OAN Staff Brooke Mallory
5:15 PM – Monday, April 20, 2026
In a move that narrows the field just six weeks ahead of the June primary, former Democrat State Controller Betty Yee officially ended her campaign for California Governor on Monday.
Yee, one of the earliest candidates to enter the contest, cited an insurmountable lack of financial resources and stagnant polling as the primary reasons for ending her bid.
In a news conference, she acknowledged that her campaign’s focus on fiscal competence and her “Boring Betty” branding failed to capture the electorate’s attention in a race increasingly dominated by high-profile personalities and “splashy” rhetoric.
She also expressed frustration with a campaign environment where “pragmatism was overlooked” in favor of candidates making the loudest statements against the federal administration, noting that voters seemed more interested in personality than her deep experience handling the state budget.
Yee’s exit follows a period of intense public pressure from California Democrat Party leadership, specifically Chair Rusty Hicks, who had urged lower-polling candidates to reassess their viability to avoid splitting the liberal vote.
The party’s concern is rooted in California’s “top-two” primary system, which could potentially allow two Republicans — currently led by former Fox News host Steve Hilton and Riverside County Sheriff Chad Bianco — to advance to the general election if the Democrat vote remains fractured among too many contenders.
Despite her status as a former party vice chair, Yee had spent recent months fighting against her exclusion from major debates, which were often limited to candidates meeting specific fundraising and polling thresholds. Additionally, in the final months of her campaign, she struggled to raise significant capital, bringing in just $344,000 in the second half of last year while being outspent by rivals with multi-million dollar war chests.
The departure of the former controller leaves the Democrat field in further flux, coming only a week after former Representative Eric Swalwell dropped out amid a slew of sexual assault and misconduct allegations from a number of different women.
While Yee did not immediately offer an endorsement, her exit leaves former Representative Katie Porter as the only prominent woman remaining in a field that still includes heavyweights like former Attorney General Xavier Becerra and businessman Tom Steyer.
Since the legal deadline to withdraw names from the ballot has already passed, Yee’s name will still appear before voters when mail-in ballots arrive in early May.
Ultimately, as the race enters its most expensive phase, Yee’s withdrawal serves as a stark reminder of the financial and polling hurdles facing candidates who lack large institutional backing or a national media platform in the nation’s most populous state.
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