California – California’s race for governor has entered the kind of stretch where every answer, interruption and sharp line can travel far beyond the debate stage.
With the June 2, 2026, jungle primary approaching, candidates from both parties are trying to break through a crowded field and convince voters they are the right person to replace term-limited Gov. Gavin Newsom.
The campaign has already tested Democrats and Republicans on immigration, taxes, health care, public safety and the future direction of the nation’s most populous state.

That pressure was on full display during a debate hosted by NBC LA and Telemundo 52, where seven candidates shared the stage: Democrats Katie Porter, Xavier Becerra, Tom Steyer, Matt Mahan and Antonio Villaraigosa, along with Republicans Steve Hilton and Chad Bianco.
What began as another policy exchange quickly turned into one of the night’s most talked-about moments, after Bianco delivered a two-word jab at Porter that drew audible gasps and groans from the audience.
The clash came during a discussion over California’s sanctuary policies for illegal immigrants, an issue that has split the field along familiar lines. Porter, a former Democratic congresswoman, argued that existing laws should be enforced and warned against “crazy cowboys” who might take “the law into their own hands.”

Bianco, a Republican candidate, career law enforcement officer and sitting sheriff, jumped in with a pointed response.
“Tell that to a crazy mother who lost her child,” Bianco said, FOX NEWS reported.
Porter immediately pushed back.
“I don’t need any lectures from you about being a mother,” she said.
Bianco then answered with the short reply that froze the room: “You might.”
The audience reaction was immediate.
Gasps and groans broke through the debate hall, turning a policy disagreement into a personal and political flashpoint. In a campaign already shaped by questions of tone, temperament and public image, the exchange gave both candidates a moment that could linger well beyond the debate itself.
For Porter, the confrontation came as she has been working to defend her record and reset criticism surrounding her style and temperament. Her campaign has faced scrutiny after a resurfaced video showed her directing expletives at a staffer, while details from her divorce have also drawn attention.
Porter shares three children with her ex-husband, Matthew Hoffman, from whom she separated in 2013. Hoffman accused her in divorce filings of verbal and physical abuse, including an allegation involving a bowl of scalding-hot mashed potatoes. Despite those allegations, Porter shares custody of their children with Hoffman.
Other personal details have also surfaced during the campaign. Porter’s ex-boyfriend, Julian Willis, had threatened to call Child Protective Services on her, but there is no evidence that Porter ever lost custody of her children. Those threats were part of roughly a thousand texts Porter and members of her family received over a three-month period. Porter later received a temporary restraining order against Willis based on allegations that he was verbally and physically abusive toward her.
Bianco, meanwhile, has been trying to make public safety and immigration central themes of his campaign.
His candidacy has also faced criticism because of his past association with the far-right Oath Keepers. Bianco has said his brief membership ended in 2014.
During the race, he has leaned heavily on his law enforcement background and has called for ending California’s sanctuary law, which limits cooperation between local law enforcement and federal immigration authorities.
The debate showed how quickly California’s governor’s race can shift from policy to personality. Candidates also clashed over taxes, health care, immigration enforcement and former President Donald Trump, underscoring how broad and combustible the contest has become.
For voters, the moment between Porter and Bianco may become more than a viral clip.
It captured the tension running through the campaign itself: Democrats trying to hold ground in a heavily blue state, Republicans looking for openings on crime and immigration, and every candidate searching for a line that can cut through the noise without backfiring.