Though Newsom has engaged in friendly wagers with governors of the opposing team’s state in the past, this year he and Missouri‘s Republican Gov. Mike Parson are teaming up to benefit charity. The pair plan to sign Super Bowl merchandise and memorabilia and donate it to the Special Olympics, Newsom’s office said.
Newsom’s chosen charity marks a poke at DeSantis, his political rival. Newsom often accuses DeSantis of being a “bully” and has publicly criticized the Republican Florida governor’s effort to prevent the Special Olympics from requiring vaccine mandates for its at-risk athletes during the pandemic. Newsom said his own late mother worked with the Special Olympics.
The governor’s office announced Newsom’s departure in a news release full of game puns, saying he would “purdy soon touchdown in Nevada to usher in another Super Bowl.” R&B artist Usher is headlining the halftime show and Brock Purdy is the quarterback for the 49ers.
A former mayor of San Francisco, Newsom predicted that his hometown team will emerge victorious on Sunday after losing to the Chiefs on the big stage in 2020. That year, Newsom and Parson exchanged gifts.
Erin Mellon, a spokesperson for Newsom, said the governor secured his ticket through friends who he’s attending the game with, but did not name names. California sets a limit on the value of gifts given to state and local officials from certain sources, though exceptions apply for family and in some instances, friends.
Newsom attended the NFC championship game in Santa Clara last month, where he was photographed talking to 49ers legendary receiver Jerry Rice on the sidelines as the team beat the Detroit Lions in a 34-31 nail-bitter.
This time around Taylor Swift tops the list of celebrities expected in the stands, or suites. Newsom defended Swift and her boyfriend, Chiefs tight end Travis Kelce, in an MSNBC interview that aired over the weekend, calling GOP criticism “sad and pathetic.”
“The Republicans that are looking down and past Taylor Swift do so at their own peril,” Newsom said to host Jonathan Capehart . “What is her sin? What is her sin? She wants more people to vote.”
Kelce, who has appeared in Pfizer advertisements encouraging Americans to get vaccinated for COVID-19, and Swift, who endorsed Joe Biden in 2020 and often encourages her fans to register to vote, have become the target of criticism from Donald Trump loyalists and the subject of a series of unproven and outlandish claims ahead of the presidential election.
The conspiracy theories have even driven some conservatives to root for San Francisco, despite usually vilifying the city as an acrid emblem of progressivism run amok.
It’s unclear if Trump will go to the game. President Biden declined an interview with CBS News to air before the Super Bowl and Trump said he would “be happy to replace him.” Biden is not scheduled to attend.
Newsom’s attendance at NFL games has stirred controversy before. He and former Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti were photographed without face masks at an NFC championship game between the 49ers and the Los Angeles Rams at SoFi Stadium in Inglewood in 2022.
With American society largely reverted back to pre-pandemic behavior, that shouldn’t be an issue in Las Vegas on Sunday.
Staff writer Noah Bierman contributed to this report.