Researching the 150+ statewide candidates on California’s June 2 ballot — May 14, 2026
Hi everyone,
If you live in California, your June 2 primary ballot is on its way (or already in your hands). Open the Governor section and you’ll see sixty candidates. The ballot designations under each name tell you almost nothing:
Mathematician · Family Care Navigator · Father · Climate Advocate · Retired Nuclear Engineer · Square Dance Caller · LivingForGod AndCountry DeMott
That’s the actual experience of opening a California ballot. Who are these people? No commentator covers all of them. No newspaper endorsement reaches half of them. And the down-ballot statewide offices — Lieutenant Governor, Insurance Commissioner, Superintendent of Public Instruction — barely get covered at all even though they have enormous power over how the state actually runs.
So we built a page for that.
→ election2026.net/california-primary-2026
Every certified statewide candidate from the official California Secretary of State roster — eleven offices, about 150 candidates — grouped by office and party, with the official ballot designation listed exactly as filed. Governor, Lieutenant Governor, Secretary of State, Controller, Treasurer, Attorney General, Insurance Commissioner, Superintendent of Public Instruction, and the four Board of Equalization seats.
Click any candidate’s card and a research panel slides in with the same eleven questions Quarex asks of every politician in the library. Same eleven questions for the sitting U.S. Representative you already know, and same eleven for the No Party Preference candidate whose entire ballot designation is the single word “Father.” (There are two of those, actually, in the Governor field alone.) No favorites, no editorial selection of who deserves scrutiny.
The eleven questions:
Click any one of those eleven and the Quarex AI — with live web search — researches it for that specific candidate and streams the answer back. Pick the questions you care about, ignore the ones you don’t.
I keep coming back to the framing that crystallized for the “Making Sense of This World” reflection a few weeks ago: people who suspect, correctly, that the gap between what they can know and what they need to know has widened past what unaided attention can close. A California primary ballot is exactly that experience in miniature. Sixty Governor candidates, a dozen for Insurance Commissioner, a dozen No Party Preference contenders most newspapers won’t even name — and somehow you’re expected to make an informed choice by June 2.
The page doesn’t solve that. It does close the gap a little. Pick a candidate you’ve never heard of, ask question 3 (who funds them), ask question 10 (who benefits from their agenda), and you’ll know more in two minutes than two hours of Googling would have produced.
After June 2 the page gets replaced with a “how the primary went” recap, then rebuilt again for the November general election. Time-bound civic information, replaceable cleanly, sitting on top of a permanent library underneath.
— Peter