- Californians launch new recall effort against Governor Gavin Newsom, citing fire mismanagement, rising crime, homelessness, and economic decline. Organizers claim voters are ready for change, while Newsom’s allies dismiss it as another failed attempt by political opponents. The campaign highlights deepening discontent in a state wrestling with persistent crises and gubernatorial leadership under scrutiny.
LOS ANGELES, CA (TDR) — A newly formed coalition of citizens calling itself Saving California has reignited efforts to recall Governor Gavin Newsom, citing a litany of grievances including public safety failures, rising costs of living, and the recent mismanagement of wildfire response systems in Southern California.
Announced publicly at a retail storefront in Los Angeles on January 23, the campaign’s intent to recall Governor Newsom comes just two years after the state’s last failed recall election. Yet supporters of this latest attempt say they believe the political climate—and the public mood—have fundamentally changed.
A Renewed Push for Accountability
Led by Saving California chairman Randy Economy, who played a pivotal role in the 2021 recall effort, the campaign formally launched by gathering initial signatures and filing a letter of intent to begin the recall process. Speaking to The Epoch Times, Economy did not mince words.
“We can’t afford two more years of Gavin Newsom … we just can’t,” he said. “High priority right now is not California.”
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Joining him were business owner Fraser Ross, Chef Andrew Gruel, and religious and civic leaders, who collectively accused the governor of gross negligence during the January fires in Los Angeles County.
In their intent to recall letter, the group wrote:
“His gross mismanagement during the Los Angeles County fires, with inadequate resources and delayed responses, left communities devastated.”
Systemic Failures Amid Wildfire Disaster
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The tipping point for many supporters appears to be the catastrophic fires in early January that swept through parts of Los Angeles County. Fire crews reported dangerously low water pressure and empty reservoirs that severely hampered firefighting efforts.
Chief San Digiovanna of the Verdugo Fire Academy in Glendale explained the dire circumstances:
“The water system got low on us—on firefighters—so when they were out fighting the fire, there were times when they had very low water pressure,” he told The Epoch Times.
Governor Newsom responded on January 10, announcing an independent investigation into the reported infrastructure failures.
“We need answers to ensure this does not happen again,” he posted on X, “and we have every resource available to fight these catastrophic fires.”
Yet for many Californians, that response came too late.
Political Blowback and Elite Dismissal
Predictably, Newsom’s political team was quick to characterize the recall as another partisan stunt. Nathan Click, a longtime adviser to the governor, mocked the campaign:
“The same group of far-right Trump acolytes have launched [seven] different recall attempts… each of which have failed spectacularly,” he said, noting internal lawsuits and allegations of donor fraud within prior efforts.
The accusation, however, fails to acknowledge the broader coalition emerging this time—one that spans political, business, and civic communities, including disillusioned Democrats and independents.
Retail entrepreneur Fraser Ross, whose stores have been repeatedly hit by shoplifting and vandalism, said in a statement:
“The destruction of California is at an all-time high… I’ve had to take matters into my own hands, and truly I’ve had enough.”
Recall’s Historical Context
Should the campaign succeed, Newsom would become only the second governor in California history to be recalled. The first occurred in 2003, when Democratic Governor Gray Davis was removed by 55 percent of voters amid widespread dissatisfaction with rolling blackouts and a fiscal crisis. He was replaced by Republican Arnold Schwarzenegger.
According to the California Secretary of State, 181 recall attempts have been filed since 1913. Only 11 reached the ballot. Six resulted in actual removals from office.
Economy believes this year’s climate is ripe for success.
“This is a democracy we live in,” he said. “He works for the people, and I think he forgets that.”
With Governor Newsom midway through his second term, the movement signals growing frustration in a state burdened by surging homelessness, rising crime, and crumbling infrastructure—all under the stewardship of a leader critics say is more focused on national ambition than California’s needs.
Will Californians once again exercise their constitutional right to demand new leadership—or will history repeat itself?
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