San Francisco Chronicle

Millions to back Villaraigo­sa mean big-ticket governor’s race

- — Joe Garofoli

A big-money ad war in California’s governor’s race officially started Thursday when a billionair­e-backed independen­t expenditur­e campaign touting Democrat Antonio Villaraigo­sa launched a “seven-figure” buy that will blast a commercial on TV screens statewide for at least a week.

The 30-second spot, titled “Ahead,” is intended to introduce the former Los Angeles mayor to voters who may not have been paying close attention to the June 5 primary race. It says violent crime in L.A. dropped by nearly 50 percent during Villaraigo­sa’s time in office, from 2005 to 2013, an assertion that the nonpartisa­n fact-checkers at Politifact California rate as “mostly true.”

The ad is funded by an organizati­on called Families and Teachers for Antonio Villaraigo­sa for Governor 2018, which is run by the California Charter Schools Associatio­n Advocates. Last week, Netflix CEO Reed Hastings pledged $7 million to the independen­t group, and Los Angeles real estate entreprene­ur Eli Broad promised $1.5 million.

The money is helpful to the Villaraigo­sa camp, which had only $5.9 million cash on hand at the end of 2017— less than a third of what Lt. Gov. Gavin Newsom had. Campaigns and independen­t expenditur­e groups are banned from coordinati­ng their activities or comminglin­g funds.

Most polls show that Newsom is leading the race, with Villaraigo­sa battling with John Cox, a GOP businessma­n from Rancho Santa Fe (San Diego County), for the other spot in the general election.

But backers of the pro-Villaraigo­sa independen­t expenditur­e group think voters are still searching for their favorite candidate in a race that has yet to catch fire. Newsom isn’t running away from the field, and about a third of voters remain undecided, said Josh Pulliam, a political consultant running the independen­t group.

“Polling over the past two years shows Gavin hasn’t gained support, and most recently shows Gavin losing votes,” Pulliam said. “People are looking for a different kind of governor. We want to introduce them to Antonio.”

In politics, the soft-focus biographic­al ads usually come first. Then they’re followed by hard-hitting attacks on opponents. It won’t be long before we find out if that pattern holds true here.

 ?? Liz Hafalia / The Chronicle ?? Antonio Villaraigo­sa got $9.5 million in support via an independen­t expenditur­e campaign by charter school backers.
Liz Hafalia / The Chronicle Antonio Villaraigo­sa got $9.5 million in support via an independen­t expenditur­e campaign by charter school backers.

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