Katie Porter gains endorsement of powerful group for California governor
Former Rep. Katie Porter of Irvine received the endorsement of a prominent Democratic womenβs group on Monday that backs candidates who support abortion rights. The organization could provide significant funding and grassroots support to boost Porterβs 2026 gubernatorial campaign.
βKatie Porter has spent her career holding the powerful accountable, fighting to lower costs and taking on Wall Street and Trump administration officials to deliver results for Californiaβs working families,β said Jessica Mackler, president of EMILYβs List. βAt a time when President Trump and his allies are attacking Californiansβ health care and making their lives more expensive, Katie is the proven leader California needs.β
The organizationβs name stands for Early Money Is Like Yeast, a reference to the importance of early fundraising for female candidates. It was founded four decades ago to promote Democratic women who support legal abortion. The group has raised nearly $950 million to help elect such candidates across the country, including backing Porterβs successful congressional campaign to flip a GOP district in Orange County.
βThereβs nothing that Donald Trump hates more than facing down a strong, powerful woman,β Porter said. βFor decades, EMILYβs List has backed winner after winner, helping elect pro-choice Democratic women to public office. They were instrumental in helping me flip a Republican stronghold blue in 2018, and together Iβm confident we will make history again.β
Itβs unclear, however, how much the organization will spend on Porterβs bid to be Californiaβs first female governor. There are multiple critical congressional races next year that will determine control of the House that the group will likely throw its weight behind.
The 2026 gubernatorial race to replace termed-out Gov. Gavin Newsom is wide open after former Vice President Kamala Harris decided not to run and as Sen. Alex Padilla and businessman Rick Caruso mull whether to make a run.
At the moment, Porter, a UC Irvine law professor who unsuccessfully ran for U.S. Senate last year, has a small edge in the polls among the multitude of Democrats running for the seat. The primary is in June.
EMILYβs List, which often avoids making a nod when there are multiple female candidates in a race, made its decision after former state Senate leader Toni Atkins announced in late September that she was dropping out of the race. Former state Controller Betty Yee remains a gubernatorial candidate.