San Francisco Chronicle - (Sunday)

San Francisco stubbornne­ss

- JOE MATHEWS Joe Mathews writes the Connecting California column for Zócalo Public Square.

San Francisco stubbornne­ss is holding the republic hostage. The hostage takers are two of California’s oldest and most powerful mules. U.S. Sen. Dianne Feinstein and U.S. Supreme Court Justice Stephen Breyer are past retirement age, but refuse to quit their jobs now, when they could be replaced by allies who share their California values. Their stubborn insistence on staying in power could end up elevating right-wing political forces hostile to California, and to democracy itself.

The 88-year-old Feinstein, by not quitting while Gov. Gavin Newsom remains in office, could end up being replaced by a Trump-loving Republican. If Newsom is recalled and Feinstein dies or becomes incapacita­ted in the next year, during a Larry Elder governorsh­ip, the Senate would flip back to Republican­s. The 83-yearold Breyer, by not retiring while President Joe Biden could nominate a replacemen­t who could be confirmed by a Democrat-controlled Senate, risks having his seat go to another right-wing justice.

Why do Feinstein and Breyer cling to power, despite the risks? The convention­al wisdom chalks their stubbornne­ss up to their age and diminishin­g cognition. But I don’t buy into such ageism. Instead, I see their political pig-headedness, their refusal to acknowledg­e present-day realities, and their unwillingn­ess to cede their power as proof of just how much they were shaped by their shared hometown, San Francisco.

Is there any human settlement on this godforsake­n Earth more stubborn than San Francisco? Even in California, where going your own way is the leading religion, San Francisco proudly defies conformity and good sense with politics, culture and ideas that leave us scratching our heads.

Of course, San Francisco owes its existence to its stubbornne­ss — it’s the rare global city to be thoroughly destroyed (by earthquake and fire in 1906) and to rebuild itself. Stubbornne­ss remains a requiremen­t of daily survival. While other California­ns are routinely warmed by the sun, San Franciscan­s, isolated on a cold peninsula, must rely on their inner fire.

So how can we expect Feinstein or Breyer to know when to quit when they are from a place where just getting around town means there’s always another hill — Telegraph, Nob, Russian — to climb?

Both the senator and the justice come by their San Francisco stubbornne­ss honestly. Feinstein, who is Jewish, was hardened first by the stubborn and demanding nuns at Convent of the Sacred Heart High School — and then, as a supervisor and mayor, by the city’s brutal, tribal, and quite male 1970s and ’80s politics. Breyer got a taste of those politics through his father, who was legal counsel to the board of education, and developed his talent for arguing as a debater at Lowell High. Both Feinstein and Breyer only went as far as Stanford University for college.

Feinstein and Breyer also embody the local combinatio­n of privilege and self-righteousn­ess that can make the place and its people so infuriatin­g. Even now, with their city boasting unsurpasse­d beauty, epic wealth and unrivaled cultural power, San Franciscan­s, including these two powerful people, still talk as if they are outsiders and underdogs.

The way that Feinstein and Breyer hold to such obtuse and outdated outlooks is itself very San Francisco.

“People don’t grow up, they grow old,” the late, great San Francisco Chronicle columnist Herb Caen wrote. “One fateful way to counteract that is to live in the past, the occupation­al hazard of San Franciscan­s.”

Caen’s old warning points to a current irony: Defiance of reality has never been more popular across the United States. So is it any wonder — in our polarized and angry age — that the rest of the country has come to prize the brand of stubbornne­ss nurtured by San Francisco?

In the past decade, California­ns, improbably, reinstalle­d that stubborn old coot Jerry Brown in the governorsh­ip, and they made former San Francisco Mayor Gavin Newsom, running on a platform of resistance to national political norms, Brown’s successor. Newsom is now trying to defeat a recall with a stubborn strategy of calling the vote illegitima­te and telling people not to even bother voting on the question of who might succeed him if he’s recalled. The attempt to recall Newsom is mostly grounded in misinforma­tion and right-wing fantasy, but it does respond to a very real California frustratio­n with the San Francisco political machine and its stubborn selfregard, even as the state is consumed by multiple crises.

I recently called one of my favorite San Franciscan­s, Quentin Kopp, a former judge and legislator who even San Franciscan­s think is too stubborn. When I asked him whether San Franciscan­s are more stubborn than the rest of us, he immediatel­y answered, “Yes” — and then stubbornly deflected my questions on the roots of that stubbornne­ss.

Kopp, who is 93, still swims every day and goes to his law office, where he represents clients that include a group of judges in their 70s and 80s who have been shut out of judicial assignment­s by the California Supreme Court. When I asked about Feinstein and Breyer, he was adamant that both should stick around. Term limits for politician­s have been a failure, he argued. And Breyer, as a judge, should not make political decisions about anything, including retirement. As for Feinstein, Kopp said he had just conveyed to a top senatorial aide that she shouldn’t bend to critics who see signs of diminished capacity or senility.

The message from the city by the Bay is clear, America: If you’re waiting for stubborn San Franciscan­s to relent to outside pressure to retire, don’t hold your breath.

Is there any human settlement on this godforsake­n Earth more stubborn than San Francisco?

 ?? Scott Strazzante / The Chronicle ??
Scott Strazzante / The Chronicle

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