fbpx
Wikipedia

Willie Brown (politician)

Willie Lewis Brown Jr. (born March 20, 1934) is an American politician. A member of the Democratic Party, he served as mayor of San Francisco from 1996 to 2004, the first African American to hold that office.

Willie Brown
Brown in 2019
41st Mayor of San Francisco
In office
January 8, 1996 – January 8, 2004
Preceded byFrank Jordan
Succeeded byGavin Newsom
Minority Leader of the California Assembly
In office
June 5, 1995 – September 14, 1995
Preceded byJim Brulte
Succeeded byRichard Katz
58th Speaker of the California State Assembly
In office
December 2, 1980 – June 5, 1995
Preceded byLeo McCarthy
Succeeded byDoris Allen
Member of the California State Assembly
from the 13th district
In office
December 7, 1992 – December 14, 1995
Preceded byBarbara Lee
Succeeded byCarole Migden
Member of the California State Assembly
from the 17th district
In office
December 2, 1974 – November 30, 1992
Preceded byJohn Miller
Succeeded byDean Andal
Member of the California State Assembly
from the 18th district
In office
January 4, 1965 – November 30, 1974
Preceded byEdward M. Gaffney
Succeeded byLeo T. McCarthy
Personal details
Born
Willie Lewis Brown Jr.

(1934-03-20) March 20, 1934 (age 90)
Mineola, Texas, U.S.
Political partyDemocratic
Spouse
Blanche Vitero
(m. 1958; sep. 1982)
Children4
EducationSan Francisco State University (BA)
University of California, Hastings (JD)
Military service
Allegiance United States
Branch/service United States Army
California Army National Guard
Years of service1955–1958
Unit126th Medical Battalion

Born in Mineola, Texas, where he graduated from high school, Brown moved to San Francisco in 1951. He graduated from San Francisco State University in 1955 and earned a J.D. from the University of California, Hastings College of the Law in 1958, after which he worked as an attorney and was involved in the civil rights movement. He was elected to the California Assembly in 1964, during which he became popular in San Francisco and became known as one of the country's most powerful state legislators.[1] As a legislator, Brown earned a reputation as a supporter of civil rights of gays and lesbians and was able to manage colleagues and maintain party discipline. He served as the Speaker of the California State Assembly from 1980 to 1995. His long tenure and powerful position were used as a focal point of the California ballot proposition limiting the terms of state legislators that passed in 1990. During the last of his three allowed post-initiative terms, Brown maintained control of the Assembly despite a slim Republican majority. Near the end of his final term, he decided to run for mayor of San Francisco.

During Brown's tenure as mayor of San Francisco, the city's budget was expanded, and real estate development, public works, city beautification, and other city projects saw a significant increase. Brown presided over the "dot-com" era at a time when San Francisco's economy was rapidly expanding. His administration included more Asian-Americans, women, Latinos, gays and African Americans than the administrations of his predecessors.[2] Brown was reelected in 1999, but term limits prevented him from running for a third term, and he was succeeded by his political protégé Gavin Newsom. San Francisco Chronicle called Brown "one of San Francisco's most notable mayors", adding that he had "celebrity beyond the city's boundaries."[2] He retired from politics after leaving the office in 2004, published an autobiography, and continued to fundraise and advise politicians.

Early life, education, and early career edit

Brown was born on March 20, 1934,[3] in Mineola, a small segregated town in East Texas marked by racial tensions,[4] to Minnie Collins Boyd and Lewis Brown. He was the fourth of five children.[5] During Brown's childhood, mob violence periodically erupted in Mineola, keeping African-Americans from voting. His first job was as a shoeshine boy in a whites-only barber shop.[5] He later worked as a janitor, fry cook and field hand.[6] He learned his strong work ethic at a young age from his grandmother.[5] He graduated from Mineola Colored High School, which he later described as substandard, and left for San Francisco in August 1951 at the age of 17 to live with his uncle.[citation needed]

Brown originally wanted to attend Stanford University. His interviewer from Stanford was a faculty member at San Francisco State College and was surprised by Brown's ambition. Although Brown did not meet the qualifications for Stanford or San Francisco State, the professor facilitated Brown's admission to the latter school on probation.[5] Brown adjusted to college studies after working especially hard to catch up in his first semester.[7] He joined the Young Democrats and became friends with John L. Burton.[5] Brown originally wanted to be a math instructor but campus politics changed his ambitions. He became active in his church and the San Francisco NAACP. Brown worked as a doorman, janitor and shoe salesman to pay for college. He is a member of Alpha Phi Alpha fraternity.[7] He also joined the Reserve Officers' Training Corps (ROTC). Brown earned a bachelor's degree in political science from San Francisco State in 1955.[8] He later said that his decision to attend law school was primarily to avoid being drafted.[9] He quit the ROTC and joined the California Army National Guard's 126th Medical Battalion, where he was trained as a dental hygienist.[9][10] Brown attended University of California, Hastings College of the Law, where he also worked as a janitor. He befriended future San Francisco Mayor George Moscone, for whom Brown later managed a campaign.[7]

During the late 1950s and early 1960s, Brown was one of a few African-Americans practicing law in San Francisco when he opened his own business.[5] He practiced criminal defense law, representing pimps, prostitutes and other clients that more prominent attorneys would not represent.[5] One early case was to defend Mario Savio on his first civil disobedience arrest. He quickly became involved in the Civil Rights Movement, leading a well-orchestrated sit-in to protest housing discrimination after a local real estate office refused to work with him because of his race.[6]

Brown began his first run for the California State Assembly in 1962 by having local African American ministers pass around a hat, collecting $700.[5] He lost the election by 600 votes before winning a second election in 1964.[6]

California State Assembly edit

 
Signatures from a resolution signed by Brown in his role of Speaker of the California State Assembly

Brown was one of four Black Americans in the Assembly in 1965. The other three were Mervyn M. Dymally, F. Douglas Ferrell and Byron Rumford.[11] He continued to be reelected to the Assembly until 1995. In the 1960s, Brown served as chair of the Legislative Representation Committee, a powerful position that helped him climb the Assembly ranks.[12] He became the Democrats' Assembly whip in 1969.[12] Brown also served on the Assembly Ways and Means Committee.[13] In 1972, he delivered a speech at the Democratic National Convention. He lost his bid for the speakership in 1972. In 1975, Brown authored and lobbied the successful passing of the Consenting Adult Sex Bill that legalized homosexuality in California, thus earning the strong and lasting support of San Francisco's gay community. Similarly, he voted against AB 607, which banned same-sex marriage in 1977, further building his reputation as a supporter of the civil rights of gays and lesbians. During the 1970s, Brown continued to expand his legal practice, including the representation of several major real estate developers. He won the Speakership in 1980 with 28 Republican and 23 Democratic votes.[citation needed]

Brown was California's first Black American Speaker of the Assembly, and served in the office from 1981 to 1995. In 1990, he helped negotiate an end to a 64-day budget standoff. In 1994, Brown gained the vote of a few Republicans to maintain the Speakership when the Democrats lost control of the Assembly to the Republicans led by Jim Brulte. Brown regained control in 1995 by making a deal with Republican defectors Doris Allen and Brian Setencich, both of whom were elected Speaker by the Democratic minority.[14]

Brown's long service in the Assembly and political connections, his strong negotiation skills, and the Assembly's tenure system for leadership appointments combined to give Brown nearly complete control over the California legislature by the time he became Assembly Speaker. According to The New York Times, Brown became one of the country's most powerful state legislators.[1] He nicknamed himself the "Ayatollah of the Assembly".[15]

Brown was extremely popular in San Francisco, but less so in the rest of the state.[16] Nevertheless, he wielded great control over statewide legislative affairs and political appointments, making it difficult for his conservative opponents to thwart his power. Partially to remove Brown from his leadership position, a state constitutional amendment initiative was proposed and passed by the electorate in 1990, imposing term limits on state legislators.[17][18] Brown became the focus of the initiative, and raised just under $1 million to defeat it.[19] The California legislature challenged the law, but the courts upheld it.[19][20] California Proposition 140 also cut the legislature's staff budget by 30 percent, causing Brown to reduce legislative staff by at least 600.[19] Under the California term-limits law, no Speaker of the California State Assembly will be permitted to have a longer tenure than Brown's.[21]

Brown gained a reputation for knowing what was occurring in the state legislature at all times.[22] In 1992, he gave $1.18 million to the Democratic Party to help with voter registration and several campaigns, some of which was from contributions from tobacco companies and insurance companies. As Speaker, he worked to defeat the Three Strikes Law. Critics have claimed Brown did not do enough to raise the legislature's ethical standards or to protect the environment.[5] During his time in Sacramento, he estimates he raised close to $75 million to help elect and reelect state Democrats.[23]

Brown led efforts in the Assembly for state universities to divest from South Africa and to increase AIDS research funding. He helped obtain state funds for San Francisco, including funding for public health and mental health funds. Brown held up the 1992 state budget for 63 days until Governor Pete Wilson added another $1.1 billion for public schools.[5]

Brown had a reputation in the Assembly for his ability to manage people. Republican State Senator Ken Maddy of Fresno noted Brown's ability to "size up the situation and create, sometimes on the spot, a winning strategy." According to Hobson, "He was a brilliant daycare operator. ... He knew exactly how to hold the hand of his Assembly members. He dominated California politics like no other politician in the history of the state".[5]

Peoples Temple investigation edit

From 1975 to 1978, Brown supported the Peoples Temple, led by Jim Jones, while it was being investigated for alleged criminal wrongdoing. Brown attended the Temple perhaps a dozen times and served as master of ceremonies at a testimonial dinner for Jones where he said in his introduction, "[l]et me present to you a combination of Martin King, Angela Davis, Albert Einstein ... Chairman Mao."[24][25][26]

Mayor of San Francisco edit

In 1995, Brown ran for mayor of San Francisco. In his announcement speech, he said San Francisco needed a "resurrection" and that he would bring the "risk-taking leadership" the city needed.[23] Brown placed first in the first round of voting, but because no candidate received 50% of the vote, he faced incumbent Frank Jordan in the December runoff. Brown gained the support of Supervisor Roberta Achtenberg, who had placed third in the first round of voting. He campaigned on working to address poverty and problems with Muni. He called Jordan the "inept bumbler" and criticized his leadership. Jordan criticized Brown for his relations with special interests during his time in the State Assembly.[1] Brown easily defeated Jordan.

 
Mayor Brown signing legislation in 2002, flanked by Dianne Feinstein, Nancy Pelosi, and Gordon England

Brown's inaugural celebration included an open invitation party with 10,000 attendees and local restaurants providing 10,000 meals to the homeless.[2][27] President Bill Clinton called Brown to congratulate him, and the congratulations were broadcast to the crowd. He delivered his inaugural address without notes and led the orchestra in "The Stars and Stripes Forever". He arrived at the event in a horse-drawn carriage.[2]

In 1996, more than two-thirds of San Franciscans approved of Brown's job performance.[28] As mayor, he made several appearances on national talk shows.[2] Brown called for expansions to the San Francisco budget to provide for new employees and programs. In 1999, he proposed hiring 1,392 new city workers and proposed a second straight budget with a $100 million surplus. He helped oversee the settling of a two-day garbage strike in April 1997.[22] During Brown's tenure, San Francisco's budget increased to $5.2 billion and the city added 4,000 new employees. Brown tried to develop a plan for universal health care, but there wasn't enough in the budget to do so.[2] He put in long days as mayor, scheduling days of solid meetings and, at times, conducting two meetings at the same time.[22] Brown opened City Hall on Saturdays to answer questions.[15] He would later claim of his mayorship that he helped restore the city's spirit and pride.[22]

Brown's opponents in his 1999 mayoral reelection campaign were former Mayor Jordan and Clint Reilly. They criticized Brown for spending the city's $1 billion in budget growth without addressing its major problems and creating an environment of corruption and patronage at City Hall.[22] Tom Ammiano was a late write-in candidate and faced Brown in the runoff election. Brown won reelection by a 20-point margin. Most major developers and business interests supported him. Ammiano campaigned on a promise that he would raise the hourly minimum wage to $11 and scrutinize corporate business taxes. Brown repeatedly claimed that Ammiano would raise taxes. President Clinton recorded a telephone message on Brown's behalf. Brown's campaign spent $3.1 million to Ammiano's $300,000.[29] The 1999 mayoral race was the subject of the documentary See How They Run.[30]

Crime and public safety edit

According to Brown, although he was scheduled for a flight to New York City on the day of the September 11, 2001 attacks, he received a "low key warning" in a phone call from a member of his airport security detail, who advised him not to fly.[31] Brown disregarded the warning and was waiting for a ride to the airport for an 8 a.m. Pacific Time flight, when he learned of the attacks.[31] He immediately ordered the city to close schools and courts, concerned over the potential for additional terrorist attacks.[31] In addition, he recommended to representatives of other possible targets in San Francisco, including the Bank of America Tower and Transamerica Pyramid, that they also close.[31]

In February 2003, Brown's appointed Police Chief, Earl Sanders, and several top San Francisco Police Department officials were arrested for conspiring to obstruct the police investigation into an incident involving off-duty officers popularly called "Fajitagate".[2]

Social policy edit

Brown ended San Francisco's policy of punishing people for feeding the homeless. San Francisco continued to enforce its policy regarding the conduct of the homeless in public places.[32] In 1998, Brown supported forcibly removing homeless people from Golden Gate Park and police crackdowns on the homeless for drunkenness, urinating, defecating, or sleeping on the sidewalk. Brown introduced job training programs and a $11 million drug treatment program. San Francisco, the country's 13th-largest city at the time, had the nation's third-largest homeless population, at a peak of 16,000.[28] In November 1997, Brown requested nighttime helicopter searches in Golden Gate Park.[2] His administration spent hundreds of millions of dollars creating new shelters, supportive housing, and drug treatment centers to address homelessness, but these measures did not end homelessness.[2]

In 1996, Brown approved the Equal Benefits Ordinance, which required city contractors to give their employees domestic partner benefits.[2] In 1998, he wrote President Clinton a letter urging him to halt a federal lawsuit aimed at closing medical marijuana clubs.[33]

Transportation edit

Mass transit edit

One of Brown's central campaign promises was his "100-Day Plan for Muni", in which he said he would fix the city's municipal bus system in that many days.[22] Brown supported the "Peer Pressure" Bus Patrol program, which paid former gang members and troubled youth to patrol Muni buses. He claimed the program helped reduce crime.[34] He fired Muni chief Phil Adams and replaced him with his chief of staff Emilio Cruz. In 1998, Brown was mayor during the summer of the Muni meltdown as Muni implemented the new ATC system and he promised riders there would be better times ahead. A voter-approved initiative the next year helped improve Muni services. Brown increased Muni's budget by tens of millions of dollars over his tenure.[2] He later said he made a mistake in overpromising with his 100-Day Plan.[22]

Brown helped mediate a settlement to the 1997 BART strike.[22]

During his first term as mayor, Brown quietly favored the demolition and abolition of the Transbay Terminal[35] to accommodate the redevelopment of the site for market-rate housing. Centrally located at First and Mission Streets near the Financial District and South Beach, the terminal originally served as the San Francisco terminus for the electric commuter trains of the East Bay Electric Lines, the Key System of streetcars and the Sacramento Northern railroads which ran on the lower deck of the San Francisco–Oakland Bay Bridge. Since the termination of streetcar service in 1958, the terminal has seen continuous service as a major bus facility for East Bay commuters; AC Transit buses transport riders from the terminal directly into neighborhoods throughout the inner East Bay. The terminal also serves passengers traveling to San Mateo County and the North Bay aboard SamTrans and Golden Gate Transit buses respectively, and to tourists arriving by bus motorcoach. Today, the terminal is being planned for redevelopment as a regionwide mass transit hub maintaining the current bus services, but with a new tunnel that would extend the Caltrain commuter rail line from its current terminus at Fourth and Townsend Streets to the site. Once completed, Caltrain riders would no longer need to transfer to Muni to reach the downtown financial district, and the terminal's heavy rail portion would be designed to accommodate the planned High Speed Rail lines to Los Angeles.[citation needed]

Critical Mass edit

Since 1992, cyclists riding in San Francisco's monthly Critical Mass bicycle rides had used the "corking" technique at street intersections to block rush-hour cross-traffic.[36][37][38][39] In 1997, Brown approved San Francisco Police Department Chief Fred Lau's plan to crack down on the rides,[40] calling them "a terrible demonstration of intolerance"[41] and "an incredible display of arrogance."[42] After arrests were made when a Critical Mass event became violent, Brown said, "I think we ought to confiscate their bicycles"[43] and "a little jail time" would teach Critical Mass riders a lesson.[44] On the night of the July 25, 1997, ride, 115 riders were arrested for unlawful assembly, jailed, and had their bicycles confiscated.[45][46]

By 2002, Brown and the city's relations with Critical Mass had changed. On the 10th anniversary of Critical Mass on September 27, 2002, the city officially closed down four blocks to automobile traffic for the annual Car-Free Day Street Fair. Brown said of the event, "I'm delighted. A new tradition has been born in our city."[47]

Urban planning and development edit

As mayor, Brown was criticized for aggregating power and favoring certain business interests at the city's expense as a whole. Supporters point to the many development projects completed or planned under his watch, including the restoration of City Hall and historic waterfront buildings; the setting in motion of one of the city's largest ever mixed-use development projects in Mission Bay, and the development of a second campus for the University of California, San Francisco. In contrast, critics objected to the construction of many live-work loft buildings in formerly working-class neighborhoods that they believed led to gentrification and displacement of residents and light industry.[48]

Under Brown, City Hall was restored from damages sustained during the 1989 Loma Prieta earthquake. He insisted on restoring the light courts and having the dome gilded with more than $400,000 in real gold. The Embarcadero was redeveloped and the Mission Bay Development project began. Brown also oversaw the approval of the Catellus Development Corp., a $100 million restoration of the century-old Ferry Building, the new Asian Art Museum, the new M. H. de Young Memorial Museum, the expansion of the Moscone Convention Center and San Francisco International Airport's new international terminal.[2] Brown worked to restructure the Housing Authority.[22] He helped established an AFL-CIO housing trust to build affordable housing and worked to increase the city's share of federal and state grants. He oversaw declining crime rates and improvements in the city's economy, finances, and credit ratings during his first term.[22]

Brown was known for his shrewd and strategic use of the planning process's details to affect and facilitate development projects on his watch. In regard to a parking garage on Vallejo Street desired by North Beach and Chinatown merchants, he circumvented neighborhood opponents of the garage by ordering demolition of the site's existing structure to commence on a Friday night and be done by Monday morning, when the group was certain to try to obtain a restraining order. "It was with the demolition permit I outsmarted them", Brown said, claiming that as the critics rushed toward court, "someone shouted out to them that the building had disappeared over the weekend. They've never recovered from that little maneuver."[49]

During his mayoralty, Brown hoped to build a new stadium for the San Francisco 49ers and worked with them to create a plan.[22] No new facility was built for the team during his tenure.[50] Brown worked with the San Francisco Giants to build a new stadium in the China Basin after previous stadium measures had failed on the ballot.[2] The stadium was approved by San Francisco voters in 1996 and opened in 2000.[22]

Due to vacancies on the Board of Supervisors before 2000, Brown was able to appoint eight of the board's 11 members. Due to a change in San Francisco's election laws that took effect in 2000, the board changed from at-large to district-based elections, and all seats on the board were up for election. The voters elected a new group of supervisors that ran on changing the city's development policy. Voters also passed a measure that weakened the mayor's control over the Planning Commission and Board of Appeals. The new majority limited Brown's power over the Elections Department, the Police Commission, and extending San Francisco International Airport's runways into the bay to reduce flight delays.[2]

Favoritism and patronage criticisms; FBI investigations edit

Allegations of political patronage followed Brown from the state legislature through his mayoralty. Former Los Angeles County GOP Assemblyman Paul Horcher, who voted in 1994 to keep Brown as Speaker, was reassigned to a position with a six-figure salary as head of San Francisco's solid waste management program. Brian Setencich was also appointed to a position by Brown.[22] Both were hired as special assistants after losing their Assembly seats because they supported Brown. Former San Francisco Supervisor Bill Maher was also hired as a special assistant after campaigning for Brown in his first mayoral race.[51] Brown is also accused of favoritism to Carolyn Carpeneti, a philanthropic fundraiser with whom he had a child. In 1998 Brown arranged for Carpeneti to obtain a rent-free office in the city-owned Bill Graham Civic Auditorium. Between then and 2003, a period that included the birth of their daughter, Carpeneti was paid an estimated $2.33 million by nonprofit groups and political committees, though not all this money went directly to Carpeneti.[52][53]

Brown increased the city's special assistants payroll from $15.6 to $45.6 million between 1995 and 2001.[54] Between April 29, and May 3, 2001, San Francisco Chronicle reporters Lance Williams and Chuck Finnie released a five-part story on Brown and his relations with city contractors, lobbyists, and city appointments and hires he had made during his mayoralty. The report concluded that there was an appearance of favoritism and conflicts of interest in the awarding of city contracts and development deals, a perception that large contracts had an undue influence on City Hall, and patronage with the hiring of campaign workers, contributors, legislative colleagues, and friends to government positions.[55]

The Federal Bureau of Investigation investigated Brown when he was Speaker. One investigation was a sting operation concerning a fake fish company attempting to bribe Brown; he was not charged with a crime. The FBI further investigated Brown from 1998 to 2003 over his appointees at the Airport Commission for potential conflicts of interests. Brown friend, contributor, and former law client Charlie Walker was given a share of city contracts. Walker had previously thrown several parties for Brown and was among his biggest fundraisers.[22] He had served jail time in 1984 for violating laws concerning minority contracting. The FBI investigated Walker. The FBI also investigated Brown's approval of expansion of Sutro Tower and SFO. Scott Company, with one prominent Brown backer, was accused of using a phony minority front company to secure an airport construction project. Robert Nurisso was sentenced to house arrest. During Brown's administration, there were two convictions of city officials tied to Brown. Brown reassigned Parking and Traffic chief Bill Maher to an airport job when his critics claimed Maher should have been fired.[22] Brown also put his former girlfriend Wendy Linka on the city payroll.[2]

Brown's romantic relationship with Alameda County deputy district attorney Kamala Harris preceded his appointment of Harris to two California state commissions in the early 1990s. The San Francisco Chronicle called the Unemployment Insurance Appeals Board and the California Medical Assistance Commission patronage positions. When the appointments became a political issue in Harris's 2003 race for District Attorney, she responded: "Whether you agree or disagree with the system, I did the work".[56] Brown's relationship with Harris gained renewed attention in early 2019 after she had become a U.S. senator and ran for president.[57][58][59] Brown addressed the questions by publishing a piece in the San Francisco Chronicle titled "Sure, I dated Kamala Harris. So what?" He wrote that he may have "influenced" her career by appointing her to boards and supporting her run for District Attorney, but added that he had also influenced the careers of other politicians. Brown noted that the difference between Harris and other politicians he had helped was that "Harris is the only one who, after I helped her, sent word that I would be indicted if I 'so much as jaywalked' while she was D.A. That's politics for ya".[60]

After mayorship edit

 
Brown speaking in 2016

After leaving the mayor's office, Brown considered running for the State Senate but ultimately declined.[61] From January through September 2006, he hosted a morning radio show with comedian Will Durst on a local San Francisco Air America Radio affiliate. He also does a weekly podcast. Brown established The Willie L. Brown Jr. Institute on Politics & Public Service, an unaffiliated nonprofit organization at San Francisco State University.[17] It trains students for careers in municipal, county and regional governments. The center will be one of the first to focus on local government in the country. Brown gave its library a collection of his artifacts, videotapes and legislative papers from his 40 years in public office. He is also planning to mentor students, teach a course on leadership, and recruit guest speakers.[17]

On February 5, 2008, Simon & Schuster released Brown's hardcover autobiography, Basic Brown: My Life and Our Times, with collaborator P. J. Corkery. The book release coincided with California's Democratic presidential primary on the same day. On July 20, 2008, Brown began writing a column for the San Francisco Chronicle, a move that drew the ire of some Chronicle staff members and ethicists for the failure to disclose multiple conflicts of interest.[62]

In 2009, Brown was defending general construction contractor Monica Ung of Alamo, California. Accused of flouting labor laws and defrauding immigrant construction workers of their wages from laboring on Oakland municipal construction projects, Ung was arraigned on dozens of felony fraud charges on August 24, 2009, in Alameda County Superior Court. Brown's decision to defend Ung angered many in the East Bay's labor community.[63]

In September 2013, the western span of the Bay Bridge was officially named for Brown.[64] In early 2015, he was named to the board of directors of the San Francisco-based biopharmaceutical company Global Blood Therapeutics.[65]

Brown has often been associated with former California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger, who served for seven years after the end of Brown's mayoralty.[66][67] In retirement, Brown continued to participate in fundraising for and advising other politicians.[68]

Transportation company edit

In late 2012, Brown became the regulatory lawyer for Wingz, a ride-sharing service.[69][70] In that capacity, he represented the company before the California Public Utilities Commission, which was creating new regulations to legalize the ability of transportation network companies to operate ridesharing services in California.[69][70][71]

In the media edit

As mayor, Brown was often portrayed mockingly but affectionately by political cartoonists and columnists as a vain emperor, presiding in a robe and crown over the kingdom of San Francisco.[72] He enjoyed the attention this brought to his personal life, disarming friends and critics with humor that directed attention away from the policy agendas he was pursuing.[73]

Brown's flamboyant style made him so well known as the consummate politician that when an actor playing a party politician in 1990's The Godfather Part III did not understand director Francis Ford Coppola's instruction to model his character after Brown, Coppola fired the actor and hired Brown himself to play the role. Brown later appeared in 2000's Just One Night as a judge. He also played himself in two Disney films, George of the Jungle and The Princess Diaries, and in the 2003 film Hulk as the mayor of San Francisco. He appeared as himself, alongside Geraldo Rivera, in an episode of Nash Bridges. He also made a cameo appearance in the 1984 Jefferson Starship music video "Layin' It on the Line" (depicting a futuristic 1988 presidential campaign).[citation needed]

Brown was criticized in 1996 for his comments that 49ers backup quarterback Elvis Grbac was "an embarrassment to humankind." He was criticized in 1997 for responding to Golden State Warriors player Latrell Sprewell choking his coach P. J. Carlesimo by saying, "his boss may have needed choking."[22]

In 1998, Brown contacted the Japanese television cooking competition Iron Chef, suggesting San Franciscan Chef Ron Siegel to battle one of the Iron Chefs. Brown appeared on the telecast himself, enthusiastically promoting the Chef.[citation needed]

Brown remained neutral in the 2008 presidential campaign. He has worked as a radio talk show host and a pundit on local and national political television shows and is seen as attempting to build credibility by abstaining from endorsing candidates for office. "I've never been high on endorsements," Brown said. "When you get one, all it does is keep the other guy from getting one. Really, what did getting John Kerry's endorsement do to help Barack Obama?"[74]

Personal life edit

 
Brown sporting one of his many hats.

Family and relationships edit

In September 1958, Brown married Blanche Vitero, with whom he had three children. He has four grandchildren and a step-granddaughter. According to a 1984 New York Times article, Brown and Vitero separated amicably in 1982.[75] James Richardson, a reporter for The Sacramento Bee, said of Brown, "The measure of his flamboyance is he'll go to a party with his wife on one arm and his girlfriend on the other."[76]

Brown also has a daughter, Sydney Brown, with philanthropic fundraiser Carolyn Carpeneti.[52]

From 1994 to 1995,[77] Brown dated Kamala Harris, who worked as an Alameda County Deputy District Attorney at the time and was 30 years his junior. Their relationship gained renewed attention in early 2019 after she had become a U.S. senator and ran for president.[57][58][59]

Retinitis pigmentosa edit

While serving as Assembly Speaker, Brown was diagnosed with retinitis pigmentosa (RP), a disease that has no cure and would slowly destroy his eyesight. RP is a hereditary disease that causes a continual loss of peripheral vision and often leads to total blindness. Brown's two sisters were also diagnosed with RP. Brown remarked, "Having RP is a challenge. As Speaker of the Assembly it was very important that I recognize people in the halls of the legislature. But I couldn't see people unless they were right in front of me. I needed to have the security people give me notes to tell me who was in the room. Reading is also very difficult so I use larger print notes and memos. Living with RP means having to use more of your brain function—I listen more intently, I memorize vast amounts of information, and I have trained my computer to recognize numerous verbal commands."[78]

Aesthetic style edit

 
Mayor Willie Brown at an event in the San Francisco City Hall rotunda in the 1990s.

Brown has demonstrated a sense of flair in his personal style from early on, which contributed to a visibility he later parlayed into political advantage. Even in high school he was fastidious about his appearance.[79] In office he became famous for British and Italian suits, sports cars, nightclubbing, and a collection of dressy hats.[80] He was once called "The Best Dressed Man in San Francisco" by Esquire magazine.[81]

In his 2008 autobiography Basic Brown, he described his taste for $6,000 Brioni suits and his search for the perfect chocolate Corvette. In one chapter, "The Power of Clothes: Don't Pull a Dukakis", Brown writes that men should have a navy blazer for each season: one with "a hint of green" for springtime, another with more autumnal threading for the fall.[82] He adds, "You really shouldn't try to get through a public day wearing just one thing. ... Sometimes, I change clothes four times a day."[83]

Recognition edit

1990: Adam Clayton Powell Award of the Congressional Black Caucus[84]

1996: Brown received the Golden Plate Award of the American Academy of Achievement[85]

2014: Legacy Award of the National Newspaper Publishers Association[86]

2018: Lifetime Achievement Award, Greater Los Angeles African American Chamber of Commerce[87]

2018: NAACP's Spingarn Medal in 2018.[88]

Filmography edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c B. Drummond Ayres Jr. (December 12, 1995). "After Rave Reviews, San Francisco Mayoral Race Is Ending Run". The New York Times. Retrieved February 20, 2008.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Gordon, Rachel (January 4, 2004). "The Mayor's Legacy: Willie Brown 'Da Mayor' soared during tenure that rivals city's most notable, but some critical goals not met". San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved February 23, 2008.
  3. ^ Gold, Bryan M. (February 28, 1999). "Tremendous Vision". Government Technology. Retrieved March 17, 2018.
  4. ^ In the 1930s, the "tensions" were undoubtedly less than they would have been than if anyone had attempted to enforce integration.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Clarence Johnson (October 24, 1995). "It's Brown vs. Brown Ex-speaker's reputation helps, hinders him". San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved February 23, 2008.
  6. ^ a b c Gregory Lewis (October 1997). "Running the Show: Mayor Willie Brown's Life Of Public Service". Black Collegian. Retrieved June 12, 2007.
  7. ^ a b c James Richardson (Winter 1996–1997). "The Higher Education of Mayor Willie Brown". The Journal of Blacks in Higher Education (14): 106–109. doi:10.2307/2962848. JSTOR 2962848.
  8. ^ SFSU Public Affairs Press Release, May 28, 2001, "San Francisco Mayor Willie Brown challenges SFSU Class of 2001", accessed July 4, 2007
  9. ^ a b Reilly, Janet (April 4, 2020). "The Interview: Willie Brown, Uncensored". Nob Hill Gazette. San Francisco, CA.
  10. ^ Brown, Willie (April 26, 2015). "A Properly Predicted Clinton Conflict". San Francisco Chronicle. San Francisco, CA – via PressReader.
  11. ^ "Past Members". Legislative Black Caucus.
  12. ^ a b . Encyclopædia Britannica. Archived from the original on June 21, 2006. Retrieved February 19, 2008.
  13. ^ E Gregory Lewis. "Running the Show Mayor Willie Brown's Life Of Public Service". The Black Collegian Magazine, IMDiversity, Inc. Retrieved March 1, 2008.
  14. ^ Daniel Weintraub (July 1, 1995). "Keeping the grip on power". State Legislatures. Retrieved July 5, 2007.
  15. ^ a b Evelyn Nieves (December 1, 1998). "San Franciscans Tire of the Life of the Party". The New York Times. Retrieved February 25, 2008.
  16. ^ Gregory Lewis (October 1997). "Running the show: Mayor Willie Brown's life of public service". The Black Collegian. Retrieved July 5, 2007.
  17. ^ a b c Rachel Gordon (November 8, 2007). "San Francisco Willie Brown comes home to roost at S.F. State Ex-mayor sets up leadership center at alma mater". San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved February 25, 2008.
  18. ^ Anthony York (June 23, 1999). "Is black politics dead in California?". Salon. Retrieved April 10, 2007.
  19. ^ a b c Katherine Bishop (January 24, 1991). "Political Giants Deflated in California". The New York Times. Retrieved February 20, 2008.
  20. ^ "State Legislative Term Limits". U.S. Term Limits. Retrieved April 10, 2007.
  21. ^ "California's G.O.P. Finally Elects an Assembly Speaker It Can Call Its Own". The New York Times. January 7, 1996. Retrieved February 22, 2008.
  22. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Edward Epstein (September 14, 1999). "The Many Faces Of Willie Brown Grand approach wins fans, foes". San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved February 23, 2008.
  23. ^ a b B. Drummond Ayres Jr. (June 4, 1995). "It's Official: Willie Brown Runs for Mayor". The New York Times. Retrieved February 25, 2008.
  24. ^ Tim Reiterman (1982) "Raven: The Untold Story of The Rev. Jim Jones and His People" ISBN 0525241361 p. 308
  25. ^ Nancy Dooley & Tim Reiterman, "Jim Jones: Power Broker", San Francisco Examiner, August 7, 1977
  26. ^ Layton, Deborah. Seductive Poison. Anchor, 1999. ISBN 0385489846. p. 105.
  27. ^ Michael J. Ybarra (January 9, 1996). "San Francisco Journal; A Time To Rejoice In Mantle Of Power". The New York Times. Retrieved February 22, 2008.
  28. ^ a b Evelyn Nieves (November 13, 1998). "Homelessness Tests San Francisco's Ideals". The New York Times. Retrieved February 22, 2008.
  29. ^ Evelyn Nieves (December 16, 1999). "San Francisco Mayor Easily Wins Another Term". The New York Times. Retrieved February 22, 2008.
  30. ^ Curiel, Jonathan (September 6, 2002). "Nasty race for mayor is film winner". San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved January 3, 2010.
  31. ^ a b c d Phillip Matier; Andrew Ross (September 12, 2001). "Willie Brown got low-key early warning about air travel". San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved February 25, 2008.
  32. ^ Carey Goldberg (May 20, 1996). "Homeless in San Francisco: A New Policy". The New York Times. Retrieved February 22, 2008.
  33. ^ "Four California Mayors Ask Clinton to Stop Marijuana Club Suit". The New York Times. March 22, 1998. Retrieved February 22, 2008.
  34. ^ "'Peer Pressure' Bus Patrol Is Called Successful in San Francisco". The New York Times. February 15, 1998. Retrieved February 22, 2008.
  35. ^ Edward Epstein (October 26, 1998). "Mayors Get on the Train; Leaders promote ballot measures in 4 cities for Bay Bridge rail line". San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved November 13, 2008.
  36. ^ Martin, Glen (July 26, 1997). "Cycling Event at Critical Point, Commuters vent, mayor gets tough, riders dismayed". San Francisco Chronicle.
  37. ^ Leslie Goldberg (March 23, 1997). "Bikers press for their right of way". San Francisco Examiner.
  38. ^ David Colker (September 7, 1997). "In LA, Movement Lacks Critical Element—Bike Commuters". Los Angeles Times.
  39. ^ Molly O'Donnell (December 1, 2004). "Critical Mass: Social Change on Two Wheels". Wiretap (AlterNet). Retrieved February 19, 2008.
  40. ^ McCormick, Erin; Finnie, Chuck; Gordon, Rachel (July 29, 1997). "Cops say group bike ride needs permit: Police distribute new policy, with mayor's blessing; supes look at plan to license cyclists". San Francisco Chronicle.
  41. ^ "MacNeil/Lehrer News Hour Transcript". MacNeil/Lehrer News Hour. PBS. August 29, 1997.
  42. ^ Edward Epstein (August 28, 1997). "Bike Fiasco Points Up S.F. Mayor's Transit Errors: Brown has had trouble taming city's road rage". San Francisco Chronicle.
  43. ^ Jim Herron Zamora; Chuck Finnie; Emily Gurnon (July 27, 1997). "Brown: Take bikes of busted cyclists". San Francisco Chronicle.
  44. ^ Steve Lopez (August 11, 1997). . Time. Archived from the original on June 3, 2008.
  45. ^ Chuck Finnie (July 23, 1997). "Cycling protesters make deal with City: Critical Mass to temper havoc in exchange for talks". San Francisco Examiner. Retrieved April 10, 2007.
  46. ^ Glen Martin; Henry K. Lee; Torri Minton; Manny Fernandez (July 26, 1997). "S.F. Bike Chaos – 250 Arrests: 5,000 bikers snarl commute". San Francisco Chronicle.
  47. ^ "Critical Mass protestors celebrate 10th year". CNN. The Associated Press. September 27, 2002.
  48. ^ Evelyn Nieves (January 8, 2004). . The Washington Post. Archived from the original on November 17, 2018.
  49. ^ John King (March 4, 2008). "Basic Brown' reveals a brazen mayor". San Francisco Chronicle.
  50. ^ Tim Golden (November 24, 1996). "His Humble Pie Is Full of Chutzpah". The New York Times. Retrieved February 22, 2008.
  51. ^ Lance Williams; Chuck Finnie (April 30, 2001). "Mayor's patronage army, Brown fattens payroll with loyalists, colleagues, friends". San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved April 10, 2007.
  52. ^ a b Lance Williams; Patrick Hoge (July 13, 2007). "Love and Money, Mayor's fund-raiser got millions". San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved April 10, 2007.
  53. ^ Phillip Matier; Andrew Ross (January 19, 2001). "Da Mayor, 66, Says He'll Be a Dad Again". San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved July 5, 2007.
  54. ^ Lance Williams; Chuck Finnie (April 30, 2001). "Mayor's patronage army Brown fattens payroll with loyalists, colleagues, friends". San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved February 25, 2008.
  55. ^ Lance Williams; Chuck Finnie (May 3, 2001). "Brown's City Hall is politics as usual despite election New board has little effect, so far". San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved February 25, 2008.
  56. ^ Byrne, Peter (September 24, 2003). . San Francisco Chronicle. Archived from the original on February 13, 2020. Retrieved September 24, 2003.
  57. ^ a b Tumulty, Karen (October 7, 2020). "How sexist, racist attacks on Kamala Harris have spread online — a case study". The Washington Post. Retrieved October 12, 2020.
  58. ^ a b Lowe, Tiana (January 23, 2019). "The San Francisco ghosts in Kamala Harris' past". The Washington Examiner. Retrieved January 23, 2019.
  59. ^ a b Ramsey, Lydia (January 26, 2019). "Former San Francisco mayor Willie Brown responds to scrutiny over his past relationship with Kamala Harris and the role he played in her career". Business Insider. Retrieved January 27, 2019.
  60. ^ Brown, Willie (January 26, 2019). "Sure, I dated Kamala Harris. So What?". San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved January 26, 2019.
  61. ^ B. Drummond Ayres Jr. (March 10, 2002). "Political Briefing; He Left His Heart In Sacramento". The New York Times. Retrieved February 25, 2008.
  62. ^ http://articles.latimes.com/2006/dec/31/opinion/op-richardson31 San Francisco Weekly. July 30, 2008.
  63. ^ Robert Gammon (August 26, 2009). "Monica's Victims, a Chinatown construction magnate may have ripped off taxpayers and workers for as much as $20 million. Now she's trying to evict Le Cheval". Retrieved September 3, 2009.
  64. ^ Kwong, Jessica (February 11, 2014). "Willie Brown says he's humbled by Bay Bridge naming honor". San Francisco Examiner. Retrieved February 18, 2014.
  65. ^ "Profile". People. Genetic Engineering & Biotechnology News. Vol. 35, no. 4. February 15, 2015. p. 37.
  66. ^ Anthony York (December 31, 2006). "Why Arnold invited Willie Brown". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved June 12, 2007.
  67. ^ Julia Cheever (June 6, 2006). . San Francisco Sentinel. Archived from the original on August 4, 2016. Retrieved May 5, 2007.
  68. ^ "California Democratic Party Lines Up Behind pro-Bush anti-Labor Schwarzenegger". Indybay. October 13, 2006. Retrieved June 12, 2007.
  69. ^ a b Geoffrey Fowler (October 28, 2012). "Taxi Apps Face Bumpy Road". The Wall Street Journal. Retrieved October 28, 2012.
  70. ^ a b Tomio Geron (January 28, 2013). "Tickengo's Willie Brown Wants Revenue Cap For Ride-Sharing Drivers". Forbes. Retrieved January 28, 2013.
  71. ^ Benny Evangelista (December 4, 2012). "State PUC to hold hearings on new cab app laws". San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved December 4, 2012.
  72. ^ Phil Frank. "Farley". San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved June 12, 2007.
  73. ^ Rob Morse (October 27, 1996). "25 ways to suck up to Willie Brown". San Francisco Examiner. Retrieved June 12, 2007.
  74. ^ Joe Garofoli (January 28, 2008). "Some state politicians leery of endorsing". San Francisco Chronicle.
  75. ^ Turner, Wallace (June 16, 1984). "For a Politician, Power and Riches Go Together". The New York Times.
  76. ^ "No Mere Mayor". People. Retrieved August 17, 2018.
  77. ^ "Kamala Harris Dated Willie Brown Decades Ago and Her Critics Claim It Matters". Los Angeles Magazine. Retrieved October 12, 2020.
  78. ^ Aubrey Patsika (February 9, 2004). "A Strong Sense of Vision". Foundation Fighting Blindness, Blue Water Media. Retrieved November 12, 2008.
  79. ^ Richardson, James (1997). Willie Brown: A Biography. Berkeley: University of California Press. ISBN 0585249857.
  80. ^ Richardson, James D. (1993). "Willie Brown: The Early Years". The AFP Reporter. 15 (4). Retrieved July 5, 2007.
  81. ^ "The best dressed real men in America". Esquire. September 1, 2006.
  82. ^ Matt Bai (February 10, 2008). "Willie's World". The New York Times Review of Books.
  83. ^ Will Haper (February 13, 2008). "Reader Quiz: Which Willie Brown Quotes Are Stranger Than Fiction?". San Francisco Weekly.
  84. ^ "Past Phoenix Award Honorees (1996 – 2018)". https://s7.goeshow.com/cbcf/annual/2020/documents/CBCF_ALC_-_Phoenix_Awards_Dinner_Past_Winners.pdf
  85. ^ "Golden Plate Awardees of the American Academy of Achievement". American Academy of Achievement.
  86. ^ Yeldell, Kyle (July 1, 2014). "NNPA Presents Willie Brown with Legacy Award". Black Press USA.
  87. ^ "GLAAACC Honors Willie L. Brown With Lifetime Achievement Award". Los Angeles Sentinel. March 1, 2018. Retrieved May 31, 2023.
  88. ^ "The Honorable Willie L. Brown Jr. to Receive Prestigious NAACP Spingarn Medal". NAACP.

Bibliography edit

  • Brown Jr., Willie L.; Corkery, P. J. (2008). Basic Brown: My Life and Our Times (1st ed.). New York: Simon & Schuster. ISBN 978-0743290814. OCLC 892925831. OL 7948919M – via Internet Archive.
  • Clucas, Richard A. (1994). The Speaker's Electoral Connection: Willie Brown and the California Assembly. Berkeley: University of California Press. ISBN 0877723613.
  • Green, Robert Lee (1974). Willie L. Brown Jr: Daring Black Leader. Milwaukee: Franklin Publishers. OCLC 53358667.
  • Holst, Arthur Matthew. “Brown, Willie.” In African American National Biography vol. 2, edited by Henry Louis Gates Jr., and Evelyn Brooks Higginbotham. (Oxford University Press, 2008), pp. 12–13.
  • Richardson, James (1993). Willie Brown: The Early Years. Washington D.C.: Alicia Patterson Foundation. OCLC 28525812.
  • Richardson, James (1997). Willie Brown: A Biography. Berkeley: University of California Press. ISBN 0585249857.

External links edit

  • Durst, Will; Brown, Willie. (Podcast). Archived from the original on August 8, 2020. Retrieved October 20, 2020.
  • Willie Brown at IMDb
  • Appearances on C-SPAN
  • New York Times – Topics: Willie L Brown Jr. collected news stories
  • Capps, Steven A. (October 14, 1996). "He wrote the book on Willie Brown". San Francisco Chronicle. from the original on August 22, 2016. Retrieved October 20, 2020.
  • Williams, Lance; Finnie, Chuck (April 30, 2001). "Mayor's patronage army / Brown fattens payroll with loyalists, colleagues, friends". San Francisco Chronicle. from the original on February 1, 2020. Retrieved October 20, 2020.
  • Stewart, Chris (January 20, 2008). "Gamed by the System: Wherein Willie Brown details his valiant attempts to conquer homelessness and bring Muni into submission". San Francisco Chronicle. from the original on August 22, 2016. Retrieved October 20, 2020.
California Assembly
Preceded by Member of the California Assembly
from the 18th district

1965–1974
Succeeded by
Preceded by
John Miller
Member of the California Assembly
from the 18th district

1974–1992
Succeeded by
Preceded by Member of the California Assembly
from the 18th district

1992–1995
Succeeded by
Political offices
Preceded by Speaker of the California Assembly
1980–1995
Succeeded by
Preceded by Mayor of San Francisco
1996–2004
Succeeded by

willie, brown, politician, willie, lewis, brown, born, march, 1934, american, politician, member, democratic, party, served, mayor, francisco, from, 1996, 2004, first, african, american, hold, that, office, willie, brownbrown, 201941st, mayor, franciscoin, off. Willie Lewis Brown Jr born March 20 1934 is an American politician A member of the Democratic Party he served as mayor of San Francisco from 1996 to 2004 the first African American to hold that office Willie BrownBrown in 201941st Mayor of San FranciscoIn office January 8 1996 January 8 2004Preceded byFrank JordanSucceeded byGavin NewsomMinority Leader of the California AssemblyIn office June 5 1995 September 14 1995Preceded byJim BrulteSucceeded byRichard Katz58th Speaker of the California State AssemblyIn office December 2 1980 June 5 1995Preceded byLeo McCarthySucceeded byDoris AllenMember of the California State Assembly from the 13th districtIn office December 7 1992 December 14 1995Preceded byBarbara LeeSucceeded byCarole MigdenMember of the California State Assembly from the 17th districtIn office December 2 1974 November 30 1992Preceded byJohn MillerSucceeded byDean AndalMember of the California State Assembly from the 18th districtIn office January 4 1965 November 30 1974Preceded byEdward M GaffneySucceeded byLeo T McCarthyPersonal detailsBornWillie Lewis Brown Jr 1934 03 20 March 20 1934 age 90 Mineola Texas U S Political partyDemocraticSpouseBlanche Vitero m 1958 sep 1982 wbr Children4EducationSan Francisco State University BA University of California Hastings JD Military serviceAllegiance United StatesBranch service United States ArmyCalifornia Army National GuardYears of service1955 1958Unit126th Medical BattalionBorn in Mineola Texas where he graduated from high school Brown moved to San Francisco in 1951 He graduated from San Francisco State University in 1955 and earned a J D from the University of California Hastings College of the Law in 1958 after which he worked as an attorney and was involved in the civil rights movement He was elected to the California Assembly in 1964 during which he became popular in San Francisco and became known as one of the country s most powerful state legislators 1 As a legislator Brown earned a reputation as a supporter of civil rights of gays and lesbians and was able to manage colleagues and maintain party discipline He served as the Speaker of the California State Assembly from 1980 to 1995 His long tenure and powerful position were used as a focal point of the California ballot proposition limiting the terms of state legislators that passed in 1990 During the last of his three allowed post initiative terms Brown maintained control of the Assembly despite a slim Republican majority Near the end of his final term he decided to run for mayor of San Francisco During Brown s tenure as mayor of San Francisco the city s budget was expanded and real estate development public works city beautification and other city projects saw a significant increase Brown presided over the dot com era at a time when San Francisco s economy was rapidly expanding His administration included more Asian Americans women Latinos gays and African Americans than the administrations of his predecessors 2 Brown was reelected in 1999 but term limits prevented him from running for a third term and he was succeeded by his political protege Gavin Newsom San Francisco Chronicle called Brown one of San Francisco s most notable mayors adding that he had celebrity beyond the city s boundaries 2 He retired from politics after leaving the office in 2004 published an autobiography and continued to fundraise and advise politicians Contents 1 Early life education and early career 2 California State Assembly 2 1 Peoples Temple investigation 3 Mayor of San Francisco 3 1 Crime and public safety 3 2 Social policy 3 3 Transportation 3 3 1 Mass transit 3 3 2 Critical Mass 3 4 Urban planning and development 4 Favoritism and patronage criticisms FBI investigations 5 After mayorship 5 1 Transportation company 6 In the media 7 Personal life 7 1 Family and relationships 7 2 Retinitis pigmentosa 7 3 Aesthetic style 8 Recognition 9 Filmography 10 References 11 Bibliography 12 External linksEarly life education and early career editBrown was born on March 20 1934 3 in Mineola a small segregated town in East Texas marked by racial tensions 4 to Minnie Collins Boyd and Lewis Brown He was the fourth of five children 5 During Brown s childhood mob violence periodically erupted in Mineola keeping African Americans from voting His first job was as a shoeshine boy in a whites only barber shop 5 He later worked as a janitor fry cook and field hand 6 He learned his strong work ethic at a young age from his grandmother 5 He graduated from Mineola Colored High School which he later described as substandard and left for San Francisco in August 1951 at the age of 17 to live with his uncle citation needed Brown originally wanted to attend Stanford University His interviewer from Stanford was a faculty member at San Francisco State College and was surprised by Brown s ambition Although Brown did not meet the qualifications for Stanford or San Francisco State the professor facilitated Brown s admission to the latter school on probation 5 Brown adjusted to college studies after working especially hard to catch up in his first semester 7 He joined the Young Democrats and became friends with John L Burton 5 Brown originally wanted to be a math instructor but campus politics changed his ambitions He became active in his church and the San Francisco NAACP Brown worked as a doorman janitor and shoe salesman to pay for college He is a member of Alpha Phi Alpha fraternity 7 He also joined the Reserve Officers Training Corps ROTC Brown earned a bachelor s degree in political science from San Francisco State in 1955 8 He later said that his decision to attend law school was primarily to avoid being drafted 9 He quit the ROTC and joined the California Army National Guard s 126th Medical Battalion where he was trained as a dental hygienist 9 10 Brown attended University of California Hastings College of the Law where he also worked as a janitor He befriended future San Francisco Mayor George Moscone for whom Brown later managed a campaign 7 During the late 1950s and early 1960s Brown was one of a few African Americans practicing law in San Francisco when he opened his own business 5 He practiced criminal defense law representing pimps prostitutes and other clients that more prominent attorneys would not represent 5 One early case was to defend Mario Savio on his first civil disobedience arrest He quickly became involved in the Civil Rights Movement leading a well orchestrated sit in to protest housing discrimination after a local real estate office refused to work with him because of his race 6 Brown began his first run for the California State Assembly in 1962 by having local African American ministers pass around a hat collecting 700 5 He lost the election by 600 votes before winning a second election in 1964 6 California State Assembly edit nbsp Signatures from a resolution signed by Brown in his role of Speaker of the California State AssemblyBrown was one of four Black Americans in the Assembly in 1965 The other three were Mervyn M Dymally F Douglas Ferrell and Byron Rumford 11 He continued to be reelected to the Assembly until 1995 In the 1960s Brown served as chair of the Legislative Representation Committee a powerful position that helped him climb the Assembly ranks 12 He became the Democrats Assembly whip in 1969 12 Brown also served on the Assembly Ways and Means Committee 13 In 1972 he delivered a speech at the Democratic National Convention He lost his bid for the speakership in 1972 In 1975 Brown authored and lobbied the successful passing of the Consenting Adult Sex Bill that legalized homosexuality in California thus earning the strong and lasting support of San Francisco s gay community Similarly he voted against AB 607 which banned same sex marriage in 1977 further building his reputation as a supporter of the civil rights of gays and lesbians During the 1970s Brown continued to expand his legal practice including the representation of several major real estate developers He won the Speakership in 1980 with 28 Republican and 23 Democratic votes citation needed Brown was California s first Black American Speaker of the Assembly and served in the office from 1981 to 1995 In 1990 he helped negotiate an end to a 64 day budget standoff In 1994 Brown gained the vote of a few Republicans to maintain the Speakership when the Democrats lost control of the Assembly to the Republicans led by Jim Brulte Brown regained control in 1995 by making a deal with Republican defectors Doris Allen and Brian Setencich both of whom were elected Speaker by the Democratic minority 14 Brown s long service in the Assembly and political connections his strong negotiation skills and the Assembly s tenure system for leadership appointments combined to give Brown nearly complete control over the California legislature by the time he became Assembly Speaker According to The New York Times Brown became one of the country s most powerful state legislators 1 He nicknamed himself the Ayatollah of the Assembly 15 Brown was extremely popular in San Francisco but less so in the rest of the state 16 Nevertheless he wielded great control over statewide legislative affairs and political appointments making it difficult for his conservative opponents to thwart his power Partially to remove Brown from his leadership position a state constitutional amendment initiative was proposed and passed by the electorate in 1990 imposing term limits on state legislators 17 18 Brown became the focus of the initiative and raised just under 1 million to defeat it 19 The California legislature challenged the law but the courts upheld it 19 20 California Proposition 140 also cut the legislature s staff budget by 30 percent causing Brown to reduce legislative staff by at least 600 19 Under the California term limits law no Speaker of the California State Assembly will be permitted to have a longer tenure than Brown s 21 Brown gained a reputation for knowing what was occurring in the state legislature at all times 22 In 1992 he gave 1 18 million to the Democratic Party to help with voter registration and several campaigns some of which was from contributions from tobacco companies and insurance companies As Speaker he worked to defeat the Three Strikes Law Critics have claimed Brown did not do enough to raise the legislature s ethical standards or to protect the environment 5 During his time in Sacramento he estimates he raised close to 75 million to help elect and reelect state Democrats 23 Brown led efforts in the Assembly for state universities to divest from South Africa and to increase AIDS research funding He helped obtain state funds for San Francisco including funding for public health and mental health funds Brown held up the 1992 state budget for 63 days until Governor Pete Wilson added another 1 1 billion for public schools 5 Brown had a reputation in the Assembly for his ability to manage people Republican State Senator Ken Maddy of Fresno noted Brown s ability to size up the situation and create sometimes on the spot a winning strategy According to Hobson He was a brilliant daycare operator He knew exactly how to hold the hand of his Assembly members He dominated California politics like no other politician in the history of the state 5 Peoples Temple investigation edit Main article Political Alliances of the People s Temple From 1975 to 1978 Brown supported the Peoples Temple led by Jim Jones while it was being investigated for alleged criminal wrongdoing Brown attended the Temple perhaps a dozen times and served as master of ceremonies at a testimonial dinner for Jones where he said in his introduction l et me present to you a combination of Martin King Angela Davis Albert Einstein Chairman Mao 24 25 26 Mayor of San Francisco editIn 1995 Brown ran for mayor of San Francisco In his announcement speech he said San Francisco needed a resurrection and that he would bring the risk taking leadership the city needed 23 Brown placed first in the first round of voting but because no candidate received 50 of the vote he faced incumbent Frank Jordan in the December runoff Brown gained the support of Supervisor Roberta Achtenberg who had placed third in the first round of voting He campaigned on working to address poverty and problems with Muni He called Jordan the inept bumbler and criticized his leadership Jordan criticized Brown for his relations with special interests during his time in the State Assembly 1 Brown easily defeated Jordan nbsp Mayor Brown signing legislation in 2002 flanked by Dianne Feinstein Nancy Pelosi and Gordon EnglandBrown s inaugural celebration included an open invitation party with 10 000 attendees and local restaurants providing 10 000 meals to the homeless 2 27 President Bill Clinton called Brown to congratulate him and the congratulations were broadcast to the crowd He delivered his inaugural address without notes and led the orchestra in The Stars and Stripes Forever He arrived at the event in a horse drawn carriage 2 In 1996 more than two thirds of San Franciscans approved of Brown s job performance 28 As mayor he made several appearances on national talk shows 2 Brown called for expansions to the San Francisco budget to provide for new employees and programs In 1999 he proposed hiring 1 392 new city workers and proposed a second straight budget with a 100 million surplus He helped oversee the settling of a two day garbage strike in April 1997 22 During Brown s tenure San Francisco s budget increased to 5 2 billion and the city added 4 000 new employees Brown tried to develop a plan for universal health care but there wasn t enough in the budget to do so 2 He put in long days as mayor scheduling days of solid meetings and at times conducting two meetings at the same time 22 Brown opened City Hall on Saturdays to answer questions 15 He would later claim of his mayorship that he helped restore the city s spirit and pride 22 Brown s opponents in his 1999 mayoral reelection campaign were former Mayor Jordan and Clint Reilly They criticized Brown for spending the city s 1 billion in budget growth without addressing its major problems and creating an environment of corruption and patronage at City Hall 22 Tom Ammiano was a late write in candidate and faced Brown in the runoff election Brown won reelection by a 20 point margin Most major developers and business interests supported him Ammiano campaigned on a promise that he would raise the hourly minimum wage to 11 and scrutinize corporate business taxes Brown repeatedly claimed that Ammiano would raise taxes President Clinton recorded a telephone message on Brown s behalf Brown s campaign spent 3 1 million to Ammiano s 300 000 29 The 1999 mayoral race was the subject of the documentary See How They Run 30 Crime and public safety edit According to Brown although he was scheduled for a flight to New York City on the day of the September 11 2001 attacks he received a low key warning in a phone call from a member of his airport security detail who advised him not to fly 31 Brown disregarded the warning and was waiting for a ride to the airport for an 8 a m Pacific Time flight when he learned of the attacks 31 He immediately ordered the city to close schools and courts concerned over the potential for additional terrorist attacks 31 In addition he recommended to representatives of other possible targets in San Francisco including the Bank of America Tower and Transamerica Pyramid that they also close 31 In February 2003 Brown s appointed Police Chief Earl Sanders and several top San Francisco Police Department officials were arrested for conspiring to obstruct the police investigation into an incident involving off duty officers popularly called Fajitagate 2 Social policy edit Brown ended San Francisco s policy of punishing people for feeding the homeless San Francisco continued to enforce its policy regarding the conduct of the homeless in public places 32 In 1998 Brown supported forcibly removing homeless people from Golden Gate Park and police crackdowns on the homeless for drunkenness urinating defecating or sleeping on the sidewalk Brown introduced job training programs and a 11 million drug treatment program San Francisco the country s 13th largest city at the time had the nation s third largest homeless population at a peak of 16 000 28 In November 1997 Brown requested nighttime helicopter searches in Golden Gate Park 2 His administration spent hundreds of millions of dollars creating new shelters supportive housing and drug treatment centers to address homelessness but these measures did not end homelessness 2 In 1996 Brown approved the Equal Benefits Ordinance which required city contractors to give their employees domestic partner benefits 2 In 1998 he wrote President Clinton a letter urging him to halt a federal lawsuit aimed at closing medical marijuana clubs 33 Transportation edit Mass transit edit One of Brown s central campaign promises was his 100 Day Plan for Muni in which he said he would fix the city s municipal bus system in that many days 22 Brown supported the Peer Pressure Bus Patrol program which paid former gang members and troubled youth to patrol Muni buses He claimed the program helped reduce crime 34 He fired Muni chief Phil Adams and replaced him with his chief of staff Emilio Cruz In 1998 Brown was mayor during the summer of the Muni meltdown as Muni implemented the new ATC system and he promised riders there would be better times ahead A voter approved initiative the next year helped improve Muni services Brown increased Muni s budget by tens of millions of dollars over his tenure 2 He later said he made a mistake in overpromising with his 100 Day Plan 22 Brown helped mediate a settlement to the 1997 BART strike 22 During his first term as mayor Brown quietly favored the demolition and abolition of the Transbay Terminal 35 to accommodate the redevelopment of the site for market rate housing Centrally located at First and Mission Streets near the Financial District and South Beach the terminal originally served as the San Francisco terminus for the electric commuter trains of the East Bay Electric Lines the Key System of streetcars and the Sacramento Northern railroads which ran on the lower deck of the San Francisco Oakland Bay Bridge Since the termination of streetcar service in 1958 the terminal has seen continuous service as a major bus facility for East Bay commuters AC Transit buses transport riders from the terminal directly into neighborhoods throughout the inner East Bay The terminal also serves passengers traveling to San Mateo County and the North Bay aboard SamTrans and Golden Gate Transit buses respectively and to tourists arriving by bus motorcoach Today the terminal is being planned for redevelopment as a regionwide mass transit hub maintaining the current bus services but with a new tunnel that would extend the Caltrain commuter rail line from its current terminus at Fourth and Townsend Streets to the site Once completed Caltrain riders would no longer need to transfer to Muni to reach the downtown financial district and the terminal s heavy rail portion would be designed to accommodate the planned High Speed Rail lines to Los Angeles citation needed Critical Mass edit Further information Critical Mass cycling Since 1992 cyclists riding in San Francisco s monthly Critical Mass bicycle rides had used the corking technique at street intersections to block rush hour cross traffic 36 37 38 39 In 1997 Brown approved San Francisco Police Department Chief Fred Lau s plan to crack down on the rides 40 calling them a terrible demonstration of intolerance 41 and an incredible display of arrogance 42 After arrests were made when a Critical Mass event became violent Brown said I think we ought to confiscate their bicycles 43 and a little jail time would teach Critical Mass riders a lesson 44 On the night of the July 25 1997 ride 115 riders were arrested for unlawful assembly jailed and had their bicycles confiscated 45 46 By 2002 Brown and the city s relations with Critical Mass had changed On the 10th anniversary of Critical Mass on September 27 2002 the city officially closed down four blocks to automobile traffic for the annual Car Free Day Street Fair Brown said of the event I m delighted A new tradition has been born in our city 47 Urban planning and development edit As mayor Brown was criticized for aggregating power and favoring certain business interests at the city s expense as a whole Supporters point to the many development projects completed or planned under his watch including the restoration of City Hall and historic waterfront buildings the setting in motion of one of the city s largest ever mixed use development projects in Mission Bay and the development of a second campus for the University of California San Francisco In contrast critics objected to the construction of many live work loft buildings in formerly working class neighborhoods that they believed led to gentrification and displacement of residents and light industry 48 Under Brown City Hall was restored from damages sustained during the 1989 Loma Prieta earthquake He insisted on restoring the light courts and having the dome gilded with more than 400 000 in real gold The Embarcadero was redeveloped and the Mission Bay Development project began Brown also oversaw the approval of the Catellus Development Corp a 100 million restoration of the century old Ferry Building the new Asian Art Museum the new M H de Young Memorial Museum the expansion of the Moscone Convention Center and San Francisco International Airport s new international terminal 2 Brown worked to restructure the Housing Authority 22 He helped established an AFL CIO housing trust to build affordable housing and worked to increase the city s share of federal and state grants He oversaw declining crime rates and improvements in the city s economy finances and credit ratings during his first term 22 Brown was known for his shrewd and strategic use of the planning process s details to affect and facilitate development projects on his watch In regard to a parking garage on Vallejo Street desired by North Beach and Chinatown merchants he circumvented neighborhood opponents of the garage by ordering demolition of the site s existing structure to commence on a Friday night and be done by Monday morning when the group was certain to try to obtain a restraining order It was with the demolition permit I outsmarted them Brown said claiming that as the critics rushed toward court someone shouted out to them that the building had disappeared over the weekend They ve never recovered from that little maneuver 49 During his mayoralty Brown hoped to build a new stadium for the San Francisco 49ers and worked with them to create a plan 22 No new facility was built for the team during his tenure 50 Brown worked with the San Francisco Giants to build a new stadium in the China Basin after previous stadium measures had failed on the ballot 2 The stadium was approved by San Francisco voters in 1996 and opened in 2000 22 Due to vacancies on the Board of Supervisors before 2000 Brown was able to appoint eight of the board s 11 members Due to a change in San Francisco s election laws that took effect in 2000 the board changed from at large to district based elections and all seats on the board were up for election The voters elected a new group of supervisors that ran on changing the city s development policy Voters also passed a measure that weakened the mayor s control over the Planning Commission and Board of Appeals The new majority limited Brown s power over the Elections Department the Police Commission and extending San Francisco International Airport s runways into the bay to reduce flight delays 2 Favoritism and patronage criticisms FBI investigations editAllegations of political patronage followed Brown from the state legislature through his mayoralty Former Los Angeles County GOP Assemblyman Paul Horcher who voted in 1994 to keep Brown as Speaker was reassigned to a position with a six figure salary as head of San Francisco s solid waste management program Brian Setencich was also appointed to a position by Brown 22 Both were hired as special assistants after losing their Assembly seats because they supported Brown Former San Francisco Supervisor Bill Maher was also hired as a special assistant after campaigning for Brown in his first mayoral race 51 Brown is also accused of favoritism to Carolyn Carpeneti a philanthropic fundraiser with whom he had a child In 1998 Brown arranged for Carpeneti to obtain a rent free office in the city owned Bill Graham Civic Auditorium Between then and 2003 a period that included the birth of their daughter Carpeneti was paid an estimated 2 33 million by nonprofit groups and political committees though not all this money went directly to Carpeneti 52 53 Brown increased the city s special assistants payroll from 15 6 to 45 6 million between 1995 and 2001 54 Between April 29 and May 3 2001 San Francisco Chronicle reporters Lance Williams and Chuck Finnie released a five part story on Brown and his relations with city contractors lobbyists and city appointments and hires he had made during his mayoralty The report concluded that there was an appearance of favoritism and conflicts of interest in the awarding of city contracts and development deals a perception that large contracts had an undue influence on City Hall and patronage with the hiring of campaign workers contributors legislative colleagues and friends to government positions 55 The Federal Bureau of Investigation investigated Brown when he was Speaker One investigation was a sting operation concerning a fake fish company attempting to bribe Brown he was not charged with a crime The FBI further investigated Brown from 1998 to 2003 over his appointees at the Airport Commission for potential conflicts of interests Brown friend contributor and former law client Charlie Walker was given a share of city contracts Walker had previously thrown several parties for Brown and was among his biggest fundraisers 22 He had served jail time in 1984 for violating laws concerning minority contracting The FBI investigated Walker The FBI also investigated Brown s approval of expansion of Sutro Tower and SFO Scott Company with one prominent Brown backer was accused of using a phony minority front company to secure an airport construction project Robert Nurisso was sentenced to house arrest During Brown s administration there were two convictions of city officials tied to Brown Brown reassigned Parking and Traffic chief Bill Maher to an airport job when his critics claimed Maher should have been fired 22 Brown also put his former girlfriend Wendy Linka on the city payroll 2 Brown s romantic relationship with Alameda County deputy district attorney Kamala Harris preceded his appointment of Harris to two California state commissions in the early 1990s The San Francisco Chronicle called the Unemployment Insurance Appeals Board and the California Medical Assistance Commission patronage positions When the appointments became a political issue in Harris s 2003 race for District Attorney she responded Whether you agree or disagree with the system I did the work 56 Brown s relationship with Harris gained renewed attention in early 2019 after she had become a U S senator and ran for president 57 58 59 Brown addressed the questions by publishing a piece in the San Francisco Chronicle titled Sure I dated Kamala Harris So what He wrote that he may have influenced her career by appointing her to boards and supporting her run for District Attorney but added that he had also influenced the careers of other politicians Brown noted that the difference between Harris and other politicians he had helped was that Harris is the only one who after I helped her sent word that I would be indicted if I so much as jaywalked while she was D A That s politics for ya 60 After mayorship edit nbsp Brown speaking in 2016After leaving the mayor s office Brown considered running for the State Senate but ultimately declined 61 From January through September 2006 he hosted a morning radio show with comedian Will Durst on a local San Francisco Air America Radio affiliate He also does a weekly podcast Brown established The Willie L Brown Jr Institute on Politics amp Public Service an unaffiliated nonprofit organization at San Francisco State University 17 It trains students for careers in municipal county and regional governments The center will be one of the first to focus on local government in the country Brown gave its library a collection of his artifacts videotapes and legislative papers from his 40 years in public office He is also planning to mentor students teach a course on leadership and recruit guest speakers 17 On February 5 2008 Simon amp Schuster released Brown s hardcover autobiography Basic Brown My Life and Our Times with collaborator P J Corkery The book release coincided with California s Democratic presidential primary on the same day On July 20 2008 Brown began writing a column for the San Francisco Chronicle a move that drew the ire of some Chronicle staff members and ethicists for the failure to disclose multiple conflicts of interest 62 In 2009 Brown was defending general construction contractor Monica Ung of Alamo California Accused of flouting labor laws and defrauding immigrant construction workers of their wages from laboring on Oakland municipal construction projects Ung was arraigned on dozens of felony fraud charges on August 24 2009 in Alameda County Superior Court Brown s decision to defend Ung angered many in the East Bay s labor community 63 In September 2013 the western span of the Bay Bridge was officially named for Brown 64 In early 2015 he was named to the board of directors of the San Francisco based biopharmaceutical company Global Blood Therapeutics 65 Brown has often been associated with former California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger who served for seven years after the end of Brown s mayoralty 66 67 In retirement Brown continued to participate in fundraising for and advising other politicians 68 Transportation company edit In late 2012 Brown became the regulatory lawyer for Wingz a ride sharing service 69 70 In that capacity he represented the company before the California Public Utilities Commission which was creating new regulations to legalize the ability of transportation network companies to operate ridesharing services in California 69 70 71 In the media editAs mayor Brown was often portrayed mockingly but affectionately by political cartoonists and columnists as a vain emperor presiding in a robe and crown over the kingdom of San Francisco 72 He enjoyed the attention this brought to his personal life disarming friends and critics with humor that directed attention away from the policy agendas he was pursuing 73 Brown s flamboyant style made him so well known as the consummate politician that when an actor playing a party politician in 1990 s The Godfather Part III did not understand director Francis Ford Coppola s instruction to model his character after Brown Coppola fired the actor and hired Brown himself to play the role Brown later appeared in 2000 s Just One Night as a judge He also played himself in two Disney films George of the Jungle and The Princess Diaries and in the 2003 film Hulk as the mayor of San Francisco He appeared as himself alongside Geraldo Rivera in an episode of Nash Bridges He also made a cameo appearance in the 1984 Jefferson Starship music video Layin It on the Line depicting a futuristic 1988 presidential campaign citation needed Brown was criticized in 1996 for his comments that 49ers backup quarterback Elvis Grbac was an embarrassment to humankind He was criticized in 1997 for responding to Golden State Warriors player Latrell Sprewell choking his coach P J Carlesimo by saying his boss may have needed choking 22 In 1998 Brown contacted the Japanese television cooking competition Iron Chef suggesting San Franciscan Chef Ron Siegel to battle one of the Iron Chefs Brown appeared on the telecast himself enthusiastically promoting the Chef citation needed Brown remained neutral in the 2008 presidential campaign He has worked as a radio talk show host and a pundit on local and national political television shows and is seen as attempting to build credibility by abstaining from endorsing candidates for office I ve never been high on endorsements Brown said When you get one all it does is keep the other guy from getting one Really what did getting John Kerry s endorsement do to help Barack Obama 74 Personal life edit nbsp Brown sporting one of his many hats Family and relationships edit In September 1958 Brown married Blanche Vitero with whom he had three children He has four grandchildren and a step granddaughter According to a 1984 New York Times article Brown and Vitero separated amicably in 1982 75 James Richardson a reporter for The Sacramento Bee said of Brown The measure of his flamboyance is he ll go to a party with his wife on one arm and his girlfriend on the other 76 Brown also has a daughter Sydney Brown with philanthropic fundraiser Carolyn Carpeneti 52 From 1994 to 1995 77 Brown dated Kamala Harris who worked as an Alameda County Deputy District Attorney at the time and was 30 years his junior Their relationship gained renewed attention in early 2019 after she had become a U S senator and ran for president 57 58 59 Retinitis pigmentosa edit While serving as Assembly Speaker Brown was diagnosed with retinitis pigmentosa RP a disease that has no cure and would slowly destroy his eyesight RP is a hereditary disease that causes a continual loss of peripheral vision and often leads to total blindness Brown s two sisters were also diagnosed with RP Brown remarked Having RP is a challenge As Speaker of the Assembly it was very important that I recognize people in the halls of the legislature But I couldn t see people unless they were right in front of me I needed to have the security people give me notes to tell me who was in the room Reading is also very difficult so I use larger print notes and memos Living with RP means having to use more of your brain function I listen more intently I memorize vast amounts of information and I have trained my computer to recognize numerous verbal commands 78 Aesthetic style edit nbsp Mayor Willie Brown at an event in the San Francisco City Hall rotunda in the 1990s Brown has demonstrated a sense of flair in his personal style from early on which contributed to a visibility he later parlayed into political advantage Even in high school he was fastidious about his appearance 79 In office he became famous for British and Italian suits sports cars nightclubbing and a collection of dressy hats 80 He was once called The Best Dressed Man in San Francisco by Esquire magazine 81 In his 2008 autobiography Basic Brown he described his taste for 6 000 Brioni suits and his search for the perfect chocolate Corvette In one chapter The Power of Clothes Don t Pull a Dukakis Brown writes that men should have a navy blazer for each season one with a hint of green for springtime another with more autumnal threading for the fall 82 He adds You really shouldn t try to get through a public day wearing just one thing Sometimes I change clothes four times a day 83 Recognition edit1990 Adam Clayton Powell Award of the Congressional Black Caucus 84 1996 Brown received the Golden Plate Award of the American Academy of Achievement 85 2014 Legacy Award of the National Newspaper Publishers Association 86 2018 Lifetime Achievement Award Greater Los Angeles African American Chamber of Commerce 87 2018 NAACP s Spingarn Medal in 2018 88 Filmography editThe Godfather Part III 1990 George of the Jungle 1997 as himself Mayor of San Francisco Just One Night 2000 The Princess Diaries 2001 as himself Mayor of San Francisco Hulk 2003 Pig Hunt 2008 America Is Still the Place 2015 I m Charlie Walker 2021 References edit a b c B Drummond Ayres Jr December 12 1995 After Rave Reviews San Francisco Mayoral Race Is Ending Run The New York Times Retrieved February 20 2008 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Gordon Rachel January 4 2004 The Mayor s Legacy Willie Brown Da Mayor soared during tenure that rivals city s most notable but some critical goals not met San Francisco Chronicle Retrieved February 23 2008 Gold Bryan M February 28 1999 Tremendous Vision Government Technology Retrieved March 17 2018 In the 1930s the tensions were undoubtedly less than they would have been than if anyone had attempted to enforce integration a b c d e f g h i j k Clarence Johnson October 24 1995 It s Brown vs Brown Ex speaker s reputation helps hinders him San Francisco Chronicle Retrieved February 23 2008 a b c Gregory Lewis October 1997 Running the Show Mayor Willie Brown s Life Of Public Service Black Collegian Retrieved June 12 2007 a b c James Richardson Winter 1996 1997 The Higher Education of Mayor Willie Brown The Journal of Blacks in Higher Education 14 106 109 doi 10 2307 2962848 JSTOR 2962848 SFSU Public Affairs Press Release May 28 2001 San Francisco Mayor Willie Brown challenges SFSU Class of 2001 accessed July 4 2007 a b Reilly Janet April 4 2020 The Interview Willie Brown Uncensored Nob Hill Gazette San Francisco CA Brown Willie April 26 2015 A Properly Predicted Clinton Conflict San Francisco Chronicle San Francisco CA via PressReader Past Members Legislative Black Caucus a b Willie Brown Encyclopaedia Britannica Archived from the original on June 21 2006 Retrieved February 19 2008 E Gregory Lewis Running the Show Mayor Willie Brown s Life Of Public Service The Black Collegian Magazine IMDiversity Inc Retrieved March 1 2008 Daniel Weintraub July 1 1995 Keeping the grip on power State Legislatures Retrieved July 5 2007 a b Evelyn Nieves December 1 1998 San Franciscans Tire of the Life of the Party The New York Times Retrieved February 25 2008 Gregory Lewis October 1997 Running the show Mayor Willie Brown s life of public service The Black Collegian Retrieved July 5 2007 a b c Rachel Gordon November 8 2007 San Francisco Willie Brown comes home to roost at S F State Ex mayor sets up leadership center at alma mater San Francisco Chronicle Retrieved February 25 2008 Anthony York June 23 1999 Is black politics dead in California Salon Retrieved April 10 2007 a b c Katherine Bishop January 24 1991 Political Giants Deflated in California The New York Times Retrieved February 20 2008 State Legislative Term Limits U S Term Limits Retrieved April 10 2007 California s G O P Finally Elects an Assembly Speaker It Can Call Its Own The New York Times January 7 1996 Retrieved February 22 2008 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Edward Epstein September 14 1999 The Many Faces Of Willie Brown Grand approach wins fans foes San Francisco Chronicle Retrieved February 23 2008 a b B Drummond Ayres Jr June 4 1995 It s Official Willie Brown Runs for Mayor The New York Times Retrieved February 25 2008 Tim Reiterman 1982 Raven The Untold Story of The Rev Jim Jones and His People ISBN 0525241361 p 308 Nancy Dooley amp Tim Reiterman Jim Jones Power Broker San Francisco Examiner August 7 1977 Layton Deborah Seductive Poison Anchor 1999 ISBN 0385489846 p 105 Michael J Ybarra January 9 1996 San Francisco Journal A Time To Rejoice In Mantle Of Power The New York Times Retrieved February 22 2008 a b Evelyn Nieves November 13 1998 Homelessness Tests San Francisco s Ideals The New York Times Retrieved February 22 2008 Evelyn Nieves December 16 1999 San Francisco Mayor Easily Wins Another Term The New York Times Retrieved February 22 2008 Curiel Jonathan September 6 2002 Nasty race for mayor is film winner San Francisco Chronicle Retrieved January 3 2010 a b c d Phillip Matier Andrew Ross September 12 2001 Willie Brown got low key early warning about air travel San Francisco Chronicle Retrieved February 25 2008 Carey Goldberg May 20 1996 Homeless in San Francisco A New Policy The New York Times Retrieved February 22 2008 Four California Mayors Ask Clinton to Stop Marijuana Club Suit The New York Times March 22 1998 Retrieved February 22 2008 Peer Pressure Bus Patrol Is Called Successful in San Francisco The New York Times February 15 1998 Retrieved February 22 2008 Edward Epstein October 26 1998 Mayors Get on the Train Leaders promote ballot measures in 4 cities for Bay Bridge rail line San Francisco Chronicle Retrieved November 13 2008 Martin Glen July 26 1997 Cycling Event at Critical Point Commuters vent mayor gets tough riders dismayed San Francisco Chronicle Leslie Goldberg March 23 1997 Bikers press for their right of way San Francisco Examiner David Colker September 7 1997 In LA Movement Lacks Critical Element Bike Commuters Los Angeles Times Molly O Donnell December 1 2004 Critical Mass Social Change on Two Wheels Wiretap AlterNet Retrieved February 19 2008 McCormick Erin Finnie Chuck Gordon Rachel July 29 1997 Cops say group bike ride needs permit Police distribute new policy with mayor s blessing supes look at plan to license cyclists San Francisco Chronicle MacNeil Lehrer News Hour Transcript MacNeil Lehrer News Hour PBS August 29 1997 Edward Epstein August 28 1997 Bike Fiasco Points Up S F Mayor s Transit Errors Brown has had trouble taming city s road rage San Francisco Chronicle Jim Herron Zamora Chuck Finnie Emily Gurnon July 27 1997 Brown Take bikes of busted cyclists San Francisco Chronicle Steve Lopez August 11 1997 The Scariest Biker Gang Of Them All Time Archived from the original on June 3 2008 Chuck Finnie July 23 1997 Cycling protesters make deal with City Critical Mass to temper havoc in exchange for talks San Francisco Examiner Retrieved April 10 2007 Glen Martin Henry K Lee Torri Minton Manny Fernandez July 26 1997 S F Bike Chaos 250 Arrests 5 000 bikers snarl commute San Francisco Chronicle Critical Mass protestors celebrate 10th year CNN The Associated Press September 27 2002 Evelyn Nieves January 8 2004 Brown Leaves Office No Longer Prince of the City The Washington Post Archived from the original on November 17 2018 John King March 4 2008 Basic Brown reveals a brazen mayor San Francisco Chronicle Tim Golden November 24 1996 His Humble Pie Is Full of Chutzpah The New York Times Retrieved February 22 2008 Lance Williams Chuck Finnie April 30 2001 Mayor s patronage army Brown fattens payroll with loyalists colleagues friends San Francisco Chronicle Retrieved April 10 2007 a b Lance Williams Patrick Hoge July 13 2007 Love and Money Mayor s fund raiser got millions San Francisco Chronicle Retrieved April 10 2007 Phillip Matier Andrew Ross January 19 2001 Da Mayor 66 Says He ll Be a Dad Again San Francisco Chronicle Retrieved July 5 2007 Lance Williams Chuck Finnie April 30 2001 Mayor s patronage army Brown fattens payroll with loyalists colleagues friends San Francisco Chronicle Retrieved February 25 2008 Lance Williams Chuck Finnie May 3 2001 Brown s City Hall is politics as usual despite election New board has little effect so far San Francisco Chronicle Retrieved February 25 2008 Byrne Peter September 24 2003 Kamala s Karma San Francisco Chronicle Archived from the original on February 13 2020 Retrieved September 24 2003 a b Tumulty Karen October 7 2020 How sexist racist attacks on Kamala Harris have spread online a case study The Washington Post Retrieved October 12 2020 a b Lowe Tiana January 23 2019 The San Francisco ghosts in Kamala Harris past The Washington Examiner Retrieved January 23 2019 a b Ramsey Lydia January 26 2019 Former San Francisco mayor Willie Brown responds to scrutiny over his past relationship with Kamala Harris and the role he played in her career Business Insider Retrieved January 27 2019 Brown Willie January 26 2019 Sure I dated Kamala Harris So What San Francisco Chronicle Retrieved January 26 2019 B Drummond Ayres Jr March 10 2002 Political Briefing He Left His Heart In Sacramento The New York Times Retrieved February 25 2008 http articles latimes com 2006 dec 31 opinion op richardson31 San Francisco Weekly July 30 2008 Robert Gammon August 26 2009 Monica s Victims a Chinatown construction magnate may have ripped off taxpayers and workers for as much as 20 million Now she s trying to evict Le Cheval Retrieved September 3 2009 Kwong Jessica February 11 2014 Willie Brown says he s humbled by Bay Bridge naming honor San Francisco Examiner Retrieved February 18 2014 Profile People Genetic Engineering amp Biotechnology News Vol 35 no 4 February 15 2015 p 37 Anthony York December 31 2006 Why Arnold invited Willie Brown Los Angeles Times Retrieved June 12 2007 Julia Cheever June 6 2006 California Governor says build the fence San Francisco Sentinel Archived from the original on August 4 2016 Retrieved May 5 2007 California Democratic Party Lines Up Behind pro Bush anti Labor Schwarzenegger Indybay October 13 2006 Retrieved June 12 2007 a b Geoffrey Fowler October 28 2012 Taxi Apps Face Bumpy Road The Wall Street Journal Retrieved October 28 2012 a b Tomio Geron January 28 2013 Tickengo s Willie Brown Wants Revenue Cap For Ride Sharing Drivers Forbes Retrieved January 28 2013 Benny Evangelista December 4 2012 State PUC to hold hearings on new cab app laws San Francisco Chronicle Retrieved December 4 2012 Phil Frank Farley San Francisco Chronicle Retrieved June 12 2007 Rob Morse October 27 1996 25 ways to suck up to Willie Brown San Francisco Examiner Retrieved June 12 2007 Joe Garofoli January 28 2008 Some state politicians leery of endorsing San Francisco Chronicle Turner Wallace June 16 1984 For a Politician Power and Riches Go Together The New York Times No Mere Mayor People Retrieved August 17 2018 Kamala Harris Dated Willie Brown Decades Ago and Her Critics Claim It Matters Los Angeles Magazine Retrieved October 12 2020 Aubrey Patsika February 9 2004 A Strong Sense of Vision Foundation Fighting Blindness Blue Water Media Retrieved November 12 2008 Richardson James 1997 Willie Brown A Biography Berkeley University of California Press ISBN 0585249857 Richardson James D 1993 Willie Brown The Early Years The AFP Reporter 15 4 Retrieved July 5 2007 The best dressed real men in America Esquire September 1 2006 Matt Bai February 10 2008 Willie s World The New York Times Review of Books Will Haper February 13 2008 Reader Quiz Which Willie Brown Quotes Are Stranger Than Fiction San Francisco Weekly Past Phoenix Award Honorees 1996 2018 https s7 goeshow com cbcf annual 2020 documents CBCF ALC Phoenix Awards Dinner Past Winners pdf Golden Plate Awardees of the American Academy of Achievement American Academy of Achievement Yeldell Kyle July 1 2014 NNPA Presents Willie Brown with Legacy Award Black Press USA GLAAACC Honors Willie L Brown With Lifetime Achievement Award Los Angeles Sentinel March 1 2018 Retrieved May 31 2023 The Honorable Willie L Brown Jr to Receive Prestigious NAACP Spingarn Medal NAACP Bibliography editBrown Jr Willie L Corkery P J 2008 Basic Brown My Life and Our Times 1st ed New York Simon amp Schuster ISBN 978 0743290814 OCLC 892925831 OL 7948919M via Internet Archive Clucas Richard A 1994 The Speaker s Electoral Connection Willie Brown and the California Assembly Berkeley University of California Press ISBN 0877723613 Green Robert Lee 1974 Willie L Brown Jr Daring Black Leader Milwaukee Franklin Publishers OCLC 53358667 Holst Arthur Matthew Brown Willie In African American National Biography vol 2 edited by Henry Louis Gates Jr and Evelyn Brooks Higginbotham Oxford University Press 2008 pp 12 13 Richardson James 1993 Willie Brown The Early Years Washington D C Alicia Patterson Foundation OCLC 28525812 Richardson James 1997 Willie Brown A Biography Berkeley University of California Press ISBN 0585249857 External links edit nbsp San Francisco Bay Area portal nbsp Biography portal nbsp Politics portalDurst Will Brown Willie Will and Willie Politics and talk from the San Francisco Point of View with Willie Brown and Will Durst Podcast Archived from the original on August 8 2020 Retrieved October 20 2020 Willie Brown at IMDb Appearances on C SPAN New York Times Topics Willie L Brown Jr collected news stories Capps Steven A October 14 1996 He wrote the book on Willie Brown San Francisco Chronicle Archived from the original on August 22 2016 Retrieved October 20 2020 Williams Lance Finnie Chuck April 30 2001 Mayor s patronage army Brown fattens payroll with loyalists colleagues friends San Francisco Chronicle Archived from the original on February 1 2020 Retrieved October 20 2020 Stewart Chris January 20 2008 Gamed by the System Wherein Willie Brown details his valiant attempts to conquer homelessness and bring Muni into submission San Francisco Chronicle Archived from the original on August 22 2016 Retrieved October 20 2020 California AssemblyPreceded byEdward M Gaffney Member of the California Assemblyfrom the 18th district1965 1974 Succeeded byLeo T McCarthyPreceded byJohn Miller Member of the California Assemblyfrom the 18th district1974 1992 Succeeded byDean AndalPreceded byBarbara Lee Member of the California Assemblyfrom the 18th district1992 1995 Succeeded byCarole MigdenPolitical officesPreceded byLeo McCarthy Speaker of the California Assembly1980 1995 Succeeded byDoris AllenPreceded byFrank Jordan Mayor of San Francisco1996 2004 Succeeded byGavin Newsom Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Willie Brown politician amp oldid 1217298765, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.