Welcome back to The Josh Lafazan Show — where we break down the political moves shaping America’s future. Today’s top headline?
🚨 Kamala Harris has officially announced she will NOT run for California governor in 2026.
After months of speculation, the former Vice President is taking herself out of contention for the country’s most powerful statehouse. Why? Because this isn’t a step back — it’s a calculated leap forward toward 2028.
Harris would’ve been the instant front-runner. She had:
72% support among California Democrats
National name recognition
A dominant fundraising operation
But instead of walking into a governorship, she’s choosing to preserve her brand and sidestep the political minefields of managing California — from homelessness to crime to wildfires.
Her choice makes one thing clear: she’s not thinking Sacramento. She’s thinking White House.
By avoiding the California governor’s race, Harris is playing the long game.
She maintains top standing among Democrats and remains the early front-runner for the 2028 presidential nomination. Despite the party’s 2024 loss, most Democrats blame Biden, not Harris. She continues to lead with:
Black voters
Women
Young progressives
And she still boasts a massive fundraising base.
This move gives her four years to reintroduce herself — on her own terms.
Without Harris, the 2026 race just exploded.
Democrats now face a wide-open, expensive primary featuring:
Katie Porter
Rob Bonta
Eleni Kounalakis
Possibly Fiona Ma or Adam Schiff
On the GOP side, former MLB star Steve Garvey is expected to surge. But in deep-blue California, Republicans face steep odds — unless Democrats turn on each other in the primary.
With Harris clearly eyeing the presidency, let’s break down the top contenders from both parties.
Kamala Harris – Former VP, 2024 nominee, and current front-runner
Gavin Newsom – Ambitious, but polarizing beyond California
Pete Buttigieg – Strong communicator, weaker grassroots base
Gretchen Whitmer – Midwest power, abortion rights leader
Josh Shapiro – Rising Pennsylvania star with national crossover appeal
Harris has the edge — but a crowded primary is likely.
Donald Trump – If eligible, he remains the kingmaker
Ron DeSantis – Lost steam, but still influential
Nikki Haley – 2024 VP pick, appealing to suburban moderates
Tim Scott – Evangelical favorite with deep donor support
Vivek Ramaswamy – Long-shot populist gaining right-wing attention
RFK Jr. – A potential GOP wildcard if Trump exits
The 2028 field is packed — and Harris just fired the opening shot.
Kamala’s move isn’t about stepping aside — it’s about positioning herself for a 2028 breakout.
Expect her to:
Campaign for Democrats across battleground states
Amplify her voice on abortion rights, gun reform, and climate change
Build a “campaign-in-waiting” team behind the scenes
She’s staying visible. Staying relevant. And staying ready.
Is Harris skipping California a smart move? Does it clear her path to the presidency — or create more questions?
👇 Drop your thoughts in the comments, and don’t forget to like, subscribe, and follow for more fearless analysis.
This is The Josh Lafazan Show — where the future of American politics always takes center stage.