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Two Republicans lead race for California’s next Governor as new poll puts presure on Democrats


Two Republicans lead race for California’s next Governor as new poll puts presure on Democrats

California Democrats were warned to get their act together months ago. Back off, consolidate, pick a front-runner or risk splitting the vote.

They ignored the advice. Now the numbers are in and the results are brutal.

A new UC Berkeley-LA Times poll shows the 2026 race for governor is a total mess for Democrats. Support is scattered across a crowded field while Republicans Steve Hilton and Chad Bianco have quietly pulled ahead.

The data tells the story. Not a single Democrat tops 13% while the GOP contenders sit in the high teens. 16% of voters remain undecided leaving the door wide open for a historic upset.

Hilton leads with about 17% followed by Bianco at 16%. Democratic heavyweights Eric Swalwell and Katie Porter are in the low teens. Billionaire Tom Steyer sits around 10%. Other Democrats like Xavier Becerra Antonio Villaraigosa and Matt Mahan all trail in the single digits.

California uses a top two primary system where the two highest vote-getters regardless of party move on to the general election. That means Democrats risk being completely shut out of November if they cannot consolidate.

Democratic heavyweights Eric Swalwell and Katie Porter are in the low teens. AP

Their vote is split across eight serious candidates while Republicans have just two. Party insiders and California Democratic Party Chair Rusty Hicks warned candidates to assess their viability and consider bowing out. The advice went largely unheeded.

A new UC Berkeley LA Times poll shows the 2026 governor race is a total mess for Democrats. AP

Analysts say the very structure of the top two systems favors Republicans when one party runs a glut of candidates. Even if Democrats make up 60% of voters and Republicans 40%, splitting that 60% among four or more Democrats could allow two Republicans to finish ahead simply because vote percentages get diluted.

The poll also shows a disengaged electorate. With over 16% of voters undecided, many Californians have not connected with any candidate’s message. That favors Republicans who avoided a free for all and rallied their base.

Other polls show Republicans and Democrats essentially tied and in some cases with Republicans slightly ahead. The race is far from settled but dangerously unstable for Democrats.

California uses a top two primary system where the two highest vote-getters regardless of party move on to the general election. MediaNews Group via Getty Images

The handful of Democratic heavyweights should have at least combined forces or hammered out a pecking order. Instead they stayed separated, each holding a slice of support too small to matter on its own.

That fragmentation under a top two system rewards simple plurality and now the possibility of a historic California upset is real. If Democrats do not act fast they could hand the governor’s mansion to Republicans at a time when the state faces soaring gas prices, housing crises and heated debates over crime.

A political earthquake that few saw coming could be just around the corner.

16% of voters undecided many Californians have not connected with any candidate message. AP

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