Porter threatens to walk out of interview over follow-up questions

The article discusses an interview with former Representative Katie Porter, a leading Democratic candidate in the 2026 California gubernatorial race. During the interview, a CBS Los Angeles reporter asked Porter how she would address the approximately 40% of California voters who supported Donald Trump, a key voting bloc she would need to win the election. Porter reacted sharply, questioning the premise of “needing” Trump voters to win and expressed frustration over the follow-up questions, eventually attempting to end the interview.

Porter emphasized her confidence in winning over the 60% of voters who did not support Trump and stated she does not intend to run against other Democrats to avoid splitting the anti-Trump vote. The tense exchange sparked criticism from her opponents, including former California State Controller Betty T. Yee, who questioned Porter’s temperament for the governorship and stressed the importance of transparency and accessibility in a candidate.

Porter, who recently left her House seat representing California’s 47th district, entered the gubernatorial race to succeed Governor Gavin newsom. The article also notes Porter’s previous reputation for being abrasive, citing a 2023 Politico report describing allegations from former staffers about her management style. Other candidates in the race include former Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa and Republican Steve Hilton.


Porter threatens to walk out of interview over follow-up questions on California Trump voters

Former Rep. Katie Porter bit back at a reporter’s question about whether she would need President Donald Trump’s voters to win the California governor’s race.

Porter is one of the top Democrats running in the race, and has been seen as the front-runner ever since former Vice President Kamala Harris decided she would not run.

A reporter from CBS Los Angeles asked Porter, as she had asked several other gubernatorial candidates, “What do you say to the 40% of CA voters who you’ll need in order to win, who voted for Trump?”

She responded in a hushed tone, “How would I need them in order to win, ma’am?”

After the reporter asked her if she would win the 60% of people who did not vote for Trump, Porter said she believes she’ll win those people. She also said she doesn’t “intend” to run against another Democrat, which would further split the anti-Trump vote.

She then went into a back-and-forth with the reporter after touting her experience as a purple-district representative. Porter called the line of questioning “unnecessarily argumentative.”

The former California representative argued over the semantics of needing the Trump voters “to win” against what she would say to those voters.

“I’m happy to say that, it’s the ‘do you need them to win’ part I don’t understand. I’m happy to answer the question as you have it written,” Porter said.

She then tried to walk out of the interview, claiming the reporter was asking too many follow-up questions. “Every other candidate has answered our follow-ups,” the journalist said.

“I don’t care. I don’t care … if every question you’re gonna make up a follow-up question, then we’re never gonna get there,” Porter said, trying to leave. “I don’t want to have an unhappy experience with you,” she added, “and I don’t want this all on camera.”

Porter’s opponents pounced on her viral interview. Former California State Controller Betty T. Yee criticized Porter most directly.

“After watching the interview, it’s clear—Katie Porter doesn’t have the temperament to be Governor,” she said in a post on X. “As a candidate, I welcome the hard questions—the next governor must be accessible and transparent. No place for temper tantrums. No place for dodging the public’s right to know.”

Other candidates include former Los Angeles Mayor Democrat Antonio Villaraigosa and Republican Steve Hilton.

CALIFORNIA GUBERNATORIAL CANDIDATE KATIE PORTER SECURES EMILY’S LIST ENDORSEMENT

Porter has been out of politics since leaving her office representing California’s 47th district in the House earlier this year. She entered the California gubernatorial race in March, aiming to succeed term-limited Gov. Gavin Newsom (D-CA).

The former Orange County representative has been accused of being abrasive in the past. Politico reported in 2023 that Porter staffers called her “rage-prone,” “racist,” and had “a tendency to disparage staffers.”



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