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Latin Times
Latin Times
Politics
Alicia Civita

Xavier Becerra's First Shot as a California Governor Candidate Isn't at Tom Steyer: It's at Donald Trump

Mexican American politician Xavier Becerra has not even officially begun his general-election campaign for California governor, but he has already chosen his first target, and it isn't fellow Democrat Tom Steyer or Republican Steve Hilton: It's Donald Trump.

Hours after CNN projected that Becerra would advance to November in California's race to replace Gov. Gavin Newsom, the former Biden administration cabinet secretary used one of his first major post-primary statements to defend the integrity of California's elections against claims of fraud made by the president.

"Donald Trump lost the 2020 election. He lost California by millions of votes in the 2024 election, and now he's trying to undermine confidence in our elections because he's a repeat loser here," Becerra wrote on X.

"Sorry Donald, the voters decide who leads California. Not you."

The sharp rebuke came after Trump alleged, without providing evidence, that Democrats were cheating as California continued counting ballots from Tuesday's primary.

"There's BIG cheating by the Democrats in California," Trump wrote on Truth Social. "Why the vote counting DELAY???"

The exchange may offer an early glimpse into how Becerra plans to campaign over the next five months.

Rather than immediately engaging Steyer, who will face him in an all-Democratic November runoff, Becerra appears eager to cast himself as a defender of California against a president who remains deeply unpopular in the state.

It is a role he knows well.

As California attorney general, Becerra became one of the most aggressive legal opponents of Trump's first administration, joining dozens of lawsuits challenging White House policies on immigration, health care and environmental regulations. Later, as secretary of Health and Human Services under President Joe Biden, he became one of the most visible Latino figures in the Democratic administration.

Now, as he seeks the governor's office, Becerra appears to be reviving a familiar political playbook: making Trump the foil.

Becerra's comments arrived as Republicans watched one of their most promising California opportunities slip away. Early election-night returns had fueled hopes that Trump-backed former Fox News host Steve Hilton could advance to the general election. Instead, late-arriving ballots boosted both Becerra and Steyer, producing an all-Democratic contest and guaranteeing that California's next governor will be a Democrat.

For Becerra, Trump's criticism of the vote count presented an opening.

By defending the state's election system, he was not simply responding to a social media post. He was staking out a position that has become central to Democratic politics in California: portraying the state as a bulwark against Trump and the national Republican movement.

That strategy could prove particularly useful in a race where both finalists are Democrats.

With relatively little daylight between Becerra and Steyer on many traditional Democratic priorities, Becerra may seek to distinguish himself through experience and by reminding voters of his long record confronting Trump.

The message was clear.

Before Californians hear Becerra's vision for housing, crime, homelessness or the economy, they already know one thing about his campaign.

He wants voters to see him as California's latest line of defense against Donald Trump.

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