California Gov. Gavin Newsom said this week that Democrats should look to the late conservative influencer Charlie Kirk’s outreach to young men as a model for their own party.
In a public conversation with former President Bill Clinton, Newsom said that conservative figures have tapped into young men’s frustrations and mobilized them—including Kirk, who was assassinated during a public event in Utah in September. Newsom said Democrats need to confront what he described as a “crisis of men and boys” both to help those men and to stay competitive in politics.
The exchange with Newsom came after Clinton noted that fewer young men are going to college and asked what California is doing to support them. Newsom said the state has created a service corps larger than the Peace Corps and has rolled out a plan targeting men’s mental health, education, and job training.
The governor cited high suicide rates among men, school dropouts, and loneliness among young men, and he said some Democrats hesitate to address men’s issues because they think they compete with efforts to help women.
Earlier this summer, other prominent Democrats warned that the party is losing a generation of men. Former Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel said on a podcast that Democrats had “lost it with young men” after years of “walking on eggshells” around cultural issues and urged a renewed focus on strength, confidence, and optimism.
Democratic strategists told The Epoch Times earlier this year that Democrats need to engage disengaged men with policies and messages that speak to work and community or risk ceding them to Republicans.

Newsom said the “epidemic of loneliness” among men is not a zero‑sum issue: Helping boys and men strengthens families and communities. Organizers hope the challenge will expand opportunities for young men to feel seen, valued, and connected.
The governor said the framework includes service opportunities, mentoring, and recruiting more male teachers. One of the biggest gaps, he said, is the lack of male educators in early grades, which he said can be addressed with simple interventions.
Earlier in the conversation with Clinton, Newsom touted California’s $4.1 trillion economy and said the state leads in industries from technology to farming.
When Clinton asked what citizens could do amid political division, Newsom quoted Supreme Court Justice Louis Brandeis, saying the most important office in a democracy is that of the citizen.
He urged people to engage in their communities with grace, humility, and respect and said that everyone wants to be protected, respected, and connected to something larger than him- or herself.







