California State Controller
The California State Controller is a constitutional officer elected statewide every four years to serve as the chief fiscal guardian of California's public funds, responsible for accounting, auditing, and disbursing the state's financial resources amid managing the budget of what is the world's fifth-largest economy.[1][2]
The office, established under the California Constitution, conducts independent audits of state agencies and programs such as the lottery, prescribes uniform accounting standards for local governments, processes payroll for over 400,000 state employees, and safeguards billions in unclaimed property until rightful owners claim it.[3][4] The Controller also sits on numerous boards and commissions overseeing investments, land management, and victim compensation, ensuring fiscal transparency and accountability across government entities.[5]
Since January 2023, San Francisco Democrat Malia M. Cohen has held the position, having won election in November 2022 after serving on the State Board of Equalization; her tenure has emphasized equity in financial management and economic growth through oversight of disbursements exceeding hundreds of billions annually.[4][6] The office's headquarters at 300 Capitol Mall in Sacramento underscores its central role in state governance.
Constitutional and Legal Basis
Establishment and Historical Evolution
The office of the State Comptroller was established under Article V of California's original constitution, adopted at the Constitutional Convention in Monterey on October 10, 1849, and ratified by voters on November 13, 1849, prior to statehood on September 9, 1850.[7] This creation addressed the fiscal disorganization inherited from Mexican provincial governance and the subsequent U.S. military administration, which lacked centralized accounting amid the chaotic influx of population and wealth from the California Gold Rush beginning in 1848.[8] The Comptroller, elected for a four-year term alongside the Governor after an initial legislative appointment, was tasked with basic financial oversight, including countersigning treasury warrants and ensuring accountability for public expenditures to impose order on ad hoc territorial spending.[9] The office evolved significantly with the adoption of a new constitution on May 7, 1879, ratified amid public outrage over corruption scandals, including excessive state debt from railroad subsidies and political influence peddling during the post-Gold Rush boom. Article V, Section 22 renamed the position State Controller and codified expanded auditing authority, mandating pre-expenditure review of all claims against state funds, issuance of warrants only for legally appropriated amounts, and quarterly financial statements to the Legislature for public transparency.[10] These provisions aimed to curb abuses exposed by earlier fiscal laxity, establishing the Controller as a check on executive and legislative spending without reliance on fragmented local or federal mechanisms. Twentieth-century constitutional amendments further refined the office's scope, incorporating post-Depression reforms to bolster statewide fiscal controls, including enhanced reporting on public moneys and, by mid-century, statutory extensions enabling audits of certain local government entities receiving state aid to prevent mismanagement in an era of expanding public works and welfare programs.[11] Core auditing duties remained anchored in Article V, with over 500 amendments to the 1879 framework since ratification reinforcing the Controller's role in maintaining empirical accountability amid California's growth into the world's fifth-largest economy.[12]Key Provisions in State Constitution and Statutes
The California Constitution establishes the State Controller as an independently elected executive officer under Article V, Section 11, listing it alongside the Governor, Lieutenant Governor, Secretary of State, Treasurer, and Attorney General, with the explicit aim of diffusing executive power and preventing centralized control over fiscal operations. This structural separation from the Governor's appointive authority underscores a first-principles commitment to checks on spending, as the Controller draws warrants only upon verified appropriations and maintains accounts independent of executive directives.[3] Statutory duties are codified primarily in Government Code Title 2, Division 3, Part 2, Chapter 5, which mandates the Controller to superintend all fiscal concerns of the state, including maintaining central accounts for treasury funds, auditing expenditures for legality and sufficiency of appropriation, and administering unclaimed property under related provisions in the Code of Civil Procedure. [11] Key sections such as Government Code § 925.6 grant discretionary auditing authority over state agencies and entities receiving public funds, requiring examinations of internal controls and financial reporting to enforce accountability without prior approval from other branches.[11] Sections 12410–12470 further detail warrant issuance protocols, payroll safeguards, and reporting on state debts, ensuring disbursements align with legislative intent rather than administrative fiat. This framework prioritizes non-partisan fiscal scrutiny, yet causal constraints arise from the Controller's lack of veto or enforcement power over appropriations, as legislatures retain ultimate authority; for instance, during the 2008–2012 budget crises amid $40 billion-plus shortfalls, Controller audits identifying wasteful spending and reserve inadequacies were issued but did not compel legislative reforms, highlighting practical limits in a unicameral-dominated environment where supermajorities approved deficit-financed budgets despite such findings.[3]Election Process and Qualifications
Term of Office, Eligibility, and Election Mechanics
The California State Controller is elected to a four-year term in statewide elections held every even-numbered year, coinciding with gubernatorial election cycles.[13][2] Incumbents face a lifetime limit of two terms in the office, as established by voter-approved term limits applicable to constitutional officers.[14] Eligibility to run requires candidates to be registered voters qualified to vote for the office, meaning they must be United States citizens at least 18 years of age and residents of California.[15][16] Elections proceed via California's top-two primary system, enacted through Proposition 14 in June 2010 and first applied in 2012, under which all candidates for the office appear on a single nonpartisan primary ballot typically held in June, with the two highest vote-getters—regardless of party affiliation—advancing to the November general election.[17] For instance, in the 2022 election, Democrat Malia Cohen secured the top spot in the primary and defeated Republican Lanhee Chen in the general election to assume office.[4][18] Following the general election, county election officials conduct canvasses of results, which are compiled and certified by the California Secretary of State, who issues certificates of election to winners.[19] The elected Controller must then take an oath of office affirming support for the United States Constitution and the California Constitution before assuming duties, as prescribed in state law.[20] Voter turnout in Controller races mirrors statewide figures for the ballot but reflects lower specific engagement for this down-ballot contest, with historical data indicating varied participation rates aligned to overall election dynamics rather than office-specific focus.[21]Political and Partisan Trends in Elections
Since the 1958 election, in which Democrat Alan Cranston defeated Republican Howard J. Thelin with 60.5% of the vote, the California State Controller position has been held exclusively by Democrats, reflecting the office's alignment with the state's broader partisan realignment toward Democratic dominance in statewide executive roles.[22] This streak follows the tenure of Republican Thomas H. Kuchel, who served from 1946 to 1953 after appointment and subsequent election, amid a period of more balanced two-party competition in California politics before the expansion of welfare programs and demographic shifts favoring Democrats.[23][24] The last Republican to mount a competitive challenge prior to recent cycles lost amid low statewide GOP turnout, underscoring a pattern where controller races serve as downstream indicators of gubernatorial coattails in California's top-down ballot structure.[25] In recent elections, Democratic candidates have secured comfortable margins, correlating with voter concentrations in urban and coastal regions where Democratic registration exceeds 50% and turnout favors progressive policies on fiscal and social issues. For instance, in 2014, Betty Yee (D) defeated Ashley Swearengin (R) with 52.8% of the vote in the general election, benefiting from strong support in the Los Angeles and San Francisco Bay Area metro areas that account for over 60% of the state's population and reliably deliver Democratic pluralities in non-presidential races.[26][27] Similarly, the 2022 contest featured six primary candidates but culminated in Malia Cohen (D) winning 55.4% against Lanhee Chen (R)'s 44.6%, despite Chen's fundraising efforts and endorsements positioning it as the GOP's strongest bid in decades to break the Democratic hold—yet undermined by turnout gaps in rural and inland counties offset by coastal urban strongholds.[28][29] Fundraising disparities further entrench this trend, with Democrats consistently outspending Republicans by wide margins in controller races, as seen in 2022 when statewide Democratic committees and aligned donors amplified Cohen's campaign through independent expenditures exceeding those of Republican counterparts by systemic factors often approaching 3:1 across California executive contests.[30] This financial edge, driven by public-sector unions and tech-industry contributors prevalent in Democratic-leaning coastal enclaves, amplifies messaging in low-information races like controller, where voter decisions hinge on party heuristics rather than issue-specific engagement.[31] The resulting one-party continuity raises questions about the controller's capacity for independent fiscal auditing of Democratic-led state expenditures, though empirical data on audit outcomes shows no statistically significant partisan divergence in enforcement actions to date.[4]Powers and Responsibilities
Fiscal Oversight, Auditing, and Accountability
The California State Controller serves as the state's chief fiscal officer, conducting pre-audits of all claims against state and federal funds to ensure validity before any disbursement, a duty enshrined in the state constitution.[11] This process scrutinizes expenditures across the state's annual budget, which exceeded $310 billion for fiscal year 2023-24, flagging potential irregularities such as improper allocations or compliance failures in agency spending.[32] The Controller's Division of Audits further examines internal controls at state agencies, revenue programs like oil and gas royalties, and the state lottery, producing reports that highlight deficiencies but often lack enforcement mechanisms to prevent recurrence, as legislative approval drives ultimate spending decisions.[33] Mandatory oversight extends to local governments and entities receiving federal funds exceeding $750,000 annually, where the Controller enforces single audits under federal requirements and reviews compliance with state laws.[34] The office compiles the Annual Comprehensive Financial Report (ACFR), formerly known as the CAFR, which for fiscal year ended June 30, 2023, detailed statewide assets, liabilities, and fund balances, including persistent challenges like unfunded pension obligations totaling over $200 billion across major systems.[35] Audits have exposed specific waste, such as fiscal irregularities in the California Public Utilities Commission's operations reported in September 2023, yet systemic issues like infrastructure project overruns and underreported local expenditures persist, underscoring audits' diagnostic role over corrective power.[36] As a voting member on approximately 70 boards and commissions, including the Pooled Money Investment Board (PMIB), which manages over $200 billion in short-term investments, the Controller influences cash management and investment decisions but requires supermajority consensus for major actions, limiting unilateral veto authority.[37] Participation on bodies like the California Public Employees' Retirement System (CalPERS) and State Teachers' Retirement System (CalSTRS) boards enables scrutiny of actuarial assumptions and funding levels, where audits have repeatedly flagged underfunding risks—such as CalPERS' funded ratio below 70% in recent years—but political supermajorities often override recommendations for reforms, perpetuating fiscal vulnerabilities.[38] This board oversight provides empirical checks on long-term liabilities, yet empirical patterns show that identified shortfalls, like those in the 2023 ACFR, rarely trigger immediate budgetary corrections amid recurring deficits.[35]Fund Disbursement and Financial Management
The California State Controller serves as the chief disbursing officer, authorizing warrants and electronic transfers for all expenditures from the State Treasury, thereby managing the state's cash outflows in coordination with the State Treasurer's inbound revenue functions. This role encompasses processing payments for a wide array of obligations, including vendor contracts, grants, and program reimbursements, with the Disbursements Bureau issuing approximately 64 million payments totaling $679 billion in fiscal year 2023-24.[3] Such operations demand meticulous bookkeeping to navigate California's persistent fiscal pressures, where state government liabilities stood at $497 billion at the close of fiscal year 2023, equivalent to roughly $12,500 per resident, amid ongoing structural deficits projected to reach $15-25 billion annually through 2028-29.[39][40] Central to these duties is the administration of payroll for over 262,000 civil service and exempt state employees through the Personnel and Payroll Services Division, which handles leave accounting, benefits deductions, and direct deposits for monthly transactions exceeding 590,000 payments.[41][42] The Controller also oversees disbursements for debt service on general obligation bonds, ensuring principal and interest payments from the General Fund or dedicated sources are executed as legislatively appropriated, contributing to accountability in servicing long-term obligations that form a substantial portion of the state's $2 trillion in cumulative debt issuance over recent decades.[43][3] In budget execution, the Controller maintains independence in warrant issuance, adhering strictly to appropriations acts rather than executive directives, a principle tested during the 2008-2009 crisis. There, Controller John Chiang declined to implement Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger's executive order slashing state employee pay to the federal minimum wage of $6.55 per hour amid a $42 billion deficit and budget impasse, contending that such unilateral reductions violated constitutional mandates for legislative control over expenditures; this stance prompted lawsuits from the administration, with courts ultimately affirming limits on gubernatorial authority over payroll disbursements.[44][45][46] While the Controller possesses no formal impoundment veto, this episode highlighted constitutional tensions in prioritizing appropriated funds during liquidity shortfalls, reinforcing the office's role as a check against ad hoc executive interventions in cash management.[47]Additional Administrative Duties
The State Controller's Office administers California's Unclaimed Property Law, requiring businesses and financial institutions to report and remit dormant assets—such as bank accounts, uncashed checks, stocks, and insurance proceeds—after a three-year inactivity period.[48] The office currently holds approximately $14 billion in such assets, which remain perpetually available for claimants via an online searchable database, with no filing fees or deadlines.[49] In fiscal year 2023-24, the office returned $465.6 million to rightful owners, averaging over $1 million daily, demonstrating effective recovery mechanisms despite the scale of holdings.[49] However, the statutory mandate imposes annual compliance obligations on holders, including due diligence notifications and remittances, which generate administrative costs for California's private sector estimated in the millions annually across reporting cycles.[50] Beyond core fiscal roles, the Controller provides oversight for the apportionment of California State Lottery revenues to public education institutions, calculating distributions based on average daily attendance metrics and issuing quarterly payments from the Lottery Education Fund.[51][52] For fiscal year ended June 30, 2024, the office facilitated transfers supporting K-12 schools, community colleges, and universities, with total lottery contributions to education exceeding prior years amid rising sales.[53] Additional tasks include auditing state agency payrolls that encompass deferred compensation deductions under programs like Savings Plus (administered via CalHR) and reporting on workers' compensation expenditures in state operations, though fraud detection yields remain modest relative to audit expenditures, with broader state efforts recovering limited improper payments despite dedicated resources.[54][55] These duties, while recovering assets and ensuring fund flows, contribute to layered regulatory processes that can strain economic efficiency by diverting business resources from productive uses.Organizational Structure
Internal Divisions and Operations
The California State Controller's Office is headquartered at 300 Capitol Mall in Sacramento, with an additional office in Los Angeles, and employs more than 1,600 staff members organized across specialized divisions to manage fiscal operations.[56][57] These divisions handle core functions such as auditing state expenditures, processing payroll for over 260,000 state employees, safeguarding unclaimed property valued at billions, and maintaining financial reporting systems.[3] The office's bureaucratic structure emphasizes compartmentalized oversight to ensure accountability in California's expansive state budget, though it operates within a high-cost government framework characterized by layered administrative processes and reliance on legacy systems alongside modernization efforts.[3] Key operational units include the Division of Audits, which conducts compliance examinations of state agencies, local governments, and programs like the state lottery to verify proper use of public funds and internal controls.[3] The Personnel and Payroll Services Division processes biweekly payroll disbursements and travel reimbursements for state civil service and California State University personnel, issuing millions of payments annually.[3] The Unclaimed Property Division manages the custody and return of dormant assets, handling claims through digital platforms and processing over $1 billion in returns in recent years.[3] These units contribute to operational efficiency metrics tracked internally, such as timely disbursement of $679 billion in payments during fiscal year 2023-24 via the Administration and Disbursements Division.[3] The Information Systems Division supports technological infrastructure, including the integration with the Financial Information System for California (FICal), a statewide platform initiated in 2012 to consolidate budgeting, [procurement](/page/Procurement), and [accounting](/page/Accounting) functions across agencies.[3] FICal's State Controller's Office module achieved full deployment in June 2021, enabling centralized ledger maintenance and reducing manual reconciliations, though adoption has faced delays due to data migration challenges in California's fragmented legacy IT environment.[58] The office's operations are funded primarily through annual state general fund appropriations allocated via the Budget Act, supporting staff salaries, audit fieldwork, and system upgrades amid ongoing pressures from California's elevated per-employee government costs compared to national averages.[59]Staffing, Budget, and Oversight Mechanisms
The State Controller's Office employs approximately 850 to 1,000 civil service personnel, primarily handling payroll, auditing, and administrative functions across its divisions.[60] [61] These employees fall under California's civil service system and are largely represented by Service Employees International Union (SEIU) Local 1000, which covers Bargaining Unit 1 for professional, administrative, and fiscal services roles.[62] [63] The elected Controller appoints the Chief Deputy Controller, Deputy Controllers for specific functions such as senior financial advising, and other key executives, providing limited flexibility amid union-negotiated contracts that emphasize tenure protections and compensation scales.[64] Public sector unions like SEIU wield substantial influence in California state operations, often resisting staffing reforms that could enhance efficiency or address specialized needs, such as advanced forensic accounting expertise required for fraud detection.[65] [66] The office's operational budget has expanded in tandem with California's overall state government bloat, particularly during periods of sustained Democratic control of the Controller position since 2007, though precise historical figures for the office alone are embedded in broader budgetary aggregates. Recent state operations funding allocated to the Controller's Office reached $87.2 million from the General Fund, supplemented by federal and other reimbursements that elevate total expenditures into the hundreds of millions annually.[67] This growth parallels union-driven cost escalations in personnel and benefits, with limited evidence of proportional gains in output metrics like audit timeliness or fiscal recovery rates. Internal budget processes include self-audits via the Division of Audits, while external validation comes from independent firms contracted for compliance reviews.[68] Oversight mechanisms encompass legislative scrutiny through bodies like the Joint Legislative Audit Committee (JLAC), which approves and directs audits of state entities including the Controller's operations, and mandates public reporting of financial data to promote accountability.[69] [70] The California State Auditor conducts periodic examinations of agency performance, though these are selectively triggered rather than routine. As an independently elected constitutional officer, the Controller faces inherent incentive misalignments—political alignment with the dominant legislative majority reduces pressure for self-initiated probes into systemic fiscal mismanagement, prioritizing partisan stability over aggressive internal reforms. Empirical patterns in state auditing reveal underutilization of forensic tools despite rising fraud risks, underscoring causal limits in oversight efficacy where elected incentives favor expenditure growth over contraction.[71]Historical Controllers
Pre-20th Century Controllers
The position of California State Controller was established under the state's original 1849 Constitution, with John S. Houston serving as the first officeholder from December 22, 1849, to January 8, 1852.[72] Amid the California Gold Rush, Houston's tenure involved organizing rudimentary state accounting systems to handle surging revenues derived mainly from mining-related taxes, including licenses and assessments on foreign miners, which funded initial government operations despite the absence of formalized banking infrastructure.[73] These finances were volatile, as gold output fluctuations led to inconsistent collections, complicating disbursements for emerging state institutions without modern auditing protocols. Subsequent controllers, such as Winslow S. Pierce (1852–1854), navigated fiscal expansion during California's early statehood, overseeing payments for infrastructure and administrative growth while contending with limited oversight mechanisms.[72] By the 1860s, amid the American Civil War, the office managed state contributions to the Union effort, including coordination of gold shipments to federal mints and disbursements for volunteer regiments, as California aligned with Northern interests despite internal divisions.[74] Controllers during this period, lacking robust federal-state fiscal integration, handled ad hoc war-related expenditures from state funds bolstered by ongoing mining taxes, though records indicate strains from postwar infrastructure demands and occasional short-term borrowing. The 1870s marked heightened challenges from widespread political corruption, particularly railroad monopolies' influence over legislative spending, which exposed vulnerabilities in executive financial controls.[75] This era's scandals, involving bribery and unchecked appropriations, prompted the 1879 Constitutional Convention to revise fiscal safeguards, reinforcing the controller's independent elected status and auditing authority to curb abuses absent in the prior framework.[76] Pre-20th-century controllers thus operated in a nascent system reliant on manual ledgers and personal accountability, setting precedents for accountability amid rapid economic transformation and governance maturation.20th Century Controllers and Key Events
Ray L. Riley, a Democrat, served as California State Controller during the Great Depression, reporting state government expenditures of $119,599,302.07 for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1930, amid rising costs from expanded public works and relief efforts influenced by federal [New Deal](/page/New Deal) initiatives.[77] By November 1933, Riley documented a General Fund deficit of $11,750,000, reflecting fiscal strains from economic contraction and increased state obligations that foreshadowed long-term dependency on volatile revenues.[78] His tenure highlighted the Controller's role in tracking disbursements for welfare expansion and infrastructure, setting precedents for auditing amid federal-state fiscal interdependencies. Post-World War II, Thomas H. Kuchel, a Republican appointed by Governor Earl Warren, held the office from February 11, 1946, to January 2, 1953, overseeing state finances during rapid industrialization, population growth, and the Korean War's indirect economic pressures, including heightened defense-related spending and federal aid flows.[79] Kuchel's administration managed a period of budgetary expansion for highways, education, and veterans' programs, with state expenditures rising to support California's emergence as an economic powerhouse, though without mechanisms to curb structural spending growth that later contributed to fiscal imbalances.[80] From the 1970s through the 1990s, Democratic Controllers dominated, including Gray Davis from 1987 to 1995, navigating the aftermath of Proposition 13's 1978 passage, which capped property tax rates at 1% and limited annual increases to 2%, profoundly altering local revenue streams and increasing state oversight of subventions to counties and cities.[81] This shift compelled Controllers to centralize fund disbursements, amplifying state liability for local shortfalls and exposing budgets to economic cycles, as evidenced by Davis's implementation of budgetary controls that reportedly saved over $500 million in taxpayer funds through enhanced auditing.[82] The 1990s boom saw temporary surpluses—peaking amid tech-driven revenues—transition to deficits by the decade's end, underscoring revenue volatility from overreliance on income and capital gains taxes rather than stable bases curtailed by Proposition 13.[83] Key events included post-1994 Northridge earthquake reconstruction, where the magnitude 6.7 event damaged infrastructure across 2,192 square miles, prompting billions in state and federal disbursements audited for efficiency; these reviews exposed inefficiencies in emergency spending, catalyzing 1996 legislative reforms to strengthen fiscal accountability in disaster recovery and public works procurement.[84] Such episodes during Democratic-led tenures reinforced patterns of expansive commitments—welfare growth, seismic retrofits, and bailouts—without commensurate revenue safeguards, planting seeds for California's chronic structural deficits by constraining local fiscal autonomy while bloating state-level obligations.[85]21st Century Controllers and Recent Developments
Steve Westly served as California State Controller from 2003 to 2007, a period encompassing recovery from the dot-com bust and the onset of the housing bubble that fueled revenue growth through increased property and capital gains taxes. Westly prioritized technological reforms, including the ReadyReturn program to simplify tax filing for wage earners, and proposed government efficiency measures aligned with incoming Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger's themes of reducing bureaucracy.[86][87] Despite these initiatives, the era's revenue peaks—driven by speculative real estate—did not lead to structural reforms addressing spending growth, setting the stage for fiscal volatility as the bubble inflated without offsetting deficit controls.[32] John Chiang held the office from 2007 to 2015, navigating the Great Recession's sharp revenue drop from $143 billion in 2007-08 to $89 billion in 2009-10, amid ongoing clashes with Schwarzenegger over emergency budget measures. Chiang refused to implement the governor's executive orders for state employee furloughs and minimum wage reductions for unpaid workers, prompting lawsuits that courts partially upheld, affirming his payroll authority but limiting unilateral blocks.[88][89] These disputes highlighted tensions in fiscal accountability during deficits exceeding $40 billion annually, yet post-recession recovery revenues rebounded without curbing expenditure expansions that entrenched structural imbalances.[90] Betty Yee served from 2015 to 2023 under Governors Jerry Brown and Gavin Newsom, overseeing a swing from post-recession austerity to record surpluses peaking at over $100 billion in 2021-22 from tech-driven capital gains taxes. Her tenure included audits of local entities like the City of Industry, though follow-ups faced donor influence allegations, and emphasized tax policy's role in local finances.[91][92] Despite these revenue highs, unchecked spending on expanding programs contributed to emerging structural deficits, as volatile income taxes—comprising nearly 70% of general fund revenues—failed to prompt balanced budgeting reforms.[93] Malia Cohen, in office since January 2023, has focused on transparency amid Newsom-era fiscal pressures, releasing monthly cash balance reports showing revenues exceeding 2024-25 budget estimates early in the year but warning of deficits as expenses outpaced inflows.[94] Her office published 2024 payroll data for public entities including special districts, universities, and counties to enhance accountability, alongside awards for accurate financial reporting by 46 counties.[95][96] Concurrent state audits revealed over $24 billion spent on homelessness since 2018 with inadequate tracking of outcomes, underscoring oversight gaps despite Cohen's initiatives; projections of $68 billion deficits for 2024-25 by the Legislative Analyst's Office highlight persistent structural shortfalls, even as Controller responses urge prudent management.[97][98]List of Controllers
Chronological Roster
The chronological roster of California State Controllers from the office's establishment under the 1849 Constitution to the present is as follows, with terms reflecting election or appointment dates, party affiliations at time of service, and notes on interim or unusual circumstances where applicable.[38]| # | Name | Term in office | Party | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | John S. Houston | 1849–1852 | Democratic | Elected as the first Controller.[99] [38] |
| 2 | Winslow S. Pierce | 1852–1854 | Democratic | [38] |
| 3 | Samuel Bell | 1854–1856 | Democratic | [38] |
| 4 | George W. Whitman | 1856–1857 | American (Know Nothing) | Resigned December 1857.[38] |
| 5 | Henry T. Magee | 1857–1858 | Democratic | Appointed to fill vacancy; died in office November 8, 1858.[38] |
| 6 | Robert A. Parker | 1858–1863 | Democratic | Elected following vacancy.[38] |
| 7 | P. L. Edwards | 1863–1870 | Republican | Served under 1862 Constitution extending terms to four years.[38] |
| 8 | Henry C. Ford | 1870–1871 | Democratic | [38] |
| 9 | George R. Groff | 1871 | Republican | Acting Controller.[38] |
| 10 | Thomas Becket | 1871–1875 | Republican | [38] |
| 11 | James W. Denver | 1875–1880 | Democratic | [38] |
| 12 | William A. Anderson | 1880–1883 | Republican | Resigned 1883.[38] |
| 13 | John P. Bray | 1883 | Republican | Acting Controller.[38] |
| 14 | Robert M. Widney | 1883–1885 | Republican | Appointed to fill vacancy.[38] |
| 15 | Charles R. Brockway | 1885 | Republican | Acting Controller.[38] |
| 16 | Asa P. Potter | 1885–1887 | Republican | [38] |
| 17 | William G. Henshaw | 1887–1891 | Republican | [38] |
| 18 | Levi C. Lane | 1891 | Republican | Acting Controller.[38] |
| 19 | William H. Davis | 1891–1895 | Republican | [38] |
| 20 | Henry J. Daley | 1895 | Democratic | Died in office shortly after inauguration.[38] |
| 21 | George A. Knight | 1895 | Republican | Acting Controller following Daley's death.[38] |
| 22 | William H. Davis | 1895–1899 | Republican | Second non-consecutive term.[38] |
| 23 | John S. Chambers | 1899 | Republican | Acting Controller.[38] |
| 24 | Henry M. Tifft | 1899–1903 | Republican | [38] |
| 25 | George B. Warren | 1903 | Republican | Acting Controller.[38] |
| 26 | Charles J. McCoy | 1903–1907 | Republican | [38] |
| 27 | William S. Cullen | 1907 | Republican | Acting Controller.[38] |
| 28 | Henry H. Gale | 1907–1911 | Republican | [38] |
| 29 | A. L. Moore | 1911 | Republican | Acting Controller.[38] |
| 30 | Richard V. Seeley | 1911–1915 | Republican | [38] |
| 31 | Joseph F. Dunn | 1915–1919 | Republican | [38] |
| 32 | Ray L. Riley | 1919–1923 | Republican | [38] |
| 33 | J. W. Lawson | 1923 | Republican | Acting Controller.[38] |
| 34 | Charles G. Johnson | 1923–1927 | Republican | [38] |
| 35 | Russel J. Waters | 1927 | Republican | Acting Controller.[38] |
| 36 | Ray L. Riley | 1927–1931 | Republican | Second term.[38] |
| 37 | Harry B. Riley | 1931–1934 | Republican | Resigned July 1934.[38] |
| 38 | Frank C. Jordan | 1934–1957 | Republican | Appointed to vacancy; longest tenure (23 years).[38] |
| 39 | Alan Cranston | 1957–1967 | Democratic | [38] |
| 40 | Houston I. Flournoy | 1967–1975 | Republican | [38] |
| 41 | Kenneth Cory | 1975–1983 | Democratic | [38] |
| 42 | Gray Davis | 1987–1995 | Democratic | Elected 1986, 1990; vacancy 1983–1987 filled by acting officials following Cory's term end and transition.[38] |
| 43 | Kathleen Connell | 1995–2003 | Republican | [38] |
| 44 | Steve Westly | 2003–2007 | Democratic | Wait, no, cite Ballot. [38] |
| 45 | John Chiang | 2007–2015 | Democratic | [38] |
| 46 | Betty Yee | 2015–2023 | Democratic | Elected 2014, 2018.[38] |
| 47 | Malia M. Cohen | 2023–present | Democratic | Elected 2022. [38] |