Katie Porter weighs Senate bid launch as Feinstein stays mum
Katie Porter #KatiePorter
Schiff, who first said he was eyeing the Senate after passing on a House leadership bid in November, has been making calls for weeks and said he would consider running if Feinstein does not run. Porter has now started making her own calls about a run, though she has not discussed a specific timeline entering the race.
Still, several Democrats said they expect Porter to launch her campaign soon.
“They’re moving real fast,” said a Democratic consultant, granted anonymity to discuss the shadow race to succeed Feinstein. “They have cash and are assembling a team.”
Porter and Lee both may jump into the race in the coming weeks, according to another person familiar with their plans. Lee intends to run for Senate, according to a person familiar with her thinking. Her office declined to comment. A spokesperson for Porter declined to comment.
Rep. Adam Schiff has been making calls for weeks and said he would consider running if Sen. Dianne Feinstein does not run. | Chip Somodeville/Getty Images
Alums of Bernie Sanders’ presidential campaigns have also encouraged Rep. Ro Khanna to run for the Senate.
Porter is among the best-positioned Democrats for the race. A prolific fundraiser, she had $7.7 million on hand as of the end of 2022 and raised $25 million the last cycle, a number that suggests she can run an effective Senate race.
Her reputation as a progressive Democrat who can speak to swing voters is also likely to help Porter. But it’s unlikely that she or anyone else would cruise to the nomination in any Feinstein succession battle, given the depth of the state’s Democratic bench.
The state has a jungle primary system that could pit two Democrats against each other in the 2024 general election. Feinstein beat fellow Democrat Kevin de Leon by about 8 points in in 2018.
And the timing of a Senate run is a tricky calculation for Porter or any other candidate to make, when the incumbent hasn’t made an announcement. As much as Senate hopefuls want to put their stamp on a crowded field quickly, few want to offend Feinstein by getting ahead of her departure after a legendary run.
The trailblazing senator, 89, chaired the Senate Intelligence Committee and assembled the landmark Bush-era CIA torture report. Yet Feinstein’s prominence has waned in recent years; she stepped down from her job leading Judiciary Committee Democrats after an unsteady performance during the confirmation hearings of Supreme Court Justice Amy Coney Barrett. She also passed this year on becoming the Senate pro tempore, which is in the line of presidential succession.
Almost everyone in the Senate expects Feinstein to step down after completing her term, but she hasn’t officially said as much.
“The senator hasn’t made any announcements regarding 2024 and will do so at the appropriate time,” Feinstein spokesperson Tom Mentzer said.
Nicholas Wu contributed to this report.