusively about his support for the the fast-food worker bill and his political ads in Florida and Texas among other topics.
SAN JOSE, Calif. – Gov. Gavin Newsom said political attack ads he's funding that are running in Florida and Texas are retribution for the Republican-backed recall against him.
"It's literally me taking advantage of the moment that I'm in," Newsom said in an exclusive interview with CNBC. "I had to raise, I think we put over $80 million to defend ourselves in a recall last year. These guys nationalized the recall campaign against me. They went after our values, went after our people, went after things we hold dear in the state, and I'm just pushing back."
Get top local stories in Southern California delivered to you every morning. >Sign up for NBC LA's News Headlines newsletter.
Newsom successfully quashed a recall attempt last year in California. Asked if he's getting ready for a presidential run, Newsom insisted that was not the case.
"I get to sleep at night," Newsom said. "I get to sleep at night pushing back against bullies like Ron DeSantis."
Newsom's re-election campaign ran an ad in July on TV stations in Florida that slammed DeSantis. Freedom "is under attack in your state," Newsom said in the ad. "I urge all of you living in Florida to join the fight, or join us in California, where we still believe in freedom — freedom of speech, freedom to choose, freedom from hate and the freedom to love."
Money Report
The 25-minute interview with Newsom came after the governor officially signing into legislation the Community Assistant, Recovery and Empowerment (CARE) act, which he crafted to address the homeless issue in California. The bill will provide court-ordered care to the unhoused with severe mental disorders.
"It addresses what's happening on our streets and sidewalks particularly with the most important issue: mental health," Newsom said. "We see every single day people with bipolar disorder, schizophrenia, people with paranoia — most, let's be candid, self-medicating with drug or alcohol addictions."
CARE court provides a rapid response for family members and first responders to petition a judge to order an evaluation of someone with a mental health disorder. If the person qualifies, the judge will set up a detailed CARE plan that could include housing.
"We see this manifested in California like no other state," Newsom said. "It's not unique to California, it's just worse here. It's an important issue that we haven't been able to address."
The legislation will be implemented statewide, beginning in seven counties including: San Francisco, Orange, Riverside and San Diego. Newsom said he hopes the program will eventually roll out across the country.
Newsom also defended AB 257, the fast-food labor bill, which expands protections for fast-food workers.
"There's sectors of our economy where workers don't have a voice, where they don't have a choice, where their health and safety are often compromised," Newsom said. "A disproportionate number of women and minorities work in that sector. And it's not just all teenagers, working for a few hours a week to make their way up, you have moms, people who work 20 years in the fast-food industry. And they're stuck. We wanted to create some sectoral bargaining to give folks a little bit of a leg up, give them a little opportunity."
The current minimum wage in California is $15 an hour for businesses with more than 25 employees. The law would allow the new 10-person council to increase the minimum wage up to $22, which has drawn some criticism from people who fear it will drive up the cost of going out to eat.
"I got an In-N-Out burger right down the block that's offering $22 today, and can't even find workers," Newsom said. "The minimum wage, they blew past that in this economy some time ago. They're just having a hard time finding workers, understandably so. Workers are saying, what you got for me?"
As part of the wide-ranging interview, Newsom also said:
- On inflation: "It's devastating to worker's wages and people's pocketbooks, not only in the short term, but in terms of how the value of the dollars relates to their long-term investments. It's having an impact on the housing market and affordability across the spectrum. That's why the State of California proudly took a portion of that surplus — we'll be handing out $9.5 billion of stimulus checks to help offset the cost of food and gas and inflation. One of the largest stimulus programs that we know of anywhere in America."
- On Prop 30 and Lyft: "I don't know why we're doing a big tax increase in California when we're running record surpluses, record reserves, record economic growth of 7.8% last year. They're doing it because they want to use those tax dollars to direct them, not to health and human services, not to mental health, not to schools, not to child care, not to roads and bridges — they want to direct it in a self-directed way to what they need. And that's to convert their old gas fleets and their drivers fleets into electric fleets. And we're not going to subsidize that. I don't think it's right to subsidize a corporation by direct dealing to address an issue. That's why I personally am appearing in these ads and opposition because we need to defeat Prop 30."
- On legalizing online sports gambling: "We'll see where the dust settles. But the voters will ultimately make that determination in the next few weeks. So eventually, the answer is yes, we will. Question is, how do we do it?"
Watch the video above for the full interview with Gov. Gavin Newsom.