The general election is set. Xavier Becerra against Steve Hilton.

See more of our coverage in your search results. Add The California Post on Google The general election is set. Xavier Becerra against Steve Hilton . Becerra — former attorney general of California and Biden’s Health and Human Services secretary — is the Democrat. Hilton — British-born commentator , entrepreneur, former Fox News host and Trump-backed — is the Republican. The first Berkeley IGS poll of the matchup puts Becerra up 52% to 31%, with 17% undecided. It was conducted online May 19-24 among more than 8,500 registered voters , run by veteran pollster Mark DiCamillo and funded in part by the Los Angeles Times. In California polling, it doesn’t get much more credible. Twenty-one points. It looks like a rout. Read the crosstabs and it stops looking like one. This poll doesn’t just show Becerra ahead. It shows why Democrats stay dominant in California — and why Becerra himself is no powerhouse. Start with the math. A generic Democrat in a two-way California race begins with an enormous structural head start. Democrats outregister Republicans by 20 points. DiCamillo calls it “a huge advantage in general elections.” Sign up for the California Morning Report newsletter California's top news, sports and entertainment delivered to your inbox every day. By clicking above you agree to the Terms of Use and Privacy Policy . So here is the question Democrats won’t ask out loud. With an advantage that large, why is Becerra stuck at 52%, with 17% still uncommitted? Because the lead is the party registration, not the man. Becerra isn’t running ahead of his party. He’s running level with it. That isn’t strength. That’s gravity. Hilton has his own anchor, and it’s a heavy one. Trump’s approval among California voters sits at 29%. Sixty-nine percent disapprove. Sixty-two percent disapprove strongly. This isn’t a bad week for Trump. The Berkeley survey finds these numbers essentially unchanged across years of measurement. The anchor is permanent. The endorsement that powered Hilton through the primary — 37% of likely GOP voters said it made them more likely to back him — now drags on him in November. The thing that got him to the dance is the thing that won’t let him lead. California Post News : Facebook , Instagram , TikTok , X , YouTube , WhatsApp , LinkedIn California Post Sports Facebook , Instagram , TikTok , YouTube , X California Post Opinion California Post Newsletters : Sign up here! California Post App : Download here! Home delivery : Sign up here! Page Six Hollywood : Sign up here! Now let’s consider the voters who actually decide this. No Republican wins statewide in California without No Party Preference voters. They are three in 10 of the electorate. Becerra leads them 43% to 28%, with 29% undecided. That undecided pile is the only encouraging number in the survey for Hilton’s team. It is also surrounded by bad news. NPP voters disapprove of Trump 68% to 22% — nearly 3 to 1. The voters Hilton must win are the voters most repelled by the brand that got him here. Separating from Trump without cracking his base is the whole game for the next five months. Nothing in this poll suggests he has found the move. There’s one more thing the press release oversells. IGS co-director G. Cristina Mora attached a passage about California’s “long-standing Latino plurality” and called a Becerra win a “model for multiracial democracy-building.” The history may be meaningful. The data don’t carry that weight. Becerra wins Latinos 52% to 28% — his exact statewide number. There is no Latino surge here. Latino voters are voting like everyone else. California hasn’t elected a Republican governor since Arnold Schwarzenegger, an internationally famous action star, more than two decades ago. This poll doesn’t move that arithmetic. But a race between two candidates with genuinely contrasting governing philosophies is not the same as a coronation. It forces the majority party to defend a record instead of running against a placeholder. And what a record it is. The Newsom era built it. Housing costs. Poor public safety. The high-speed rail boondoggle. Taxpayer-funded health care for illegal immigrants. Unemployment-insurance fraud. The insurance collapse. Basic fiscal incompetence. That is the campaign Hilton will run — competence, accountability, affordability and the accumulated failures of one-party rule. Becerra’s incentives run the other way. He has no reason to take risks or hand Hilton a stage. Expect him to play the generic Democrat, stay quiet where he can, and recast every exchange as a referendum on Trump and Hilton rather than on Becerra. The undecideds are real. So is Hilton’s path — but it runs entirely through a Becerra stumble that is visible and serious. Not a bad news cycle. A debate that goes sideways. A corruption story. A scandal inside an administration he has to own. Something that makes those NPP voters take a second look and decide the generic Democrat isn’t the safe choice after all. That possibility isn’t zero. But the burden is on Hilton to create it, and on Becerra to avoid it — and Becerra is far better positioned to run out the clock. This poll doesn’t show a competitive race. Not yet. It shows a front-runner with a soft floor, and a challenger who needs the front-runner to trip. Jon Fleischman, a longtime strategist in California politics, writes at SoDoesItMatter.com.