Top takeaways from final governor’s debate: Knives out for Becerra
SAN FRANCISCOย โย As Californians cast ballots in the most unsettled governorโs race in recent history, former U.S. Health and Human Services Secretary Xavier Becerra, a Democrat surging in the polls, once again took most of the heat during a contentious debate among the top candidates for California governor.
Becerraโs rapid rise as the top Democrat in the race was greeted on stage by a fusillade of political attacks from rival Democrats and Republicans, notably regarding his former campaign managerโs guilty plea to federal corruption charges hours before the clash.
Then came accusations that he wavered on support for single-payer healthcare, and failed to stem healthcare and unemployment fraud while serving as Californiaโs attorney general.
โThis is what happens when you take the lead in the polls and youโre ahead of everyone else. They all come at you,โ Becerra said. โI get it. So they have to try to beat you down. This is a great Trump tactic thatโs used. I didnโt expect it to come from fellow Democrats.โ
โWith friends like that, who needs enemies?โ Becerra later said.
The face-off took place at a critical moment before the June 2 primary. Republican voters appear to be consolidating behind Hilton, who was endorsed by President Trump, while Becerra and billionaire hedge fund founder Tom Steyer are favored most by Democrats.
From left, Katie Porter, Chad Bianco, Antonio Villaraigosa and Xavier Becerra at Thursdayโs debate.
(Godofredo A. Vรกsquez / Pool via Associated Press)
Up for grabs
As ballots land in mailboxes, California voters are finally tuning in to the race to lead the nationโs most populous state and fourth-largest economy in the world. Thursdayโs 90-minute CBS debate may have been the final opportunity for candidates to directly address large numbers of voters.
Until now, scandal drew the most attention to the contest, as former U.S. Rep. Eric Swalwell (D-Dublin), once an establishment favorite and nominal front-runner, dropped out in April amid allegations of sexual assault and misconduct
Five Democrats โ Becerra, Steyer, San Josรฉ Mayor Matt Mahan, former Orange County Rep. Katie Porter and former Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa โ and two Republicans โ Riverside County Sheriff Chad Bianco and former conservative commentator Steve Hilton โ clashed about affordability, housing, public safety, climate, education and healthcare. State Supt. of Public Instruction Tony Thurmond, a Democrat, failed to reach the polling threshold to qualify for the debate.
CBS News Bay Area reporter Ryan Yamamoto, CBS News Los Angeles reporter Tom Wait, and San Francisco Examiner Editor-in-Chief Schuyler Hudak Prionas moderated the face-off in front of nearly 200 people at the historic Julia Morgan Ballroom in San Franciscoโs Financial District, with sweeping views of the city.
The opulent Beaux-Arts venue contrasted with the tense confrontations among the candidates that underscored Becerraโs swift rise among Democrats in the field after Swalwell dropped out of the race. Even before the face-off, his Democratic rivals began ramping up their focus on Becerra.
Becerra under attack
The candidate faced a barrage of attacks over a string of unfavorable publicity this week, including a widely circulated exchange with a KTLA reporter in which the Democratic candidate asked, โThis is a profile piece, this is not a gotcha piece, right?โ
Earlier Thursday, his former campaign manager Dana Williamson, who also spent time as Newsomโs chief of staff, pleaded guilty to federal corruption charges alleging she and Becerraโs former top advisor were among those who illegally siphoned $225,000 from Becerraโs campaign accounts.
Although Becerra has not been accused of wrongdoing, that did not temper criticism from his political rivals during Thursdayโs debate. They questioned his judgment and said Becerra should have noticed where his money was going.
Hilton said Becerra should be preparing his own criminal defense, rather than running for governor. Porter warned that damning evidence against Becerra could come out later โ which, if he finishes as the top Democrat in the primary election, could undercut his campaign and lead to a Republican being elected Californiaโs next governor.
Becerra defended himself, pointing out that federal prosecutors never accused him of being involved and stated that none of the candidates for governor were implicated in scandal.
Democrats also painted Becerra as a leader who allowed fraud and mismanagement to fester under his watch.
โHe wasnโt minding the shopโ as state attorney general, Mahan said, pointing to fraudulent unemployment and hospice claims early in the COVID-19 pandemic. โI mean, the Biden administration had to sideline him during COVID. This is not good leadership.โ
Matt Mahan, left, is polling in the single digits and made a last-ditch effort to leave an imprint during Thursdayโs debate.
(Godofredo A. Vรกsquez / Godofredo A. Vรกsquez/pool Ap Via Ap)
Major focus on kitchen table issues, a critical concern among voters
Affordability was a major theme in the debate, which included an introductory video of a single mother struggling to fill her gas tank and buy groceries.
Steyer said he would reduce costs by taking on special interests and bringing about structural change and breaking up monopolies.
โI am the person who will tax the billionaires like me, and the big corporations so we can afford to make the changesโ to pay for healthcare and great education, he said.
Mahan said the answer was to โput more money in peopleโs pockets by bringing down costs,โ and that that would not occur under either Steyer or Hilton.
โTom Steyerโs structural change sounds to me more like socialism. His plans literally would double the size of state government,โ Mahan said. โThatโs not going to drive affordability. Steve Hilton is touting his Donald Trump endorsements. Youโve got tariffs and wars driving up costs.โ
Hilton returned fire: โI love the way Matt talks about how heโs going to lower costs when his city was recently rated the most expensive, the least affordable for housing, in the world.โ
Daylight between Republicans about climate change
The Republican candidates avoided attacking each other during the debates, offering compliments instead. But the two split when asked about whether climate change was having a real-world impact.
Bianco said California is destroying itself with its environmental policies.
โOf course we can say that temperatures are increasing,โ he said, but he also said he was not โnaiveโ enough to think that humans can affect or control the climate, which has been changing since he was a child, and that California has to stop all the environmental regulations that are โactivist relatedโ and destroying the stateโs economy.
Tom Steyer spoke Thursday of affordability, a hot-button issue: โI am the person who will tax the billionaires like me.โ
(Godofredo A. Vรกsquez / Pool via Associated Press)
Hilton said he believes in climate change but that California needs to have โcommon senseโ on the issue rather than ideological responses. He said it is โof courseโ right to want clean water and air but that policies in California are not working โ as has been made clear by the recent โmega-firesโ in the state.
The Democrats on stage were closely aligned on the need to respond to the climate crisis and ensure that environmental protections are not dismantled by the Trump administration.
Last-ditch efforts by struggling candidates
Candidates in the crowded field who have struggled to break through โ centrist Democrats Mahan and Villaraigosa, who have languished in the single digits in the polls โ made a last-ditch effort to leave an imprint during Thursdayโs gathering.
Mahan went after nearly every candidate on the stage in the opening moments of the debate.
โThe change we need is rooted in accountability for results,โ Mahan said. โItโs not the change billionaire Tom Steyerโs offering, which is higher taxes and bigger government. Itโs not the change Fox News talking head Steve Hiltonโs offering โ fear, division and more Donald Trump. And letโs be honest, Xavier Becerra is not offering change; heโs the embodiment of the status quo.โ
Villaraigosa leaned heavily into his experiences leading Los Angeles and in the state Assembly to argue that he was most qualified to lead the state while castigating his fellow Democratsโ policies.
โThis is a state with big challenges, the challenge of affordability, the challenge of healthcare, homelessness, and dirty streets and crime-filled streets,โ Villaraigosa said. โThe fact is, Iโm the only candidate on this stage who, in addition to hitting Donald Trump, which I do, have challenged us, challenged this party, and said, โHold it, a lot of the problems that we face have come from Sacramento policies.โ We need someone with the courage to take on Donald Trump, but also take on our friends when theyโre wrong. Iโve had a record of doing that.โ
Mehta reported from Los Angeles and Nixon from San Francisco.