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Katie Porter is running to become California governor — but her nastiness might catch up with her
Robert Gauthier/Los Angeles Times via Getty Images

Katie Porter is running to become California governor — but her nastiness might catch up with her

Two videos emerged this week exposing Porter as a cantankerous radical loath to answer simple questions.

Former Democratic Rep. Katie Porter (D-Calif.) failed spectacularly in her bid last year to secure a U.S. Senate nomination, placing a distant third in a Democratic primary that she suggested was rigged. Evidently keen to reacquire power, the leftist law professor is in the running to become the next governor of California.

While recent polling suggests that she leads other Democrats as well as Republican candidates Steve Hilton and Chad Bianco, Porter's sizable edge in the gubernatorial race appears threatened by mounting evidence both of her nastiness and unwillingness to answer reasonable questions.

'Is this a disaster? Yes.'

This week, Porter threatened to walk out of an interview with CBS News California after reporter Julie Watts asked, "What do you say to the 40% of California voters — who you'll need in order to win — who voted for Trump?"

"How would I need them in order to win, ma'am?" Porter said before laughing at the notion of appealing to the millions of Republicans living in California. "If it is me versus a Republican, I think that I will win the people who did not vote for Trump."

When Watts dared to ask follow-up questions, Porter said, "I feel like this is unnecessarily argumentative."

After Watts noted that she was posing the same questions to Porter that she had posed to other candidates, Porter became visibly agitated, looked to someone off camera, and stated, "I don't want to keep doing this. I want to call it."

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Photo by Justin Sullivan/Getty Images

When asked whether she was going to continue the interview, Porter said, "Not like this, I'm not. Not with seven follow-up questions to every question you ask."

"I don't want to have an unhappy experience with you," continued Porter. "And I don't want this all on camera."

Gale Kaufman, a Sacramento-based Democratic strategist, told Politico, "Is this a disaster? Yes."

"And the reason it's a disaster is because it amplifies what her reputation already is."

Three other California Democrats jockeying for the governor's mansion — former Health and Human Services Secretary Xavier Becerra, former Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa, and former California state controller Betty Yee — were among those who made hay out of Porter's interview.

Villaraigosa said, "We need a leader who will solve hard problems and answer simple questions."

Becerra, apparently referencing Porter's scoffing at the prospect of courting Republican voters, stated, "I'm not interested in excluding any vote."

"Katie Porter is a weak, self-destructive candidate unfit to lead California," tweeted Yee. "It's time for her to drop out of this race."

Yee added, "After watching the interview, it’s clear — Katie Porter doesn't have the temperament to be Governor."

Blaze News has reached out to Porter's campaign for comment.

Critics have far more than just the CBS News interview to cite as evidence of Porter's cantankerous disposition.

Footage obtained by Politico on Wednesday has gone viral showing Porter viciously berate a staffer who interrupted her July 2021 meeting with then-Biden Energy Secretary Jennifer Granholm.

In the video, which was taped for the Biden administration, Porter, occupying much of the foreground, spotted a staffer in the background, then screamed, "Get out of my f**king shot!"

The staffer apparently wanted to correct something Porter had said about electric vehicles. After the chastised staffer volunteered the correction, Porter said, "You also were in my shot before that. Stay out of my shot."

The final, edited version of the video published by the Biden administration omitted the unhappy experience.

"It’s no secret I hold myself and my staff to a high standard, and that was especially true as a member of Congress," Porter told Politico in a statement. "I have sought to be more intentional in showing gratitude to my staff for their important work."

The problem of Porter's temper has not only been raised by former staffers — one of whom was apparently scolded after contracting COVID — and by the former congresswoman's ex-boyfriend Julian Willis, who called her a "monster," but by Porter's ex-husband, Matthew Hoffman, who alleged in court filings that Porter was abusive, prone to "extreme anger," and had in a 2006 incident apparently dumped a bowl of steaming hot mashed potatoes onto his head, burning his scalp.

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Joseph MacKinnon

Joseph MacKinnon

Joseph MacKinnon is a staff writer for Blaze News.
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