Conservative commentator and Silicon Valley entrepreneur Steve Hilton announced Monday that he is running for governor, the second prominent Republican to enter the 2026 race to replace termed-out Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom.
āCalifornia means to America what America means to the world. Letās make California the land of opportunity again ā great jobs, great homes, great kids. Letās make California an inspiration again, the very best of America,ā he said in a nearly three-minute video posted online. āThereās only one way to do that. Weāve got to end the one-party rule that got us into this mess. Itās time to end the years of Democrat failure. Itās time for a new future. Thatās why Iām running for governor, to make this beautiful state that we love so much truly golden again.ā
Hilton, who plans an official campaign announcement event in Huntington Beach on Tuesday, faces steep odds. Californians last elected statewide Republican candidates in 2006, and the stateās residents have become more liberal since then. However, there is mounting frustration about issues such as crime, inflation and the cost of living.
āFortune favors the bold. It is an uphill battle for a Republican to win statewide office, but if bold people like Steve donāt emerge, Republicans arenāt going to win,ā said Conyers Davis, an advisor to former Republican Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger.
Davis first met Hilton when conservative leader David Cameron of England visited then-Gov. Schwarzeneggerās cigar-smoking tent at the statehouse in Sacramento in 2008 and worked with him on Cameronās successful 2010 campaign to become prime minister.
Additionally, the stateās jungle primary system, in which the two candidates who receive the most votes in the June 2026 primary move on to the general election regardless of party, mean Republicans have a decent shot of securing one of the spots on the November ballot.
Thatās partly because the Democratic vote may be fractured by the large number of Democrats running ā Lt. Gov. Eleni Kounalakis, state schools chief Tony Thurmond, former U.S. Secretary of Health and Human Services Xavier Becerra, former state Controller Betty Yee, former Rep. Katie Porter, former state Senate President Pro Tem Toni Atkins, former Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa and businessman Stephen Cloobeck.
Additionally, former Vice President Kamala Harris is weighing a bid and expected to make a decision by the end of the summer.
On the Republican side, Riverside County Sheriff Chad Bianco is the sole prominent GOP candidate who previously announced he would run. So if Democratic voters splinter, Bianco or Hilton could win one of the top two spots, despite the stateās deep blue tilt.
Hilton, 55, is the son of Hungarian immigrants who fled their homeland during a revolution in 1956. He was born in England and after graduating from Oxford, Hilton worked in politics and advertising. He then founded āGood Business,ā a consulting firm that advised companies such as Nike and McDonaldās about ethical capitalism.
Described as āpart Svengali, part spin doctor, part strategistā by the London Standard in 2006, Hilton was a senior adviser and close confidant of Cameron, who served as Britainās prime minister from 2010 to 2016.
Hilton was credited with modernizing the British conservative movement, remaining true to free-market ideals while also supporting liberal social policy, such as backing gay rights and fighting climate change.
News reports about Hiltonās time at 10 Downing St. paint him as a charismatic but eccentric figure, routinely wearing wrinkled T-shirts, jeans or tracksuit pants, cycling gear and no shoes as he wandered around the prime ministerās stodgy formal residence.
He also drew headlines for making about $450,000 per year in 2006, a salary that dwarfed Cameronās compensation, according to the Observer. And he broke with Cameron by supporting Brexit, the successful 2016 effort to have the United Kingdom leave the European Union.
Hilton immigrated to California in 2012 with his wife, Rachel Whetstone, who has worked as a public relations executive at Google, Uber, Facebook and Netflix. He became a U.S. citizen in 2021, in the midst of the COVID-19 pandemic, and was a vocal critic of shutdowns. The couple live in the affluent Silicon Valley community of Atherton and have two children.
Since he moved to the United States, Hilton has taught at Stanford University, hosted a Fox News show called āThe Next Revolution,ā and co-founded Crowdpac, a nonpartisan political fundraising website. He and the company parted ways in 2018 after his full-throated support of President Trump caused controversy.
Despite positioning himself as a populist who has supported policy from both parties, Hiltonās vocal support of Trump, including calling for an investigation into potential voter fraud during the 2020 presidential election, and other controversial views will almost certainly be raised in the campaign.
Shortly after losing the 2020 election, Trump tweeted several videos of Hilton questioning the validity of the vote tallies.
āFor four years, [Democrats] plotted and schemed to undermine and overturn the sacred right of American democracy. For four years, they smeared the duly elected president and his supporters,ā Hilton said in one of the Fox appearances that Trump retweeted. āāNot my Presidentā they screamed, ānot my presidentā. Four years on, still, they are at it.ā
A spokesman for Hilton defended his comments.
āAlong with Joe Biden, Mitt Romney, and almost everyone else at the time, Steve called for an investigation into any disputes raised about the election,ā said Republican strategist Hector Barajas.
Trump has not weighed into the gubernatorial election, but Trump ally Vivek Ramaswamy, who is running for governor of Ohio next year, endorsed Hilton on Monday.
Hiltonās Silicon Valley relationships with billionaires such as venture capitalist Chamath Palihapitiya and former Google Chief Executive Eric Schmidt could also be a boon to his gubernatorial campaign.
In 2023, Hilton founded Golden Together, a research group focused on restoring the California dream. Among the groupās policy focuses are the stateās business climate, homelessness, crime, affordable housing and wildfire management. Its advisory board includes Lanhee Chen, a former advisor to the presidential campaigns of Mitt Romney and Marco Rubio; Gloria Romero, a former Democratic state Senate leader who is now a Republican; former San Diego Mayor Kevin Faulconer, and Davis.
āHe is somebody who is sincerely interested in working to address some of the challenges California faces,ā said Chen, a Stanford lecturer who unsuccessfully ran for state controller in 2022 and has been floated as a potential statewide or congressional candidate. Chen said he is weighing his options, but is a supporter of Hilton because of his focus on policy and substance.
āHe is at his core a policy guy,ā Chen said, āand has a lot of ideas to address these challenges.ā