Newsom memoir recounts Trump joking about Brady, Ivanka, and Kushner aboard Marine One
Gavin Newsom's new memoir includes a secondhand anecdote that will generate exactly the kind of headlines the California governor needs right now: a story about Donald Trump, Tom Brady, Ivanka Trump, and Jared Kushner, all wrapped in the sort of family ribbing that tabloids treat like a national security briefing.
According to Newsom, Trump told him the story while the two were aboard Marine One. The tale goes like this: at some unspecified function, Brady expressed interest in dating Ivanka. Trump gave the quarterback her number. Brady called and left a message. Ivanka never called back.
When Trump found out, he pressed his daughter about it. Newsom recounts Trump saying he told Ivanka, "Jesus, you know, Tom Brady. What the hell is going on? Why aren't you calling this guy back?" Ivanka's alleged reply was simple: "Oh, I'm in love."
Trump, according to Newsom's retelling, then gestured toward Kushner and said, "This guy right here. This Kushner guy. I said to Ivanka, 'Not the guy whose father just got out of prison?'"
A father-in-law joke, not a political scandal
As reported by the NY Post, Newsom frames the exchange as Trump making Kushner "feel two feet tall." But anyone who has spent five minutes around a father-in-law with a sense of humor recognizes the dynamic instantly. This is a man busting his son-in-law's chops in front of the company. It is not Watergate.
Kushner's reported response lands with the quiet confidence of someone who has heard the bit before:
"Yes, sir. I know I wasn't your first choice."
That's a man secure enough to laugh at himself. Newsom, apparently, read the room differently.
Trump then reportedly turned to Newsom and said, "Not even close, right, Gavin? Tom Brady. Tom Brady." The whole scene reads less like cruelty and more like a father who enjoys telling a good story, especially one where his daughter chose love over a quarterback's fame.
Brady settled this years ago
The Brady angle is not new. Trump told Howard Stern back in 2004 that Ivanka and Brady would make a "power dynasty." But Brady himself addressed the speculation in 2020, telling Stern plainly:
"That was a long time ago in my life. … No, there was never that, where we ever dated or anything like that."
So the grand romance never happened. Ivanka and Jared started dating in 2005 after being introduced by mutual friends. They married in October 2009 at Trump's golf club in Bedminster, New Jersey. They have three children together. The story, such as it is, ended two decades ago.
What Newsom is actually selling
The more interesting question is not what Trump said on Marine One. It is why Newsom is putting it in a book right now.
Newsom governs a state hemorrhaging residents and businesses, running deficits that would make a European finance minister wince, and managing a homelessness crisis that his own party's policies created. His national ambitions are an open secret. A memoir filled with colorful Trump anecdotes is not a policy document. It is a campaign brochure dressed in hardcover.
This is the pattern with Democratic governors who want to be president: they position themselves as the adult who stood in the room with Trump, the reasonable voice who can relay the inside story. The memoir becomes the credential. The anecdotes become the audition tape.
Newsom does not need to solve California's problems if he can sell himself as Trump's foil on a national stage. That is the calculation, and the Brady story is the bait.
The Kushner footnote
Newsom's memoir also references Jared Kushner's father, Charles Kushner, who pleaded guilty in 2004 to 18 criminal counts, including tax evasion and witness retaliation, and served two years in federal prison. Trump pardoned the elder Kushner at the end of his first term and appointed him ambassador to France in his second term.
Newsom clearly wants readers to linger on the "just got out of prison" line. But Trump's willingness to extend loyalty to the Kushner family, through pardon and appointment alike, tells a different story than the one Newsom is constructing. Loyalty is not a vice in every context, even when the political class treats it as one.
A story about a family, told by an outsider
Strip away the political packaging, and what Newsom describes is a father teasing his son-in-law about how his daughter could have dated Tom Brady but chose him instead. Millions of fathers-in-law have delivered some version of this monologue at Thanksgiving dinner.
The difference is that this family lives in the White House, and the man telling the story has a book to sell.





