Progressives MIA in San Francisco mayor's race

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Jan 09, 2024 View in browser
 
POLITICO California Playbook

By Dustin Gardiner and Lara Korte

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San Francisco Mayor London Breed speaks during the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation CEO Summit.

San Francisco Mayor London Breed speaks during the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation CEO Summit on Nov. 16, 2023, in San Francisco. | Eric Risberg/AP

THE BUZZ: MOD-ON-MOD FIGHT — Progressives apparently don't want to run the most liberal major city in America.

The emerging field in the 2024 San Francisco mayor's race includes an incumbent and two well-known challengers all campaigning to appeal to an electorate frustrated by the city’s condition.

Mayor London Breed has a tough reelection fight in November. But, unlike her first run for the office, her opponents are all moderate-leaning Democrats — at least by San Francisco standards — who want to hire more police officers, clear homeless encampments from sidewalks and arrest people for dealing drugs on the street.

The field largely reflects the mood of voters in the city who’ve grown frustrated with its sluggish recovery from the pandemic, squalor on the streets and concerns about rampant theft.

Progressives have dominated the Board of Supervisors for years. But San Francisco hasn’t elected a progressive mayor since Art Agnos in 1987 — a factor that speaks to the influence of business interests in citywide elections and the more centrist shift of San Francisco voters as more tech workers move to the city. Gov. Gavin Newsom was seen as a business friendly moderate when he was elected mayor in 2003.

Board of Supervisors President Aaron Peskin, a staunch progressive who has been rumored as a mayoral contender, said wealthy tech executives bankrolling moderate candidates have made it challenging for progressives to fight back. He said that’s one reason why he’s leaning against getting into the race.

‘‘The billionaires have spent a lot of money creating an extremely toxic environment for the historic liberal consensus in San Francisco,” he said.

Ironically, the glut of moderates could splinter the vote, creating a pathway for a progressive to pull off an upset. The potential for such a candidate to shake up the field has been a source of chatter in city political circles for weeks.

“There’s definitely a lane for a progressive, if that progressive got in now or got in yesterday,” Peskin said.

It wouldn’t be the first time. Former District Attorney Chesa Boudin, who was later recalled, won election in 2019 during the third round of ranked vote tabulation, largely due to moderate rivals splitting the vote, meaning Boudin only won after the third and fourth place candidates were eliminated and their votes reassigned based on their second choice.

Would-be candidates have until June to enter the race, but any serious contender would likely need to begin fundraising immediately to be able to compete with mayoral hopefuls backed by business interests.

Breed’s most formidable challenger so far is Daniel Lurie, a nonprofit executive and heir to the Levi Strauss & Co. fortune. She also faces a mayoral opponent in Ahsha Safaí, a swing vote on the Board of Supervisors. Former interim Mayor Mark Farrell, also a moderate, is considering jumping into the fray and has been quietly meeting with allies in recent weeks.

Breed has increasingly seized tough-on-crime rhetoric in recent months as her field of challengers grows. She’s even proposed a ballot measure to require drug screening for recipients of locally-funded welfare — an idea criticized by other moderates in the race.

“The problem with progressives right now is that they are not aligned with the mood or the desires of San Francisco voters for a safer city,” said Maggie Muir, Breed’s campaign consultant. “It’s really hard when you’re ideologically out of line.”

But the centrist field could spur other candidates to appeal to the left. Safaí, for example, has emphasized his background as an immigrant and former labor organizer. “I’m, by far, the most progressive candidate in the race to date,” he said.

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This will be a televised battle between those top candidates. Tell us what we should ask them, and we just might use your question during the debate. Fill out this form by Wednesday, Jan. 17 to be considered.

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THIS JUST IN

California Gov. Gavin Newsom.

California Gov. Gavin Newsom speaks during the Milken Institute Global Conference in Beverly Hills, California, on May 2, 2023. | Patrick T. Fallon/AFP via Getty Images

FIRST IN POLITICO: NEWSOM’S PLAN TO FIGHT CRIME — Newsom is taking steps to crack down on property crime, without touching Proposition 47.

As Jeremy B. White scoops this morning, the governor is asking lawmakers to create new categories of crimes targeting professional thieves and auto burglars. Newsom wants to enhance penalties for resellers who traffic in stolen goods, clarify existing powers to arrest retail thieves and aggregate separate offenses, and indefinitely extend the retail task force.

The governor has reached out to lawmakers who will need to carry his proposals along with law enforcement officials and Democratic Attorney General Rob Bonta’s office, Jeremy reports.

Rising concerns about public safety, exacerbated by highly-visible mass retail theft, has given new scrutiny to Prop 47, the 2014 measure which reduced drug and property crimes to misdemeanors. Some Democrats in the Legislature, including Assembly Public Safety Chair Kevin McCarty, have proposed changes to the law, which would have to be approved by voters.

 

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CAMPAIGN YEAR

Rep. Kevin McCarthy speaks to reporters hours after he was ousted as Speaker of the House.

Then-Rep. Kevin McCarthy speaks to reporters hours after he was ousted as Speaker of the House, Tuesday, Oct. 3, 2023, at the Capitol. | J. Scott Applewhite/AP

ICYMI — The primary special election to finish out the remainder of Kevin McCarthy’s term will be held March 19, Newsom announced Monday.

The special primary was not consolidated with the March 5 primary due to counties’ concerns about cost and the risk of voter confusion, according to the governor’s office. If no candidate wins the majority of the vote in the March 19 special primary, the race will go to a runoff on May 21.

The former Republican speaker resigned from his Bakersfield-area seat in December after an abbreviated and embattled tenure as head of the House. His ousting at the hands of the far-right Freedom Caucus was a major loss for the California GOP, especially its vulnerable House members.

Assemblymember Vince Fong, who is running to succeed McCarthy in the 2024 election, said he intends to run in the special election as well. Tulare County Sheriff Mike Boudreaux will also run in both elections, his campaign announced Monday.

COMMITTEE WATCH — Former State Controller Betty Yee appears to be making good on her promise to run for governor in 2026, opening a committee on Monday for the campaign — though no official launch just yet. Other candidates running to succeed Newsom include Lt. Gov. Eleni Kounalakis and Superintendent of Public Instruction Tony Thurmond, and, potentially, Attorney General Rob Bonta and Senate President pro Tem Toni Atkins. 

RECALL RESPONSE — Mayor Sheng Thao spoke out against the new effort to remove her from office on Monday, calling on Oaklanders to “push aside fear and division” and “bring our community together to fight for the city we love.”

The mayor’s chief of staff, Leigh Hanson, put it in much starker terms:

“This recall effort is led by losers,” Hanson said in a statement. “I have faith that Oaklanders are smarter than this, and will resist the urge to be distracted by a desperate attempt for relevance.”

 

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CASH DASH

 — Republican Scott Baugh announces raising more than $420,000 in Q4, bringing his 2023 total to $1.9 million. Baugh is running to replace Rep. Katie Porter in her Orange County district. He’s up against Democratic state Sen. Dave Min and Democratic newcomer Joanna Weiss. 

Top Talkers

CARRY ON: Gun owners in California will have a lot more leeway to carry their weapons in public after a federal court struck down a central provision of California’s gun law banning carry in certain “sensitive” areas. (San Francisco Chronicle)

SUSPENDED: Leaders of Sacramento’s NAACP branch mismanaged county funds and hired themselves, financial filings show. (The Sacramento Bee)

 

EXCITING EVENT OPPORTUNITY: The USC Dornsife Center for the Political Future, in collaboration with POLITICO and Unite America, hosts the Warschaw Conference on Practical Politics on January 30, 2024 at USC. Top experts from politics, government, media and academia will explore the upcoming election season as part of the following conversations: PRIMARY COLORS: Iowa, New Hampshire, South Carolina and Beyond, NOVEMBER SHOWDOWN: Battle for the Presidency, TRUTH DECAY: Misinformation and Disinformation in Elections, RANKING REFORMS: The Cure for the Ills of Democracy Is More Democracy. Register to attend in person or virtually.

 
 
PLAYBOOKERS

TRANSITIONS — ​​James Nash is the new director of news and media relations at UC Davis. He previously was senior vice president at the Washington firm ROKK Solutions and worked as a press secretary at the National Governors Association.

BIRTHDAYS — (was Monday): former Rep. Richard Pombo (R-Calif.) …

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