Democrat Xavier Becerra Advances to November Race for California Governor

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Democrat Xavier Becerra has secured a place in California’s November gubernatorial election, capping a rapid rise in a crowded primary contest and positioning the longtime public official as one of the final contenders to lead the nation’s most populous state.

Becerra, a former California attorney general and former U.S. health secretary, had nearly 27% of the vote from the June 2 primary when The Associated Press called the race Friday afternoon, with roughly two-thirds of ballots counted. If elected in November, he would become California’s first Latino governor in more than a century and the first Latino ever elected to the office, a milestone his campaign has emphasized as historic.

His opponent in the general election was not immediately settled. Early returns showed Republican Steve Hilton likely to advance with more than 26% of the vote, while Democrat Tom Steyer trailed with about 21%. More than 3 million ballots remained uncounted, and late-counted ballots in California often lean Democratic because many Democratic voters submit mail ballots close to Election Day.

California’s primary system sends the top two vote-getters to the November ballot regardless of party, meaning the final contest could take very different shapes depending on who finishes second.

If Hilton advances, Becerra would enter the fall campaign with a strong partisan advantage. Democrats outnumber Republicans in California by nearly 2 to 1, and Hilton has been endorsed by President Donald Trump, who remains deeply unpopular with many California voters.

If Steyer overtakes Hilton, the November race could become an expensive and divisive contest between two wings of the Democratic Party. Steyer, a former hedge fund manager, major Democratic donor and climate activist, has run as a progressive and has drawn support from allies of Bernie Sanders. He also spent hundreds of millions of dollars from his personal fortune during the primary.

Becerra, by contrast, has been backed by much of the Democratic establishment, along with major support and financial help from labor unions and business groups.

For much of the campaign, Becerra appeared to be a long shot, polling in single digits as other Democrats drew more attention. His standing improved after the political decline of former front-runner Eric Swalwell, as establishment Democrats increasingly coalesced around Becerra instead of former Rep. Katie Porter or Steyer, who ran as a political outsider.

The turnaround was striking for a soft-spoken career politician who had previously been grouped among lower-polling Democrats. At one point, California Democratic Party Chairman Rusty Hicks publicly urged candidates in that tier to leave the race.

“Guess what? The underdog stayed in the fight,” Becerra told supporters at an election night gathering Tuesday in Los Angeles, describing his near-victory as an example of “the everyday miracle” of a state where the unlikely can become expected.

The general election comes at a consequential moment for California, including Southern California and the Inland Empire, where residents continue to face steep housing costs, high utility bills, expensive gasoline and growing insurance challenges tied to wildfire risk. State leaders also face an unstable budget, looming federal reductions to California’s large health care system and economic strains connected to immigration enforcement.

So far, Becerra has not laid out a major break from the policies of Gov. Gavin Newsom, who is completing his second term. To address affordability, Becerra has said he would declare a state of emergency to freeze utility and homeowners insurance rates while examining why they have risen. He also has said he would enforce existing housing laws to ensure local governments plan for new construction.

Like other California Democrats, Becerra has said he supports reducing greenhouse gas emissions and moving toward cleaner energy while keeping gasoline prices affordable.

Becerra, the son of Mexican immigrants, grew up in Sacramento and began his political career in the 1990s. A young attorney, he won a Los Angeles-area seat in the state Legislature before being elected to Congress two years later. He served in the House for 24 years before being appointed California attorney general in 2017 during Trump’s first administration. He later served as secretary of health and human services under President Joe Biden.

During the primary, Becerra faced criticism over his record in federal office. Some Democratic leaders revived complaints about his leadership during the COVID-19 pandemic. Primary opponents also repeatedly pointed to his agency’s role in placing large numbers of migrant children in homes before some were later found working in dangerous or exploitative jobs.

Steyer, in particular, also attacked Becerra over the surge of donations from corporations and special interests that helped boost his campaign in the final weeks of the race.

Hilton has sought to channel Republican frustration over California’s high cost of living and regulatory climate, portraying Becerra as a continuation of the Newsom era. Becerra has offered few major policy departures from Newsom and, during a debate, said he would give the governor an “A” for effort on homelessness, even as the number of unhoused residents has risen sharply over Newsom’s two terms.

Becerra has largely answered criticism by emphasizing his decades in government and his record suing the Trump administration when he served as California attorney general.

“You can make all those big, exaggerated promises,” Becerra said this week in a comment aimed at critics such as Steyer. “But what matters is delivering.”

Original source: CalMatters

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