Political Science Professor Reacts to the California Gubernatorial Debate
Who actually wins California's 2026 governor race — and why is the math so strange? University of Redlands political scientist Dr. Renée Van Vechten watches the final California gubernatorial debate and breaks down what's really at stake, from the affordability crisis to the quirks of California's top-two "jungle" primary.
In this episode of Redlands Reacts, Dr. Van Vechten — Fletcher Jones Endowed Chair in American Politics and Policy and Director of the Public Policy Program — reacts in real time to the seven-candidate debate and explains the political dynamics most coverage skips. Why could a deep-blue state that backed Kamala Harris end up with two Republicans on the November ballot? How does a structural budget deficit actually get closed? And what can a governor really do when every other statewide officer answers to no one?
Watch for a clear, nonpartisan explainer on the issues driving the race: housing costs, the "California Dream," climate policy, Medi-Cal and federal healthcare funding fights, corporate tax loopholes, and the real limits of gubernatorial power under a Democratic supermajority legislature.#CaliforniaGovernor #2026Election #CaliforniaPolitics #RedlandsReacts #UniversityOfRedlands #PoliticalScience #CaGov #Becerra #Hilton #Bianco #Steyer #KatiePorter #GubernatorialDebate #CaliforniaPrimary #AffordabilityCrisis #CaliforniaDream