California’s Democratic attorney general was on pace to face the Republican Party’s endorsed candidate in the November general election in a state that overwhelmingly favors Democrats, based on early ballot returns Tuesday.
Attorney General Rob Bonta, the only Democrat in the five-way primary field, advanced after winning 58% of the vote shortly after polls closed.
He was trailed by the GOP’s endorsed candidate, Nathan Hochman, with 17%. Hochman is a former federal prosecutor and former assistant U.S. attorney general.
Conservative Republican Eric Early was third, with 14%, while Sacramento County District Attorney Anne Marie Schubert, running without party affiliation, had 8% of the vote. Green Party candidate Dan Kapelovitz had 3% in early vote tallies.
The top two vote-getters advance to the November election under California law, no matter their party affiliation.
“No Department of Justice in the country is doing more to stand up to rightwing attacks against our constitutional and legal rights — from defending abortion protections and the right to privacy to strengthening our gun safety laws,” Bonta said in a statement.
He said it was too soon to say which Republican he will face in November, but said both “have dodged basic questions about how they would handle these constitutional and legal issues if they are elected Attorney General.”
Neither Republican immediately responded to requests for comment, nor did Schubert.
Independent organizations supporting Bonta spent more than $1 million on targeted messaging advising Republican voters that Early is a Trump supporter, recall leader and defender of Second Amendment rights. Early was legal counsel for the unsuccessful effort to recall Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom last year.
The state Republican Party, in a letter distributed by Hochman's campaign, called the tactic “dirty tricks.”
Early had finished last in a four-way primary election for attorney general in 2018 and this year was far behind other candidates in campaign fundraising.
Hochman and Schubert both said Bonta allies were trying to sideline their campaigns that might have greater appeal to centrist voters and thus pose a greater risk to Bonta in a general election.
Any Republican is considered a longshot, however.
The party hasn’t won a statewide election since 2006, and its last California attorney general left office in 1999.
Bonta’s opponents hope to oust him this year by focusing on what they say are Democratic failures to curb violent crime and reduce homelessness.
Bonta has never before run a statewide race and previously was one of the state’s most progressive lawmakers, representing a San Francisco Bay Area district in the state Assembly. Newsom appointed him attorney general last year to fill a vacancy.
Schubert gave up her Republican affiliation four years ago to run as an independent. Schubert has portrayed herself as a tough-on-crime career prosecutor but is both openly gay and pro-choice, leaving her difficult to pigeonhole on social issues.
The office of California attorney general has long provided both a national stage and a stepping stone to higher office, including recently for Vice President Kamala Harris, U.S. Health and Human Services Secretary Xavier Becerra and former Gov. Jerry Brown.
Becerra used the office to fight then-President Donald Trump at every turn, while Bonta has championed reproductive and LTGBQ rights and the state’s gun control efforts at the national level.