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SCOOP: Steve Hilton is more connected than ever before

Inside the Golden State political arena
Mar 29, 2024 View in browser
 
POLITICO California Playbook

By Christopher Cadelago, Lara Korte and Dustin Gardiner

Steve Hilton poses with his Kyocera flip-phone.

Steve Hilton, a Republican former Fox News host, who is diving into California politics, poses with his Kyocera flip-phone at Mayahuel in Sacramento. | Christopher Cadelago/POLITICO

THE BUZZ: For years, populist pundit Steve Hilton raved about the zen-like pleasure of living without a cell phone.

Hilton, the former Fox News host, Silicon Valley entrepreneur and policy adviser to British ex-Prime Minister David Cameron, ditched his mobile device a dozen years ago and, seemingly, never looked back. Hilton was more relaxed, carefree and happier.

“When people discover this fact about my life, they could not be more surprised than if I had let slip that I was actually born with a chicken’s brain,” Hilton wrote in the Guardian in 2016. “‘But how do you live?’ they cry.”

Turns out, he doesn’t — at least not anymore.

Playbook made the surprising discovery that Hilton is again with a cell phone after a happy hour this week in Sacramento, where the Republican sipped prosecco while touching on his increasing involvement in California politics. On Tuesday, Hilton’s Golden Together, a group aiming to restore the California Dream of fast success that began during the Gold Rush, released its second policy paper, this one on ending the housing shortage and ushering in an era of “housing abundance.” While leaving for a dinner date, Hilton pulled out the phone, perhaps inadvertently, then held it up after realizing he’d just made news.

“Well, there’s a story there,” Hilton acknowledged, before mugging for a photo with his Kyocera flip-phone, which was stamped with a Verizon logo.

Hilton’s cell phone-free lifestyle had become luddite lore. It started after he moved to Atherton, a community of billionaires in Silicon Valley, in 2012. (A New York Times Style section cover photo from 2017 showed him recreating with his pet chickens, his favorite of which was a brown hen named Hermione). When he had to yak with humans, Hilton communicated via landline and email, and a few times a month resorted to asking friends to hail him an Uber or Lyft.

Hilton, bald and charmingly puckish, found the idea that everyone should be connected and contactable all the time not just bizarre, but menacing. In a 2018 segment on Fox Business Network, about Google tracking smartphone users, he gloated about how wise his decision was.

So, what changed? How did a bloke so strident in his abstinence start toting a phone again?

First, Hilton has only partially succumbed to the modern era. He rarely shares his number. He has between 10 and 15 contacts stored in the flip-phone, he said, an amount that’s small by comparison to most people, but exponentially larger than… zero. Hilton also owns an iPhone with no SIM card that he calls his “camera,” which he uses on occasion to take pictures and upload them to Google.

He explained that the flip phone came into his possession years ago when he started to travel to the East Coast to appear on Fox. He says he never gave out the number and only used it to wish his children goodnight without racking up enormous long-distance charges with hotels. The rest of the time, it sat in a drawer at home and the Hiltons joked that it wasn’t a phone so much as a “Family Connection Device.”

Then, two years ago, his closest friend had a tragedy so he shared his number so they could communicate by text — the way the friend preferred to stay connected.

“But for years, literally no-one else had it,” Hilton stressed about his mobile number.

The big change came just this year. Over the last couple months, he’s been on the road in California two or three days most weeks, enough to feed the rumor mill with grist that he has his eye on higher-office in 2026, perhaps California governor. Hilton said he does get asked about running, but offered little else. As for the phone, he’s found it impossible to make his schedule work without a faster and more efficient way of staying in touch with people given road traffic and last-minute meetings.

Hilton reports that he isn’t any less happy, but conceded it’s annoying when the cell goes off at home. If you’re still wondering about the prosecco, Hilton, known for his Cinco de Mayo parties, wanted a margarita, but enjoys them “too much,” and worried he couldn’t stop imbibing.

On a more serious note, he’s genuinely outraged that more businesses and services require smartphones for things like accessing events via QR code only. He agrees with Democratic Rep. Adam Schiff’s recent warning about the “dangerous implications” of AT&T dropping landline services. He maintains his hatred for phones with email and apps that track—as well as distract—users. And he still believes in encouraging less smartphone use, not more.

Concluded Hilton: “I am determinedly insisting I will not get a smartphone!”

 

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GOOD MORNING. Happy Friday. Thanks for waking up with Playbook. We’ll see you back Monday when the Legislature reconvenes from their spring recess!

Now you can text us at ‪916-562-0685‬‪ — save it as “CA Playbook” in your contacts now. Or drop us a line at lkorte@politico.com and dgardiner@politico.com, or on X — @DustinGardiner and @Lara_Korte.

WHERE’S GAVIN? Nothing official announced.

BILLS BILLS BILLS

Associated Press reporter Michael Liedtke gets into a Waymo driverless taxi.

A Waymo driverless taxi operates in San Francisco. | Terry Chea/AP Photo

DEFENSIVE DRIVING — Dozens of tech and business groups are pushing back against a bill that would require robotaxi companies to obtain local approval before operating in a city or county, saying it would create an immediate, statewide prohibition on the autonomous vehicles that are already operating on California streets.

Senate Bill 915, authored by state Sen. Dave Cortese and backed by the Teamsters Union, would take exclusive control away from the state. Instead, it would empower county and city electeds to set conditions or outright reject autonomous vehicles by requiring local ordinances to be in place before cars can hit the streets.

Ahead of Wednesday’s hearing in the Senate’s local government committee, groups including CalChamber, Uber, Waymo, TechNet, Tesla and Zoox sent a letter to Chair María Elena Durazo this week, arguing the bill would undermine the ability of California’s state authorities to regulate AVs and create a cumbersome burden on advancing technology.

“SB 915 is akin to requiring Californians to obtain a separate driver’s license for every one of California’s 520 cities after already receiving a license from the DMV,” the groups wrote.

Cortese, in a statement, said local governments have long managed traffic and safety in their jurisdictions, especially in areas like school zones, and that his bill would install safety measures to ensure robotaxis don't interfere with critical services, like emergency vehicles.

"Local governments understand their roadways best and bear the responsibility for protecting their communities," he said.

SAN FRANCISCO

San Francisco Mayor London Breed speaks during a news conference.

San Francisco Mayor London Breed. | Eric Risberg/AP

NOT GI JANE — San Francisco Mayor London Breed’s campaign is mocking her rival’s proposal to bring armed California National Guard members into the city, an idea her camp has labeled “Republican.”

Mark Farrell, a former interim mayor and city supervisor, made waves Thursday when he announced that, if elected in November, he would ask Gov. Gavin Newsom to send in significantly more Guard members to help the city fight open-air drug markets and fentanyl rings fueling record overdose deaths.

“Residents and commuters aren’t looking for a police state,” said Joe Arellano, Breed’s campaign spokesperson. “While Farrell plays GI Joe, Mayor Breed continues to do the heavy lifting of governing behind the scenes.”

Arellano also suggested that Farrell’s proposal would create a literal “Baghdad by the Bay” with military in the streets. He said residents want policing and compassion, “not Humvees and AR-15’s.”

Farrell countered that Breed and her camp should spend more time talking to residents and merchants, adding, “If they were listening, they would have heard loud and clear that these neighborhoods were desperate for more law enforcement presence.”

Breed herself has partnered with Newsom to bring National Guard and California Highway Patrol into the city to help local police dismantle fentanyl rings. But they have typically worked in support functions — Farrell’s request would amount to a significant escalation.

The mayor and Farrell are both moderate Democrats who’ve increasingly embraced tough-on-crime and drugs policies as they try to win over voters frustrated by the city’s problems with addiction, homelessness and crime.

But Thursday’s kerfuffle makes one dynamic clear: Breed is ready to give Farrell the furthest rightward lane on public safety.

 

In celebration of Earth Month, the USC Wrigley Institute for Environment and Sustainability and the USC Dornsife Center for the Political Future, in collaboration with POLITICO, host “Climate Forward 2024: Climate at the Crossroads” on April 4, 2024 at USC. Top experts from politics, government, media, and academia will discuss climate change issues with a focus on finding practical policy and business solutions as well identifying ways to remove political obstacles to implementing those changes. Register to attend in person or virtually.

 
 
CLIMATE AND ENERGY

TWO ROADS — Where there once was harmony, California's and the feds' paths have diverged when it comes to clean car rules. Does it matter for the automakers? For the environment? Read last night's California Climate to find out.

TOP TALKERS

Fast food workers and their supporters march past the state Capitol calling on passage of a bill to provide increased power to fast-food workers, in Sacramento, Calif.

Fast food workers march past the state Capitol on Aug. 16, 2022, calling for passage of a bill to provide increased wages. | Rich Pedroncelli/AP Photo

— Some fast food workers making minimum wage will get a bump starting Monday, but employers are confused about which ones. (CalMatters)

— State employees within the California Health and Human Services Agency could be required to return to work in-person full time, if they don’t sign a telework agreement. (The Sacramento Bee)

AROUND THE STATE

— Oakland’s new police chief has gone public — and he’s eager to crack down on crime. (San Francisco Chronicle)

— Another one of Elon Musk’s rockets blasted over Southern California last night. (Los Angeles Times)

— Police turned up $4.5 million worth of herb in a bust of black-market marijuana growers. (The Modesto Bee)

— A clash between pro-Palestian demonstrators and police shattered a door to Bakersfield City Hall. (The Bakersfield Californian)

— with help from Ariel Gans

PLAYBOOKERS

SPOTTED: NO, THE OTHER OAKLAND — Vice President Kamala Harris drew attention last week when she correctly predicted that 14th-seed Oakland would knock third-seed Kentucky out of the NCAA tournament.

Well, in case anyone was questioning the VP’s cred, Harris clarified Thursday that she does know that the University of Oakland Golden Grizzlies are from Auburn Hills, Michigan — not her East Bay hometown. “I do recognize the difference,” Harris joked in a video posted on X, where she and President Joe Biden responded to a voter question about their brackets.

There you have it, an underdog story about the other Oakland’s moment in the sun…

BIRTHDAYS — (was Thursday): Amelia Matier

CALIFORNIA POLICY IS ALWAYS CHANGING: Know your next move. From Sacramento to Silicon Valley, POLITICO California Pro provides policy professionals with the in-depth reporting and tools they need to get ahead of policy trends and political developments shaping the Golden State. To learn more about the exclusive insight and analysis this subscriber-only service offers, click here.

Want to make an impact? POLITICO California has a variety of solutions available for partners looking to reach and activate the most influential people in the Golden State. Have a petition you want signed? A cause you’re promoting? Seeking to increase brand awareness amongst this key audience? Share your message with our influential readers to foster engagement and drive action. Contact Jesse Shapiro to find out how: jshapiro@politico.com.

 

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