San Diego Union-Tribune

CONTENTIOU­S PETE WILSON STATUE BACK IN PLACE

Owners pulled it in Oct.; rights groups demanded removal

- BY ANDREA LOPEZ-VILLAFAÑA

A bronze statue of former San Diego Mayor and Gov. Pete Wilson was returned to its former spot in downtown nearly two months after its owners removed it because of pushback from local advocates.

Racial justice and gay rights groups called for the statue’s removal in mid-October, saying Wilson used his inf luence to “demonize and dehumanize” Latino and gay communitie­s.

The 13-year-old statue was removed from Broadway Circle near Horton Plaza Park on Oct. 15 by the nonprofit Horton Walk, which owns the statue. Stephen B. Williams, president of Horton Walk, said at the time that the statue was removed in response to concerns for its safety.

On Wednesday Williams declined to answer questions about the statue’s return. Instead he issued a written statement that said the statue was returned on Monday.

“The statue of Pete Wilson is a symbol of all that is great about San Diego and its unlimited future,” Williams said in the statement.

Williams praised Wilson’s efforts as mayor to revitalize and attract investors to downtown San Diego.

The statement did not say if the nonprofit still has safety concerns.

Calls to remove the statue came amid nationwide demands for the removal of statues and symbols of Confederat­e generals and those who owned enslaved people.

In 2017, a plaque honoring Jefferson Davis, the president of the Confederac­y, was quietly removed

from Horton Plaza Park. The plaque, which was inlaid into the f loor of the pavilion, was once a part of a larger totem to Davis but was reduced in size and stature after the downtown park was redevelope­d in 2016.

Enrique Morones, founder of Gente Unida, spearheade­d the Wilson statue removal effort. He said on Wednesday that he strongly encourages the owners of the statue to remove it again.

“Hate is not welcome here,” Morones said in an email.

Advocates point to Wilson’s support of Propositio­n 187, which sought to limit illegal immigratio­n by cutting off state services such as health care and public education to undocument­ed immigrants in California. The propositio­n was approved by voters in 1994, but a federal judge later ruled it unconstitu­tional.

Wilson could not be reached for comment Wednesday.

Sean Walsh, Wilson’s former chief of staff and now law partner, told the UnionTribu­ne in October that the statue was a nice recognitio­n of the governor’s years of public service. He said Wilson had a strong track record that included boosting health care for children, shrinking class sizes in public schools and increasing funding for low-income areas.

“In many respects the city of San Diego is the envy of the nation and is a global destinatio­n due in large part to the tireless work on its behalf by Pete Wilson,” Walsh said in a statement Wednesday. “It’s fitting and right that Pete Wilson is recognized for his accomplish­ments with a public display that recognizes these facts.”

Wilson served as mayor of San Diego from 1971 to 1983. He represente­d California in the U.S. Senate for eight years and was California’s governor from 1991 to 1999.

There is another downtown statue, outside the Sofia Hotel on Broadway, that many believe depicts Wilson. The statue is of a man standing next to the hotel’s entrance with his legs crossed, reading a magazine.

 ?? KRISTIAN CARREON ?? A statue of former San Diego Mayor and Gov. Pete Wilson was recently placed back in its original spot in downtown San Diego. It had been removed since October.
KRISTIAN CARREON A statue of former San Diego Mayor and Gov. Pete Wilson was recently placed back in its original spot in downtown San Diego. It had been removed since October.

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