Voter alert Some of the nastiest hit mail coming out of Gavin
Newsom's campaign doesn't have the campaign's name on it. That's
the result of some complex and fascinating politics. But make no mistake:
it's Newsom who's behind the nasty, misleading mailers.
Two anti-Matt Gonzalez flyers that arrived in mailboxes last
week one featuring harrowing images of homeless people and accusing
the Green Party candidate of supporting "failed homeless policies,"
the other blasting him for supporting a pay raise for supervisors
came from an under-the-radar group called the California Urban Issues
Project.
While the organization has a local address, it's not registered as
a political action committee or as an independent expenditure committee
with the California Secretary of State's Office. According to the secretary
of state's files, it's a corporation created August 2003, and Thomas
A. Willis, an attorney with Remcho, Hohansen and Purcell, serves
as the processing agent. Remcho's office has long helped Mayor Willie
Brown on campaign issues. Indeed, his law office fought the successful
legal battle to get the city's limits on independent expenditure spending
thrown out so Brown could use an unprecedented amount of soft money
to secure reelection in 1999.
Other pro-Newsom flyers are coming from the California Democratic Party
an outfit that normally doesn't get heavily involved in local,
nonpartisan races. Why is the state party involved? Put simply, Brown
didn't want to see a lot of money go the local party operation
because local party slate mailers would support not only Newsom but
also District Attorney Terence Hallinan.
Brown is pulling out all the stops to elect Hallinan's challenger,
Kamala Harris.
Several sources told us that Brown, state party chair Art Torres, and
Assemblymember Mark Leno pushed hard to keep political money from flowing
through the local Democratic County Central Committee because
they didn't want to do anything to boost Hallinan's chances.
"Their line for why we had to endorse Newsom was 'party unity,'
" DCCC member Debra Walker, who abstained from voting for the group's
mayoral endorsement Nov. 12, serves on the mailer committee and supports
Hallinan. "But what kind of so-called party unity are they talking
about when they go and undermine the local party's slate?" (Savannah
Blackwell)