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BREAKING: California Governor Race Called… (see more)

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The immediate reaction within the party was a chaotic, dizzying blend of profound relief and aggressive vindication. For those who had spent the last week pacing in campaign offices and refreshing data dashboards with trembling hands, the result felt less like a standard electoral victory and more like a stay of execution. However, that sense of relief was fleeting. As the adrenaline began to recede, a new, sharper, and far more uncomfortable question began to circulate among the political elite: if this race was this close, and if the party’s internal divisions were this visible, what will happen when the remaining votes are finalized and the general election campaign truly begins?

The path to this moment was paved with unprecedented obstacles. The California primary system, which forces candidates from all parties into a single pool before narrowing them down to the top two, has long been a source of anxiety for party loyalists. This year, that anxiety reached a boiling point. The internal struggle for the soul of the party—pitting progressive organizers against more traditional institutionalists—had threatened to split the vote so thoroughly that the Democratic base faced the genuine risk of self-destruction. Becerra’s ability to consolidate enough support to avoid this fate is being hailed by his supporters as a testament to his resilience, but his critics remain unconvinced that his base is actually unified.

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