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- NATION, Page 42American NotesSAN FRANCISCOShift to the Right
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- When he was elected mayor of San Francisco in 1987, Art Agnos
- described himself as an outsider who would shake up city hall.
- Four years later, he finds himself on the outside again. Last
- week the liberal Agnos was defeated in his bid for a second term
- by former police chief Frank Jordan, a self-described moderate
- with little patience for the city's high-profile populations of
- homeless people and panhandlers. Jordan got 52% of the vote.
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- Jordan benefited from a coalition of blue-collar and rich
- voters peeved that under Agnos the city seemed more interested
- in declaring itself a sanctuary for Desert Storm war resisters
- than in keeping Market Street clean. Long delays in repairing
- freeways damaged in the 1989 earthquake, while not attributable
- to Agnos, did not help his image. Meanwhile, increasingly
- militant posturing by activist gays -- a key group of Agnos
- supporters -- sent more conventional voters scurrying to
- Jordan's camp. The final blows for Agnos were a sputtering
- economy and fewer dollars to spend on costly social programs
- such as caring for AIDS victims.
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- Those problems will not vanish before Jordan takes over in
- January. But his victory showed that even in one of the nation's
- most liberal cities, competent management is more important to
- voters than political correctness.
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