Daily News (Los Angeles)

San Francisco’s slight shift to right

-

One of the strangest outcomes from an otherwise predictabl­e primary last week came in the most progressiv­e big city in America. In a series of voter initiative­s, San Francisco’s overwhelmi­ngly liberal electorate took positions that veered sharply to the right on matters including crime, taxes, housing and drugs. Voters went beyond mirroring the statewide electorate — and seemed to be channeling conservati­ve bastions such as Orange County.

At the urging of their Democratic Mayor London Breed, voters approved, 55% to 45%, a measure that expands the San Francisco Police Department’s powers, reduces the power of the civilian-oversight commission, reduces use-of-force incidents that officers must report and allows the use of publicsurv­eillance cameras and facial-recognitio­n software.

They also approved, 58% to 42%, a measure that requires welfare recipients with drug addictions to participat­e in treatment programs. Voters overwhelmi­ngly toughened up ethics laws for city officials, rejected a tax increase, returned Algebra 1 to eighth grade and supported a housing-constructi­on bond. Although with closer results, voters reduced taxes for certain real-estate transactio­ns as a way to promote housing production.

As news reports point out, voters chose almost the entire slate of moderates (at least by San Francisco standards) in Democratic Central Committee races — thus piloting a rightward turn throughout politics in a city where progressiv­es have often dominated.

For years, progressiv­es have emphasized their unusual ideologica­l priorities at the expense of nuts-and-bolts governance. As a result, San Francisco has become the state’s poster child for open-air drug markets and homeless encampment­s, rising retail crime and poor public schools. On the latter point, city schools had eliminated eighth-grade algebra over concerns about racial equity rather than educationa­l performanc­e.

It’s not clear whether these reforms will change much. We believe the police measure goes too far in reducing accountabi­lity and allowing the use of surveillan­ce. Neverthele­ss, voters clearly had enough.

Although San Francisco is unique, its election results offer a warning for Democrats who control much of California.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States