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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsThe California Governor's Race That Didn't Happen
Progressive economics has swept the Democratic base, but the jungle primary has kept it from emerging in force in this crucial contest.
https://prospect.org/2026/06/01/california-governors-race-that-didnt-happen-steyer-becerra/

Xavier Becerra, right, listens to Antonio Villaraigosa, second from right, during a break in a California gubernatorial debate in San Francisco, May 14, 2026. Credit: Godofredo A. Vásquez/AP Photo
Lets come up with a hypothetical Democratic primary for governor in heavily Democratic California. Imagine that one candidate (lets call him Candidate 1) has largely avoided taking any positions on key economic questions like taxes, but has taken significant contributions from such massive California-based corporations as Chevron and the utility PG&E. Now, imagine another candidate (Candidate 2) who is the sole candidate in the field who supports a wealth tax on California billionaires, whos taken no corporate donations (hes independently wealthy), but has been the subject of at least $32 million in attack ads from an independent expenditure organization funded by the states realtor association, Chamber of Commerce, and PG&E. Another independent expenditure organization has devoted $13 million to ads backing Candidate 1, to which Airbnb and Mark Zuckerbergs Meta have each ponied up a cool million dollars, while Chevron, McDonalds, and the California Resources Corp. (a large California oil driller) have chipped in $500,000 apiece.
Problem is, none of this is hypothetical. Candidate 1, of course, is Xavier Becerra, while Candidate 2, equally of course, is Tom Steyer. And according to the Los Angeles Times/UC Berkeley Institute of Governmental Studies Poll released on Friday, Becerra leads in the states top-two jungle primary tomorrow with 25 percent support, with Republican Steve Hilton second at 21 percent and Steyer third with 19 percent. Support for the other Republican in the race, Riverside County Sheriff Chad Bianco, who once was running second, has dropped to 11 percent, while that for former Rep. Katie Porter has dipped to 7 percent. As the poll is based on responses from more than 5,000 likely votersfour or five times more than the typical pollits findings should be considered pretty damned accurate, though not definitely predictive of the final outcome, as some voters remain undecided.
The corporate millions flowing to Becerra are just the latest example of the California corporate sectors fundamental electoral strategy, which is not to donate to the Republicans who may share their overall perspectives, as Republicans havent won a single statewide contest since 2006 and hold such a small share of the seats in the legislature (usually around 25 percent) that they lack even the power to block, much less enact, any legislation. Instead, corporations routinely donate to those Democrats they deem sufficiently moderate (that is, occasionally pro-corporate) on economic issues. Over the past several decades, such Democrats have formed Moderate Caucuses in the legislature; two of their caucus chairs have resigned mid-term, one to go to work for pharma, the other for Chevron. But if theres anything that mobilizes the Democratic base in 2026, other than its loathing for Donald Trump and all his works, its an anti-corporate populism arrayed against big moneys domination of both the economy and politics. For which reason, if this were a straight-on Becerra-vs.-Steyer Democratic primary, I wouldnt bet on Becerra (though hed probably command a higher-than-usual share of the Latino vote).
But its not a straight-on anything. Very understandably, the jungle primaryin which all candidates from every party are on the same ballot, and the top two finishers go to the general electioncompelled Democrats to make sure that one Democrat broke from the pack (if not the PAC) so that they wouldnt be confronted with two Trumpians running off in November. With all the polls until recently showing that to have been a real possibility, tactical considerations outweighed those of values and ideology. And those same calculations kept the usual progressive organizations like the Working Families Party from endorsing in the governors race. (The California WFP did endorse in two down-ticket statewide contests and seven U.S. House races, in none of which was an all-Republican November runoff a plausible outcome.) Moreover, the presence of two progressive Democrats in the gubernatorial fieldSteyer and Porteralso posed an obstacle to any progressive group that would otherwise have endorsed. All this has deprived those candidates of the kind of ground-game, precinct-walking operations that have generally benefited other progressive candidates in recent years.
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The California Governor's Race That Didn't Happen (Original Post)
Celerity
16 hrs ago
OP
msongs
(74,325 posts)1. steyer the one man PAC lol. billionaires get that way by stomping on people
