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TIME: Almanac 1995
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1995-02-15
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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>