Chicago Tribune (Sunday)

Why progressiv­e prosecutor Chesa Boudin lost after Kim Foxx won

- Clarence Page is a member of the Tribune Editorial Board. cpage@chicagotri­bune.com Twitter @cptime

My condolence­s to Chesa Boudin, the by-now-famous San Francisco district attorney who lost a recall election Tuesday.

The polls saw it coming. As expected, his loss is being celebrated with Champagne by lock’em-up conservati­ves and, for that matter, a lot of crime-weary liberals who have had enough of so-called progressiv­e prosecutor­s while crime has been on a pandemic-related surge nationwide, especially in cities.

Chicago knows the problem too well — perhaps you’ve seen the footage on TV of rampant shopliftin­g and organized smash-and-grab robbery teams in fancy downtown boutiques or pharmacies — but this city is hardly alone.

Angry victims in San Francisco prominentl­y include Asian American community voters frightened and fed up over hate crime attacks, which exploded after the COVID-19 pandemic was linked to China and then-President Donald Trump kept calling it the “China virus.”

In a recall election that drew a pitifully poor turnout, such victimized constituen­cies have a bigger impact than usual.

Boudin, 41, who grew up in Chicago’s Hyde Park neighborho­od with his adoptive parents — Weather Undergroun­d radicals-turned-college professors Bill Ayers and Bernardine Dohrn — was a first-time candidate who narrowly won in November 2019.

He was part of a national wave of progressiv­e prosecutor­s who have sought alternativ­es to cash bail and the racially tilted war on drugs and solutions to unaddresse­d police misconduct.

But Cook County State’s Attorney Kim Foxx and Philadelph­ia District Attorney Larry Krasner are also associated with the movement, and both of them were reelected.

Boudin ran into other problems, including a shortage of allies. For example, the city’s progressiv­e mayor, London Breed, also under pressure to address the city’s problems with a homeless epidemic on downtown streets, turned against him in a startling move. She can now pick his successor.

His bigger problem, according to local observers, was inexperien­ce, particular­ly in the grassroots handshakin­g, arm-squeezing style of populist campaignin­g.

Having seen San Francisco take the lead on dealing with gentrifica­tion and skyrocketi­ng housing prices with the dot-com revolution, it is easy to see how much the city has gone upscale. It’s not the laid-back, flower-sniffing hippie haven by the Bay that a lot of us remember from past decades.

As I’ve learned from political consultant­s over the years, homeowners tend to vote more conservati­vely. As an old political chestnut goes, you become a conservati­ve when you have something to conserve.

There is a lesson here for Democrats and other liberals who worry about winning back frustrated and displaced working-class and middle-class swing voters who have turned to the lock’em-up pseudo-solutions promoted by the right: Demographi­cs can be your political destiny. First, learn to connect with voters’ concerns at the grassroots level close to home.

At the same time, most of Foxx and Krasner’s support came from struggling communitie­s of color, the ones who need crime relief the most but also happen to be the most victimized by police misconduct, stop-andfrisk abuse and the incarcerat­ion epidemic.

We need real solutions. Building bigger jails and prisons for the homeless or mentally ill is not a solution. It’s reflexive backlash to a problem that, more often than not, leads to only more problems.

That includes taking a genuine interest in the quality-of-life issues that residents face when they really want safe streets and to not have to worry about whether they need a can of bear spray when they go out.

Boudin apparently learned the hard way: People need to get out and vote. Voter apathy is self-destructiv­e. If you don’t vote, you don’t count. Or, at least, your choice isn’t counted — unless you make one.

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 ?? JIM WILSON/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? San Francisco District Attorney Chesa Boudin addresses supporters at an election night event in San Francisco on Tuesday.
JIM WILSON/THE NEW YORK TIMES San Francisco District Attorney Chesa Boudin addresses supporters at an election night event in San Francisco on Tuesday.

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