Beyond the Viral Katie Porter Clip: What California’s Governor Race Says About Voter Choice

Screenshot from CBS Investigates interview with Katie Porter.
Screenshot from CBS Investigates interview with Katie Porter.
Published: 09 Oct, 2025
2 min read

I just don't understand why any candidate would ever say that they weren’t going to go after every single vote… the way forward for consensus building is candidates that represent the broadest number of people possible.” - Cara McCormick

In this episode, Chad Peace and Cara McCormick unpack the viral exchange between CBS’s Julie Watts and gubernatorial candidate Katie Porter - a clip that sparked headlines but also exposes how California’s limiting election rules shape campaign incentives. What did the interview actually show, and why did it touch such a nerve? Chad and Cara use the moment to explore coalition-building in a “top two” primary world - one that they both have had extensive experience navigating in their own political careers.

They then zoom out to the 2026 field: Toni Atkins has exited the race while Ian Calderon has jumped in - moves that underscore how dynamic the contest remains and how strategies shift when everyone appears on a single primary ballot. What does that mean for independents and crossover voters in June - and for consensus-building in November?

Next, Chad and Cara break down how California’s nonpartisan “top two” actually works, the tradeoffs voters experience, and why some reformers favor a Final Five (open top-five primary + ranked-choice general) to reward broader appeal. They compare California’s system to Alaska’s top-four + RCV model to show how different rules nudge different candidate behavior - and voter power.

Finally, they connect the dots to a national court fight unfolding now: the U.S. Supreme Court’s Bost v. Illinois State Board of Elections case on whether a federal candidate has standing to challenge counting mail ballots that arrive after Election Day. It’s a narrow procedural question with wide implications for trust in the process. Chad and Cara explain what the justices are weighing and why it matters to independents - without choosing sides.

If you’re tired of echo chambers, this episode delivers context over outrage - true to the Independent Voter Podcast’s mission to challenge partisan binaries and elevate reforms that put voters first.

Listen to this episode and more from Independent Voter Project on Spotify and Apple Music

You Might Also Like

California Democrats vs Texas Republicans
California Democrats and Texas Republicans Keep Copying Each Other
From California, where independent redistricting commissioner J. Ray Kennedy, a Democrat, describes how state leaders effectively sidelined the nonpartisan commission, to Texas, where the Republican Party is suing to close one of the nation’s oldest open primary systems, the hosts trace a pattern of partisan agenda-setting that transcends geography and time....
16 Oct, 2025
-
1 min read
flag on top of military uniform.
Veterans for All Voters Launches “Take the Oath Challenge”
Veterans are once again answering the call to serve, not overseas but here at home, to help heal America’s broken politics. Veterans for All Voters, a coalition of more than 700 active veteran volunteers, has officially launched the Take the Oath Challenge, a nationwide effort to reaffirm the enduring promise at the heart of military and public service: the oath to the Constitution. ...
24 Sep, 2025
-
4 min read
Partisan chess game.
The Gerrymandering Fight is About Democracy -- But Not for the Reasons You Think
The Texas GOP made two significant moves in the last few months to enhance their chances in the 2026 midterms. The first made national headlines and provoked a Democratic Party response. The second has flown under the radar....
20 Oct, 2025
-
4 min read
Isn't It Weird That Congress Feels No Urgency to Re-Open the Government?
Isn't It Weird That Congress Feels No Urgency to Re-Open the Government?
The U.S. has entered Day 22 of the latest government shutdown with no end in sight. As pundits expect it to surpass the 35-day record set during Trump’s first term, a new Gallup poll shows voters’ approval of Congress has plummeted in the last month. Yet, for congressional leaders, there isn’t any urgency to re-open the government. House Speaker Mike Johnson and Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries trade jabs back and forth in the media, but the blame game continues to be prioritized over solutions....
22 Oct, 2025
-
5 min read
Proposition 50 voter guide
California Prop 50: Partisan Power Play or Necessary Counterpunch?
November 4 marks a special election for what has become the most controversial ballot measure in California in recent memory: Proposition 50, which would circumvent congressional districts drawn by the state’s independent redistricting commission for a legislative-drawn map....
01 Oct, 2025
-
9 min read