News reaches us that Steve Hilton, the former Downing Street adviser with a penchant for bold gestures and breton shirts, is taking his brand of ‘common sense’ governance to California. For those unfamiliar with the name, Hilton was David Cameron’s strategist, the architect of the ‘Big Society’ and a man who once tried to rebrand the Conservative Party as compassionate, modern and vaguely trendy. Now he wants to do the same for the Golden State, launching a new political movement that promises to cut through the bureaucratic fog with the crispness of a British seaside breeze.
On its face, this is a curious development. California is the home of Silicon Valley optimism and Hollywood fantasy, not the grey-toned pragmatism of British policy wonks. Yet here is Hilton, a man who has spent years in the US as a Stanford professor and Fox News pundit, declaring that the state’s problems are not ideological but procedural. He talks about density, about housing supply, about parents having more say in education. It is the language of a man who still believes that politics is about making things work, not just winning arguments.
What is actually happening on the ground? The ‘British governance exports surge’ is real. From behavioural insights units to public-private partnerships, the UK’s reputation for pragmatic, evidence-based policy making is being sought after by states and cities desperate for solutions. But there is a human cost to this cultural shift. For every successful transplant, there are a dozen more that fail, overwhelmed by local resistance, legal challenges and the sheer scale of American federalism. Hilton’s venture is a test case. If he can take ‘common sense’ all the way to Sacramento, he might just give California the nudge it needs. If he fails, he will join a long line of reformers who discovered that common sense in California is not so common after all.
For the people of the state, this is not an abstract debate. It is about whether they can afford to live near their jobs, whether their children will have decent schools, whether their roads will ever be free of traffic. Hilton’s rhetoric about ‘deregulation’ and ‘choice’ sounds good, but it is a cold comfort when you are stuck in a rent-controlled apartment that is falling apart. The question is whether ‘common sense’ can bridge the gap between the technocrats and the everyday.
In the end, Hilton’s crusade is a reminder that governance is not just about systems. It is about people. And people are messy. As he sets out to overhaul the Golden State, one has to wonder: can a British sensibility really tame the beast of California’s unruly politics? Or is this just another splash of imported wisdom that will evaporate under the hot Pacific sun?









