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<text id=90TT0680>
<title>
Mar. 19, 1990: Lady Power in the Sunbelt
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
Mar. 19, 1990 The Right To Die
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
NATION, Page 21
Lady Power in the Sunbelt
</hdr>
<body>
<p>The most potent triple play in San Diego is O'Connor to Copley
to Kroc
</p>
<p>By Jordan Bonfante/San Diego
</p>
<p> One balmy night in September 1988 San Diego's Mayor Maureen
O'Connor spent the night in Balboa Park, not to take the air
beneath the palm fronds but to sample the life of homeless
people. In jeans and baseball cap, she watched a series of drug
deals go down. She spent a second night among more vagrants at
a skid row mission. Throughout most of her 48 hours on the
streets, she went unrecognized--until Sister Raymonda, a nun
who has known the mayor for years, spotted her resting on a
bench reading the paper and whispered, "If you want to conceal
your identity, you should remember that homeless women don't
read the financial pages."
</p>
<p> The mayor's expedition into the world of the downtrodden was
indeed an attention-getting departure for someone who also
happens to be a millionaire. But the excursion was less
startling in this city, which tends to write its own rules for
its free-form public life. One rule is that a woman politician,
perhaps better than a man, can attempt the new and different.
For San Diego is where the new is the norm and woman power is
a dominant force in the political game. Here the "smoke-filled
rooms," such as they are, tend to be flamingo-colored
restaurants overlooking the Pacific surf. And here the
"machine," such as it is, rests in the hands of a key coterie
of women, especially three elegant ladies from the smart set.
</p>
<p> Mayor O'Connor, 43,--"Mayor Mo," as she is airily
addressed by her constituents--is at the center of a powerful
troika of female leadership. The other two members do not hold
public office and hardly need to. One is the region's foremost
publisher, Helen Copley, 67, the stately owner of the San Diego
Union and Tribune and a chain of 40 other papers. The other is
philanthropist Joan Kroc, 61, the vivacious majority
stockholder in McDonald's and owner of the San Diego Padres.
</p>
<p> Together these wealthy women call many of the shots in the
West's second largest city. They set the tone of its breezy
conservatism. They generate much of its impulse for urban face
lifting and instant culture. They influence, and in fact make,
many of the city's major civic decisions. "Every day I get up
and thank God that we have Mrs. Kroc and Mrs. Copley in San
Diego," the mayor says extravagantly. "They go not just the
extra mile, but the extra 100 miles. What they do for this
community--and they don't have to--goes beyond any mayor's
wildest expectations of private-public partnership."
</p>
<p> The teamwork can produce useful political results. O'Connor,
a Democrat, has for years enjoyed the regular support of
Copley's conservative Republican papers. So have other
candidates for county and state office after O'Connor
introduced them to her powerful friend. One recent beneficiary
was newly elected State Senator Lucy Killea, a Democrat famed
for having been banned from Catholic Communion for her
pro-choice abortion stand.
</p>
<p> The teamwork can produce even more impressive civic results.
When Kroc in 1988 decided to donate $18 million, to start a
hospice for AIDS and other terminally ill patients, O'Connor
enlisted Killea, then an assemblywoman, to sponsor the
regulatory legislation needed from the state. Just when
everything seemed to be in place, Republican Governor George
Deukmejian vetoed the bill. The team closed ranks once more.
Copley and her editor in chief, former Nixon aide Herb Klein,
agreed to turn some Republican heat on the capital by
dispatching a ringing letter to Deukmejian. The Governor was
sufficiently impressed to reverse his decision and sign the
hospice legislation. "Now that is how you use power," says Kroc
admiringly. "That is just the way the men used to do it when
the old boys controlled the city," says a friend of Copley and
Kroc, Del Mar marketing executive Sonny Sturn. "But the men
would do it for a factory. The women do it for human services."
</p>
<p> Another prominent O'Connor to Copley to Kroc triple play
made possible San Diego's recent Soviet Arts Festival. The
mayor first dreamed up the idea of a big 22-event festival with
a flashy Faberge show couched among operas and ballets. But it
took the money and clout of her two friends to surmount
vehement opposition to it. Copley and Kroc covered half the
festival's budgeted cost by anteing up $500,000 and $1 million
respectively. Then Copley's opinion-making dailies swung behind
it. To clinch the deal, Kroc kicked in with a $2.8 million
Faberge egg she had bought at auction for the occasion in
Europe.
</p>
<p> Woman power in San Diego extends beyond this golden
triumvirate. Four of the nine city council seats are occupied
by women. So are the presidencies or chairs of the school
board, the chamber of commerce, the Centre City Development
Corp., both the Republican and Democratic county committees and
the deputy mayor's post. Their rise, say these women, has been
surprisingly unchallenged.
</p>
<p> Growth is the most frequently cited explanation for woman
power in San Diego. The shimmering harbor city grew nearly 30%,
to 1.1 million in the 1980s and was transformed from a sleepy
Navy town to a booming metropolis. It became second only to Los
Angeles in the West and sixth in the country, ahead of both
Detroit and Dallas. Its industry diversified into high-tech
research as well as low-cost maquiladoras manufacturing across
the border in Mexico. Unemployment, at 3.9%, came to stand well
under the national rate.
</p>
<p> The explosive growth extended the bleak stretches of
treeless housing tracts, especially inland. It intensified the
traditional local conflict between a laid-back resort
atmosphere and a stressful development. It imposed urban ills
like crime and overcrowded jails. But at the same time it threw
open the doors of opportunity, creating a fluid new nonpartisan
politics. And, in the absence of blue-blood dynasties like
those in Boston or San Francisco, it engendered an unapologetic
admiration for new money.
</p>
<p> San Diego's three leading ladies did not always live in
mansions in Point Loma and Rancho Santa Fe. O'Connor, one of
13 children of a local boxer named Kid Jerome, once worked
after school as a chambermaid in the Westgate Hotel next to the
City Hall she now occupies as mayor. She was a phys-ed teacher
with a shoestring campaign budget when, at 24, she became the
youngest-ever member of the city council. In 1986 O'Connor
handily won the mayoral race, after the incumbent mayor was
convicted of perjury. By then financing a campaign was less of
a problem: she had married a banking and fast-food
millionaire, Bob Peterson.
</p>
<p> Copley was a secretary from Iowa who married her boss, James
Copley, and at his death in 1973 hesitantly took over his press
fiefdom. Surprisingly, for a reticent, private figure, she
proved to be a hands-on publisher who expanded the Copley
newspaper chain and quadrupled its worth to more than $800
million. Kroc, whose personal fortune is estimated at $950
million, was a music teacher and supper-club organist from
Minnesota who married McDonald's founder Ray Kroc in 1969 and
moved to San Diego with him in 1976 to run his newly acquired
Padres. After Kroc's death in 1984, she turned his
conservative Republicanism on end by contributing mightily to
disarmament causes and to the Democratic Party itself. Her
philanthropy is legendary. Once at a party at the house of Dr.
Jonas Salk in La Jolla, so many other guests accosted her with
solicitations for money that she excused herself and left.
</p>
<p> For all their close personal and social ties, the three
women hold very different political views. Democrat O'Connor
and conservative Republican Copley like to kid about their
inability to convert each other. "I haven't given up, but she
never takes my advice," says Copley, smiling, about O'Connor.
Neither does the liberal Kroc. What binds them, according to
O'Connor, is camaraderie and a shared boosterism in regard to
San Diego. Yet why do they do it? Part of the answer lies in
old-fashioned values that Kroc and Copley attribute to their
Midwestern upbringing, and O'Connor to a strict Catholic
girlhood that taught "you have to give something back."
</p>
<p> And why does San Diego cede them so much prominence? One
theory is that in the Sunbelt perhaps more than other places,
power is there for the taking. Says San Diego Tribune editor
Neil Morgan, an insightful observer of the city: "Relatively
few people really want positions of leadership here. They came
here for the climate, for opportunity, for all those beautiful
beaches--not to assume responsibility."
</p>
<p> Not everyone is enamored of the reigning matriarchy. Copley
has been embroiled in a prolonged dispute at the newspapers in
which labor accuses her of intransigence. Kroc, as a woman,
finds herself even more maligned than other baseball owners in
the current players' dispute--the dugout being one of the
last all-masculine bastions, even in San Diego--and has been
seeking to sell the team. As mayor, O'Connor gets most of the
flak. Councilman Bob Filner, a fellow Democrat, accuses her of
dodging systematic dialogue and instead "bullying people, one
issue at a time." Some political regulars charge that she shuns
partisan duties to concentrate on her "populist" appeal that
one of them describes as "a mile wide and an inch deep."
</p>
<p> O'Connor, however, sticks to her vision of a "global" San
Diego that somehow, with strict limits on new growth, will also
preserve its beach-town quality of life. And she sticks up for
women leaders as being more approachable than men, more service
oriented and more concerned with their communities than with
their personal ambitions. "When I took office three years ago,
we had a mayor who'd been convicted. We had a councilman and
a housing director under investigation. The city had gone
through five mayors in four years," she says. "I was elected
as a Democrat in a heavily Republican city with 60%. Mayor Mo
must be doing something right."
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>