Los Angeles Times

Former state controller joins governor’s race

Betty Yee’s budget experience could help her stand out in a crowded contest.

- By Taryn Luna Times staff writer Melody Gutierrez contribute­d to this report.

Former state Controller Betty Yee on Wednesday launched her campaign for California governor in 2026, joining a crowded field of Democratic candidates nearly a year after she initially said she planned to run for the job.

In an announceme­nt video on social media, Yee emphasized her modest upbringing and her fiscal leadership in state government.

“People worry we have no power over our future, but I know we do,” Yee said. “That’s why I’m running for governor. We have the grit and the power to make California add up for all of us again.”

Yee joins a slate of Democrats with experience in state government but a lack of statewide name recognitio­n vying to succeed Gov. Gavin Newsom, who is serving his second and final term.

Lt. Gov. Eleni Kounalakis was the first to announce her campaign last spring. State Supt. of Public Instructio­n Tony Thurmond launched his bid in September. State Sen. Toni Atkins (D-San Diego), former president pro tem of the upper house of the Legislatur­e, stepped into the race in January.

State Atty. Gen. Rob Bonta said he’s considerin­g. Rep. Katie Porter (DIrvine), who lost her bid for U.S. Senate in the March 5 primary, is among a slew of other names mentioned in political circles as potential candidates.

In announcing her campaign, Yee told a compelling story about her upbringing, raised by her Chinese immigrant parents with her five siblings in a studio apartment behind the family’s dry cleaning business in San Francisco.

“Our parents didn’t speak English, so I managed the books, dealing with banks and suppliers to get things done,” Yee said, adding that she learned what numbers meant for the family. “If earnings for the week came up short, we got by with one less carton of milk or loaf of bread. I learned when things are out of balance, many communitie­s are left to fend for themselves and sometimes left behind.”

Yee’s campaign website says she began overseeing the finances of the business when she was 8. She studied sociology at UC Berkeley and attended Golden Gate University for her master’s in public administra­tion.

Yee served as state budget director under former Gov. Gray Davis before winning a seat on the California Board of Equalizati­on in 2006 and again in 2010. She was elected state controller in 2014. The following year she revealed that the Board of Equalizati­on was failing to properly handle the money it collected and failing to collect debts that were owed. Her audits and investigat­ions from the controller’s office, she said, found more than $4 billion in misused funds. She won her reelection bid in 2018.

Her budget experience could appeal to California voters as the state grapples with a historic shortfall. Budget projection­s suggest the next governor could walk into a challengin­g fiscal environmen­t if state revenues don’t rebound.

Competing for support from many of the same donors could also pose a challenge for Yee and the other Democrats. Kounalakis has raised nearly $4 million for her campaign. Atkins has pulled in about $2.5 million, while Thurmond has under $1 million.

A 2022 Times report detailed that Yee gave behindthe-scenes advice to a politicall­y connected company seeking a $600-million nobid government contract to provide COVID-19 masks, and raised questions about her involvemen­t. The deal with Blue Flame Medical was flagged as possible fraud, and the state was forced to claw back its $457-million advance to the company. Yee has said that she had no financial interest in the deal and that the advice was tips she would offer any business owners.

 ?? Los Angeles Times ?? Genaro Molina
YEE has years of state government experience.
Los Angeles Times Genaro Molina YEE has years of state government experience.

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