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- <text id=94TT0595>
- <title>
- May 09, 1994: Elections:Golden State Warriors
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- May 09, 1994 Nelson Mandela
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ELECTIONS, Page 54
- GOLDEN STATE WARRIORS
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> Kathleen Brown has everything going for her, but the race with
- Pete Wilson is getting scrappy
- </p>
- <p>By Jordan Bonfante/Los Angeles
- </p>
- <p> Why are women making such exceptional political headway in
- California? San Diego's liberal Republican Mayor, Susan Golding,
- once ventured a theory. Women, she said, more naturally represent
- that state's particular, two-beat public pulse: socially progressive
- and fiscally conservative. Or, up with choice and down with
- taxes. If Kathleen Brown is elected California's Governor next
- fall in the most important U.S. race of election year 1994,
- she will not only enshrine that ideological combination, she
- will also raise women's political power to historic heights.
- </p>
- <p> Vaulting alongside Senators Dianne Feinstein and Barbara Boxer,
- she would complete a powerful triumvirate of Democratic women
- in the top elected offices of the biggest state. Democrats and
- the Clinton re-election machine would palpitate with excitement
- watching the threesome standing like Olympians on the medals
- platform. Brown believes Feinstein and Boxer already broke the
- gender barrier in 1992 the way Kennedy broke the Catholic one
- in 1960. "That said," she exults, "it's going to be a great
- day for women."
- </p>
- <p> The question is, Can Kathleen Brown pull it off? Can she subdue
- not only her Democratic rivals but also incumbent Republican
- Governor Pete Wilson? By most appearances, she has everything
- going for her. She has the name. As the youngest daughter of
- Pat Brown, the revered 1960s Governor who turned 89 last month,
- and as the kid sister of Jerry Brown, the erratically innovative
- Governor from 1975 to 1982, Kathleen, 48, is heir to California's
- most prominent political dynasty. And she has the money, having
- assiduously raised funds at $25 kaffeeklatsches and $500-a-plate
- banquets for the past 18 months. In the most recent campaign
- disclosure, Brown reported nearly $4 million in reserve, in
- contrast to $58,000 for her Democratic adversary, insurance
- commissioner John Garamendi.
- </p>
- <p> In a recent statewide poll, Brown won face-offs with both Garamendi,
- 42% to 25%, and Wilson, 51% to 39%. The state Democratic convention
- in Los Angeles last month declined to endorse a candidate this
- year, but her dominance at the event gave her a badly needed
- lift after a long season of unfocused strategy and outright
- foul-ups. Ushered before the placard-waving delegates swaying
- to rock music, Brown wore a suit of banker's blue with a string
- of Barbara Bush pearls as she uncorked a new campaign that pushed
- just two messages: a promise of 1 million new jobs and an excoriation
- of the sitting Governor's record. "You know who Pete Wilson
- is?" she asked mischievously. "He's George Bush. Without the
- charisma."
- </p>
- <p> Yet Wilson, 60, whose long-shot challenger in the Republican
- primary is computer tycoon Ron Unz, 32, cannot be written off.
- The bland but scrappy Governor, who a year ago suffered a record-low
- 15% approval rating, has rebounded on the strength of swift
- action during the brush fires in October and November and the
- earthquake in January. Wilson's own explanation for his resurgence
- takes note of Brown's new tack. "People are paying attention
- to real issues. And those are the ones upon which I have been
- visible," he says, citing his efforts to create jobs and legislate
- longer prison sentences.
- </p>
- <p> Brown, meanwhile, has ceded the initiative on two of the three
- main issues. On crime--like all the candidates except radical
- Democrat Tom Hayden--she duly supports tougher penalties and
- California's new, three-strikes-you're-out law, but her failure
- to justify or explain her personal aversion to the death penalty,
- which a majority of voters want, leaves her open to charges
- of being soft on law and order. On immigration, she adamantly
- opposes Wilson's proposals to deny the children of illegal immigrants
- their citizenship, schooling and even emergency health care,
- but may have gone too far in her own way by proposing that Army
- units be used in support of a U.S. border-patrol crackdown.
- Latino leaders quickly decried that proposal as a "militarization
- of the border." On the economy, though, her call for the million
- new jobs in the next four years has provided a clear-cut slogan
- that she can back up with her expertise gained in the past four
- years as the state's treasurer.
- </p>
- <p> Brown's new campaign has been crafted by a freshly hired gun,
- Clint Reilly, the strategist who engineered the victory of Los
- Angeles Republican Mayor Richard Riordan. Reilly revamped Brown's
- organization and focused on targeting, among other groups, Republican
- women and blue-collar Reagan Democrats in recession-hit suburbs.
- He acknowledges that Brown, like Feinstein, is bound to face
- a prejudice among many male Democratic voters that "women aren't
- tough enough." He warns that countering Wilson's attacks effectively
- will require negative campaigning. Ironically, Brown proposed
- in February that the candidates all sign a joint "honest and
- clean campaign pledge." Luckily for her new strategy, neither
- Wilson nor Garamendi subscribed to it.
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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