Snapshot
Eric Swalwell suspended his campaign for California governor on April 12, 2026, and announced the next day that he would resign from Congress, effective April 14, 2026. The exit followed reporting on April 10 by the San Francisco Chronicle and CNN in which four women described sexual misconduct, including a former staffer who said Swalwell had nonconsensual sexual contact with her (CNN; NPR). Swalwell denies all the allegations, calling them “false” and saying they came “on the eve of an election” (SF Standard).
Because the June 2 primary ballot had already been printed, Swalwell’s name still appears on it and votes cast for him will be counted, but he is no longer campaigning, organizing, or spending. A former six-term East Bay congressman, 2020 presidential candidate, and prominent Trump antagonist, his campaign had — before the reporting — assembled a major union endorsement, committed independent-expenditure support, and a polling position near the top of the Democratic field.
Background
Eric Michael Swalwell was born November 16, 1980, in Sac City, Iowa, and raised in Dublin, California, the son of a police officer. He earned a B.A. (2003) and a J.D. (2006) from the University of Maryland, began his career as an Alameda County deputy district attorney (2006–2012), and won a seat on the Dublin City Council in 2010 (Wikipedia). In 2012, at age 31, he ousted 20-term Democratic incumbent Pete Stark in a same-party top-two general election. He married Brittany Watts in 2016; the couple has three children.
Record
Swalwell represented California in the U.S. House from 2013 to 2026 (CA-15, then the redistricted CA-14), serving on the Intelligence and Judiciary committees and becoming a frequent cable-news presence during the Russia investigation and impeachment eras. He was one of nine House impeachment managers in the 2021 Senate trial of Donald Trump after the January 6 Capitol attack and sued Trump and others that March, alleging they incited the riot (CNN, 2021). Gun-violence prevention was his signature national issue; during his 2020 presidential run he proposed banning and buying back military-style semiautomatic rifles. In January 2023, Speaker Kevin McCarthy blocked him from the Intelligence Committee, citing the Fang Fang matter (see below); Swalwell called it political retaliation.
Coalition & base
Before his exit, Swalwell’s coalition combined an East Bay geographic base, organized labor, anti-Trump activist Democrats, and a national online and Hollywood donor network. He polled credibly in the low double digits — 11% in PPIC’s February 2026 survey and a lead in a late-2025 Emerson poll (PPIC). After the allegations the coalition dispersed: a major union rescinded its endorsement, allied officials withdrew support, and his labor and donor base flowed largely to other Democrats (The Hill).
Controversies & scrutiny
- Sexual-misconduct allegations (April 2026) — the campaign-ending event. On April 10, 2026, the San Francisco Chronicle and CNN reported that four women described sexual misconduct by Swalwell (CNN; SF Standard). A former staffer said he had nonconsensual sexual contact with her on two occasions while she was incapacitated, describing the second as rape; the Chronicle reported it corroborated aspects using medical records and accounts from others. A second woman described a hotel-room incident; two others said they received unsolicited explicit messages. Manhattan prosecutors opened a criminal investigation into the alleged staffer assault (ABC7). Swalwell denies all the allegations, calling them “lies,” and his attorney sent a cease-and-desist letter to CNN.
- The 72-hour sequence. On April 10, party leaders Nancy Pelosi and Hakeem Jeffries urged him to exit and several allies withdrew endorsements; on April 11, SEIU California rescinded its endorsement, citing its priority on workplaces free of harassment and assault (SEIU); on April 12, Swalwell suspended his campaign; on April 13, facing a threatened expulsion resolution, he announced he would resign from Congress effective April 14 (NPR; CNN).
- Fang Fang matter (2020). In December 2020, Axios reported that suspected Chinese intelligence operative Christine Fang had cultivated California politicians and participated in fundraising for Swalwell’s 2014 campaign. Swalwell cut ties in 2015 after an FBI briefing, was not accused of wrongdoing, and an FBI official said he was “completely cooperative and under no suspicion.” The House Ethics Committee closed its inquiry in May 2023 (Axios, 2020; Axios, 2023).
Campaign & messaging
Swalwell built a national brand on combativeness toward Trump — cable-news ubiquity, the impeachment-manager role, and the January 6 lawsuit — and translated it into a “fighter and protector” message centered on affordability and safety, launched on Jimmy Kimmel Live! on November 21, 2025 (CalMatters). The campaign was cut short before its detailed-policy phase, so few state-specific proposals were published.
How they differ
Swalwell occupied an East Bay / labor-progressive / anti-Trump-resistance lane, distinguished by his national-media persona and union backing. After his exit, his labor and donor map flowed primarily to Xavier Becerra, and the California Teachers Association moved to Tom Steyer (The Hill). Note: he is no longer a candidate; his name remains on the printed June 2 ballot and votes for him are still counted.
Where they stand
Position summaries across the major issues. Expand a row for the specific proposal and prior record.
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Cost of living, taxes & budget Before suspending, held standard progressive tax positions with a corporate-accountability framing.
Specific proposalDid not release a detailed state tax plan before his April 13, 2026 suspension; had endorsed labor priorities including Prop 35 / MCO-tax permanence.
Record US Rep CA-14 (2013–present); in Congress voted for the IRA, against the TCJA and for SALT-cap repeal. Suspended his campaign amid sexual-misconduct allegations but remains on the ballot.
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Education Conventional Democratic approach with no distinctive education platform.
Specific proposalNone published.
Record Member of Congress; the CTA endorsed him, then moved to Steyer after he exited the race. Campaign suspended; remains on the ballot.
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Government reform Suspended his campaign April 13, 2026 and remains on the ballot; no active government-reform platform pursued post-suspension.
Specific proposalNo active proposal after campaign suspension.
Record Member of Congress; campaign suspended amid misconduct allegations.
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Healthcare Suspended Democrat who supported Medicare protections and Health4All but offered no detailed state single-payer plan.
Specific proposalSupported Medicare protections in Congress and Health4All, but did not put forward a detailed California single-payer plan before exiting; strong defender of reproductive rights.
Record U.S. Representative; campaign suspended April 13, 2026, with positions largely moot, though he remains on the printed ballot.
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Housing & homelessness Faith-based and nonprofit-channel approach to homelessness, with a first-time-buyer housing focus.
Specific proposalFocus on apartments and first-time-homebuyer homes; channel the homelessness response through existing nonprofit and faith-based organizations rather than a new state program.
Record U.S. Rep CA-14 (2013–2026). YIMBY Action graded him B- before he suspended. Campaign suspended April 13, 2026; remains on the ballot.
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Public safety & crime A 'protector' self-image as the son of a cop and a former prosecutor (campaign suspended, still on the ballot).
Specific proposalGun-violence prevention, including assault-weapons bans, buybacks and universal background checks.
Record Former Alameda County prosecutor; suspended his campaign April 13, 2026.
Money
- Raised (hard money)
- $3.1M
- Self-funded
- $0
Campaign suspended April 13; funds stranded.
Endorsements
Labor
- California Federation of Labor Unions · shared
- SEIU California · shared
Assessment
Strengths
- Former top-tier polling and national name ID before his exit.
- Had assembled real labor and donor infrastructure, including a major union endorsement and committed independent-expenditure support.
- An East Bay geographic base and anti-Trump activist following.
Weaknesses
- Sexual-misconduct allegations from four women, including a rape accusation, ended his viability.
- Rapid institutional abandonment by party leaders, an allied union, and his own campaign co-chair.
- Pre-existing lines of attack, including the Fang Fang matter and a media-forward reputation.
In their words
I am suspending my campaign for Governor.
These allegations are false and come on the eve of an election.
This great state needs a fighter and a protector.
Polling
| Poll | Field dates | Swalwell |
|---|---|---|
| PPIC | Feb 3–Feb 11 | 11% |
Sources
ReferenceNewsCampaign— source type is labeled on each citation.
- ReferenceWikipedia — Eric Swalwell (opens in new tab)en.wikipedia.org
- NewsCalMatters — Swalwell joins crowded governor's race (Nov 2025) (opens in new tab)calmatters.org
- CampaignCNN — Four women describe sexual misconduct by Rep. Swalwell (Apr 10, 2026) (opens in new tab)cnn.com
- CampaignSF Standard — Former staffer accuses Swalwell of sexual assault (Apr 10, 2026) (opens in new tab)sfstandard.com
- CampaignCNN — Democrats withdraw endorsements, demand he end bid (Apr 10, 2026) (opens in new tab)cnn.com
- CampaignNPR — Swalwell suspends bid for California governor (Apr 12, 2026) (opens in new tab)npr.org
- CampaignNPR — Swalwell will resign from Congress (Apr 13, 2026) (opens in new tab)npr.org
- CampaignCNN — Swalwell, Gonzales resign under threat of expulsion (Apr 14, 2026) (opens in new tab)cnn.com
- CampaignABC7 — Manhattan DA investigating sexual-assault allegation (opens in new tab)abc7.com
- NewsSEIU California — statement rescinding Swalwell endorsement (Apr 11, 2026) (opens in new tab)facebook.com
- CampaignThe Hill — Becerra, Steyer front-runners after Swalwell exit (opens in new tab)thehill.com
- NewsAxios — How a suspected Chinese spy gained access to California politics (Dec 2020) (opens in new tab)axios.com
- CampaignAxios — House Ethics ends Swalwell investigation (May 2023) (opens in new tab)axios.com
- ReferencePPIC — Up for grabs: 5-way tie (Feb 2026) (opens in new tab)ppic.org