Dec. 7, 2025 6:30 AM PT

Californians have crossed the sixth-month threshold for the June 2 primary election for governor, with the numbers of candidates continuing to swell to replace termed-out Gov. Gavin Newsom.

The Times politics desk, led by my colleagues Phil Willon and Seema Mehta, has constructed a list of current declared candidates.

Let’s jump into their work.

Former U.S. Health and Human Services Secretary Xavier Becerra

(Genaro Molina/Los Angeles Times)

Xavier Becerra (67, Democrat)

Top job: U.S. Secretary of Health and Human Services

Highlights: Becerra has said among the Biden administration’s top accomplishments was getting 700 million COVID-19 vaccination shots into the arms of Americans. He also touted the administration’s efforts, where he served as HHS director, to expand access to healthcare under the Affordable Care Act.

Setbacks: Becerra’s former chief deputy in the California attorney general’s office, Sean McCluskie, who, along with two high-profile Democratic political strategists, was indicted on allegations of conspiring to bill Becerra’s dormant campaign account for bogus consulting services. Becerra is not accused of wrongdoing.

Riverside County Sheriff Chad Bianco Chad Bianco (58, Republican)

Top job: Riverside County Sheriff

Highlights: During the 2024 election, Bianco supported Proposition 36, the ballot measure approved by voters to reverse course on progressive criminal justice reform, cracking down on theft and the use of the deadly drug fentanyl.

Setbacks: Bianco faced scrutiny after a data leak revealed that in 2014 he was a member of the Oath Keepers, a far-right, anti-government group whose members took part in the pro-Trump insurrection at the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021.

Former state Assemblymember Ian Calderon is running for California governor.

(Tanya Caycedo for Courtney Lindb)

Ian Calderon (40, Democrat)

Top job: Former Assembly majority leader

Highlights: Calderon created the Blockchain Working Group to oversee regulation of cryptocurrency and other technology, and authored legislation to prohibit full-service restaurants from handing out plastic straws to customers unless requested.

Setbacks: The family name was tarnished after two uncles, former state Sen. Ronald Calderon and former Assemblymember Tom Calderon, served prison time for crimes related to a bribery scheme. Ian Calderon was not accused of wrongdoing.

Conservative commentator and Silicon Valley entrepreneur Steve Hilton.

(Allen J. Schaben/Los Angeles Times)

Steve Hilton (56, Republican)

Top job: Senior adviser to British Prime Minister David Cameron

Highlights: 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.

Setbacks: Hilton had to part ways in 2018 with the nonpartisan political fundraising site he co-founded, Crowdpac, due to his support for Trump.

Katie Porter Katie Porter (51, Democrat)

Top job: Member of the U.S. House of Representatives from Orange County

Highlights: Porter clashed with former Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-San Francisco) in 2021 over committee assignments, and Pelosi was initially cool to Porter’s support to ban members of Congress from trading individual stocks. Her resoluteness helped transform Porter into a standout national political figure.

Setbacks: Porter caught heat after she tangled with a television reporter during a contentious interview in October, an incident that rival candidates used to question her temperament.

Jon Slavet, managing director for WeWork west.

(San Francisco Chronicle/Hearst N/San Francisco Chronicle via Gett)

Jon Slavet (58, Republican)

Top job: Silicon Valley tech entrepreneur

Highlights: He strongly opposed Proposition 50, a rare mid-decade redrawing of California’s congressional districts to boost the number of Democrats in the U.S. House of Representatives. Passage of the initiative, he said, prompted him to enter the gubernatorial race.

Setbacks: The one-time Democrat, who registered as a Republican in recent years, has little name recognition to the average voter.

Democratic presidential candidate businessman Tom Steyer. Tom Steyer (68, Democrat)

Top job: Billionaire hedge fund manager

Highlights: After flirting with runs for governor and U.S. Senate and then backing off, Steyer ran for president in 2020. He dropped out after spending nearly $342 million on his campaign, which gained little traction.

Setbacks: Steyer made his fortune as founder of Farallon Capital Management, one of the nation’s largest hedge funds. He was criticized for the firm’s investments in a giant coal mine in Australia and a company that ran migrant detention centers on the U.S.-Mexico border.

U.S. Rep. Eric Swalwell (D-CA) speaks during a House Judiciary Committee meeting.

(Win McNamee / Getty Images)

Top job: Member of the U.S. House of Representatives

Highlights: After attending law school, he served on the Dublin planning commission in the Bay Area as the city grew its housing stock and improved schools and community services, in part by leveraging developers who sought to build there.

Setbacks: Since he became a frequent face on cable news shows criticizing Trump, he believes the administration forwarded a charge of mortgage fraud against him to the Department of Justice.

California superintendent of public instruction Tony Thurmond

(Josh Edelson/For The Times)

Tony Thurmond (57, Democrat)

Top job: California Superintendent of Public Instruction

Highlights: Thurmond opposed textbook bans attempted by conservative school boards in California and was forcibly removed from a Chino Valley Unified school board meeting in 2023.

Setbacks: He faced allegations of a turnover problem in the state’s Department of Education amid accusations that he was running a toxic workplace. Voters overwhelmingly reelected Thurmond in 2022 despite criticism of his handling of schools during the COVID-19 pandemic.

 Former Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa

(Allen J. Schaben/Los Angeles Times)

Antonio Villaraigosa (72, Democrat)

Top job: Los Angeles mayor

Highlights: As mayor, he brought the number of LAPD officers to more than 10,000, an effort he credited for a 48% drop in violent crime. Villaraigosa also helped fund the construction of mass transit rail lines through South Los Angeles, the San Gabriel Valley and the Westside.

Setbacks: Villaraigosa 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.

Former state Controller Betty Yee

(Josh Edelson/For The Times)

Betty Yee (68, Democrat)

Top job: California controller

Highlights: 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.

Setbacks: 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.

Check out the full article here.

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