San Diego Union-Tribune

TEARFUL MOURNERS PAY RESPECTS TO FEINSTEIN

In San Francisco, people express their pride and gratitude

- BY JANIE HAR

Mourners streamed into San Francisco City Hall on Wednesday to pay their respects to the late U.S. Sen. Dianne Feinstein, honoring her as fearless, smart and the glue who kept the city together after two political assassinat­ions that catapulted her into the mayor’s office and the national spotlight.

“She wasn’t afraid to do a man’s job. She wasn’t afraid to be a senator. She wasn’t afraid to go after what she wanted,” said Lawanda Carter, 48, of San Francisco. “And that’s encouragem­ent for us women now to have courage.”

Carter was among the scores of everyday San Franciscan­s and political leaders alike who brought flowers, bowed their heads or clasped their hands in prayer as they stood before Feinstein’s casket, which was draped in an American f lag and on display behind velvet ropes. Many said they had never met Feinstein, but wanted to honor an indefatiga­ble public servant who fought to level the playing field for women, members of the LGBTQ+ community and racial minorities.

Feinstein died early Friday in her Washington, D.C., home of natural causes, said Adam Russell, a spokespers­on for her office. She was 90.

She was San Francisco’s first female mayor and one of California’s first two female U.S. senators, a job she first

won alongside Barbara Boxer in 1992, dubbed the “Year of the Woman.” Former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, also of San Francisco, and Mayor London Breed were among the officials who paid their respects.

Feinstein spent much of her career in the U.S. Senate but will be known as the forever mayor of San Francisco, a role she inherited in tragedy. She was president of the Board of Supervisor­s in November 1978 when a former supervisor assassinat­ed Mayor George Moscone and Supervisor Harvey Milk, the city’s first openly gay supervisor, at City Hall.

Feinstein, who found Milk’s body, became acting mayor and won election twice to serve as mayor until 1988.

Georgia Otterson, 76, a health care administra­tor, said Feinstein wasn’t as politicall­y liberal as she would have liked, but the late mayor earned her respect with how she kept the heartbroke­n city together.

“We were all mourning together,

holding candles. If memory serves me, Joan Baez sang,” Otterson said of an impromptu march that night from the historical­ly gay Castro District to City Hall. “And she held us up.”

As a centrist Democrat, she was criticized by people on the left, including for her support for the death penalty, and in her later years, for working with Republican­s. But the straight, White woman largely earned the gratitude of a city that celebrates its racial and sexual diversity.

She steered San Francisco through the HIV and AIDS crisis, bringing attention to an epidemic ignored by President Ronald Reagan. She also secured federal and private funding to save the city’s iconic cable cars from death by deteriorat­ion.

Feinstein led the city as it played host to the Democratic National Convention in 1984. Another San Francisco tradition — “Fleet Week” — was started by Feinstein in 1981, and this year’s annual celebratio­n of air shows, naval ships and military bands is dedicated to her.

Mourners Wednesday expressed their pride in Feinstein.

San Francisco native Cari Donovan placed a bouquet on the f loor before the casket. She lingered, crying quietly over a woman she never knew but who was so important to her life.

“She championed and fought for the rights of so many people,” Donovan said. “I’m so grateful. And I really just wanted her family to know how much she meant to me.”

The social worker said she talked to her 28-year-old daughter about the battles Feinstein fought so that younger generation­s of women could dream bigger. “She was a lioness.”

Feinstein’s body was to remain in City Hall until 7 p.m. and a memorial service is scheduled today outside the building.

Speakers will include Vice President Kamala Harris, Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., and Feinstein’s granddaugh­ter Eileen Mariano.

Among the first to say goodbye Wednesday were Jose Romero Cooper and Mark Cooper. The married couple waited in line before doors opened to the public.

“What I’m gonna say is: ‘Thank you for everything, for being strong,’” said Romero Cooper, 61, a scarf of the American flag draped around his neck.

He stood before the casket, genuflecte­d and crossed himself, then walked away with tears streaming down his face.

 ?? GODOFREDO A. VÁSQUEZ AP ?? Rep. Nancy Pelosi puts her arm around the casket of Sen. Dianne Feinstein on Wednesday in San Francisco.
GODOFREDO A. VÁSQUEZ AP Rep. Nancy Pelosi puts her arm around the casket of Sen. Dianne Feinstein on Wednesday in San Francisco.

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