Mayoral candidate wants to demonstrate that a new consensus is possible

Board of Supervisors President David Chiu launched his mayoral campaign Feb. 28 with a pledge to bring San Franciscans of all political stripes together around a common agenda. It's a message that has also been sounded by other mayoral candidates, but one in which Chiu is in a unique position to try to deliver on this year.
"This campaign, at its heart, is going to be how we come together," Chiu told a crowd of hundreds gathered at City Hall for the announcement. Later he told the crowd, "This campaign needs to be a beacon to the rest of the world about who we are as San Franciscans."
Chiu appeared to be reaching out to progressives more than the other mayoral candidates have so far, emphasizing how he doesn't own a car and wants make big improvements to Muni and the bicycle network, valuing "diversity and social justice," calling for "community-based budgeting," and saying that "we have to have a conversation about how we can creatively fund affordable housing."
"We are at our best when we come together for our shared progressive values," Chiu said.
But then he quickly noted that over the past decade, "City Hall has been a bit dysfunctional." That was a time when progressives controlled the Board of Supervisors and there was a downtown-backed mayor, and Chiu decried how the two sides didn't work well together. Yet now, with Chiu as board president and Ed Lee as interim mayor — an appointment Chiu helped engineer — "the tone at City Hall has changed."
Perhaps that's true, but the thorny issues that divide the city and defy simple solutions remain in play: bridging a $380 million budget deficit after years of deep cuts, creating jobs without worsening the city budget picture, controlling employee pension costs, reforming Muni and addressing traffic congestion, bringing cleaner energy sources online, and increasing the affordable housing stock.
These are all issues that President Chiu and Mayor Lee will have to deal with this year if Candidate Chiu is going to be able to credibly claim that the new tone at City Hall can actually translate into policies that work and bring people together.
And there won't be consensus in the community on all of those issues; at some point, Chiu will have to take a side.
RHETORIC AND REALITY
All the mayoral candidates argue for coming together around common-sense solutions, a trope that clearly polls well with voters.
Leland Yee welcomed Chiu into the race while emphasizing his own kumbaya message: "My commitment is to run a different kind of campaign for mayor — to work with other candidates to present real choices and options for voters."
Dennis Herrera, whose mayoral campaign announced its endorsement by Sup. Scott Wiener during Chiu's kickoff event, said, "I look forward to working with him toward my goal of making San Francisco a city that works and one that lives up to its great promise"
And Ting told a gathering of his Reset SF group over the weekend, "It's time for San Francisco city government to be as creative and innovative as the rest of San Francisco. And it's going to take all of us to make that a reality."
Even political consultant David Latterman, who usually works with downtown-backed candidates but is working on Chiu's campaign, told us, "I'm just so tired of that left-right divide. I don't think this city is served well by those wars any more."
Also from this author
What would a Bay Citizen merger with Center for Investigative Reporting mean for local journalism?
Most Commented On
Recent comments
- Remarkable Story - February 22, 2012
- Last time I checked, Brown wasn't mayor. - February 22, 2012
- So, Lisa, you don't care what the video proves? - February 22, 2012
- Which Greg are you? - February 22, 2012
- Killing the left's sacred cows - February 22, 2012
- by "big brother" ... - February 22, 2012
- So, its the ADULT industry - February 22, 2012
- A "red-meat" article. Same as SF Chronicle game plan for years. - February 22, 2012
- Social inijustice - February 22, 2012
- Finally, we get to hear the other side of the story (Mirk case) - February 22, 2012









Comments
Post new comment