Kevin O’Leary slams Gavin Newsom as ‘a bad manager’: California ‘is a shell of what it used to be’
O’Leary details what he’s seen in California while filming ‘Shark Tank’s’ sixteenth season
California’s economic and small business environment has been hit by a "triple whammy," according to O’Leary Ventures Chairman Kevin O’Leary.
"It's a triple whammy. You have people's preferences and how they dine after the pandemic has changed dramatically. They don't go out as much… Then you have inflation itself," O’Leary noted on "The Big Money Show" Monday.
"But also you've got policy mistakes. I'm here in California shooting season 16 of 'Shark Tank.' The casual dining sector in this state has been decimated by a policy mistake on minimum wage. They're shutting down left and right," he further detailed.
More than two-and-a-half months ago, a California law went into effect that mandates a $20 minimum wage for restaurants with 60 or more locations.
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New data published by Placer.ai last week found that as a result of the new law, most quick-service chains have raised menu prices in the state by anywhere from the mid-single digits to mid-teens, percentage-wise, and the price hikes are hurting business.

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However, in a statement to Fox News Digital, Gov. Gavin Newsom's deputy director of communications said "it seems as though Kevin O’Leary wasn’t able to wade through the corporate disinformation like his former, and far more successful" colleague and linked to a recent tweet from Mark Cuban on the minimum wage topic.
Newsom's office also cited U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics data that shows California added 4,500 jobs in the fast food industry since the $20 wage mandate was signed and took effect in April.
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McDonald's franchisee Scott Rodrick speaks out against new policy that could lead to laid-off workers on 'The Bottom Line.'
"Listen, I’ve met him. He's a nice guy, but I can't be more critical of his policies," O’Leary said. "He's a bad manager. He's decimated this place. I've been coming here for 15 years, this is a shell of what it used to be."
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