WORSE AND WORSER
When my good friend, Wilson Riles Jr., ran against
Jerry Brown for Mayor of the City of Oakland four years ago, I thought he made two
major mistakes. The first mistake was that he waited too long to go after Brown’s
record as mayor. The second was that he did the going himself.
In the new politicalspeak of slate mailers and media soundbites, going after your
opponent’s record is considered a negative act, and is made synonymous with the popular
term “mudslinging.” The two, however, are not synonymous. You can point out the errors
in your political opponent’s record without being nasty about it, though that’s a
trick that is not as easy as it might seem. A lot of politicians aren’t particularly
good at the art, my good friend, Wilson Riles, being one of them. He has the demeanor
of a pacifist and a thoughtful man—both of which he is—and so, when he took to criticizing
Mr. Brown for Mr. Brown's many failures as mayor back in the 2002 election, it was
so out of character that it probably lost Mr. Riles more votes than it gained him,
and contributed to his getting roundly trounced by Mr. Brown, 64 percent to 36.
Comes the dreary race this spring for the Democratic nomination for the Attorney
General of the State of California and Los Angeles City Attorney Rocky Delgadillo,
flexing his street cred as a tough kid from East LA, decided to hit Mr. Brown early
and often in news releases and debate statements and email updates.
“Speaking to a group of Alameda County Democratic lawyers,” the San Francisco
Chronicle reported last spring, Mr. Delgadillo “accused Oakland Mayor Jerry Brown
of failing to fulfill a campaign promise of reducing crime in Oakland to the level
of Walnut Creek. Oakland has had 31 killings so far this year compared to zero in
Walnut Creek. ‘He calls 31 homicides a surge, I call it a crisis,’ said Delgadillo,
who also accused Brown of waffling on the death penalty.”
The charges pretty much bounced off Mr. Brown and as a result, in last week’s primary
Mr. Delgadillo did slightly better than Mr. Riles, losing only 63 percent to 37 percent.
State media outlets mostly credited Mr. Brown’s decisive primary win not on the issues
so much as on his name recognition and star power, with the Los Angeles Alternative
newspaper giving out the bad news in an article called “Rocky In A Hard Place” a
month before the actual vote took place: “Delgadillo—a decent guy with no surplus
of magnetism—is running against the most famous democrat in California, Oakland Mayor
and former governor Jerry Brown, one of the most articulate people alive. Brown’s
name is the top brand. And, unlike other former governors (Wilson, Deukmejian, Davis),
Jerry doesn’t just have fans—he has True Believers. … Jerry’s thousands of ex-Brownies
are out there in all walks of life, in appointed and elected offices all over the
state, spreading the word. Hence, Rocky’s rough road.”
Leaving aside the calling of Mr. Brown “one of the most articulate people alive”
(really?), I think that’s a misreading of the race. Mr. Delgadillo’s problem against
Mr. Brown was not that he attacked a state icon, but that he attacked him in the
wrong way. True, Mr. Brown made public safety a major platform in his two runs for
Oakland mayor and true, under Mr. Brown’s watch, homicides skyrocketed. But in places
like Lodi and Fresno and Santa Barbara and San Diego, I’m sure, they figured of
course, homicides skyrocketed in Oakland…it’s Oakland, after all…and at least Jerry
Brown went there and tried, taking on a tough and dirty and thankless job. It’s
not Jerry Brown’s great image that made the difference so much as Oakland’s poor
one. Who, in the rest of California, expects much out of us?
Brace yourself, friends. For those of us who have followed Mr. Brown’s
work (or lack, thereof) as mayor of Oakland, and wouldn’t wish that experience on
the rest of the state, it gets progressively worse in November (pun intended). If
Mr. Brown is a bad choice for California Attorney General, then there is pretty much
no choice at all in the General Election. Our Republican friends, bless their right-wing
hearts, have managed to nominate someone who the Schwarzenegger wing of the party
will have to hide their faces about.
Witness the sampling of Project Vote Smart ratings on two-term Fresno State Senator
Chuck Poochigian, the Republican Attorney General nominee: On the issue of abortion
and a woman’s right to choose, Mr. Poochigian voted with Planned Parent Affiliates
of California 11 percent of the time in 2005. Three years before, Project Vote Smart
reports, NARAL-Pro Choice flatly “determined Senator Poochigian to be anti-choice.”
On budget spending and taxes in 2005, the Fresno State Senator supported the California
Taxpayers’ Association 100 percent of the time and the Howard Jarvis Taxpayers Association
94 percent. He supported the California Chamber of Commerce 93 percent in 2005, slipping
a little from his 100 percent support a year before. On the environment last year,
Mr. Poochigian supported only 9 percent issues important to the California League
of Conservation Voters, and those of the Sierra Club, flat-out never. He voted with
CalPIRG 19 percent on governmental reform issues in 2005, but 100 percent with the
Gun Owners of America the same year on issues important to that organization. On
labor concerns, he voted with the California School Employees Association 10 percent
of the time in 2005, the California Labor Federation-AFL-CIO 11 percent. And PawPAC,
the animal rights folks, gave him an F grade in 2003-04. Grrrrr….
Meanwhile, in his campaign website letter to his “Dear Friends” of California, Mr.
Poochigian stressed his law-and-order muscles, telling us that “the holder of [the
California Attorney General’s] office has no more important duty than protecting
Californians and their families from crime.”
In reality, Californians tend to depend upon law enforcement agencies that actually
have police officers and police powers to do that particular job, from the various
city police departments to the county sheriff’s offices and the State Highway Patrol,
as well as prosecuting officials like the county district attorneys. The Attorney
General’s Office has a much broader mandate, intervening in civil and legal and political
matters in a way that can have a profound effect on local situations (an example
was when, in 2003, current Attorney General Bill Lockyer gave an “opinion” against
the transfer of construction bond money to bail the Oakland Unified School District
out of its budget problems, leading directly to the state takeover of the Oakland
schools).
(In all fairness, in his “Dear Friends” letter Mr. Poochigian says that the Attorney
General’s job “also includes a wide range of duties, including civil justice, representation
of the executive branch of government, advising law enforcement and other local and
state public agencies.” The addition, however, appears to be an afterthought to his
emphasis on the law enforcement aspects of the job.)
Mr. Poochigian immediately went the ridicule route on Mr. Brown, reprinting on his
campaign website a recent Jim Boren Fresno Bee column that manages to revisit
both the old Governor Moonbeam tag put on Mr. Brown in 1978 by Chicago Tribune
columnist Mike Royko and Mr. Brown’s old love affair with singer Linda Ronstadt,
none of which, one imagines, will make much difference to California voters in November.
But also, as one would expect of someone with his political background and his
take on the responsibilities of the job, Mr. Poochigian has taken out after Mr. Brown’s
Oakland crime record, writing on his website that “Jerry Brown took a big gamble
when he decided to wage his campaign for Attorney General based on a pledge to ‘lead
the fight against crime as I have done as Mayor of Oakland.’ Brown was betting that
he could confuse the press and public into buying his Soprano-style bookkeeping regarding
crime statistics. … Unfortunately for Jerry, the release of actual crime statistics
not filtered through the lens of his Attorney General campaign has caused the Mayor’s
crime-busting claims, built on a house of cards, to come tumbling down.”
Sigh…
My guess is that Mr. Brown, ever the artful dodger throughout his political career,
will be able to dodge this one, too, running not so much on the platform of “if it
ain’t broke, don’t fix it” as he will on the slogan “Oakland’s so broke, nobody could
fix it.”
Anyways, for November, you can label Mr. Brown and Mr. Poochigian Worse and Worser,
without much difference in which candidate gets stuck with which.