California voters were handed another ugly reminder this week that temperament matters in a governor, not just grandstanding and viral stunts. Video from a 2021 interview resurfaced showing Democrat gubernatorial hopeful Katie Porter erupting at a staffer during a virtual appearance — a moment that went viral and crystallized long-running questions about her leadership style. The clips have ignited a PR crisis that Democrats can’t paper over with fundraising emails.
In the most talked-about clip Porter can be heard demanding a staffer get out of her shot while she was on camera with a Cabinet official, an outburst that left viewers and reporters stunned. That outburst, taken together with other footage of Porter snapping at aides, undermines the polished warrior-of-the-people image she cultivated in Congress. Californians deserve leaders who can keep their cool when the heat is on, not temper tantrums that distract from governing.
Worse still are the accounts from former staffers and resurfaced texts showing Porter reportedly firing and berating employees over COVID test compliance and other minor infractions. Ex-staffers have described a pattern of verbal abuse and a high turnover rate in her office, which should alarm anyone who cares about competent administration. This isn’t the kind of management style you want running California’s sprawling bureaucracy.
Then there are the even darker allegations that have bubbled up — including divorce records reported in multiple outlets alleging verbal and physical mistreatment of a former spouse. Whether voters take every allegation at face value or not, a pattern of such claims raises serious questions about judgment, restraint, and character. California cannot afford to elevate someone whose private conduct is as chaotic as some of these reports suggest.
Porter and her allies are predictably pushing back, rallying progressive groups and sympathetic media voices to frame this as a smear or a case of taking one moment out of context. That defensive posture only proves the point: the left will rally behind its candidates no matter how flawed, and it falls on conservatives and independent voters to offer a sober alternative. Voters should judge people by how they treat those beneath them and how they behave when the camera is on — not by campaign spin.
This episode also exposes the double standard of a media class that once celebrated aggressiveness when it suited their narrative but now pretends to be shocked when a liberal star shows the same behavior off-script. American patriots know that character matters more than choreography, and temperament matters more than trigger-happy viral moments. It’s time to stop excusing the excuses and demand real accountability from would-be leaders.
If California’s future matters to you, don’t be fooled by theatrics, whiteboards, or fundraising text messages. Hold candidates to a simple standard: can they lead with steadiness, respect, and competence? The people of California deserve better than petty meltdowns staged behind a camera lens.