CA-Gov 2010: Gavin Newsom sides with PG&E Against Clean Energy Act

I have little doubt that Senator Hillary Clinton would be the Democratic Nominee had it not been for her caving to right wing talking points and voting for the Iraq War. Being on the wrong side the the biggest foreign policy disaster in a generation is what advanced her career from inevitable nominee to junior senator. At the time, many of us in the netroots were flabbergasted, we knew it was a disastrous course of action and came to the conclusion that those who sided with George Bush and the neocons either had no grasp of the situation or were doing it for as a purely political calculation (and a poor one at that as Clinton discovered).

Iraq was the single biggest foreign policy decision, but when it comes to the global climate crisis, I'm getting a sense of déjà vu from the positioning and language used by San Francisco Mayor and 2010 California Gubernatorial hopeful Gavin Newsom as to why he's siding with PG&E against the Sierra Club on clean, renewable energy.

As was reported this morning on Clean Energy Act getting seven of eleven votes on the San Francisco Board of Supervisors and thus qualifying for the 2008 fall ballot:

San Francisco supervisors Tuesday approved the submission of a November ballot measure calling on the city to produce more than half of its energy through renewable sources within a decade, and also explore a move toward city control of its power.

The San Francisco Clean Energy Act calls for the city to fulfill 51 percent of its energy needs through renewable energy by 2017, rising to 75 percent by 2030, and 100 percent "or the greatest amount technologically feasible or practicable" by 2040.

The Charter Amendment says San Francisco wants clean, renewable energy and we need to set our sights on it and figure out how to make it happen. Sounds like something a Democrat facing a Democratic Primary would want to support, especially in light of Al Gore's bold call to action to act even more aggressively.

Right Wing Talking Points Emerge

Democrats step up to fight against global climate change and you'll be shocked to know that the polluters fought back using right-wing talking points:

A host of big-name politicos, including several supervisors, Assemblyman Mark Leno and former Public Utilities Commission manager Susan Leal, gathered on the steps of City Hall Tuesday to support the act.

"This is our time," Supervisor Tom Ammiano said. "We're going to win, and we'll keep the lights on for you."

Opponents, including Pacific Gas and Electric Co., say voters would see their utility rates spike if the city turns to public power. In mailers sent to voters last week, PG&E also says city government can't even fill potholes and shouldn't be granted another responsibility.

Look at the language in the mail. It didn't defend PG&E, it attacked the very concept that government can deliver services. To defend PG&E's monopoly profits, they are going after the very fundamentals of government. So did Mayor Gavin Newsom defend his city's government, of buy into the right-wing talking points:

"Let's call it what it is, it's a public power initiative to take over PG&E ... who are by any objective standards doing more than any other utility in the United States of America [to reduce greenhouse emissions]," Newsom said.

A campaign to defeat the initiative has already been formed through Newsom advisor Eric Jaye's political consultant group.

There is so much, so wrong with that that I think it needs a list:

  • It is not a takeover of PG&E, it is a push for 100% clean, renewable energy.

  • If he's right that PG&E is the best vehicle to move beyond fossil fuels, they will be the vehicle. However, when on the same day PG&E announces a $850-million carbon-based plant a few miles from San Francisco it might look ridiculous

  • The right-wing talking points in the misleading mail cited above against San Francisco government being able to get anything done is being sent by the Mayor's own chief consultant?

Why is Gavin Newsom trying to make Al Gore cry?



Display:


Wow. (none / 0)

What an ass.  I hope my neighbors across the Bay punk him for this.  He ain't gonna get my vote in the primary, that's for sure.

If only Gonzales had been elected...


by NewOaklandDem on Wed Jul 23, 2008 at 02:19:42 PM EST

Re: CA-Gov 2010: Gavin Newsom sides with (none / 0)

My, admittedly unsourced, speculation: Bob supports/is working for Ace Smith/Mayor Villaraigosa for GOV 2010?

Let's rank the CA GOV 2010 Democratic Primary contenders shall we?


  1. Oakland Mayor Jerry Brown -- Old reliable. 40 years of statewide office-holding, name recognition, and solid liberal credentialing goes a long way. If the electorate fractures significantly among three or more candidates, he'll probably win comfortably. If it becomes a mano-a-mano showdown (especially with Villaraigosa or Newsom), he could be in trouble.
  2. Gavin Newsom -- the Mayor from central casting. Has a statewide media profile and political following because of his laudable activism on behalf of gay marriage. Has the potential to be very well financed. Is genuinely charismatic and unashamed to speak passionately to liberal ideals. Although seen as a generally successful mayor could be tripped up during a campaign by his somewhat sleazy personal life and sometimes overly friendly relationship with the SF business community.
  3. Lieutenant Governor John Garamendi -- has strong statewide name recognition and fundraising potential given his nearly 40 years of office holding. Has very strong environmentalist credentials and possibly separate himself from the field in that way.
  4. Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa -- if the contest could be settled on hand-shaking, back-slapping, and stump speeches alone, Villaraigosa would win going away. Villaraigosa is full of charisma and passion, and as perhaps the most prominent Latino politician in California has the ability to transform his candidacy into "movement" which could galvanize a Latino electorate expected to constitute a near-plurality of Democratic Primary voters. He's further helped by strong fundraising potential and the potential to dominate, across demographics, the vote across the SoCal media markets. Is likely to have perhaps the best campaign manager in CA politics working for him ("Ace Smith"). Will be hurt by relative lack of name recognition outside of L.A., mixed mayoral record, and fears about his statewide electability.
  5. Steve Westly -- runner-up in the 2006 CA Democratic Gubernatorial Primary. He is helped by his Silicon Valley credentials and self-funding potential. May be helped by residual loyalty from Barack Obama and supporters ( Westly served as a campaign co-chair for Obama when virtually every other major CA Democrat supported Clinton). Is hurt by the fact that he was effectively defined in the media's eyes by 2006 Gubernatorial nominee Phil Angelides as a centrist, and the fact that most CA Democratic rank-and-file have zero idea who he is.

Obviously, I'm not from CA, and not on the ground there, so if you are and have special (or not-so-special) expertise, feel free to enlighten me to my analytical errors.


by blueflorida on Wed Jul 23, 2008 at 03:34:10 PM EST

Re: CA-Gov 2010: Gavin Newsom sides with (2.00 / 1)

Jerry Brown  -- is the California Attorney General (formerly the mayor of Oakland). He's our also our former "Governor Moonbeam" and did a good job for us in the 70s. He 69 years old and hasn't really said that he wants to run for governor.

Villiaraigosa -- destroyed his marriage last year with a well publicized affair with a news reporter. I think he's DOA.

Westly -- we know who he is. He spent the last gubenatorial campaign battling Angelides in the primary which resulted in another victory for Arnie. Not sure if he's damaged goods as a result.

I think Garamendi has the best shot. Lieutenant Governor, former Insurance Commissioner, former Deputy Secretary of the Interior. He's got credibility as an environmentalist, and for repeatedly battling insurance companies when he was commissioner.


by LakersFan on Wed Jul 23, 2008 at 04:25:50 PM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: CA-Gov 2010: Gavin Newsom sides with (none / 0)

I've never even met Ace Smith and don't have a horse but have worked for Newsom and thinks he's not living up to his potential. And I've written a great deal about how much Westly sucks.


- John McCain
by Bob Brigham on Wed Jul 23, 2008 at 10:38:36 PM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: CA-Gov 2010: Gavin Newsom sides w PG&E (none / 0)

I don't think Newsom has a chance regardless of his position on this issue. But what a dumb move!


by LakersFan on Wed Jul 23, 2008 at 04:01:45 PM EST


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