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Atkins’ qualifications run into political reality
Los Angeles Times
|October 22, 2025
Among the small army of prospects who've eyed the California governorship, none seemed more qualified than Toni Atkins.
ALLEN J. SCHABEN Los Angeles Times
TONI ATKINS ended run for governor when she saw no realistic path to victory.
After serving on the San Diego City Council, she moved on to Sacramento, where Atkins led both the Assembly and state Senate, one of just three people in history — and the first in 46 years — to head both houses of California’s Legislature.
She negotiated eight state budgets with two governors and, among other achievements, passed major legislation on abortion rights, help for low-income families and a $7.5-billion water bond.
You can disagree with her politics, but, clearly, Atkins is someone who knows her way around the Capitol.
She married that expertise with the kind of hardscrabble, up-by-her-boot-straps backstory that a calculating political consultant might have spun from whole cloth, had it not been so.
Atkins grew up in rural Appalachia in a rented home with an outdoor privy. Her first pair of glasses was a gift from the local Lions Club. She didn’t visit a dentist until she was 24. Her family was too poor.
Yet for all of that, Atkins’ gubernatorial campaign didn’t last even to 2026, when voters will elect a successor to the termed-out Gavin Newsom. She quit the race in September, more than eight months before the primary.
She has no regrets.
“It was a hard decision,” the Democrat said. “But I’m a pragmatic person.”
She couldn’t and wouldn't keep asking “supporters and people to contribute more and more if the outcome was not going to be what we hoped,” Atkins said. “I needed sort of a moonshot to do it, and I didn’t see that.”
This story is from the October 22, 2025 edition of Los Angeles Times.
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