Democrats running for California governor met Sunday morning for the first major candidate forum of the 2026 election, a cordial discussion with few fireworks and almost no jabs at the politician they hope to succeed, Gov. Gavin Newsom.
With a large and diverse field of candidates vying for the state’s highest office, the winner may make history. California has never elected a woman as governor, and only once has a person of color held the office — Gov. Romualdo Pacheco, for just a few months in 1875.
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Here are the declared candidates and some potential hopefuls:
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Toni Atkins
Top job: California Senate president pro tem Biggest splash: First female and first out LGBTQ+ president pro tem in state history Particulars: Atkins, 62, lives in San Diego with her wife, Jennifer LeSar, an affordable housing and economic development consultant. Atkins grew up in rural Virginia, the daughter of a coal miner and a seamstress. She’s a Democrat. Campaign launch: January 2024
Atkins has been a champion of affordable housing while serving in Sacramento. She also wrote the legislation that became Proposition 1 in 2022, codifying abortion rights in the California Constitution after national protections were undone by the U.S. Supreme Court.
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She often talks about growing up as a miner’s child in Virginia in a house that lacked indoor plumbing, and said she first heard of California as a “magical place” her father had visited while serving in World War II. She eventually followed her sister to San Diego and began working at a reproductive health clinic.
Democrat Toni Atkins has made history as a legislative leader but she’s never run in a statewide race before and is largely unknown north of San Diego.
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Stephen J. Cloobeck
Top job: Founder of the timeshare company Diamond Resorts International Biggest splash: Appeared on the TV show “Undercover Boss” Particulars: Cloobeck, 63, grew up in Encino and has lived in Nevada and California. He lives in Beverly Hills and has three adult children. He’s a Democrat. Campaign launch: November 2024
Cloobeck made his fortune in real estate and hospitality, and founded Diamond Resorts International, a sprawling timeshare and vacation property company. He sold the firm in 2016.
This is Cloobeck’s first run for public office, but not his first foray into politics. Cloobeck is a longtime donor and fundraiser for Democrats and philanthropic causes. He backed former Gov. Gavin Newsom and former Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa in the 2018 California governor’s race, along with former federal prosecutor Nathan Hochman’s successful bid for Los Angeles County district attorney in the 2024 election.
Nearly half of California voters would be very or somewhat likely to support Kamala Harris if she were to run for governor in 2026, according to a UC Berkeley poll.
Last year he said he contributed $1 million to LA4LA, a public-private partnership launched by Mayor Karen Bass to build affordable housing in Los Angeles, and has given to Southern California schools, police departments and churches.
Cloobeck has lived in Nevada and California and was recently the chair of Nevada’s athletic commission. Cloobeck also appeared on several episodes of “Undercover Boss,” the reality show that sends executives in disguise into low-level jobs at their own companies, including in one episode where he donned a Guy Fieri-like disguise and played the character of an out-of-work construction worker from Bakersfield.
Cloobeck, 63, struck a pro-business tone in the crowded governor’s race, saying in an advertisement that California is “closed for business, and we’ve had enough.”
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Eleni Kounalakis
Top job: California lieutenant governor Biggest splash: Major fundraiser for Hillary Clinton’s 2008 and 2016 presidential campaigns Particulars: Kounalakis, 58, is the daughter of wealthy Sacramento developer Angelo Tsakopoulos and is married to foreign affairs columnist Markos Kounalakis. They live in San Francisco and have two children. She’s a Democrat. Campaign launch:April 2023
Kounalakis was first elected lieutenant governor in 2018 and reelected in 2022. The office is largely a ceremonial post that’s been used as a launchpad for the governor’s mansion. Both Newsom and former Gov. Gray Davis previously served as lieutenant governor. Kounalakis has highlighted her work in the job opposing college tuition hikes, combating climate change and protecting women’s rights.
She was the first major candidate to formally launch a gubernatorial campaign when she announced in April 2023. Kounalakis quickly received endorsements from Clinton, her former boss, and from former California U.S. Sen. Barbara Boxer.
Kounalakis helped raise money for Clinton’s 2008 presidential campaign and then worked for her when Clinton was secretary of State and Kounalakis was ambassador to Hungary. In 2016, Kounalakis was a California co-chair of Clinton’s presidential campaign, helping raise money and advising on foreign policy.
During a visit to Sacramento this week, Vice President Kamala Harris spent time with two women aiming to become California’s first female governor.
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Tony Thurmond
Top job: California superintendent of public instruction Biggest splash: Kicked out of a Chino Valley Unified School District board meeting after opposing a policy to inform parents about student gender identity Particulars: Thurmond, 56, represented the East Bay in the state Assembly before he was elected to California’s top education post in 2018. He is engaged and has two children. He is a Democrat. Campaign launch: September 2023
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Thurmond served on the West Contra Costa Unified School District board and the Richmond City Council before he was elected to the state Assembly in 2014, serving two terms. With strong support from the California Teachers Assn. and other labor unions, Thurmond was elected as California’s superintendent of public instruction in 2018 and was reelected in 2022.
When he announced his campaign for governor, Thurmond highlighted his youth living in poverty, having been essentially orphaned at 6 years old after his mother, an immigrant from Panama, died, and his father, a veteran, was absent. Inspired by his Afro Latino heritage, he has vowed to tackle California’s economic inequality, calling for a higher minimum wage, higher pay for teachers and more affordable housing.
Thurmond has leaned into increasingly politicized school culture wars. He opposed textbook bans such as those enacted in red states and attempted by conservative school boards in California and was forcibly removed from a Chino Valley Unified school board meeting in 2023 after he spoke in opposition to a policy that would force school officials to inform parents if their child identified as transgender.
The superintendent of public instruction becomes the second Democrat to launch a campaign for California governor in a race that is still three years away.
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Antonio Villaraigosa
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Top job: Los Angeles mayor Biggest splash: Increasing the Los Angeles Police Department to 10,000 officers, and leading a major drop in violent crime Particulars: Villaraigosa, 71, served as state Assembly speaker before being elected mayor of the nation’s second largest city. The former mayor was raised by a single mother in Boyle Heights and currently lives in the Los Angeles area. He has four children. He is a Democrat. Campaign launch: July 2024
After serving as Assembly speaker and on the Los Angeles City Council, Villaraigosa in 2005 became the first Latino mayor of Los Angeles since 1872. He was reelected four years later and, during his tenure, had the politically bruising task of navigating the city through the financial upheaval caused by the Great Recession.
Although he started his career as a labor organizer, Villaraigosa evolved into something of a foil for Southern California’s labor movement, tangling at City Hall with the powerful unions representing city employees and teachers over budget cuts and seniority-based layoff protections. He became the most prominent Democrat in California to criticize teachers unions during his failed efforts to take control of L.A. schools, describing the union as an “unwavering roadblock to reform.”
Villaraigosa also drew national attention for his high-profile missteps, including an extramarital affair with Telemundo reporter and anchor Mirthala Salinas that led to the breakup of his marriage of two decades.
Villaraigosa seems to be banking on his main opponents running as wokosos in a state where Democratic voters are complaining about crime, homelessness, the cost of living and a lagging economy while not trusting the status quo to solve anything.
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Betty Yee
Top job: California controller Biggest splash: During Yee’s tenure as controller, her agency uncovered tens of millions of dollars of local government misspending and questionable financial practices at state agencies. Particulars: Yee, 67, was born to Chinese immigrant parents and grew up in San Francisco, where the family lived in a one-room apartment behind their dry cleaning business. Yee lives in the Bay Area with her husband, Rabbi Steven B. Jacobs. She is a Democrat. Campaign launch: March 2024
Yee served as state budget director under former Gov. Davis before winning a seat on the California State Board of Equalization in 2006 and again in 2010. She was elected state controller in 2014. Her audits and investigations from the controller’s office, she said, found more than $4 billion in misused funds. She won reelection in 2018, and her second term ended in January 2023.
Yee has emphasized her financial background and budget experience, both of which could appeal to California voters as the state grapples with a historic shortfall. Budget projections suggest the next governor could walk into a challenging fiscal environment if state revenue doesn’t rebound.
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When she announced her campaign, Yee spoke about how her modest beginnings crystallized her focus on the importance of financial health. As a young girl, she managed the books of the family business and saw firsthand how a bad week meant cutting back on groceries and other essential spending for her and her five siblings, she said.
A 2022 Times report detailed how Yee gave behind-the-scenes advice to a politically connected company seeking a $600-million no-bid government contract to provide COVID-19 masks and raised questions about her involvement. Yee has said that she had no financial interest in the contract and that the advice was the same she would offer any business owners.
Yee serves as a vice chair of the California Democratic Party.
Former state Controller Betty Yee launched her campaign for California governor, joining a field of Democrats vying to succeed Gov. Gavin Newsom in 2026.
Phil Willon is an assistant editor based in the Sacramento bureau of the Los Angeles Times and guides coverage of California politics and assists with state capital coverage.