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CA Gubernatorial debate, April 22, 2026. (Photo: screenshot)

California Gubernatorial Debate Shows Partisan Divide

Hilton and Bianco differentiated themselves by providing answers to some of California’s most serious issues that do not impose new taxes, or regulations, or more taxpayer-funded giveaways

By Katy Grimes, April 23, 2026 8:10 am

Wednesday’s California Gubernatorial Debate reinforced the race’s partisan divide and chaos, with no Democrat candidate standing out – other than to expose their Trump Derangement Syndrome, as they made the President their opponent.

Republicans Steve Hilton (businessman and former Fox host), and Chad Bianco (Riverside County Sheriff); and Democrats Katie Porter (former U.S. Rep.), Tom Steyer (billionaire climate activist), Xavier Becerra (former HHS Secretary, former CA Attorney General, former U.S. Rep.), and Matt Mahan (San Jose Mayor) were the candidates on stage for the debate held in San Francisco. 

Steve Hilton and Chad Bianco stood out significantly as they differentiated themselves by providing answers to some of California’s most serious issues that do not impose new taxes, or regulations, or more taxpayer-funded giveaways.

Many in the media dubiously claimed Eric Swalwell was the clear Democrat frontrunner, so with his departure from the race, Democrats had a chance to mix it up and talk California policy, but instead, most just attacked the President.
Hilton blamed 16-years of one-party Democrat supermajority rule, government overreach, and leftist policies under Gov. Gavin Newsom for California’s highest-in-the-nation taxes, energy  costs, unsolved homelessness, and failing public schools. Both Hilton and Bianco called for enforcement of existing laws, addressed the failure of the fundamental role of government to maintain California’s crumbling infrastructure and worst roads in the country, despite the highest gas prices and gas taxes in the country.

Hilton said he’d cut the gas tax and asked why we are importing oil from 7,500 miles away with all of California’s oil and gas reserves in California.

Bianco noted that gas prices are $2 cheaper right across state lines, and blamed one-party rule.

Tom Steyer blamed Donald Trump for the high gas prices, and said the President “is out of control.”

The most comical question of the evening was “What letter grade would you give Gavin Newsom’s performance?”

Xavier Becerra said he’d give Newsom an “A” on homelessness for his efforts because “he has cleaned up camps himself.” Who gives grades for effort?

Mahan gave Gov. Newsom a “B” for his care courts.

Katie Porter said she’s a tough grader, and gave Newsom a “B” on his approach to homelessness.

“We just learned why the failure of California education system if we can’t give a real grade,” Bianco said, and said homelessness is about drug and alcohol addiction. “We would have fixed the problem if Proposition 36 was funded.” He said homelessness “is not about homes. Every single dollar is going to NGOs and non-profits.”

Hilton told Porter “I’d love to be in your class Katie, if Newsom gets a ‘B.’ He gets an ‘F.’ Literally Gavin Newsom cleaning up homeless camps was a photo op. It’s illegal to live on the streets, and should not be a choice to not get treatment.”

Steyer gave Newsom a B- and then said he’d get the homeless off the streets as fast as possible, and would provide them emergency housing designed to meet their needs.

I was expecting Steve Hilton to be attacked for receiving President Trump’s endorsement.

Debate moderator noted that Hilton said he was “deeply honored” to recently receive President Trump’s endorsement, “despite the fact that 62% of Californians disapprove of the job he is doing. Are those Californians wrong?”

Hilton said, “One of the proudest days of my life was the day I became an American citizen, and said his ceremony took place “right here in San Francisco.”

Hilton added, “it is a deep honor for me to be endorsed by the President of the United States. He said when he is California governor, California will have a constructive partnership with the federal government to make things better in California. He added he would work with the president and his administration “to manage the forests better, to harvest the timber so we can build the single-family homes we need for young families… to work to increase California energy production as he wants to do so we can lower gas prices, to fight the fraud in our government so we can cut spending and cut taxes, to work to enforce our immigration laws.”

“In all these areas and more it will benefit every Californian to have a governor who is a partner on these issues with the president and his team.”

Perhaps the most disturbing moment in the debate was when the moderator asked candidates if the California CHP and DMV should be giving English tests to commercial truck drivers, and noted that the U.S. Department of Transportation is withholding federal funding from the state over this issue. He did not mention that California illegally issued 17,000 non-domiciled Commercial Driver’s Licenses to drivers who could not read or speak English, or the horrific crashes involving commercial truck drivers.

Becerra blamed President Trump and asked if the CHP should be giving English proficiency tests to truck drivers. “Is the CHP asking everyone to do English proficiency tests?” he asked.

Following the debate, California Assembly Speaker Robert Rivas declared Becerra the winner, calling him “El Gobernador,” clearly referring to the English language issue.

Becerra’s campaign ads appeal to illegal immigrants, and what they will get if he’s elected, including free health care on California’s Medi-Cal system.

Steyer claimed “racial profiling is illegal – we must stop racial profiling.” And he blamed Donald Trump again.

Mahan said “the right answer is to hold the DMV accountable to make sure every commercial driver is qualified.”

Hilton told the story of talking with Marcus Coleman from Bakersfield, whose “beautiful daughter, Dalilah, was put into a coma by someone driving a truck, an illegal immigrant who didn’t speak English. His daughter is now disabled for life. That’s what we’re dealing with here.”

“It is completely ridiculous that we have people driving on our roads who can’t understand road signs and can’t speak English,” Hilton added. “So, yes, of course!” He said he’s discussed this issue with Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy.

“We will not be issuing commercial driver licenses, when I’m governor, to people who are illegally here and don’t speak English. That is obvious common sense.”

When asked if candidates would throw their support behind the party nominee, Bianco said “no” because it will be two Republicans on the ballot.

Hilton said “yes, I will be because we’ve had 16 years of Democrat Party rule.”

All of the Democrats said they would support their candidate.

Nothing new came from the closing statements:

Mahan: “Californians deserve better. As Mayor of the third largest city in California…”

Porter: “Elections are about who you trust to represent you. I’m a mom.”

Becerra: “California is going through a crisis. We don’t need training wheels in the Governor’s office. I will beat back Trump, uphold DACA… I have 33 years of experience and accountability…”

Steyer: “I’m the change agent here and oil companies, PG&E, Donald Trump and ICE don’t want me. Organized labor, teachers union want me…”

Hilton: “We obviously need change in California after 16 years of One-Party Rule… it’s time to make our state Califordable. $3 gas. Lower taxes. A home you can afford…. and to vote different this year.”

What is interesting about reporting on a political debate, after taking pages of notes as the debate was happening, and then transcribing the answers, the standouts gave concise, clear answers, specifics.

What did we learn? Steyer rambled and he hates Donald Trump. Becerra babbled in platitudes, and is campaigning to millions of illegal immigrants. Porter is a single mom and a tough grader. Mahan is the Mayor of the third largest city in California. Bianco is fed up with one party rule, is tough on crime and is no-nonsense. Hilton is fed up with California’s Democrat rule, failing schools, housing crisis, high gas prices, high taxes, high energy prices, and waste and fraud.

This is what the candidates told us last evening during the debate.

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7 thoughts on “California Gubernatorial Debate Shows Partisan Divide

  1. My husband & I felt the night went to
    Hilton , Bianca & Mayhon. They didn’t rely on DTS to make points. Look forward to hearing their stance on solving the Non Documented problem in CA.

  2. Accurate story. Hilton and Bianco were strong. Porter looked pissed off as usual. Becerra revealed himself as an empty suit desperate for Newsom’s endorsement, Hilton put Mahan in his place when he pointed out Mahan’s city had the highest housing costs in the state. Steyer is a loon, who thinks he’s a change agent?

    There will be another debate on Cinco de Mayo.

  3. Four candidates seemed to be for more taxes, and besides, they were running against DJT, who is not running in California and is but 2.5 years from completing his term in office.

    One candidate is definitely for raising taxes and has a history of spending his money to raise gas and energy prices in California, along with being soft on crime, despite the fact that he made his billions in private prisons, coal and petroleum. One candidate is an empty shirt. As the appointed AG, the rules were tossed aside since he wasn’t qualified at the time, and as US Health Secretary, he masked two-year-olds. Not too impressive. Another assaulted her husband and needs anger management intervention. The last one would do well to stay where he is.

    Those four seem to think the problem is in more taxes, fees, and regulations. The other two, despite the opposition, seem to have the voters’ and California’s interests as their priorities.

    We can only hope that we’ll have a decent choice in this year’s Jungle Primary and leave the haters and the spenders in the dust in June.

  4. This statement is missing a component; Bianco noted that gas prices are $2 cheaper right across state lines, and blamed one-party rule.

    Bianco also emphasized that the cheaper fuel comes from California.

  5. Thankfully Katy Grimes watched and reported on the gubernatorial debate for those of us who couldn’t stomach hearing those demonic Democrat clowns spew their rabid TDS and then laughably give high grades to Newsom for supposedly solving the state’s homeless crisis.

    Who was the biased hack posing as the debate moderator that claimed as a fact that 62% of Californians disapprove of the job that President Trump is doing?

    It’s becoming increasingly obvious that the criminal Democrat thug mafia is going to try to install that shady and sleazy lawyer Xavier Becerra as “El Gobernador?” Becerra will babble inane platitudes while campaigning to the millions of illegal alien Democrat voters. No doubt the unions and the cartels will do their part in installing Becerra?

    Remember when Xavier Becerra was installed as Secretary of Health and Human Services under the Biden Regime despite having ZERO health care experience? Remember what a nightmare he was with his stupid COVID-19 vaccine scam mandates?

    In 2025, Politico reported on a scheme in which Becerra’s closest aides, including his chief of staff, had siphoned money from his campaign accounts for years. The total amount was reported to be $225,000 over two years. How could he had not known about the situation until federal investigators approached him?

    Becerra has had many campaign finance violations. In 2024, it was reported that he was paying $10,000 a month for campaign reporting from a dormant state account which was a Hatch Act violation. Becerra laughably claimed that the expenditures were for account maintenance and he got away with it.

    1. While the debates focused on just the Democrat and Republican candidates, there are currently sixty-one candidates running in the 2026 California gubernatorial election, including 25 candidates with no party preference, one Libertarian, one Peace and Freedom Party candidate, and one Green Party write-in candidate.

      Some of the no party preference candidates:

      Naomi Bar-Lev, musician and writer
      Joseph Cabrera, business administrator
      Elaine Culotti, entrepreneur and farmer
      LivingForGod DeMott, chaplain and logistical professional
      Serge Fiankan
      Lukasz Filinski, father and business owner
      Max Fomin, business owner
      Jon Henderson, business owner
      Lewis Herms, corporate executive and entrepreneur
      Dawit Kellel
      Anne Komarovsk, communications executive
      Duane Loynes Jr.
      Amanda Martin, entrepreneur and builder
      Brent Maupin, civil engineer
      Daniel Mercuri, author and businessman
      Mauro Orozco
      Reza Safarnejad
      Sam Sandak, filmmaker
      Christine Sarmiento, public health nurse
      Frederic Schultz, human rights attorney
      Margaret Trowe, hotel worker
      Nancy Young, CEO and pastor

      It’s a shame that California has been destroyed by a corrupt Democrat supermajority that is impossible to remove?

      1. They have Dominion over us TJ, thanks to corrupt Alex Padilla, who signed off on a statewide purchase of their security-exploit laden electronic voting machines.
        They have an adjudication feature that allows the operator to manually override the voter’s selection when they supposedly compare the signature on file against that on the envelope.
        The entire current voting infrastructure is a sham and there’s no easy way to audit or prove that the true will of the electorate is represented with these fraud machines being used to process and tabulate our votes.
        It’s in the PDF on the SOS website…

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