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Sees government overreach as the obstacle and free-market competition as the fix.
He runs as an independent, angry at "fat cat" money and politicians doing "next to nothing.".
Frames partisan "sclerosis" as the problem — offers "country over party" independence.
Says CA-20 needs an advocate for people over party, corporate donors, and “absentee leadership.”.
Frames his long Central Valley tenure as a tool for delivering tangible district results.
Frames his farmworker-to-military path as proof the American Dream must work in the Valley.
A self-described "political outsider" who favors "hard work over handouts.".
Frames the Central Valley’s contaminated drinking water crisis as his reason for running.
Cites family hardship and “career politicians” as reasons he runs for working families.
An educator and addiction counselor running with no party preference in California's 21st District.
Frames herself as a "doctor, not a career politician" putting the Central Valley first.
Highlights rejecting corporate PAC money as proof he puts working families first.
Frames his dairy-farm roots as grounding practical Republican work for Central Valley families.
Frames politics as engineering: solve rural problems, not serve special interests.
Treats government as best when limited — a pro-market fiscal conservative.
Says Congress helped cause homelessness and soaring rents — and should repair the damage.
Presents himself as a "builder-first" veteran engineer, not a career politician.
Frames lived experience with poverty and social work as a guide to challenge entrenched power.
Says he is the "antithesis to California state government, " running against one-party rule.
Frames the race as a "break-glass moment" to defend the California Dream from rising costs.
Treats California's problem as accountability, not revenue — a "back to basics" Democrat.
Presents herself as a whiteboard-wielding watchdog holding CEOs and Trump officials accountable.
Says California must stop "throwing money at problems" and unite labor and business.
A retired U.S. Army sergeant and retired county/federal employee.
Says corrupt one-party Democratic rule broke California — pitches a "Califordable" reset.
No Party Preference candidate for California governor.
Frames affordability as a fight to end corporate domination of politics.
Frames his bid as a fight against "oath violators" and "party over people" politics.
Frames Sacramento as corrupt — an outsider taking on "crooks, cowards, and globalist sellouts.".
Runs as a Republican real estate broker with roughly 30 years in California real estate.
Frames herself as a grassroots outsider taking on establishment Democrats and Trump-era abuses.
Presents growth and equity as compatible, using both Keynesian and supply-side tools.
A San Diego real estate broker who has run her own mortgage firm since the mid-1990s.
Presents himself as a Blue Dog Democrat fighting "Atheist Marxism" and defending capitalism.
Frames his run as "legacy leadership" and a "builder's choice, " not career politics.
Says California has a management crisis, not a revenue problem — and needs engineering rigor.
Frames his independent bid around fighting wasteful spending and making government deliver.
Uses "People are power" to frame government as serving working people, not the wealthy.
Former Tracy mayor, pastor and nonprofit CEO; Tracy's first female and first African American mayor.
Says California is broken by Sacramento leadership — runs as a business-minded outsider.
Serves as vice president at Bad Hat Harry Productions, with a film and TV background.
A longtime Socialist Workers Party organizer rooted in factory work and union activism.
A pilot-entrepreneur and self-described "caring humanitarian" pitching "space-age" growth.
Runs as an independent, saying Californians are "tired of extremes" and need common sense.
Says rising costs, public-safety concerns, and barriers need practical leadership.
Frames his independent bid as "California 2.0, " applying fiduciary ethics to government.
Frames government’s only rightful job as protecting rights under the non-aggression principle.
A proud socialist organizer, he frames government as for people, not billionaires.
A Redding logistical professional and chaplain running as a No Party Preference candidate.
Says California should “do what works, stop what doesn’t, ” over bureaucratic inertia.
Says public schools and government aid enabled her success — and are harder to access.
Says California needs a builder, not political theater, to make fixes work in real life.
Says California needs science and entrepreneurship to solve "hard problems, " not react to headlines.
Presents himself as an evidence-driven mathematician bringing “analytical clarity” to government.
Says "real change" comes from communities, not top-down systems, via stories and micro-economies.
Republican candidate for California Governor.
An immigrant from Abyssinia and Navy veteran, he frames his run as independent of parties.
Frames his bid as independent of party machines and large donors, focused on measurable results.
Frames politics as a "campaign for sanity" against the IRS, Fed, and "homosexual movement.".
Democratic candidate for California Governor.
Argues educators can make "fantastic governors, " drawing on decades in K-12 schools.
No Party Preference candidate for California Governor.
A self-described "Anti-Politician" who says the two-party system is a trap.
Frames California as beset by lawlessness and big-tech surveillance through a pro-Trump MASA lens.
Frames his campaign as a spiritual "paradigm shift" for California.
Says she was born in the Philippines, immigrated at 18, and is a nurse and mother of five.
Presents herself as a SayRabbit “4th Estate” watchdog, not a traditional politician.
A Democratic business owner and entrepreneur running for California governor.
Presents himself as an accountant and songwriter, "not a politician, " seeking clean leadership.
A lactation consultant registered nurse and businesswoman running as a Democrat for governor.
Frames independence as rejecting corporate PACs, large corporations, and lobbyist money.
Frames his campaign as a break from party establishments to restore a healthy two-party democracy.
Says California has a "leadership problem, " not a wealth problem — solved through Prosperity Zones.
He frames governing as "politics with a mind and heart, " rooted in dignity and the common good.
Frames Stockton’s basic income pilot as proof government can fight poverty statewide.
Frames “structural deficits” as the test her CPA background prepares her to meet.
Says he's running to prove "government can actually work" by mobilizing Californians to serve.
Says Sacramento is too reactive and inefficient — casts herself as an outsider.
Says Democrats abandoned working families — frames her party switch as a reformer's break.
Says California's tax dollars should deliver for people, not corporate profits.
Republican candidate for California Lieutenant Governor.
Says "public service should never be bought, " rejecting PAC money and career politicians.
A professional mediator running to "find common ground" and serve people, not parties.
Rails against the "Ponzi game" of California government as a No Party Preference candidate.
Frames his campaign through a farmer's frustration with Sacramento regulators.
Frames his Bangladeshi immigrant story as tied to a lifelong commitment to education.
A Riverside defense technology executive and former counterterrorism official.
Sees government fraud as what's blocking a revived California Dream.
Frames her socialist campaign as a grassroots fight for people, not billionaires.
Frames corporate pay gaps as a reason to make state government more proactive.
Frames the AG's office as a legal shield against corporate abuse and government overreach.
Says California has "lost its way" — casts himself as a fighter against Sacramento.
Presents her campaign as a people-powered fight against corporate and government power.
Calls foreclosure a learning experience that made her a “fierce advocate” for bank accountability.
Says California taxpayers deserve transparency, not NGO waste.
Presents herself as a working-class organizer in a broader fight for social justice.
Frames his run as a fight against "big government and wasteful spending" to empower communities.
Says California needs less government overreach and more "statesmanlike" individual-rights politics.
He is a Republican aviation mechanic and father from Visalia running for State Senate District 12.
Presents herself as an "independent voice" putting the Valley first to secure its "fair share.".
Frames his run as restoring partisan balance in Sacramento for a stronger Central Valley.
Daughter of farmworkers, she frames Valley neglect as a fight for families left behind.
Runs as a former Merced mayor bringing local City Hall problem-solving to Sacramento.
Says Valley families are "working harder than ever, and still falling behind" on costs.
Runs on an anti-political-machine platform rooted in local Central Valley groups.
A Central Valley native and urban planner, she is Fresno’s first openly LGBTQ+ councilmember.
Frames the Central Valley's health crisis as avoidable — and her nonprofit work as proof.
A Valley native and retired civil-service engineer, he frames Sacramento as needing "common sense.".
Self-described "common sense" conservative pushing back on "big government edicts" from Sacramento.
Frames her run as taking on insurance corporations driving California's affordability crisis.
Says the Palisades Fire in his district drove him to run — putting consumers first.
Frames California’s insurance crisis as a climate-era test of fairness and market stability.
Argues overregulation and one-party rule broke insurance — wants government out of the way.
Argues California is too easy on insurers and strangles competition.
Frames California’s insurance crisis as a catastrophe-risk problem for finance and tech to solve.
Frames the insurance crisis as consumers versus companies — a commissioner "who works for you.".
A Republican contractor who owns a long-running Sacramento custom cabinetry business.
Says private insurance has a "stranglehold" on the working class.
Says the Palisades wildfire made him a consumer advocate against State Farm's rate-hike.
Casts the office as a "personal watchdog" against waste, fraud, and "abusively inflated" premiums.
Treats voter-ID laws and voter-data demands as threats to access and privacy.
Green Party co-founder who frames election rules as a "Democracy Bill of Rights.".
Frames Sacramento as needing Orange County "common sense" and fiscal restraint.
Frames election rules as a fight to shift power from wealthy interests to working people.
Says "normal people" need a voice against unfair treatment by state tax agencies.
Frames tax oversight through an economics teacher’s lens: everyone “plays by the same rules.”.
Treats the tax board as taxpayer service, centered on "Good Public Service.".
A self-described "taxpayer advocate" focused on AI-driven tax administration.
A Visalia Republican and retired correctional officer running for State Board of Equalization.
A former Senate Education chair who frames the schools chief as a data-and-oversight job.
Says public education took him from warehouse jobs to a PhD — and should do the same for kids.
Assembly Education Committee Chair running to lead California's public schools.
Presents himself as a teacher-union organizer bringing a movement campaign to schools.
Argues California's schools settle for average, especially for low-income students of color.
Presents San Diego Unified as proof that schools can be run with organized labor as a copilot.
Says a "time of crisis" in education demands "leadership rooted in classrooms.".
Presents herself as a "soccer mom" fighting state control and ideology in schools.
Sees schools as whole-child supports so zip code or language does not decide outcomes.
Runs as a public-school math teacher arguing the "schoolhouse" needs a voice.
Former legal aid lawyer for farmworkers who frames government as serving working people.
Treats state finance as a tool to turn public credit into housing and climate investment.
Frames the Treasurer as a watchdog against fraud, waste, and political agendas.
Green Party candidate for California Treasurer.
A Marine combat veteran who frames state finance around accountability and a Golden State Dividend.
Santa Monica's first Latino mayor, now chairs California's Board of Equalization.
Treats SEDA as a fiscal stress test for Fresno's infrastructure, schools, and taxpayers.
Says "corruption and backroom deals" should give way to people-driven city budgeting.
Frames the race as "your neighbor, your voice" representation, not career politics.
An openly queer Tower District small-business owner active in Fresno Stonewall Democrats.
Cites trauma, domestic violence and trafficking in bringing victim advocacy to City Hall.
Says Fresno should focus on "historically" neglected neighborhoods before new growth.
Frames Southwest Fresno as historically overlooked and due its "fair share" at City Hall.
A county public health worker and former state social services clerk running for Fresno council.
Presents faith, family, and farming roots as a "people over politics" push against waste.
Frames her "not born with a silver spoon" upbringing as showing education builds stability.
Presents his Southwest Fresno building record as his case to advocate for District 3.
A Central Valley native, she serves as an SCCCD trustee and former board president.
A Hmong refugee who came to Fresno as a child, he is a former probation officer and school trustee.
Frames Southeast Fresno as long denied its fair share of city investment.
A self-described "Liberty Activist/Rapper" mixing politics with "televising the rEVOLution.".
He highlights roots in Fresno public schools and a family of Sikh immigrant parents.
Presents herself as a neighborhood organizer shaped by Faith in the Valley and City Hall work.
Presents himself as "not a politician" putting Fresno families and small businesses before politics.
A retired paralegal and Fresno property manager making a second run for District 7.
Treats student success as a "whole child" project linking schools, families, and agencies.
Argues school spending must show results — failing approaches require "courage to change.".
Calls out Fresno schools for graduating students who read at a fourth-grade level.
Presents himself as an independent CPA steward who doubled the tax roll without adding staff.
A CPA and Fresno County's Auditor-Controller/Treasurer-Tax Collector since 2016.
As a small-business owner, says government should empower job creation, not hinder it.
Is a former farmworker, Firebaugh councilmember, and Los Promotores Comunitarios director.
Says "politics is social work, " rooted in overcoming teen pregnancy, homelessness, and poverty.
Says she is running to champion rural and west Fresno communities.
Describes himself as the grandson of Haitian immigrants, tying advocacy to family history.
Says rural and unincorporated communities need "strong, attentive leadership.".
Runs as a four-term former sheriff with 42 years in Fresno County law enforcement.
A farmer and six-year Selma school board trustee running for an open Fresno County seat.
Says a small town like Huron can make big changes when rural residents lead.
An IRS tax auditor and U.S. Navy veteran running for an open Fresno County supervisor seat.
A retired correctional officer and Parlier's first Latina mayor, with 12 years as mayor.
Says election-law experience lets him catch ballot errors and maintain public confidence.
A Fresno County prosecutor who says her family's funeral home instilled her commitment to service.
A former prosecutor and 15-year defense attorney running on courtroom experience.
A Fresno County Superior Court commissioner, former prosecutor and public defender.
An Administrative Law Judge and former Deputy Public Defender seeking a Fresno County judgeship.
Says judges should stay nonpolitical, applying facts and legal standards case by case.
Runs as a 16-year family and civil attorney seeking a Fresno County judgeship.
Fresno's Chief Assistant City Attorney and a certified criminal-law specialist.
A senior public defender who frames judgeship as service to people, not political ideology.
Frames the bench as a “natural” extension of prosecution in the pursuit of justice.
A 27-year criminal defense lawyer and State Bar-certified criminal-law specialist.
Frames judging as following facts and law; has worked as both prosecutor and defense lawyer.
Frames working-class roots and public-defense work as shaping how he would judge.
Former public defender and Fresno court commissioner who describes his advocacy as "zealous.".
A former felony prosecutor and court commissioner, she emphasizes law-bound impartiality.
Runs as a veteran Fresno trial lawyer for an open county Superior Court seat.