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Katie Porter’s bid for California governor is gaining traction as nearly 30 of her former staff members rally in her support, even as viral videos of her fiery exchanges present challenges to her campaign.
These former staffers, who have worked with Porter in her congressional office and on previous campaigns, dismissed the contentious footage as misleading in a letter to the Southern California News Group on Monday.
“Katie’s effectiveness doesn’t always come with gentle edges,” they stated in a letter to The Orange County Register. They argued that the videos paint “a caricature built from a few clips on a bad day” and do not reflect the leader who consistently “shows up for her team.”
This endorsement arrives just weeks before ballots are distributed in a competitive race that currently lacks a definitive Democratic frontrunner.
Porter is currently polling near the top among Democratic candidates, alongside billionaire Tom Steyer and former Health and Human Services Secretary Xavier Becerra.
The dynamics of the race shifted recently after Eric Swalwell exited the contest amid sexual assault allegations, which he denies.
Still, Republicans Chad Bianco, the Riverside County Sheriff-Coroner-Public Administrator, and Steve Hilton, a former Fox News host, have consistently led polls, sparking fears Democrats could be shut out of the general election entirely.
A recent California Democratic Party survey put Hilton and Bianco ahead, followed by Becerra, Steyer and Porter.
The controversy stems from two viral moments.
In October, Ported clashed with CBS reporter Julie Watts, growing visibly frustrated over questions about winning over Donald Trump supporters and at one point threatening to end the interview.
Another clip, from 2021 and released by Politico, shows Porter berating a staffer who interrupted a recording about electric vehicles and appeared on camera.
Porter later admitted to Nexstar media group she “could have handled things better.”
Her former aides didn’t deny her tough style, calling her standards “among the highest” they’d seen, but said that’s why they signed on.
“But that’s one reason we chose to work for her,” they wrote. “A few video clips of our worst moments are not the full or honest measure of Katie or anyone’s career.”
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The letter was organized by former chief of staff Jordan Wood, now a congressional candidate in Maine, according to the Washington Post.
The staffer seen in the Politico video did not sign.
Scrutiny over Porter’s workplace culture isn’t new.
The Washington Post reported her office had higher-than-average turnover in most years, with 119 staffers cycling through, far more than those defending her now.
Porter served three terms representing Orange County and lost a 2024 Senate bid.