The signal is clear. A former Downing Street staffer and a onetime Biden cabinet secretary are now the frontrunners for California governor. This isn’t a coincidence. It’s a story about the permanent intermingling of British and American political elites.
Let’s start with the ex-aide. He cut his teeth in Number 10 under Blair. Master of the grid. Knows how to kill a story on a Friday afternoon. Now he’s polling at 28% in the Golden State. His campaign is a carbon copy of New Labour’s playbook: triangulation, focus groups, and a relentless message discipline. The opposition team is still trying to work out how he stole their clothes.
Then there’s the Biden refugee. She ran a federal department with a budget larger than most countries. Her fundraising machine is already humming. She’s tacking left on climate but centrist on crime. The party machinery is wary. But they’ve seen her slice through a primary debate like a hot knife.
What does this mean for the race? Two things. First, the old rules of California politics are dead. You used to need a Hollywood name or a family dynasty. Now you need a Westminster-style operation. Second, the transatlantic pipeline is now a two-way street. London’s political class has exported its techniques. Washington exported its personnel. This is the result.
The other candidates are flailing. The state senator from Los Angeles is rich but robotic. The environmental lawyer is passionate but polls at 5%. The only one who seems to understand the new terrain is the tech entrepreneur who hired a team of ex-Obama strategists. But he’s spent half his money on ads that nobody watched.
Backbench murmurs from Westminster are instructive. “He always had the instincts,” one former cabinet minister told me last night. “He saw the way the wind was blowing. Brexit taught him that the centre can’t hold unless you build a coalition of the anxious and the ambitious.” That same logic is playing out in California. The state is a laboratory for the next phase of Anglo-American political fusion.
Polling data shows the ex-aide leads with independents and suburban women. The Biden alumna cleans up with union households and progressives. If they both stay in, the race could fracture. But there’s chatter of a unity ticket. The whispers are loudest from donors who want to avoid a bloody summer primary.
Don’t underestimate the symbolic weight. If one of them wins, it will be the first time a non-American-born politician holds statewide office in California. Not legally significant, but politically explosive. The right will scream “globalist takeover.” The left will call it a victory for diversity. Both will be missing the point.
The real story is about the hollowing out of local political talent. California’s bench is weak. The party bosses lost control years ago. Now the vacuum is filled by operatives who learned their trade in a different capital. This is what happens when politics becomes a professional class that moves between countries like bankers.
One thing is certain. The race will be dirty. Oppo research is already circulating. The ex-aide’s past comments on the Iraq War. The Biden appointee’s corporate ties. By November, California will have seen the ugliest campaign in its history. And London will be watching, because this is its creature.










