Cupertino Courier

Council member Mahan will run for mayor

Rookie politician joins 2 colleagues in bid to take city’s top position

- By Maggie Angst mangst@bayareanew­sgroup.com

San Jose council member Matt Mahan announced recently that he is jumping into the race to become the city’s next mayor, running on a platform that he described as “a revolution of common sense.”

In announcing his campaign, Mahan — a rookie politician who joined the council at the beginning of the year — said he plans to use his experience working in the tech industry to bring more accountabi­lity and results to San Jose’s top elected office.

“I think if there is a theme to my campaign, it’s a revolution of common sense that moves us from managing dysfunctio­n to solving problems,” he said in an interview. “Part of what I’m trying to do is bring a focus back on the basics.”

Mahan joins council members Dev Davis and Raul Peralez, who both announced their candidacy in April, in the race to succeed Mayor Sam Liccardo’s two terms in office. Santa Clara County Supervisor Cindy Chavez also appears to be running, but has not yet made any official proclamati­on. The primary election will take place on June 7.

Mahan said he feels the city is “going in the wrong direction” with its growing population of unhoused residents, worsening blight and deteriorat­ing conditions of city parks and roadways and he wants San Jose’s top officials to be held accountabl­e for getting the city back on track.

In his pitch for the mayoral seat, Mahan is proposing that the city create a data dashboard to track key performanc­e goals — from moving more unhoused residents into stable housing to better maintainin­g city park and roadways to reducing wait times for building permit requests and inspection­s.

If those annual performanc­e goals are not met, Mahan believes that city council members and top officials within City Hall, including the city manager and department heads, should not get a raise that year.

“I don’t know how an organizati­on that does not have clear public goals and does not regularly report out on progress can be a good steward of taxpayer dollars,” he said.

As for the city’s homelessne­ss crisis, Mahan would like to see the city identify suitable public land where modular prefabrica­ted housing can be constructe­d more quickly and cost-effectivel­y than larger permanent supportive housing projects currently getting built with county bond funds. He also wants to see the city put more pressure on the county to expand its mental health and substance abuse treatment programs.

Mahan is opposed to eliminatin­g single-family zoning across the city and is calling on city officials to focus on bringing higherdens­ity developmen­t to public transit corridors and retail areas.

During his first race for elected office, Mahan proved to be a formidable candidate when he overwhelmi­ngly won the three-candidate contest for the District 10 seat in March 2020. He not only raised the largest amount of money of any candidate across all five San Jose district races held in March 2020, but he also nabbed the most high-profile endorsemen­ts. Mahan received the backing of Liccardo, Vice Mayor Chappie Jones, Santa Clara County Supervisor Joe Simitian and the Silicon Valley Organizati­on PAC, the now-defunct political arm of the region’s largest chamber of commerce.

Although he has spent the least amount of time in public office of the proclaimed mayoral candidates, Mahan sees that as his benefit.

“Anyone else whose running that has been in local government for five-20 years is going to have to answer what they’re going to do differentl­y from what they’ve been doing for years,” he said. “I’m a problem-solver more than a politician and I don’t think I need another year at City Hall to understand what the problems are or how we might start to solve them.”

Mahan grew up in Watsonvill­e, attended high school at San Jose’s Bellarmine Prep and graduated from Harvard University. Prior to joining the city council, he served as the co-founder and CEO of Brigade, a technology company that provides tools to promote civic engagement, political transparen­cy and government accountabi­lity.

Ann Ravel, former chair of the

Federal Election Commission and former Santa Clara County counsel, is one of Mahan’s earliest endorsemen­ts in his mayoral campaign.

Having known Mahan since he interned for her in high school, Ravel said that she felt Mahan was the best candidate to lead San Jose, describing him as “exceptiona­lly smart,” “incredibly thoughtful” and someone who would be doing the job “truly as a public service.”

“He’s not going to be one of those people just seeking elected office because he needs the next job or because he may be beholden to some of his donors,” Ravel said. “He’s doing it because he has a lot of great, creative ideas on how to address important issues in the city and he’s committed to the public.”

Mahan, who was largely endorsed by business organizati­ons and other business-backed politician­s during his council campaign, will be vying against Davis for the support of the city’s business faction. Davis — one of the most conservati­ve members currently on the city council — represents District 6, which includes the neighborho­ods of Willow Glen and the Rose Garden. She was elected to the council in 2016 and won reelection to keep her seat last year.

Peralez, who represents the city’s downtown area, was first elected to the council in 2014 and previously was employed as a San Jose police officer. He has historical­ly received strong support from the city’s organized labor base, but it is unclear who the city’s most prominent labor groups would endorse after Chavez — a longtime South Bay labor leader — makes her candidacy official as well.

A poll commission­ed by the San Jose Police Officers’ Associatio­n in late June found that 23% of likely voters supported Chavez, while 7% were leaning toward Peralez, 5% for Mahan and 4% for Davis. Nearly three in five — of 59% — of those polled were undecided.

 ?? KARL MONDON/BAY AREA NEWS GROUP ?? San Jose city councilmem­ber Matt Mahan announces his run for mayor of the city of San Jose on Sept. 25 during a campaign stop at the county fairground­s in San Jose.
KARL MONDON/BAY AREA NEWS GROUP San Jose city councilmem­ber Matt Mahan announces his run for mayor of the city of San Jose on Sept. 25 during a campaign stop at the county fairground­s in San Jose.

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