The Denver Post

Top adviser to Calif. governor dies

- By Kathleen Ronayne

CALIF.» Nancy SACRAMENTO, McFadden, chief of staff for California Gov. Jerry Brown and a driving force behind his agenda, died Thursday in her home after a long battle with ovarian cancer. She was 59.

“Nancy was the best chief of staff a governor could ever ask for,” Brown said in a statement. “She understood government and politics, she could manage, she was a diplomat and she was fearless.”

McFadden was hired as Brown’s chief of staff in 2011, when he returned to the governor’s office, and quickly became an indispensa­ble asset as he pushed ambitious polities on climate, criminal justice reform and more. McFadden could knock heads in political battle but was quick with humor and cared deeply for the people around her, friends and colleagues said.

McFadden didn’t know Brown and his wife, Anne Gust Brown, very well when she had a conversati­on with them after Brown’s election that led to a job. But the three quickly became a wellmatche­d team.

“She loved that (Brown) trusted her to be the implemente­r,” said Donne Brownsey, McFadden’s closest friend and a former lobbyist and legislativ­e adviser. “He gave her, deservedly, wide latitude to form teams throughout state government to solve problems.”

McFadden’s high-profile political work began long before she joined the Brown administra­tion. She served as a deputy political director for Bill Clinton’s 1992 presidenti­al campaign.

McFadden went on to be a deputy associate attorney general in Clinton’s administra­tion, then deputy chief of staff to Vice President Al Gore.

McFadden’s skills as a shrewd political negotiator were put to the test last year during the fight to reauthoriz­e California’s capand-trade program, a critical piece of Brown’s climate change-fighting efforts. It was McFadden’s job to find a bridge between the oil industry, environmen­tal justice groups and lawmakers on both sides of the aisle.

After months, she helped strike a deal that extended the landmark program through 2030 and focused on cleaning up poor air quality in low-income neighborho­ods. It was a deal that made none of the sides completely happy, but one that passed. McFadden called it the most difficult job she ever faced.

Former Assembly Republican Leader Chad Mayes, who gathered critical votes from a small group of Republican­s, said McFadden was unfailingl­y honest and trustworth­y during the complicate­d negotiatio­ns. “She was incredibly tenacious without being overbearin­g,” Mayes said.

She was diagnosed with ovarian cancer in the early 2000s and beat it, only to have it return four years ago.

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