Tag Archives: David Chiu

Donkey Kong: How Chris Daly Will Haunt David Chiu

Chris Daly: I will haunt youWhile most people were fixated on the “Donkey Kong” mention in last night’s speech by Chris Daly, what about the actual content of the speech? Immediately before Donkey Kong, Daly made his promise to Board President David Chiu:  “I will haunt you. I will politically haunt you for the biggest fumble in history.”

As Daly is termed out this week, can he make good on this promise? The answer is a yes, and big time. For three key reasons.

Chris Daly’s Relationships: If you only read CW Nevius, you might be misinformed enough to come to the conclusion that Daly is a pariah in San Francisco. But in reality, nothing could be further from the truth. Chris Daly is the most accomplished legislator on the San Francisco Board of Supervisors because he knows so many people so well that he can put together big deals, often with strange bedfellows. Tonight is the “roast” of Chris Daly, which will have as many downtown suits as SOMA hipsters. Daly can scroll through his cell phone and identify dozens of people he knows on each side of every issue. On every single issue, Daly can make Chiu’s life miserable, but Daly also has the political instincts to identify the most critical pressure points.

Social Networking: Chris Daly’s Facebook is an active community with 2,562 people that he has repeatedly used to create news that is picked up by the traditional press. Daly’s twitter is only followed by 621 people right now, but that’s mostly because Daly prefers Facebook. While those numbers may not sound huge, scroll through the names and you’ll see a who’s who of influence makers in San Francisco. Daly can change the framing and dynamics of issues before the Board, especially with early messaging. If he bought an ipad, he could easily post from behind the bar. That is some serious haunting potential.

Buck’s Tavern: David Chiu should be haunted by the mere thought of Daly now having a watering hole so close to City Hall. No matter what issue, operatives on the other side of Chiu can stop by and drop info to Daly. The nature of San Francisco’s political fissures means that in any given year, almost everyone in town will have an issue where they disagree with Chiu and agree with Daly. Plus, Daly opened the bar with Ted Strawser, who is a triple-threat with political game, online game, and event organizing mastery. Already, people are gravitating to Bucks as it fills the long vacant role of a City Hall bar. Drinking Liberally has already moved to Bucks — it is rapidly turning into the place to go for politics in San Francisco. Plus, look at the geography. Two short blocks from Van Ness & Market. In District 6, but District 5 begins across the street and District 8 is two blocks away. District 9 starts less than a dozen blocks away and Chiu’s District 3 is three stops away on the Muni underground or a dozen blocks up the hill on Van Ness. Location, location, location. There’s a reason Willie Brown ’99 and Matt Gonzalez ’03 both ran their campaigns out of a building two blocks away.

Those are the three major givens and three huge reasons why Daly can haunt David Chiu. But he could also easily go further. I’d be surprised if Daly didn’t consolidate his new watchdog role into an actual organization. He can raise far more money at the bar then it would cost for him to start a PAC, set up a website, and start building out his list.

Chris Daly can easily haunt David Chiu. And from what I’ve heard, it’s On Like Donkey Kong!

Stop the circus at SF City Hall, please

On behalf of the City’s small businesses, I am pleading with the Board of Supervisors to declare a moratorium on headline-grabbing legislation.  We simply can’t afford it.  Small businesses are still fighting through the economic downturn. At the same time, the City is struggling to close a $500 million budget deficit, laying off thousands of workers and fighting to keep vital services available.  In this climate, there’s just no room for politics-as-usual.  But they’re at it again.  This time, the Small Business Commission on Monday will decide whether to support Mayor Gavin Newsom’s idea that small business owners who sell mobile phones need  to post San Francisco-specific product labels for customers.  In the words of one public health official, if the government starts requiring warnings on everything with undefined risks, everything “from apples to xylophones” would have to be labeled.  The last thing we need is the City getting into the business of mandating product labels in convenience stores, dry cleaners, and restaurants for all kinds of different products.  What’s next?  Will I need to get my labels approved by the government with information on what ingredients are in the hair product I sell? As many as 15,000 city workers are facing lay-offs.  Nine hundred school workers, including 10 percent of the City’s teachers, are facing lay-offs.  Metered parking may be extended to Sundays.  The City’s police force faces $30 million in cuts.  We just don’t have the luxury of spending money on silly nannny-state ordinances.  San Francisco politics is a circus.  We all know that.  We all know that won’t change.  But on behalf of small businesses, we’re asking that our political leaders stop the merry-go-round at least until we’ve weathered the economic storm.  

Thursday Open Thread

• The Alliance for Justice has some more information about the 501c3 status of the Mormon Church, vis a vis Proposition 8. I don’t think there is a lot to go on here, or that pushing on this is the best idea, but it is worth keeping an eye on.

• It is truly sad that the swelled ranks of the California jobless can’t get through to the unemployment office to file their claims.  I remember this being a problem the one time I used the state unemployment system several years ago, I can only imagine how impossible it is today.

• This CMR analysis touts “Obama’s hidden coattails” for Congressional candidates in California.  I believe they were hidden because there weren’t any.  Obama is the first Democrat to win the state without flipping a seat Dem since 1940.  

• The California Supreme Court made a big decision on health insurance today.  Basically the case says that ERs cannot go after patients in disputes with the insurance company. It is a big win for consumer advocates, who had argued that consumers were getting caught in the crossfire of the hospitals and the insurance companies.

• The trial of former OC Sheriff Mike “America’s Sheriff” Carona went to the jury today. We’ll let you know about the verdict just as soon as we hear.

• Expect even more stringent restrictions on smoking outside restaurant patios and doorways in Los Angeles.  It should be noted that the biggest public health benefit of the last 50 years has been cigarette taxes.  Anything that helps encourage people to quit using a substance that can kill them makes at least some sense to me, nanny-state considerations be damned.

• Newly Elected SF Supervisor David Chiu was elected Board President. He succeeds his predecessor, Aaron Peskin, in District 3 as well. Chiu was considered something of a consensus candidate. He’s a bit easier to get along with than Peskin, but will likely still take issue with the Mayor.    

Tuesday Open Thread

• Sen. Obama isn’t spending a ton of money on billboards across California, but he is spending money on billboards in Burnout Paradise, a racing game produced by California gaming firm ElectronicArts. The comments on the link are interesting, with several self-described Republicans lauding the Obama campaign.

• You can follow along with every independent expenditure filing, on a daily basis, at the California Fair Political Practices Commission site.  It’s good to check this and see who’s dumping money where.

• The Guardian (UK) has actually been doing excellent work on the economic crisis in Southern California.  Earlier this year they uncovered the “Bushville” tent cities popping up in the region in the wake of the foreclosure mess.  Now they travel to Riverside to see how the credit crunch is impacting the people there.

For years, Bob taught adult education. Last spring, because of state budget cuts, his hours were reduced: over the summer, he got only two weeks pay, and in September he got no paycheck at all. He’s now back at work, but is apprehensive about more budget cuts. Short-term credit has dried up in California, and the state is asking for emergency federal loans. Any way you look at it, reasons Bob, programmes like his are going to get cut.

Read the whole thing, it’s harrowing.

• The Yes on Prop 2 Campaign released some nasty video of cruelty to chickens. We’ll have a discussion of Prop 2 with the Campaign Manager on our revived podcast on Friday at 1 pm.

• Same-sex weddings are spiking with just a few weeks remaining before the election.  Hopefully that isn’t necessary, but this just re-emphasizes how important it is to defeat Prop 8.

• An interesting story in the Chronicle about an Oakland City Council race: Rebecca Kaplan vs. Kerry Hamill. Kaplan is the progressive in the race, and as out lesbian, is endorsed by Victory Fund. She’s also got the endorsements of the SF Bay Guardian, the Alameda County Democratic Party, SEIU locals (UHW and 1021), East Bay Young Dems, Van Jones, Asm. Sandre Swanson, and well, Brian Leubitz (if that means anything).

• In SF, District 3 Board of Supervisors candidate David Chiu is going to file a ethics commission complaint against the San Francisco Association of Realtors for ads claiming that he supported Prop K, a measure to decriminalize prostitution.  The position doesn’t really bother me, it’s more the pure sloppiness of it. While I have heard Chiu was a little slow to oppose K, a simple fact check of the No on K website would disabuse them of the notion that he supports K.  By the by, Brian Leubitz supports another candidate in the race, Denise McCarthy.