Not that it was any secret in political circles, but Lt. Gov. Gavin Newsom made it official on Wednesday morning: He's running for governor in 2018.
"I make this promise -- this won’t be an ordinary campaign," wrote Newsom on his Facebook page. "But, then again, California has always been an extraordinary place."
Newsom's announcement comes in the middle of a fascinating winter for California political watchers, where leading Democrats have begun openly jockeying for high-profile positions that will be vacant in the next two statewide election cycles.
It began with the decision last month by Democratic Sen. Barbara Boxer to not seek re-election next year. Newsom passed on that race, while state Attorney General Kamala Harris decided to take the plunge. Other Democrats, most notably former Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa, are still pondering a campaign.
Newsom had made it clear he wants to be governor when Jerry Brown is forced from office by term limits in 2018, and the Facebook declaration was probably about money as much as anything. One source close to Newsom said that potential donors have already been approaching the 47-year-old Democrat and former San Francisco mayor about 2018, but that Newsom couldn't raise money for that effort without formally opening an exploratory committee.