California Democrats exhaled in shock. For weeks, party leaders whispered about a nightmare: a November ballot with no Democrat running for governor. Tonight, that disaster is off the table — but the cost, the chaos, and the unanswered questions are staggering. Xavier Becerra is in. The second spot is a ticking political time bom
Xavier Becerra’s breakthrough into California’s November gubernatorial election is more than a personal victory; it’s a rescue mission completed at the last possible moment for Democrats. After months of bitter infighting, imploded campaigns, and scandal-driven exits, his steady climb from uncertainty to inevitability gave the party something it desperately needed: a guaranteed place on the ballot, and a figure they can plausibly rally around.
Yet the path ahead is anything but calm. The unresolved battle for the second spot — between Trump-aligned Republican Steve Hilton and billionaire Democrat Tom Steyer — will shape not only the tone of the race, but the soul of California’s political future. Becerra enters the general election bruised by attacks over his record, shadowed by controversies he insists he did not cause, and tasked with convincing a weary electorate that experience is not a liability, but the only way through the state’s overlapping crises.