SF Chronicle: New Rules Put Mayor’s Race Up For Grabs

San Francisco Chronicle

6 hats in ring for S.F. mayor’s race

Heather Knight, John Coté, Chronicle Staff Writers

Sunday, February 6, 2011

The race to become San Francisco‘s next mayor is on.

With interim Mayor Ed Lee firmly in place, six serious candidates have laced up their running shoes for what could be a mad dash to fill City Hall’s Room 200 for the next four years – and several more are expected to join them for the Nov. 8 election.

But this time the rules are different. This is the city’s first competitive mayor’s race to use public financing and ranked-choice voting, which allows voters to rank their top three choices so a winner can be declared even if he or she doesn’t get a majority of first-place votes.

SF Weekly: Were Travel Gift Reports Padded?

Welcome to blogs.sfweekly.com

Kibitzer Jon Golinger, who last month compiled Ethics Commission travel gift reports to show that the Chinese Chamber gave $19,506 in travel gifts to politicians, isn’t dropping the subject.

Chamber bigwig Rose Pak has been quoted as saying that Golinger’s figures were overblown and that she overstated the amount of money the Chamber contributed to a 2009 Asia junket attended by Supervisors David Chiu, Carmen Chu and Eric Mar. She changed her story and said it was two dozen businessmen who came along on the junket and helped pay their way, Pak told The Bay Citizen.

Golinger, who’s had a career working for well-known politicians including former supervisor Aaron Peskin and Chiu, has set up an organization called San Franciscans for Clean Government. He says he is curious as to whether junkets wined and dined politicians to get what they wanted — a quick hearing and favorable votes.

http://blogs.sfweekly.com/thesnitch/2011/02/did_chinese_chamber_pad_supes.php

Ch. 7 ABC: SF group questions travel gifts to officials

Watch TV Clip:  http://abclocal.go.com/kgo/story?section=news/local/san_francisco&id=7906180

SAN FRANCISCO (KGO) — The group San Franciscans for Clean Government says public records disclose that the city’s elected officials received travel donations of more than $44,000. Is it a conflict of interest? The agency that monitors government ethics says existing laws already prevent abuse, but the group says the city should restrict public officials from accepting gifts for travel. They looked at public documents over a span of two years.

Funders included the Chamber of Commerce, the Taipei City Council and even Harvard University.

Board of Supervisors President David Chiu received the most at $16,600 for seven trips. City Treasurer Jose Cisneros was second with $7,400 for nine trips.

“While we saw nothing that was illegal under current law, it points out a major need to correct the law to ensure that special interests don’t influence City Hall too much,” San Franciscans for Clean Government spokesperson Jon Golinger said.

State law prohibits elected officials from accepting gifts of more than $420 from a single donor.

San Francisco has one of the toughest laws on that of any city. Elected officials are generally prohibited from receiving gifts from lobbyists and potential contractors, but San Franciscans for Clean Government points out there are no laws restricting travel.

“It’s the appearance, the public’s trust in politics is low enough and making the friendly skies just a little too friendly is not something that’s wise to our political system,” Golinger said.

John St. Croix is the executive director of the Ethics Commission. He says if the travel is for legitimate reasons, it should be allowed. He adds the city requires public officials to disclose all trips before they take them.

“In addition to who funded the travel, there are regulations that travel be reported in advance and after the fact and if there are substantial donees for official travel that these names be listed,” St. Croix said.

Longtime political consultant Don Solem says disclosure generally prevents improprieties.

“Disclosure is prevention absolutely, that’s part of the purpose and the public is the ultimate source of democracy and has a right to know many, many things they would not know in private employment,” Solem said.

Chiu and Cisneros tell ABC7 they disclosed all the trips as required and they were all for legitimate purposes and the fact that the watchdog group was able to get access to the information shows the system works.

(Copyright ©2011 KGO-TV/DT. All Rights Reserved.)

Matier & Ross: Report shows big bucks for fancy flights

San Francisco Chronicle

WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 19, 2011

Matier & Ross

“San Franciscans for Clean Government issued a report Tuesday showing that two Pak-affiliated organizations – the Chinese Chamber and Chinese New Year Festival Committee – spent $19,506 in 2009 to fly Board of Supervisors President David Chiu and Supervisors Carmen Chu and Eric Mar to China.

That made up half the total that outside interests spent on supervisors’ travel in the past two years.”

Bay Citizen: Pak Gives, Chiu Receives Most Travel Gifts

Jan. 18, 2011

Pak Gives, Chiu Receives Most Travel Gifts

Report finds Chinatown leader was responsible for nearly half of all travel gifts to city officials

By Gerry Shih

Groups associated with Rose Pak, the Chinese Chamber of Commerce lobbyist, were by far the largest sources of travel gifts given to San Francisco officials in the past two years, according to public disclosure forms reviewed by a newly formed group calling itself San Franciscans for Clean Government. Board of Supervisors President David Chiu was identified as the top individual recipient of travel gifts during that period.

Receiving travel gifts is not illegal as long as the trips are reasonably associated with an official’s duties, according to San Francisco ethics rules.

But disproportionately large gifts, or generous giving from one source, may create the appearance of undue influence by special interests, said Jon Golinger from San Franciscans for Clean Government, the new group.

http://www.baycitizen.org/politics/story/pak-gives-chiu-receives-most-travel/

Guardian: Do free trips influence SF’s elected officials?

San Francisco Bay Guardian
Do free trips influence SF’s elected officials?
01.18.11  | Steven T. Jones |

 

San Francisco public officials have received $44,000 in trips and travel expenses from private interests in the last two years – with Board of Supervisors President David Chiu the biggest recipient and controversial Chinatown power broker Rose Pak the biggest giver – according to “Flying Through Loopholes,” a report by a new group named San Franciscans for Clean Government.

The report questions whether the gift of free trips, a rare exception to the city’s otherwise strict ban on gifts to public officials, is a way of currying favor with decision-makers. “The appearance of thousands of dollars changing hands doesn’t look good and it could be easily fixed,” says attorney Jon Golinger, Chiu’s former campaign manager and a founder of the group. He raises the question, “Is a person who paid for a trip more likely to get a return phone call?”

The disclosure of Pak’s largesse comes in the wake of reports that she engineered the selection of Ed Lee as the city’s new mayor. The records show that Pak and the Chinatown Chamber of Commerce she heads gave travel gifts totaling nearly $20,000, almost half of the total. Most of that was for sending Sups. Chiu, Eric Mar, and Carmen Chu to southern China in November at a cost of $6,122 each. Pak also sent Chiu to China in September, with the World Economic Forum Young Leaders Program also kicking in another $1,544 for the trip.

Chiu was by far the largest recipient of the travel funds, taking in $16,640 for seven trips, including trips to the Netherlands, Taiwan, Washington DC, and Cambridge, Mass., in addition to his two China trips. Neither Pak nor Chiu have returned Guardian calls for comment yet, but we’ll update this post when and if they do.

The group is calling for the city to close the travel gift loohole and require fuller reporting of the details of the trips – such as where they stayed and other indicators of how lavishly the officials were treated – as well as calling on elected officials to voluntarily refuse to accept gifts. Golinger also raised questions about the influence that Pak in exerting on city government, which is largely invisible considering that she doesn’t even register as a lobbyist even though she’s known to be in regular contact with public officials.

“That is the bigger issue that needs to be looked at,” he said, “now that it’s become clear that Rose Pak and her group are so influential.”

Download New Report: “Flying Through Loopholes”

Click here to download new report:  FlyingThroughLoopholes

Through The Looking Glass

San Francisco Chronicle

MONDAY, JANUARY 17, 2011

Letters to the Editor

Special interests

I felt like Alice after she stepped through the looking glass when I opened my Chronicle Wednesday morning and read the opinion piece entitled “We mustn’t yield to special interests” (Jan. 12) by none other than former Mayor and Assembly Speaker Willie Brown.

For years, Brown has been the chief consigliere and adviser to a who’s who of the most powerful special interests in San Francisco, including PG&E, Chevron and mega-real-estate developers. In the wake of the latest late-night backroom deals at City Hall, it’s clear that – along with Rose Pak – Brown himself appears to be the most powerful unregistered special-interest lobbyist in town. He is right about one thing – if we love our city, we mustn’t yield to special interests. We need to shine the spotlight on what they’re doing and stand up to them.

Jon Golinger, San Franciscans for Clean Government

NY Times: Backroom Deals At SF City Hall

The New York Times 


January 6, 2011

Behind-the-Scenes Power Politics: The Making of a Mayor

By GERRY SHIH

On Sunday afternoon, former Mayor Willie L. Brown Jr. made an urgent call to Rose Pak, his longtime political ally and the powerful head of the Chinatown Chamber of Commerce. Word had trickled out that San Francisco’s Board of Supervisors had narrowed the list of interim candidates to replace Mayor Gavin Newsom, the lieutenant governor-elect.

But the contenders — Sheriff Michael Hennessey, former Mayor Art Agnos and Aaron Peskin, the chairman of the city’s Democratic Party — were deemed too liberal by Ms. Pak, Mr. Brown and Mr. Newsom, who are more moderate.

With momentum fizzling around Ms. Pak’s favored candidate, David Chiu, the board president, Ms. Pak and Mr. Brown decided to pool their efforts on behalf of another Asian-American official: Edwin M. Lee.

Over the next 48 hours, Ms. Pak, Mr. Brown and the Newsom administration engaged in an extraordinary political power play, forging a consensus on the Board of Supervisors, outflanking the board’s progressive wing and persuading Mr. Lee to agree to become San Francisco’s first Asian-American mayor, even though he had told officials for months that he had no interest in the job.

“This was something incredibly orchestrated, and we got played,” Supervisor John Avalos, a progressive, said in an interview. “I’m still trying to figure out what happened. I don’t know what the game was about, except that it was to muscle someone into office.”

Barring another last-minute development, the board is expected to ratify Mr. Lee’s appointment Friday in its final session. The incoming board, to be sworn in on Saturday, is expected to vote to install Mr. Lee next week — the last step needed for him to become interim mayor, until the election in November.

The behind-the-scenes drama was a stark reminder of the enduring power of Ms. Pak and Mr. Brown and their ability to influence city politics at the highest levels, even seven years after Mr. Brown left office.

In separate interviews, Ms. Pak and Mr. Brown described Mr. Lee as a committed liberal Democrat, and they emphasized the importance of the symbolism of an Asian-American mayor.

“This was finally our moment to make the first Chinese mayor of a major city,” Ms. Pak said. “How could you let that slip by?”

Mr. Brown said progressives should be “ashamed” of “subtle biases” in their opposition to Mr. Lee, a former civil rights lawyer who in 1978 led city tenants in the first rent strike against the State Housing Authority.

“To present an opportunity to a person of color, well-credentialed and well-qualified, ought to be one of the tenets of the progressive movement,” Mr. Brown said. “That’s genuine progressivism.”

Progressive supervisors said that they did not question Mr. Lee’s credentials or his politics. A career bureaucrat, Mr. Lee — who was appointed to his current post as city administrator by Mr. Newsom in 2005 — has a reputation among insiders as one of most competent public officials at City Hall. Rather, the progressives bristled at how his candidacy was engineered by Mr. Brown and Ms. Pak, whose bare-knuckled style of politics they have come to resent bitterly.

“I like Ed Lee, and I’ve always been open to him,” Supervisor David Campos said. “If they had given us an opportunity to have the conversation with Ed Lee and consider it, maybe we wouldn’t have had those issues.”

The last-minute push to install Mr. Lee involved political maneuvering, as well as misdirection and some luck, according to people involved in the effort.

For months, a number of supervisors had asked Mr. Lee if he was interested in being interim mayor, but he had always said no.

The critical stumbling block for Mr. Lee, several people said, was his concern about a rule in the city charter that prohibited elected officials from taking appointed positions within a year of leaving office. Mr. Lee, who is putting two daughters through college, was confirmed to a new term as chief administrator in December. He told officials he did not want to risk forfeiting the remainder of his five-year contract as city administrator, worth $1.25 million.

As his anxieties became clear, Mr. Newsom’s staffers asked the office of Dennis Herrera, the city attorney, to begin quietly drafting a charter amendment to allow Mr. Lee to return to the administrator’s post after he served as mayor, according to several City Hall officials. The amendment still needs board approval. On Monday morning, Mr. Chiu, the board president, joined Supervisor Sean Elsbernd and others in pushing Mr. Lee as a candidate among the board members. But Mr. Lee remained deeply ambivalent about the nomination as late as Monday evening.

“I am tremendously reluctant,” Mr. Lee wrote in an e-mail to Ms. Pak as he prepared to leave Hong Kong for the hot springs of Yangmingshan National Park in Taiwan.

“But Newsom would like to take care of as many concerns that I have, including the exemption from work prohibition after serving,” the e-mail continued.

Mr. Lee asked Ms. Pak for guidance, writing: “As you know, I love serving my city. Would this be the best way?”

Ms. Pak was fortunate to connect with Mr. Lee shortly before he boarded his flight to Taiwan — and an area with spotty cellphone service — and urged him to consider becoming the first Chinese mayor of San Francisco. It was only then, less than 24 hours before the board vote, that the Lee camp persuaded its candidate to accept a nomination.

On Tuesday, just hours before the board was to consider nominations and vote for an interim mayor, Mr. Newsom and his allies knew they needed a single vote more to push through Mr. Lee.

Mr. Newsom turned to Supervisor Bevan Dufty, who had initially favored Mr. Lee but had signaled to progressive stalwarts like Chris Daly, Mr. Campos and Mr. Avalos that he would back Mr. Hennessey.

The mayor summoned Mr. Dufty and another supervisor, Michela Alioto-Pier, a supporter of Mr. Lee, to his office shortly before the board meeting.

According to Mr. Dufty, Mr. Newsom urged him to support the “consensus candidate.”

When Mr. Dufty went to the board chamber that evening for what turned into an eight-hour session, he told Mr. Campos that he “felt good about Hennessey,” Mr. Dufty said. That led progressives to nominate their favored candidate, Mr. Hennessey, in an effort to lock up his appointment.

But their plan was thrown into chaos when Mr. Dufty refused to vote for Mr. Hennessey, leaving the sheriff one vote shy of the six he needed to secure the nomination.

Mr. Dufty then called for a recess and met with Supervisor Sophie Maxwell and Steve Kawa, Mr. Newsom’s chief of staff, in Mr. Kawa’s office, with Mr. Newsom on speakerphone. In an interview, Mr. Dufty said he wanted to confirm Mr. Lee’s positions on immigration before voting for him. He denied that he brokered a deal with Mr. Newsom.

“I could just see the waters shifting around Mr. Hennessey,” Mr. Dufty said.

Shortly before 10 p.m., Mr. Dufty emerged from Mr. Newsom’s suite to declare that he was ready to vote for Mr. Lee.

Mr. Daly was enraged. He had spent months working to install someone he hoped would be the first truly progressive mayor in 30 years, and that dream had been blown apart. He sharply criticized Mr. Dufty and vowed revenge on Mr. Chiu, who he had believed would side with the progressives, and who could have provided the sixth vote for Mr. Hennessey.

Mr. Chiu, who was mentioned as a possible candidate for interim district attorney (to fill the position vacated by Kamala Harris, the new state attorney general), announced Thursday that he was taking himself out of the running. Mr. Chiu is expected to run for mayor in the fall.

“I will haunt you,” Mr. Daly told Mr. Chiu on Tuesday night. “After this vote, I will politically haunt you. It’s on, like Donkey Kong.”

Twice, he muttered “30 years,” then slammed his fist against a banister and stormed out of the chamber.

Across town, Ms. Pak gleefully watched the proceedings from a bar at the New Asia Restaurant.

She was in a boastful mood the next day, several hours before she planned to have celebratory drinks with Mr. Brown at the Chinatown Hilton.

“Now you know,” she told a reporter, “why they say I play politics like a blood sport.”

SF Chronicle: Willie Brown Inc. How SF’s mayor built a city based on ‘juice’ politics

San Francisco Chronicle
Willie Brown Inc.  How S.F.’s mayor built a city based on ‘juice’ politics
Lance Williams and Chuck Finnie, S.F. Chronicle Staff Writers
Sunday, April 29, 2001
As Mayor Brown heads toward the final two years of his te... On a 1996 trade mission to Paris, Mayor Brown, right, was... Brown and bodyguard Frank Harrell both talked on cell pho...

(First in a Five-part series)


He was the most powerful Democrat in California — forceful, charismatic, adept at the art of the political deal.  And on the gray winter morning when former Assembly Speaker Willie L. Brown became mayor of his adopted hometown, he vowed to apply all his political skill to restoring “the dream of San Francisco.”

But among the 3,000 supporters who packed Yerba Buena Gardens for his January 1996 inauguration were some whose dreams were far more personal.

They were lawyers, lobbyists, campaign donors and political players — Brown’s “juice clientele,” as one state legislator described them at the time – – the mayor’s cronies, as they came to be known.

http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2001/04/29/MN162298.DTL&ao=all