Jerry Brown(II)
- Actor
Although Jerry Brown comes from a political family, he has an unusual
background for a politician, even in California, and is considered an
oddity in some corners. The son of longtime California public figures
Pat Brown, he originally didn't plan to be a public official. After
attending public schools, he planned on entering the priesthood, and
became a Jesuit in 1958, the year his father was elected Governor by a
record-breaking margin. However, this life didn't suit him and he left
the order in 1960 to become a lawyer, which he did after graduating
from Yale Law School in 1964. He worked for some prestigious law firms
during the 1960s. His family suffered a setback when his father was
soundly defeated for reelection in 1966 by retired actor/businessman
Ronald Reagan. In 1970, he was entered public life when he ran successfully
for Secretary of State. In that office, he was highly critical of
then-President Richard Nixon. He was also a stickler for following state
election law regulations, which annoyed many in his own party as well
as Republicans. He had planned on challenging Reagan in 1974 to avenge
his father's defeat, but Reagan didn't seek reelection that year, so
that he could lay the groundwork for a Presidential bid in 1976. Brown
was the Democratic Party's nominee for Governor that year and was
expected to win by a landslide. However, his Republican opponent,
then-state Controller Houston Flourney, turned out to be a stronger for
than expected, and on election day, Brown just barely won in the
state's closest Governor's race in decades. As Governor, Brown was
controversial. He helped form the state Agricultural Labor Relations
Board, and staffed it with liberals who were charged with being biased
against farmers and landowners and being in the pocket of labor
activist Cesar Chavez, who was unpopular in rural California at the time. He
also stirred up controversy when he appointed his personal friend and
aide, Rose Bird, as Chief Justice of the state Supreme Court, even
though she had never been a judge before. He also won the attention of
the tabloids by dating popular singer Linda Ronstadt. In 1976, he wasn't
helped when a ballot initiative he supported, allowing farm workers to
organize on farmers' land, lost by a landslide and contributed to
Jimmy Carter narrowly losing the state to Gerald Ford in the Presidential
election that year. It was uncertain whether Brown would win reelection
in 1978, and he was opposed by state Attorney General Evelle Younger, a
former Los Angeles County District Attorney who had overseen the murder
conviction of Charles Manson by Deputy District Attorney Vincent Bugliosi in 1969.
However, Younger took an extended vacation to Hawaii during the summer,
and Brown took advantage of Younger's absence to take control of the
campaign and move into a wide lead. On election day, Brown won by 1.3
million votes, breaking the record his father set in 1958. However, his
victory was tempered by the fact that his Lieutenant Governor was
unseated by entertainment executive Mike Curb, a fierce critic, and that
his protégé Rose Bird was nearly removed from the Court amid ethics
charges. Things went downhill for him, and in 1980, his longtime
adversary, Ronald Reagan, was elected President by a decisive margin. In
1982, Brown ran for the U.S. Senate, but had become widely unpopular by
then. In spite of an inept campaign by his opponent, San Diego Mayor
Pete Wilson, he was defeated in an otherwise good year for his party.
Afterwards, he left the country for a while, lecturing in several Asian
nations. In 1986, he received more bad news when three state Supreme
Court Justices he had appointed, including Rose Bird, were removed from
the Court by landslide margins. He returned to California in 1989 and
became state Democratic Chairman, but kept a low profile. In 1992,
disturbed by the growing influence of big money in politics, he
launched an improbable campaign for President. He had little
establishment support even in his home state, but campaigned with
vigor. In spite of limited financial resources, he won primaries in
Maine, Colorado, Vermont, Connecticut, Utah and Nevada. He was the
first to attack Arkansas Governor Bill Clinton on possible
conflict-of-interest in a questionable land deal that became known as
The Whitewater Scandal, which would haunt Clinton throughout his whole
Presidency. Clinton won both the nomination and general election. He
wasn't offered a job in the Clinton administration, which suited him as
he regarded both Bill Clinton and his controversial wife Hillary Clinton as shady
and opportunistic. After practicing law, he returned to elective office
when, against expectations, he ran for Mayor of Oakland, a moribund
city in the eastern San Francisco Bay Area, as a reformer and won by a
landslide. In office, he pushed priorities that differed from those he
had earlier in his career: vigorously fighting crime, bringing business
downtown, and encouraging charter schools, which alienated some
liberals. He achieved success in all of those endeavors and was
reelected in 2002 by an even larger margin. In 2006, he made his most
improbable comeback to date. He ran for state Attorney General, even
though he had been skeptical of law enforcement and friendly to trial
lawyers during most of his career and had appointed judges widely
condemned as overly lenient on criminal defendants. In spite of that,
he won his party's nomination easily and defeated a credible opponent
in the general election by a wide margin. He will assume office in
January of 2007.