Commentary: California is having its most wide-open governor's race in decades. Why's that?

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Today we discuss Texas, overreaction and the voluminous field of candidates for California governor.Is there anyone who is not running for governor?I’m not.And neither are my two cats.

At least they weren’t as of this morning, when we discussed the race before breakfast.That leaves us somewhat short of the 135 candidates who ran in California’s 2003 recall gubernatorial election.But not by much.I count nearly a dozen serious candidates, with possibly more to come.

Why so many?Opportunity.This is the most wide-open race for California governor in decades.By comparison, you’d have to go back to at least 1998, when Lt.

Gov.Gray Davis surged past a pair of moneybag candidates, Al Checchi and Rep.

Jane Harman, in the Democratic primary, then stomped Republican Atty.Gen.

Dan Lungren in November to win the general election.Now, as then, there is no one who even remotely resembles a prohibitive front-runner.Polling in the governor’s race has shown former Democratic Rep.Katie Porter and Chad Bianco, Riverside County’s Republican sheriff, narrowly leading the field.

But with support for both in the middling 13%-to-21% range, we’re not talking about a pair of world-beaters.Like nature, political ambition abhors a vacuum.Toni Atkins is one of just three people in history to head both houses of California’s Legislature.Despite that Sacramento know-how and an inspirational backstory, her candidacy never caught fire.Speaking of moneybags...Tom Steyer!Yes.After making a bundle as a hedge fund manager, the San Francisco billionaire and environmental activist has been panting after public office for years.

Running for president didn’t work out in 2020, even after Steyer spent more than $345 million on his effort.(That’s close to what the Dodgers spent on their 2025 payroll.) So now Steyer is running for governor, a move he appeared to telegraph by airing nearly $13 milli...

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Publisher: Los Angeles Times

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