Los Angeles Times

Happy birthday, Pedro

- GUSTAVO ARELLANO ormer California mexicanwit­hglasses@gmail.com Follow @GustavoAre­llano on Twitter

FGov. Pete Wilson turns 85 tomorrow, so on behalf of all California­ns, I say: gracias. (That’s “thank you” in Spanish, Pedro.) Gracias for your 30-plus years of service as a public official — first, as an assemblyma­n for San Diego, then as the mayor of that city, followed by two terms apiece as our U.S. senator and governor. Your career helped shaped the modern-day Golden State.

Gracias for a career mostly defined by a moderate approach — an important lesson for the Democrats and Republican­s of today that too few bother to remember.

Gracias for a mayoral career that saw you protect San Diego’s wetlands and implement affirmativ­eaction hiring practices. “He believes that America’s minorities have been handicappe­d for years,” one campaign flier read, “by inadequate housing, education and job opportunit­ies, and he has dedicated his efforts to alleviatin­g these problems.” That’s a reality that more Republican­s should acknowledg­e.

Gracias for being so hurt when the Republican Party pulled their 1972 convention from San Diego that you responded with an “America’s Finest City” campaign. You showed second-tier cities across the country that they too should be proud of who they are.

Gracias for proving that Republican­s can take the lead in addressing America’s prior racial wrongs. As senator, you cosponsore­d the Civil Liberties Act of 1988, which granted reparation­s and an official government apology to Japanese Americans interned during World War II.

Gracias for showing us that a Republican governor could understand that raising taxes to help shore up public finances was a wise thing and not treason. In 1991, when California faced a record deficit, you backed tax increases for sales, the wealthy and even snacks.

Gracias too for throwing away this record of centrism. (Just bear with me.) You showed future generation­s of politician­s how not to ruin their legacy.

Gracias for helping to deregulate California’s electricit­y, which led to mass blackouts in the beginning of the 2000s and convinced an entire generation that we shouldn’t leave public utilities to the private market.

Gracias for signing the state’s three-strikes sentencing laws. The increase in prisoners proved that justice isn’t blind but usually racist and always classist, and it planted the first seeds of distrust in law enforcemen­t that have bloomed into a movement across the state today.

Gracias for working so hard to eliminate affirmativ­e action at the University of California and beyond. The program helped to get thousands of minorities into the middle class, where they promptly retreated into the comforts of whiteness. Your 180-degree turn on the issue radicalize­d college students.

Gracias, most of all, for Propositio­n 187. You didn’t author the 1994 measure, which declared war on immigrants in the country illegally and the people who helped them. But you jumped on the 187 bandwagon and took the reins as soon as you could to help resurrect your flagging reelection campaign.

Gracias to Propositio­n 187, Mexican Americans like me realized for the first time that a large part of society still considered us “Mexican” and not “American,” like we always believed ourselves to be. Most of us have identified with the former more than the latter ever since.

Gracias to Propositio­n 187, MEChA bounced back. The Chicano high school and college group was slowly losing its power as more Mexican Americans began to identify as “Latino” or “Hispanic” and wanted no part with radical politics. Because of 187, MEChA members went on to reinvigora­te the labor movement, introduce ethnic studies in high schools, and make Dia de los Muertos a thing.

Gracias for inspiring Latinos to enter politics like never before. And gracias for making the defense of immigrants their rallying cry. From state Atty. Gen. Xavier Becerra’s zeal, to bringing back driver’s licenses for the undocument­ed (which you took away), to declaring us a sanctuary state, it’s all a direct response to your cynicism.

Gracias for inspiring two of the most hilarious deathmetal songs ever: “Matando Güeros” (“Killing White People”) and “Raza Odiada” (“Hated Race”), both by Brujería. I certainly hope that you take their mock-assassinat­ion skit as satire at its finest, instead of a bona fide threat.

Gracias for providing the California Republican Party a cautionary tale.

Gracias for inadverten­tly posing for an airplane selfie two years ago with film director Alex Rivera. Your befuddled expression reminded Latinos that you’re not a monster but rather just a confused fool.

And gracias for still not getting it. At a recent speech by Assembly Speaker Anthony Rendon to the Southern California Leadership Council, you complained to him that Sacramento “ignores us,” whatever the hell that means. (Who’s “us”?) Speaker Rendon’s grace in responding to your petulance — basically “I’m here now” — was as great an example of Old and New California as Rivera could’ve scripted.

Gracias, Governor Pedro. May I suggest a birthday dinner of crow tacos?

 ?? Luis Sinco Los Angeles Times ?? PETE WILSON was mayor of San Diego, a U.S. senator and a two-term governor of California.
Luis Sinco Los Angeles Times PETE WILSON was mayor of San Diego, a U.S. senator and a two-term governor of California.

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