NEED TO KNOW

  • Two Republicans — Steve Hilton and Chad Bianco — lead California’s governor’s race in the latest UC Berkeley poll, with 17% and 16% respectively
  • Eight Democrats remain in the race despite party chair Rusty Hicks calling for lower-polling candidates to drop out by April 15
  • Statistical modeling puts the odds of an all-Republican November runoff at 20–27%, depending on how many Democrats stay in

SACRAMENTO, CA (TDR) — California Democrats are confronting a scenario that would have seemed impossible two years ago: their own party’s polling shows two Republicans leading the race to replace term-limited Gov. Gavin Newsom, with a fractured Democratic field handing the GOP an opening it hasn’t had in two decades.

The big picture: California’s top-two primary system — where the two highest vote-getters advance to November regardless of party — was designed to produce more competitive general elections. It’s now threatening to lock Democrats out of one entirely.

  • The June 2 primary has eight prominent Democrats on the ballot and only two major Republicans
  • Republican voters are consolidating behind Hilton and Bianco; Democratic voters are split across a field where no candidate has cleared 14%
  • At the state Democratic Party’s February convention, delegates were so divided no candidate earned the party’s endorsement

Freedom-Loving Beachwear by Red Beach Nation - Save 10% With Code RVM10

Why it matters: California’s governor commands the largest state economy in the nation and has served as the de facto opposition leader to the Trump White House — a role that would end if a Republican wins.

  • A Republican governor would face a Democratic supermajority legislature, but would control executive branch agencies, the National Guard, and disaster response
  • Democrats are defending congressional seats they need to flip the House — a demoralized base in November could cost them those races too
  • California hasn’t elected a Republican governor in 20 years; Democrats outnumber Republicans nearly two-to-one in voter registration

Driving the news: The state Democratic Party released its own internal poll Tuesday showing both Republicans leading — a rare public admission of vulnerability from a party apparatus.

  • The California Democratic Party poll, conducted March 12–17 among 2,000 likely voters, placed Hilton and Bianco first and second
  • The UC Berkeley IGS poll, conducted March 9–15, confirmed the same top line: Hilton at 17%, Bianco at 16%, Swalwell and Porter tied at 13%, Steyer at 10%
  • Five remaining Democrats — Becerra, Villaraigosa, Mahan, Yee, and Thurmond — are polling at 5% or below
  • A planned USC/ABC7 debate scheduled for Tuesday was abruptly canceled after the exclusion criteria drew backlash for leaving out every candidate of color

What they’re saying: The debate over consolidation is fracturing along racial and ideological lines inside the Democratic Party itself.

  • State Supt. Tony Thurmond — “The California Democratic Party is essentially telling every candidate of color in the race for governor to drop out”
  • Former Rep. Katie Porter, one of the Democratic frontrunners, acknowledged the stakes directly — “I think it is terrifying to think about what Trump would do to Californians if we had a governor who at every turn cooperated with him”
  • UC San Diego political scientist Thad Kousser — if Hilton pulls ahead of Bianco, it could consolidate the GOP vote but also reduce the risk of a Republican-only November
  • Berkeley IGS Poll Director Mark DiCamillo — “I’ve never seen a gubernatorial election quite like this with so many voters disengaged”

Yes, but: The Republicans’ polling lead is real — but so are the structural headwinds they haven’t solved.

  • Both Hilton and Bianco have higher unfavorable ratings than favorables among likely voters — a warning sign for a November general election in a state with 2:1 Democratic registration
  • The state GOP convention hasn’t yet endorsed either Republican, and splitting their vote carries symmetric risk: if both stay strong, one could be knocked out in June
  • 16% of likely voters remain undecided — more than the margin separating all five top candidates

CLICK HERE TO READ MORE FROM THE THE DUPREE REPORT

Do you think the U.S. should drill more domestically to bring down gas prices?

By completing the poll, you agree to receive emails from The Dupree Report, occasional offers from our partners and that you've read and agree to our privacy policy and legal statement.

Between the lines: The crisis isn’t really about jungle primaries — it’s about a Democratic field that couldn’t find consensus even when the party’s own apparatus was pleading for it.

  • The February convention failure to endorse anyone was a public signal that no candidate has consolidated the donor class, labor, or progressive infrastructure needed to break through
  • The April 15 deadline Hicks set is structurally toothless — candidates’ names remain on the ballot even after they drop out if they’ve already filed, meaning their votes still splinter the field
  • Lower-polling candidates refusing to exit aren’t just being stubborn — they’re protecting their own fundraising, future political careers, and in some cases arguing they represent constituencies the frontrunners have ignored

What’s next:

  • April 15 is the soft deadline Hicks set for low-polling Democrats to exit and endorse a frontrunner
  • California Democratic Party releases its next VOTER Index poll no later than April 7
  • Nexstar Media debate on April 22 — using a 5% polling threshold — will include only Swalwell, Hilton, Bianco, Steyer, and Porter
  • California Republican Party convention expected to endorse one candidate next month, potentially consolidating the GOP vote further

If the Democratic Party can’t unite its own candidates around a common candidate for governor of its most important state — what does that say about its ability to offer a coherent alternative to voters in November?

Sources

This report was compiled using information from CalMatters, NBC News, NBC Los Angeles, Mercury News, Daily News, ABC7, and Border Report.

Freedom-Loving Beachwear by Red Beach Nation - Save 10% With Code RVM10