Takeaways From the California Governor Debate at Pomona College - The New York Times

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Apr 29, 2026, 12:16:51 PM (4 days ago) Apr 29
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5 Takeaways From the Latest Debate in the California Governor’s Race

The candidates felt pressure to differentiate themselves, with ballots going out to voters next week. The result was a more spirited battle than past debates.

Eight candidates stand at podiums on a stage with name placards on their podiums. A banner in the center of the backdrop says “Voters Decide” and has the logos of CBS California, Pomona College and Asian Pacific American Public Affairs.
Eight candidates took the stage at Pomona College in one of the final debates in the California gubernatorial primary race.Mario Tama/Getty Images

Eight candidates for California governor vigorously sparred during a debate in Claremont, Calif., on Tuesday night as each tried to break out of a field that remains tightly bunched.

The event at Pomona College, in front of a student audience, came just one week before California voters will begin receiving mailed ballots and start voting in the June primary.

Five of the eight candidates are polling close to each other, and the televised debate, sponsored by CBS California and Asian Pacific American Public Affairs, was an opportunity to try to seize momentum in the turbulent race. The candidates are running to succeed Gov. Gavin Newsom, a Democrat, who cannot seek re-election because of term limits.

Among the five leaders are three Democrats: Tom Steyer, a former hedge fund manager; Xavier Becerra, a former California attorney general and Biden administration cabinet secretary; and Katie Porter, a former congresswoman. Two Republicans are also near the front of the pack: Steve Hilton, a former Fox News host; and Chad Bianco, the sheriff of Riverside County.

But there is still time for one or two candidates to rise above the rest, as polls show that many voters remain undecided. In California’s nonpartisan primary, the two candidates who receive the most votes will advance to the November election, regardless of their party affiliation.

Here are five takeaways from the debate.

Becerra was the biggest target of the night.

Mr. Becerra has surged in the race since Eric Swalwell, a Democratic congressman, dropped out earlier this month amid accusations of sexual assault. For months before that, most candidates barely paid much attention to Mr. Becerra, who was polling so poorly that he wasn’t invited to a debate in March.

That has since changed.

Matt Mahan, the mayor of San Jose, was answering a question about wildfire response when he suddenly pivoted to attacking Mr. Becerra on a completely different topic. He said that Mr. Becerra had bungled his role as the health and human services secretary under President Joseph R. Biden Jr., with poor responses to monkeypox, Covid-19 and the wave of migrant children who had crossed the southern border.

Steve Hilton went on the attack when Mr. Becerra said he would prevent homeowners from losing their insurance by declaring a state of emergency and freezing insurance policies.

“Have you read the statute that sets out the governor’s emergency powers?” Mr. Hilton asked, waving an arm at Mr. Becerra, who was standing next to him in the middle of the stage.

Mr. Becerra said he had.

“Then you would know that what you’re proposing is not in there. You can’t do it,” Mr. Hilton said.

“That’s not correct,” Mr. Becerra replied.

In a brief interview after the debate, Mr. Becerra defended his record as health secretary, saying he had helped fix problems created by the first Trump administration.

He was unfazed by the incoming fire from his opponents. “That’s what happens when you shoot to the top,” Mr. Becerra said.

The format made for lively chaos.

It was the largest debate so far, with eight candidates crowding onto the stage. They often talked over each other during the 90-minute event — so much so that the moderators repeatedly threatened to cut their microphones.

In some cases, the moderators gave candidates mere seconds to answer a question, and they did not always allow them to respond to attacks made by other candidates.

The format made for a livelier, but also more chaotic, scene than in the last debate.

“Wow, that was a bit of a mess,” said Ryan Kossarian, a politics student at Pomona College, delivering what was perhaps the best one-liner of the night right before he asked the first student question of the debate.

The higher energy levels were noticeable.

“Thank you all of you for having coffee before you came out here tonight,” said Pat Harvey, one of the CBS moderators. “This has been electric.”

After the debate, Sara Sadhwani, another moderator, said that she felt voters had learned not only about policy proposals but also about the temperament of the candidates.

“I think that’s what a lot of folks are looking for in this moment and with such a crowded race,” she said.

Porter addressed parental anxieties head-on.

For years, Ms. Porter’s political persona has leaned heavily on her identity as a minivan-driving single mother. She frequently talks about pushing a grocery cart and worrying that her teenagers will never be able to afford to leave home.

On Tuesday, she brought more of that energy to the debate stage with her proposals and her barbs alike. She pitched her plan to make child care free and create a tuition-free path for earning a college diploma.

“Those are all real affordability solutions,” she said.

Ms. Porter, the only female candidate on the stage, sometimes gave the vibe that she was floating above the fray while the others interrupted one another.

At one point, as several of her opponents talked over each other and the moderator struggled to control the discussion, Ms. Porter theatrically slammed her head in her hands and quipped, “This is worse than my teenagers at dinner.”

Most ran away from taxes. Steyer embraced them.

At one point in the debate, the candidates were asked if they supported suspending the state gas tax given high prices at the pump. The two Republicans said yes, as did two Democrats, Mr. Mahan and Tony Thurmond, the state schools chief. Four Democrats said they would keep the current gas tax: Mr. Becerra, Mr. Steyer, Ms. Porter and Antonio Villaraigosa, the former mayor of Los Angeles.

That was nearly the extent to which the candidates talked about raising taxes. Mr. Thurmond did mention that he supported the billionaire tax initiative that appears to have enough signatures to reach the November ballot.

But none of the candidates leaned into taxes like Mr. Steyer, a progressive billionaire who has made increasing them a central part of his platform, and who has said he thinks he should be taxed more.

During the debate, Mr. Steyer said he supported a windfall profits tax on oil companies that have raised the price of gasoline.

He also said that he would remove a property tax protection for corporate real estate that he said would deliver $22 billion to the state of California every year. He said the money would help fund single-payer health care, as well as salaries and training for teachers.

“The truth is, no one else on this stage wants to talk about revenue,” he said.

What went unsaid, however, was that those proposals have been tossed around the State Capitol for years, and they have been politically impossible to pass so far. Voters even rejected the corporate property tax idea in 2020.

One Republican was angrier than the other.

In the debate last week, the two Republicans — Mr. Bianco and Mr. Hilton — agreed on nearly everything. It was expected that they would try to differentiate themselves this time around.

Mr. Bianco instead focused on attacking every Democrat on stage as well as those that are currently in office. He said that “failed Democrat policies” had made the state unaffordable, pushed out insurance companies, encouraged homelessness and drug use and allowed giant wildfires to wipe out entire neighborhoods.

“I’m not afraid of anything. I’m truly not. But actually I’m terrified that one of these people are going to be your next governor, and these kids are all going to have to move. This is absolutely ridiculous,” he said, referring to college students in the audience.

He still didn’t disagree with Mr. Hilton on much. But the two men did appear very different, at least in terms of temperament, with Mr. Bianco the angrier of the two.

When Ms. Porter mentioned single-payer health care, Mr. Bianco told her, “If you want socialism, go somewhere else.”

In his closing comments to the audience at Pomona College, many of them students, Mr. Bianco referred to the debate as an “hour and a half that you’re never going to get back.”

A correction was made on

April 29, 2026

An earlier version of this article misstated the positions of two candidates on the state gas tax. Matt Mahan and Tony Thurmond, both Democrats, said they would suspend the tax given the high gas prices in California.

Laurel Rosenhall is a Sacramento-based reporter covering California politics and government for The Times.


More on California


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  • Hospice Fraud: The Trump administration and Democratic state leaders are blaming each other for what everyone agrees is a big problem. President Trump has made hospice fraud in California a new political flashpoint.

  • California Governor’s Debate: Just weeks before voters receive their ballots, the California race for governor remains unpredictable and chaotic; but in the latest debate, there were relatively few fireworks among the six candidates onstage. Here are five takeaways.

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  • How Gavin Newsom Boosted His Book Sales: The California governor offered supporters who gave any amount to his political group a copy of his book. Roughly 67,000 donors received the memoir, accounting for roughly two-thirds of its total print sales.


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