California’s first major televised gubernatorial debate turned into a showcase of why Republicans think the state is headed the wrong way, with six contenders sparring and conservatively minded commentators declaring the Democratic field embarrassingly weak. BlazeTV host Sara Gonzales watched and ripped into the debate, arguing that the Democrats on stage made even Gavin Newsom look comparatively competent. Her take landed on three main low points: reactions to a Trump-era trucker safety order, soft grades on Newsom’s homelessness record, and a resurfaced viral clip of Katie Porter that still raises questions about temperament.
The debate, hosted by Nexstar Media Group, featured Democrats Xavier Becerra, Katie Porter, Tom Steyer, and Matt Mahan facing off with Republicans Chad Bianco and Steve Hilton. The lineup promised a clash over California’s biggest problems but delivered little confidence from the Democratic side about solving those problems. From a Republican point of view, the whole event underscored just how urgent it is to offer voters an alternative that actually understands public safety and order.
Sara didn’t mince words as she watched: “Things are looking bleak when California Governor Gavin Newsom looks like a good governor, a good leader,” she sighed on air, and she followed up with the zinger, “This isn’t a compliment to Gavin Newsom. That’s just how bad everyone else is.” Those lines landed because voters want competence, not performative virtue signaling, and the debate gave lots of performative moments without clear plans to fix what’s broken.
On this episode of “Sara Gonzales Unfiltered,” Sara reviews three lowlights from the debate.
One flashpoint was President Trump’s Enforcing Commonsense Rules of the Road for America’s Truck Drivers executive order, which aims to tighten English proficiency for commercial drivers and clamp down on non-domiciled CDLs. That push for basic road-safety standards was framed by Republicans as commonsense and by many Democrats as somehow extreme. Xavier Becerra called it “reckless”; Katie Porter vowed she would “absolutely fight the Trump administration” to protect Californians from Trump; and Tom Steyer equated requiring English understanding to “racial profiling.”
Watching those responses, Sara was blunt and a little incredulous about how far Democrats would go to resist simple safety rules. “I actually don’t care if you have, like, Whitey McWhiterson from Norway or Sweden who comes here and doesn’t speak a lick of English,” she quips in response to Steyer, and she skewers the supposed protectiveness from Porter with, “She said, ‘We have to protect Californians.’ Yeah, I think Californians are like, ‘I would like to also not just be run over by a truck driver who shouldn’t be here, who can’t read the road signs.”’ Those lines hit at a basic voter instinct: law and order matters when lives are at stake.
Another telling moment came when candidates were asked to grade Gavin Newsom on homelessness, and the partisan split was glaring. Both Republicans handed Newsom an F, while Democrats offered three B’s and one A, highlighting a disconnect between what voters see on the streets and what the party elites want to acknowledge. “The homelessness is out of control. Anyone who has been to California understands that,” Sara says, pointing to the lived reality that most voters can’t ignore.
The debate also reopened the wound around Katie Porter’s past on-camera meltdown, with the viral Politico clip resurfacing where she yelled at a staffer. When confronted, Porter said, “I apologized that day to that staffer four years ago.” The original outburst included the line “Get out of my f**king shot!” and voters watching the exchange worried about temperament and how candidates handle pressure when things get real.
Sara’s closing point was a warning flavored with urgency for conservatives: California’s problems aren’t abstract, and the Democratic field did little to convince anyone they can fix them. “[California] is such a hellhole,” she said plainly, and she doubled down with, “Republicans, this is probably your last chance. It may be gone if you guys don’t take it back.” That’s the red-meat message for anyone who thinks the state can be turned around without a clear change in leadership and direction.
To hear more of Sara’s commentary and watch clips from the debate, check out the episode above.
