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Saturday, May 23, 2026

CALIFORNIA'S GOVERNOR'S RACE: A VOTER'S FIELD GUIDE TO NOT GETTING PLAYED

 

CALIFORNIA'S GOVERNOR'S RACE: A VOTER'S FIELD GUIDE TO NOT GETTING PLAYED

Filling out a ballot in California right now feels less like civic duty and more like defusing a bomb while someone yells at you in a TV ad. But here's the thing — the June 2 primary matters enormously, and if you're a Democrat trying to figure out who actually deserves your vote, the answer is hiding in the money, not the messaging.

The Cast of Characters (Or: A Very California Story)

Let's be honest. This race has everything: a British TV pundit cosplaying as a MAGA cowboy, a billionaire who found his conscience somewhere between a hedge fund and a climate rally, and a career politician who has been in Sacramento so long he probably has his own parking spot. Oh, and Katie Porter — who is genuinely compelling, carries a whiteboard like a weapon of mass instruction, but whose poll numbers, bless her heart, are hovering around 7%.

Here's where the race actually stands heading into the final stretch before June 2:

CandidatePartyPolling
Steve HiltonRepublican~22%
Xavier BecerraDemocrat~21%
Tom SteyerDemocrat~15%
Chad BiancoRepublican~7%
Katie PorterDemocrat~7%
Matt MahanDemocrat~7%

Because California uses a top-two primary system, only the top two finishers advance to November — regardless of party. That means the real drama is whether November becomes a Becerra vs. Hilton showdown, or a Becerra vs. Steyer intra-Democratic civil war.

First, Let's Dispatch Steve Hilton

Steve Hilton is, to put it charitably, an acquired taste — like warm British beer or spotted dick pudding. He's a former Fox News host, a one-time policy adviser to UK Prime Minister David Cameron, and now a Trump-endorsed candidate for the governorship of the most progressive state in America. That's a bold pivot.

His policy menu includes suspending environmental rules to boost oil production, tax cuts weighted toward the wealthy, and — in what may be the single most disqualifying sentence uttered in this race — a stated willingness to extradite a California abortion provider to Louisiana under their laws if requested. For a Democrat, that's not a policy disagreement. That's a dealbreaker written in neon.

His funding? About $4.4 million raised, largely from small-dollar conservative donors and Central Valley agribusiness interests. Respectable for a Republican in California. Not exactly a grassroots revolution.

The verdict for a Democrat: Steve Hilton brings a lot of English food you don't recognize and a MAGA endorsement that makes him a non-starter. But knowing what he stands for — and who funds him — is still worth your time. Always know what's on the other side of the table.

The Real Race: Steyer vs. Becerra

This is where it gets genuinely interesting — and where following the money becomes less of a hobby and more of a survival skill.

Xavier Becerra: The Ultimate Insider

Xavier Becerra has one of the most impressive government résumés in California history: State Assemblyman, U.S. Congressman, California Attorney General, Biden's HHS Secretary. He is, in every sense, the establishment candidate — and in a normal California cycle, that would be a feature, not a bug.

But here's the problem. California's Democratic establishment has presided over two decades of educational decline, a housing crisis that has turned the American Dream into a Bay Area punchline, and a cozy relationship with the very utility monopolies — PG&E, Southern California Edison, Sempra — that have been lighting the state on fire (sometimes literally). Becerra has received over $153,000 from those investor-owned utilities over his career.

His recent fundraising surge got a notable boost from a $1 million PAC injection from Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg — which tells you something about who expects to have his ear in Sacramento. Tech oligarchs don't write seven-figure checks out of civic generosity.

His vulnerabilities are real: questions about his handling of unaccompanied migrant children during his HHS tenure, and a fraud scandal involving money stolen by his former political consultant. None of it is disqualifying on its own — but it rhymes with a pattern of institutional insulation that has left working Californians behind.

Tom Steyer: The Billionaire Who Found Religion

Tom Steyer is a fascinating and genuinely complicated figure. He made his fortune running a hedge fund — one that, yes, invested in fossil fuels and private prisons. He will not let you forget that he knows this, because he's spent the last decade and $157 million of his own money trying to atone for it.

His platform is aggressive by any measure:

  • Build 1 million new homes through state-backed initiatives
  • Strip PG&E of its utility monopoly and slash electricity bills by 25%
  • A wealth tax and higher taxes on commercial property
  • A proposed fee on AI usage to fund safety nets for displaced workers

He's endorsed by the California Nurses Association and Our Revolution — progressive labor groups that don't hand out endorsements like Halloween candy.

Follow the Money — The Most Important Section You'll Read

Since Citizens United blew the doors off campaign finance in 2010, dark money has flooded American politics like a broken fire hydrant. But even in the murk, there are telling money trails — and in this race, they are screaming.

The most revealing data point in the entire California Governor's race is this: a PAC called "California is Not for Sale" has spent over $21 million in attack ads targeting Tom Steyer. Here's who's writing those checks:

  • Pacific Gas & Electric (PG&E): $8 million — because Steyer has explicitly threatened to end their utility monopoly
  • California Chamber of Commerce: $7 million
  • California Association of Realtors: $5 million — because his housing proposals terrify them
  • California Building Industry Association: $1 million
  • IBEW Local 1245 (a utility labor union) — standing shoulder-to-shoulder with PG&E
  • California Correctional Peace Officers Association (CCPOA) — the prison guards' union

Read that list again slowly. The people most desperate to stop Tom Steyer are: the utility that has sparked catastrophic wildfires, the real estate industry profiting from California's housing scarcity, and the prison guards' union. If your enemies list looks like that, you might be doing something right.

How to Check the Money Yourself

Don't take anyone's word for it — including this article's. Here are the tools to verify campaign funding yourself:

ResourceWhat It Shows
California Secretary of State (cal-access.sos.ca.gov)All state-level campaign contributions and expenditures
OpenSecrets.orgFederal-level donor histories and PAC spending
FollowTheMoney.orgState-level dark money and independent expenditure tracking
ProPublica Nonprofit Explorer501(c)(4) "dark money" group financials
CalMatters.orgNonpartisan California-specific political journalism

These aren't partisan tools. They're public record. Use them.

The Bottom Line

Here's the honest voter's calculus as a progressive Democrat in 2026 California:

Steve Hilton is not your candidate. He's a well-dressed argument for why you should vote.

Xavier Becerra is a safe, competent, institutional choice — backed by the same corporate and utility interests that have made California increasingly unlivable for its working and middle class. His surge is real. His establishment pedigree is both his strength and his liability.

Tom Steyer is messy, self-funded, and carries genuine baggage from his hedge-fund days. But the enemies he has made in this race — and the groups attacking him — are a more honest endorsement of his threat to entrenched power than any TV ad he could buy. And he's buying plenty of those too.

The 14% of undecided voters heading into the final week will determine whether California gets a real progressive disruption or a return to the comfortable dysfunction of the status quo.


Whatever you decide — and this race genuinely deserves your careful thought — please vote on June 2, 2026. Not because any candidate is perfect. But because the people spending $21 million to shape your opinion are absolutely, certainly going to show up. The least we can do is show up too.


Sources & References — California Governor's Race 2026

Here are all the primary sources used in the article, organized by outlet. Each link has been verified and leads directly to the relevant reporting.


🗞️ News & Political Journalism

1. CalMatters — "Hilton, Becerra lead and Steyer trails in CA governor poll" Dan Walters, CalMatters opinion/commentary — polling analysis and race overview 🔗 https://calmatters.org/commentary/2026/05/governor-poll-hilton-becerra-california/


2. KQED News — "Hilton, Becerra Lead Democrats' Final Poll for California Governor" KQED public radio/TV — final pre-primary poll breakdown and candidate funding analysis 🔗 https://www.kqed.org/news/12084358/hilton-becerra-lead-democrats-final-poll-for-california-governor


3. Los Angeles Times — "Hilton and Becerra lead in a tightening race in final weeks of California governor's campaign" LA Times — deep reporting on the final stretch, money trails, and attack ad spending 🔗 https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2026-05-19/hilton-becerra-in-tightening-race-in-final-weeks-of-california-governors-campaign


📊 Polling Data

4. Emerson College Polling — "California 2026 Poll: Becerra Continues to Surge, Steyer and Hilton Compete for Second Spot" Emerson College Polling / Inside California Politics — May 9–10, 2026 survey, n=1,000 likely primary voters, ±3% credibility interval 🔗 https://emersoncollegepolling.com/california-2026-poll-becerra-continues-to-surge-steyer-and-hilton-compete-for-second-spot/


🔍 Follow the Money — Campaign Finance Tools

These are the public-access tools referenced in the article for tracking campaign contributions yourself:

ToolWhat It TracksLink
CA Secretary of State — CAL-ACCESSAll California state campaign contributions & expenditurescal-access.sos.ca.gov
OpenSecrets.orgFederal donor histories, PAC spending, dark moneyopensecrets.org
FollowTheMoney.orgState-level independent expenditures & PAC trackingfollowthemoney.org
ProPublica Nonprofit Explorer501(c)(4) dark money group financialsprojects.propublica.org/nonprofits
CalMatters.orgNonpartisan California political journalismcalmatters.org

All links accessed and verified May 23, 2026. Primary election: June 2, 2026. Go vote.