
Citing cuts to health care, Bains says she's running for Congress
'From the beginning of this year, a lot of people were asking me if I would ever consider a run for Congress, and I kept saying, 'I hope I don't have to,'' said Bains, a family physician who's served in California's 35th Assembly District since 2022.
Bains said much of the work that she entered politics to accomplish was now being undone by the Trump administration, aided and abetted, she said, by Valadao in his recent vote for the massive reconciliation bill recently passed by Congress.
'I have been working day in, day out, to help expand access in an area with some of the most Medicaid patients in the country and this directly cuts a lot of the work that I have been doing,' Bains said. 'The whole reason why I even ran for an Assembly (seat) in the first place.'
Speculation around the assemblywoman's potential run has swirled for months, but it wasn't until speaking with The Californian that Bains confirmed her intention to run.
California's 22nd District is considered one of the most competitive in the nation and Valadao has been the target of relentless campaigning by Democrat-aligned groups for months.
It also has the highest level of Medicaid enrollment in the state — 67%, according to UC Berkeley — making the focus of those attacks the proposed cuts to the program.
'I was shocked when I saw Congressman Valadao vote for what he himself said would decimate health care in our Central Valley, would take away vital access to care in an area that has the least access to begin with,' Bains said.
Valadao didn't say revisions to Medicaid would decimate the valley, but he did sign onto a letter in June with other Congressional Republicans cautioning against changes made by the U.S. Senate. In a statement, Valadao said the vote on the reconciliation bill was not an easy one and he said he'd received assurances from the administration about the $50 billion allocated for rural health.
Ahead of votes on the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, Bains appeared in advertisements urging Valadao to vote against the bill. Following the U.S. House of Representatives' vote for the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, Bains submitted in the state Legislature a resolution to formally censure all nine members of California's Republican Congressional Delegation who voted for it.
Yet Bains has also previously clashed with her own party. In 2023, she was removed from an Assembly committee assignment by party leadership for being the only Democrat to vote no on a bill targeting the oil and gas industry.
Those clashes were evidence, Bains said, of her willingness to put the interests of her district ahead of party politics. Bains said repeatedly during an interview with The Californian that her loyalty was to the district first.
'Voters in this district just saw their congressman choose party loyalty over them. That is something that I, from the first day I was in the Assembly, it was about choosing my district first,' Bains said. 'This area needs a representative that will choose them first. My loyalty again to the people in this district will always come first.'
Bains is the second Democrat to officially challenge Valadao. In April, Visalia School Board member Randy Villegas announced his run for Congress, running on a progressive platform and vowing not to take any corporate political action committee money. Bains declined to make a similar commitment, saying she is focused on bringing health care back to the district.
'I am a doctor,' Bains said. 'I have been fighting to increase health care and I've been fighting to increase access to health care. I continue focusing on the issues that matter most, health care and also affordability, making sure that government is working for the people.'
Environmental groups such as Greenpeace have criticized Bains for accepting money from the oil and gas industry.
Past campaigns in the district have brought in massive amounts of money, much of it from donors outside the district. According to the Federal Elections Commission, in the 2024 race Valadao's campaign raised nearly $5 million while Democratic challenger Rudy Salas raised $6.5 million.
Salas, himself a former Assemblyman, twice lost to Valadao, in 2022 and 2024. He's filed paperwork with the FEC to run in 2026, but has not committed to doing so.
Valadao's campaign did not immediately respond to request for comment Tuesday, but in an email, Republican National Congressional Committee spokesman Christian Martinez called Bains a radical.
'Radical Democrat Jasmeet Bains will never represent the values of the Central Valley with her extreme record that sells out hardworking California families,' Martinez said. 'She's more focused on handing out taxpayer-funded home loans, welfare and free health care to illegal immigrants than defending the very Californians footing the bill. Californians deserve better than a radical activist masquerading as their representative.'
Whether or not Bains is elected to Congress, running for the 22nd District means she won't be able to run for the 35th Assembly District, leaving a vacancy in that seat for the 2026 election.
California's primary election isn't until June 2026, but only the two top vote-getting candidates in that race will move on to the general election. Whether or not she's elected to Congress, Bains said she is first and foremost a doctor.
'This is a doctor taking her oath to the highest level. I never signed up for this job in the Assembly to be a career politician. I am staying true to who I said I was from day one,' Bains said. 'This is about a doctor taking her oath to protect her community.'
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USA Today
5 minutes ago
- USA Today
A rockstar and reality TV dad
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The Hill
5 minutes ago
- The Hill
Epstein firestorm consumes House
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New York Post
35 minutes ago
- New York Post
Eric Adams praises Trump for securing US border, dishes on Biden meetings about migrant crisis: ‘Everything was out of control'
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Since Trump took office, Adams said: 'We're now down to less than 100 migrant asylum seekers coming into our city a week, and that's due to this securing of the border.' 6 Adams claimed that the border crisis cost the city $7.7 billion over a three-year period. Hizzoner defended US Immigration and Customs Enforcement leading Trump's crackdown. 'We have to stop classifying ICE as an illegal operation. They're not. They are a federal governmental law enforcement entity, and we will coordinate with them when we go after illegal, dangerous people, and we have done that,' Adams said. More than 237,000 migrants were served by the city since 2022 — at a peak of 4,000 per week — and some 100 hotels were converted into emergency shelters to house the new arrivals. 'You could do the math to see how challenging this was,' Adams said. 6 Adams said he believes people in the Biden administation 'put the order out' to prosecute him. Tamara Beckwith Adams praised his administration and city government officials for handling the migrant crisis after spending countless hours helping guiding New Yorkers through the deadly COVID-19 pandemic. 'We had to build an entire shelter system within months … educate 50,000 children, make sure we had to feed, clothe and house,' he said. Adams said he bore the brunt of the criticism for dealing with an unrelenting wave of migrants entering the city that he had little control over, given New York's existing sanctuary and right to shelter laws, or the authority to provide migrants with jobs who lack federal legal status. The city couldn't stop the buses of migrants from coming in, he noted. 'This was an unbelievable achievement that the team was able to accomplish, and I really am pleased by the leaders of this administration who did it,' Adams said.