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‘I don’t want this state that I love to become the country I left’: Steve Hilton on why he’s running to be California governor

37 0
29.03.2026

Ben Clerkin has narrated this article for you to listen to.

‘I don’t want this state that I love to become the country I left,’ Steve Hilton tells the lunch meeting of Southern California Republican Women. Knives and forks rattle on porcelain as the perfectly coiffured ladies down cutlery to clap. Remarkably, Hilton, the former director of strategy under David Cameron, has topped virtually every poll for governor of California since he launched his campaign in April last year.

Hilton has leant into the West Coast aesthetic and spirit. Once the rebel of Downing Street in T-shirts and stockinged feet, today he sports a tech-bro beard, more bracelets and beads on his wrists than Prince Harry, and has the top three buttons of his white shirt undone. British by birth, he has renounced his citizenship and become an American.

California, he tells me as I follow him on the campaign trail, is ‘where I’m meant to be’. Britain is now ‘run by socialists,’ afflicted with a ‘bureaucratic bloat’ that makes it ‘impossible to do anything’.

‘California reminds me of 1970s Britain – we need to elect people who are not puppets of the unions’

‘California reminds me of 1970s Britain – we need to elect people who are not puppets of the unions’

In part, he blames the Conservative party. ‘The real disaster for the UK that I just find inexplicable is that most of this seems to have set in in the second half of the Conservative years,’ he says. ‘Keir Starmer has only been Prime Minister for two years – it’s not suddenly deteriorated, although he is obviously making it much worse.’

The economy of California, the home of Silicon Valley, is bigger than Britain’s. Yet the state is also in sharp decline thanks to poor leadership.

At least........

© The Spectator