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California Gov. Gavin Newsom boldly declared his state a model for the nation Monday but said its leaders have failed to rein in the soaring cost of living and stem inequalities that are making it harder for people to achieve what he called the “California dream.”
“We face serious challenges — some that have been deferred for too long,” Newsom said in his inaugural address. “We face a gulf between the rich and everyone else — and it’s not just inequality of wealth, it’s inequality of opportunity.”
Still, Newsom said it’s California that can best defend U.S. values in the face of “incompetence and corruption” in Washington. He never mentioned President Donald Trump by name, but his speech was laced with sharp rebukes of Trump’s policies, particularly on immigration.
“The future depends on us,” he said. “And we will seize this moment.”
Hours after taking the oath of office, Newsom proposed state-funded health care coverage for 138,000 young people living in the country illegally and reinstating a mandate for everyone to buy insurance or pay a fine — part of former President Barack Obama’s health care law that was eliminated by Republicans in Congress last year.
The outgoing governor, fellow Democrat Jerry Brown, and other political dignitaries packed into a tent outside the Capitol in Sacramento for Newsom’s address. A church choir from Compton and a Mexican-American band energized the crowd in a display of the 51-year-old Newsom’s flashier style.

During @GavinNewsom's swearing in as California's 40th governor, he was nearly upstaged by his son Dutch, who clambered toward the podium during his dad's inaugural address https://t.co/fv5DY7pvd0 pic.twitter.com/7bgP5Fu8In
— KTLA (@KTLA) January 7, 2019