The Mercury News

Warm, fuzzy book about the Browns falls short

- By Dan Walters CALmatters Dan Walters is a CalMatters columnist.

Jerry Brown’s longest-ever, two-stage governorsh­ip is coming to a close and a book that examines his extensive legacy, and that of his father, the late Gov. Pat Brown, in detail and context would be a valuable addition to the political literature of California.

Journalist Miriam Pawel’s soon-to-appear, 419-page “The Browns of California” purports to be such a book. It isn’t.

Pawel, a former Los Angeles Times editor, wrote a deservedly acclaimed book about Cesar Chavez and his United Farm Workers Union that looked deeply beneath their superficia­l images.

Unfortunat­ely, in writing about the Browns, Pawel was unwilling or unable to get past their images — Pat the backslappi­ng Irish-American politician, Jerry the cerebral, moralizing former seminarian.

Presented chronologi­cally, her account of the Brown family, including a brief descriptio­n of Kathleen Brown’s four years as state treasurer and failed candidacy for governor, omits almost anything that doesn’t square with those images.

One of many examples: Pawel devotes exactly one paragraph to Pat Brown’s efforts, after losing his bid for a third term in 1966, to help the murderous military dictatorsh­ip that had seized control of Indonesia and its oil industry gain credibilit­y in American banking and political circles. In return, the stateowned Indonesian oil firm, Pertamina, gave Brown a franchise for importing oil into California.

Later — 114 pages later, to be precise — Pawel reports tersely, “Pat sold his interest in the Indonesian oil firm at a large profit and took pleasure in spending money on his family.”

She left out that Pertamina defaulted on the $12 billion in bank loans that the elder Brown had helped arrange and to settle accounts, he spearheade­d a drive during Jerry Brown’s first governorsh­ip to increase the firm’s revenues by selling Indonesian natural gas to California.

The younger Brown backed his father’s campaign for a liquefied natural gas port near Santa Barbara and pushed approval through the Legislatur­e, only to see the project fall apart due to environmen­tal concerns

and deregulati­on of the domestic natural gas market during the Reagan administra­tion that increased supply.

That’s the sort of detail that would have added much-needed depth to Pawel’s book, but also could have tarnished the benevolent family images she was reinforcin­g.

Another example: Pawel repeatedly blames Propositio­n 13,

California’s iconic property tax limit, for the state’s chronic fiscal problems after its 1978 passage. She excludes, however, the salient fact that Jerry Brown, who was running for re-election that year and had opposed Propositio­n 13, not only declared himself a “born-again tax cutter” after its passage but jammed through the Legislatur­e a sharp reduction in state income taxes to bolster his new image.

It helped Brown win a second term but was fiscal malpractic­e.

In conjunctio­n with the state’s post-Propositio­n 13 “bailout” of schools and local government­s, the income tax cut created an operationa­l deficit that quickly exhausted reserves and set the stage for decades of fiscal problems.

Still another: Pawel writes approvingl­y of Jerry Brown 2.0’s overhaul of school finance to improve academic achievemen­t of poor and “English-learner” students, but ignores criticism of its spotty implementa­tion and lack of measurable results.

Pawel’s many errors of omission might be explained, in part, by her not having covered any of the Browns directly as a journalist. She largely relied, instead, on research that, the book’s bibliograp­hy reveals, didn’t include critical accounts.

Whatever the reasons, while “The Browns of California” may be an okay read for its on-therecord chronology, it falls very short of the serious, nuanced analysis the subjects deserve.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ARCHIVES ?? A new book about Gov. Jerry Brown and his father, Pat, a two-term governor of California, fails to go beyond their public images.
ASSOCIATED PRESS ARCHIVES A new book about Gov. Jerry Brown and his father, Pat, a two-term governor of California, fails to go beyond their public images.

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