California Elections

Kevin Kiley says he’s running for re-election. He’s not sure where

Reps. Ami Bera, left, and Kevin Kiley could face off in one of California's most expensive and attention-grabbing House races under Gov. Gavin Newsom’s redistricting maps that voters approved on Tuesday, Nov. 4, 2025.
Reps. Ami Bera, left, and Kevin Kiley could face off in one of California's most expensive and attention-grabbing House races under Gov. Gavin Newsom’s redistricting maps that voters approved on Tuesday, Nov. 4, 2025. Bee file photos
Key Takeaways
Key Takeaways

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  • Kiley vows to seek re-election but remains undecided on his district.
  • Redrawn map shifts Third District toward Democrats and complicates strategy.
  • Bera announces Third District bid, setting up a competitive rematch.

Reps. Kevin Kiley and Ami Bera slugging it out to win the Third District congressional seat? Maybe not.

Kiley, R-Rocklin, told The Sacramento Bee on Wednesday in an interview in his Capitol Hill office that while he plans to seek re-election, he’s not sure where he’ll run.

His current district, which stretches from the Sacramento suburbs down to near Death Valley, has been carved into six different pieces. What’s left of the district has leaned heavily Democrat in the recent past.

“We’ll see,” the second-term congressman said when asked where he would run. “I have not thought about that really at all because my focus has been on Prop 50.”

Kiley still represents his current district through January 2027, he said, and “that will continue to be my first priority.”

After that, Kiley said, “I guess I have a lot of options.”

The new Third District, concentrated in the Sacramento area, is one of five newly drawn districts aimed at ousting Republican incumbents. Because Proposition 50 was approved, Sabato’s Crystal Ball, a nonpartisan organization that rates House races, moved the outlook for the Third from likely Republican to likely Democrat.

Kiley said he will be talking to constituents and others. “I have no timeline,” he said.

The Ami Bera challenge

But if he stays in the Third District, he does have a formidable challenger. Bera, D-Sacramento, announced moments after polls closed Tuesday that he’s running in the Third. Kamala Harris won the district by 10 points as the 2024 Democratic presidential nominee.

Kiley has been a ball of political energy, helping to lead the 2021 effort to recall Gov. Gavin Newsom and then, a year later, winning a tough primary and election for the congressional seat.

He got an important boost that spring from Donald Trump, who endorsed him at a crucial point during the primary season and later lauded the young congressman’s victory.

In Congress, Kiley crafted an image as a partisan bulldog, routinely tearing into Newsom, even in House floor speeches. He wrote a book titled “Recall Newsom: The Case against America’s Most Corrupt Governor.”

He also got things done. His bill to overturn California’s restrictions on sales of new gasoline-powered vehicles was passed and signed into law by Trump in June.

His effort to stop federal funding for the state’s high-speed rail project got strong support from Trump’s Department of Transportation, which said in June the project had “no viable path forward.

Kiley, at 40, had the look of a rising star, and until Tuesday, he was regarded as having a fairly safe House seat.

He said Wednesday that such political turmoil comes with the job.

“I’m pretty sanguine about the whole thing,” Kiley said. “There will always be challenges.”

Before and after: How the proposed congressional districts compare

The redrawn congressional districts could cost the state's Republican delegation five seats in the 2026 election. Use the slider in the middle of the map to see how they compare to the districts created in 2021 by the California Citizens Redistricting Commission.
Sources: California Assembly, California Citizens Redistricting Commission. Map: NATHANIEL LEVINE

This story was originally published November 5, 2025 at 9:36 AM.

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David Lightman
McClatchy DC
David Lightman is a former journalist for the DCBureau
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