San Francisco Chronicle

6 contenders seek to unseat London Breed as S.F. mayor

- By Dominic Fracassa

Six long-shot candidates in the San Francisco mayor’s race qualified for the November ballot by Tuesday’s deadline and will challenge London Breed, all but ensuring she’ll easily win her bid for a full term in office.

All of Breed’s challenger­s come from outside traditiona­l political circles and will be hard pressed to overcome the advantages of incumbency: broad name recognitio­n, campaign experience and fund-raising abilities.

Breed beat former state Sen. Mark Leno last June by a scant 1.1% in a special election prompted by the death of Mayor Ed Lee. That race decided only who would finish out the rest of Lee’s term, through January 2020. The winner in November will enjoy a full four-year term before having to seek re-election.

“The only way to beat an incumbent in San Francisco is to prove that they’re either incredibly incompeten­t or corrupt,” said Jim Ross, a political consultant who managed Gavin Newsom’s 2003 mayoral campaign. “While people aren’t happy with the direction of the city, I don’t

think you can prove to voters that Mayor Breed is either of those.”

San Franciscan­s gave their city government a “B-” grade, according to a biennial survey released last month by the Controller’s Office. Most respondent­s felt officials had failed to make meaningful progress on its biggest problem — homelessne­ss.

Though it appears Breed will cruise to victory in November, Ross said the mayor’s margin of victory will still be an important barometer of her ability to govern.

“If she can’t get into the high 50s to low 60s, people will really question her strength as a leader, as someone who can drive an agenda in San Francisco.” Rather than rely on her compelling personal narrative, which she used to great effect during last year’s special election, “she’s going to have to tell voters, ‘This is what I’ve done so far, and this is what I’m going to do,’ ” Ross said.

These are Breed’s six challenger­s:

Ellen Lee Zhou, a public health worker, ran for mayor last June and picked up less than 4% of first-place votes in the city’s ranked-choice voting system. Zhou’s rhetoric and sometimes vaguely outlined policy positions skew conservati­ve. She was one of the featured speakers at a rally convened by right-wing demonstrat­ors last month to denounce perceived censorship of politicall­y conservati­ve views and speech by social media companies. Zhou did not return multiple calls seeking comment.

Joel Ventresca, a retired administra­tive analyst with the San Francisco Internatio­nal Airport, plans to attack Breed from the left, touting his bona fides as a neighborho­od activist and environmen­tal commission­er. He also ran unsuccessf­ully for mayor, treasurer and citywide supervisor in the 1990s.

“I’m going to align myself with the mass movements that have made the progressiv­e movement very strong in San Francisco,” Ventresca said. Breed “has associated herself with corporate interests — high tech and the real estate industry.”

Paul Ybarra Robertson will be listed as a mayoral candidate on the November ballot but listed no contact informatio­n or other personally identifyin­g details, according to paperwork filed with the city’s elections department.

Wilma Pang is a profession­al singer and music educator who ran unsuccessf­ully for various offices in the past, including multiple runs for mayor and the District Three supervisor­ial seat. Her central issue as a candidate, she said, is enhancing cultural tourism in San Francisco.

“We need to do something about boosting our cash cow — that’s the tourist industry,” she said.

Jean-David Hsu filed to run as an independen­t Tuesday with a “full focus” on cleaning up the Tenderloin. Hsu submitted his paperwork on time — but just barely. The Department of Elections will review and verify his eligibilit­y for the ballot Wednesday.

Robert Jordan, a street minister, rounds out the list of long-shot mayoral candidates. He filed just before the 5 p.m. deadline and said he was “a hard worker with no ego. I think this is my year.”

 ?? Trisha Thadani / The Chronicle ?? Mayor London Breed gets done filing papers to run for reelection. If she wins, it would be her first full term in the job.
Trisha Thadani / The Chronicle Mayor London Breed gets done filing papers to run for reelection. If she wins, it would be her first full term in the job.

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