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Becerra, Hilton Lead in California Governor’s Race Poll Ahead of June Primary

The Public Policy Institute of California survey suggests it’s likely that one Democrat and one Republican will advance to the state’s top-two November runoff.
Chad Bianco, Republican gubernatorial candidate for California, Xavier Becerra, Democratic gubernatorial candidate for California, and Steve Hilton, Republican gubernatorial candidate for California, arrive for a gubernatorial debate at KRON Studios in San Francisco on April 22, 2026. A new poll by the PPIC indicates that Becerra and Hilton are leading in the race for California's next governor. (Jason Henry/Nexstar/Bloomberg)

Democrat Xavier Becerra and Republican Steve Hilton are leading the crowded field for California governor in a new poll, which finds Democrat Tom Steyer trailing the top two candidates with less than a week remaining to vote in the primary election.

The survey released Wednesday night by the Public Policy Institute of California is the latest poll to indicate that it’s highly unlikely the state will end up with two Republicans advancing to a November runoff, something Democrats had feared this spring when party support was fractured among an unsettled, crowded field of candidates.

It also shows Becerra continuing his surge to the front, despite being the target of debate attacks and critical ads, as well as Steyer’s historic self-funding wave.

Becerra, former U.S. Health and Human Services secretary under President Joe Biden, leads the poll with 23% support among likely voters, followed by Hilton, a former Fox News commentator and businessman, at 20%.

Steyer, a billionaire former hedge fund manager turned progressive activist, garnered 15% support, while Republican Riverside County Sheriff Chad Bianco and former Orange County Rep. Katie Porter, a Democrat, rounded out the top five at 13% and 12% respectively.

“This is the first poll that we’ve done that showed with some clarity that we have two candidates with more than 20% of the vote — one a Democrat, one a Republican,” PPIC survey director Mark Baldassare said. “There’s always the possibility that we end up with two Democrats [in the November runoff], but it’s much more likely at this point that we have a Democrat and a Republican.”

California gubernatorial candidates former U.S. Rep. Katie Porter, businessman Tom Steyer, businessman Steve Hilton, Riverside County Sheriff Chad Bianco, former U.S. Secretary of Health and Human Services Xavier Becerra, San José Mayor Matt Mahan look on during a CNN California Governor Primary Debate at East Los Angeles College on May 5, 2026, in Monterey Park, California. (Justin Sullivan/Getty Images)

Democrats have largely rallied around Becerra, who was stuck in the single digits in the PPIC poll as recently as early April, after East Bay Rep. Eric Swalwell dropped out of the race amid allegations of sexual assault and harassment against him.

“Swalwell’s exit and the circumstances surrounding it led to support for Becerra — who has experience in Sacramento, unlike really any other of the major candidates, and spoke to Democrats about something that really mattered to them, which was that he had experience taking on Donald Trump,” Baldassare said.

Hilton likewise surged further ahead of Bianco among Republican voters after President Donald Trump endorsed him in early April. That’s despite the latest PPIC poll also finding a sharp drop in the number of Republicans saying the U.S. is going in the right direction — down to 50%, from 64% in PPIC’s February survey.

Despite that shift, Baldassare said, Trump looms large among Republicans, earning a 75% approval rating from GOP voters in California.

“Endorsements by President Trump, we’ve seen again and again, in primaries makes a big difference,” he said.

The poll indicates that Steyer, who has far surpassed California’s self-funding record by spending more than $213 million of his own fortune on his candidacy, seems to have hit a ceiling in the mid-teens, Baldassare said. He didn’t count Steyer completely out, though — and Steyer’s significant war chest means he’ll have no problem funding wall-to-wall ads in the campaign’s final days.

“We haven’t seen much change in support for Tom Steyer since he entered the race,” Baldassare said. “But Tom Steyer is still a contender, and we’ll watch and see what happens.”

The poll also found that the cost of living and affordability remain Californians’ top concerns within the state, and nearly one-third of respondents see political extremism or threats to democracy as the most important problems facing the U.S. An additional quarter of Californians told PPIC the economy was their top concern nationally.

The poll has a sampling error of plus or minus 3.2%. It was conducted May 14-18.

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