What Is Xavier Becerra’s Authority For?
Applying a Biblical framework to California’s leading Democratic governor candidate
Every candidate for governor is asking for authority.
Not just the procedural kind — the power to sign legislation and negotiate budgets. They are asking for the kind of authority the Berean Fruit framework describes as morally weighted: power over people’s lives, power that “amplifies the consequences of moral failure,” power that scripture treats not as a crown but as a burden.
Xavier Becerra enters the November general election as the Democrat in a state that has elected Democrats to the governor’s office for fifteen consecutive years. His biography is genuinely compelling: the son of Mexican immigrants who arrived in America with twelve dollars in their pockets, a first-generation college graduate, Stanford-educated, who spent thirty-five years in public service before running for the state’s highest office.




































