Los Angeles Times

After loss, Rep. Porter is optimistic

The former Senate candidate is now focused on teaching and family, and she believes the GOP won’t flip her O.C. seat in a key race in a battlegrou­nd state. But she’s open to running for elected office again.

- By Benjamin Oreskes

Since Democratic Rep. Katie Porter launched her losing bid for Senate, an air of discontent has simmered quietly — and not so quietly — among fellow Democrats.

They had worked hard to flip her Orange County congressio­nal seat from red to blue in 2018. Porter’s decision to run for U.S. Senate against fellow Democratic Reps. Adam B. Schiff and Barbara Lee meant the swingdistr­ict House seat would be vacant, setting up an expensive race for Democrats — and a potential f lip for Republican­s.

California has become a key battlegrou­nd in the fight for the House, and Porter’s seat is one of a handful that will help determine which party wins control. But she dismissed fears that her absence from the ballot could make the seat easier for the GOP to pick up, saying in an interview that Democrats have a strong candidate for the 47th Congressio­nal District in state Sen. Dave Min, who will face off against Republican former Assemblyma­n Scott Baugh in November.

“We have to be careful not to let that anxiety doom us to fail,” Porter told The Times. “I absolutely don’t see why Dave won’t win.”

Porter ran against Min in 2018 in a race that was unusually nasty. She noted that they have since become friends, and this year, he prevailed decisively in a Democratic primary against a well-funded opponent even while bearing the brunt of millions of dollars in attack ads.

Porter said she remains open to the possibilit­y of running for elected office again but is excited in the near term to return to teaching at UC Irvine’s law school, where she has been on leave since her election to Congress.

“To me, educating students who are going to go on to become lawyers and prosecutor­s and public defenders and judges and civil rights attorneys is also shaping public life,” she said.

Jacob Rubashkin, deputy editor for Inside Elections, said it’s hard to envision Democrats winning the majority in the House if Min loses this fall. His Republican opponent Baugh lost by 3 percentage points to Porter in 2022 — in a race that saw her raise and spend close to $30 million. Min’s fundraisin­g is unlikely to come close to hers, but he’s getting fundraisin­g and organizing support from congressio­nal Democrats’ national campaign arm.

Rubashkin also pointed out that outside groups supporting Min’s Democratic opponent in the primary ran nearly $5 million in ads attacking Min for a 2023 DUI in Sacramento, and he still won decisively last month.

“I think there’s going to be a lot more focus [from Republican­s] on his legislativ­e record in Sacramento than his criminal record in Sacramento this fall,” Rubashkin said.

Looking back on her primary run against Schiff, Lee and Republican Steve Garvey, Porter said she was handicappe­d by the outside money flowing into the race in its final weeks attacking her, along with a shifting “zeitgeist” that left many Democrats unenthusia­stic about voting. The low turnout from young people in particular made it a hard race for her to win, she said.

“It’s hard when you get outspent 3 to 1, and that is ultimately how in the last month the race unfolded,” she said.

“Donald Trump is one of the biggest threats to our democracy. I think you could also say that voter disillusio­nment, voter disengagem­ent — particular­ly among younger voters, voters of color — that is also a big threat to our democracy and we should be thinking about that going forward as well.”

Porter had previously said she regretted calling the Senate primary rigged. Her point with that comment was that the money flowing from outside sources, some of which was hidden, made it hard for her to compete.

For now, Porter said, she’s focused on her work on the House Oversight Committee, as well as on passing several pieces of legislatio­n related to ethics and good government. One would require members of Congress to disclose their meetings to their constituen­ts. She also highlighte­d a colleague’s bill to require more and earlier disclosure of campaign spending by super PACs.

When asked about running for governor or attorney general in 2026, Porter was noncommitt­al, saying that right now she wants to spend more time with her family, but that she would not “foreclose anything in the future.”

Since the primary ended, she’s already followed through on a promise to her daughter, Betsy: that if Porter lost the race for Senate, the family could get a cat.

Naming the new pet, though, has been a big “controvers­y,” she said. “We’re currently deciding between Mocha, Karma and Dino.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States