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Rep. Katie Porter regrets saying the California Senate primary she lost was rigged

“Obviously I wish I’d chosen a different word,” the Democrat said on a podcast two weeks after the primary.
Rep. Katie Porter
Rep. Katie Porter, D-Calif., at the U.S. Capitol in 2022.Graeme Sloan / Sipa USA via AP

Rep. Katie Porter says she regrets claiming that billionaires tried to "rig" the California Senate primary after she failed to advance to the general election.

"Obviously I wish I'd chosen a different word," Porter, D-Calif., said Tuesday on an episode of "Pod Save America."

"At no time and in no way would I ever suggest that there's anything other than a careful, thoughtful, amazing election system that actually should be the model for a lot of the country, in my opinion," she added.

A day after the March 5 primary, Porter thanked her supporters who “voted to shake up the status quo in Washington” before she ignited controversy by implying the election was rigged.

“Because of you, we had the establishment running scared — withstanding 3 to 1 in TV spending and an onslaught of billionaires spending millions to rig this election,” she said on X.

Porter’s choice of words was quickly compared to that of former President Donald Trump, who has falsely claimed since the 2020 election that the contest was rigged and characterized by widespread election fraud.

On Tuesday's podcast, Porter argued that a point lost in the controversy over her comments was that "big money does influence our elections."

"Outcomes are manipulated and distorted when you have people coming in spending millions and millions of dollars at the last minute and that money is not disclosed until after the election," she said.

Democratic Rep. Adam Schiff, who is advancing to November's runoff election in the Senate race, addressed Porter's immediate post-election comments in an interview March 10 on NBC News' "Meet the Press."

"That term 'rigged,' though, is a very loaded term in the era of Trump. It connotes fraud or ballot-stuffing, false claims like those of Donald Trump," Schiff said. "And I think what’s remarkable is Democrats very quickly rallied to say: 'No, we don’t use that language. The election was legitimate.' And this is a sharp contrast to how the Republican Party treats allegations of rigged elections, which is they’ve gone along with them."

Schiff and Republican Steve Garvey will face off in November for the Senate seat previously occupied by longtime Sen. Dianne Feinstein, who said in February of last year that she would retire at the end of 2024. She died in September.

California Gov. Gavin Newsom, a Democrat, appointed Laphonza Butler to serve out the rest of Feinstein's term, and Butler said she would not run in 2024.