June 11, 2006
COMMENTARY: Jerry Brown Reinventing Himself Once More at 68
By Jim Boren
Fresno Bee
If you think Madonna was the only celebrity in Fresno, Calif., last week
whose career has been based on a reinvented persona, you weren't paying
attention. The day after the Material Girl left town, Jerry Brown showed up
at the police union headquarters and slipped into his latest reincarnation:
Super Crime Fighter.
The new role has been so successful that he was endorsed for attorney
general by the Fresno Police Officers Association -- in the hometown of
Republican opponent Chuck Poochigian.
I was stunned when I read about the endorsement. When Brown was governor,
California cops used to hate him for his lefty positions on crime that
included appointing death penalty opponent Rose Bird to the state Supreme
Court.
So now begins the latest saga of a two-term governor who once dated Linda
Ronstadt and earned the label of Governor Moonbeam after suggesting that
California have its own space program.
Because Brown has darted in so many directions, it might be helpful to
review the public record. Let's fast forward from the Jesuit seminary days
to 1982 when he attempted to jump from the governorship to the U.S. Senate.
He lost to Republican Pete Wilson, and it was clear that California voters
had tired of the Jerry Brown act.
During a self-imposed political exile, Brown traveled the world, and
subsequently ended up in Calcutta, India, and worked with Mother Teresa. Did
that suggest to him there was a higher calling than politics? Not exactly.
That experience apparently was so head-clearing that he decided to run for
president. He's done that three times. After another unsuccessful
presidential run, you'd think he'd be through with politics.
Wrong. Brown decided to go off to Oakland and become mayor of a city that
needed a lot of help. Now he'd be closer to the people, so would serving at
the local level finally quench Brown's political thirst? Again, you haven't
been paying attention. After being diagnosed with PADD (political attention
deficit disorder), Brown decided to raise his political profile by running
for statewide office again.
So at age 68, Brown wants to be California's attorney general. It may not
make sense to the rest of us, but it apparently makes sense to him. And if
Brown gets elected in November, you can bet that he'll run for president
again. He can't help himself.
On Tuesday, Brown won the Democratic nomination for attorney general by
easily defeating Los Angeles City Attorney Rocky Delgadillo. Poochigian,
Fresno's favorite son, was unopposed for the Republican nomination.
Brown quickly showed that he's not going to take the campaign for granted
and the day after the election began blitzing the state. One of the stops
was Fresno where he picked up the backing of the 1,100-member police union.
That was an endorsement that most Fresno folks thought would go to
Poochigian, not only for parochial reasons but also because he has a stellar
crime record in the Legislature.
In the political gamesmanship category, the FPOA endorsement was an
in-your-face move by Brown. But this was more about Brown being a union
supporter than being a crime fighter.
Now contrast the ex-governor, who the paparazzi used to chase around, with
Poochigian, who isn't known much outside the San Joaquin Valley. He's
squeaky clean, a hard worker and knows the nuts and bolts of public policy.
But Poochigian doesn't exactly ooze charisma. So how does he compete?
Poochigian plans to use Brown's celebrity against him, dragging out all the
oddball things that he's done over the past three decades. That could work.
On election night, Poochigian issued a statement that framed his campaign
theme:
"The choice will be between my years of proven, steadfast and focused
leadership on criminal justice and family safety concerns versus my
opponent's pattern of unpredictable and erratic approaches to serious public
policy issues."
Running unopposed in the primary election gave Poochigian the opportunity to
snipe at Brown. His campaign sent out a steady stream of attacks on Brown
and problems that have surfaced in Oakland. But that was merely a warm-up
act for the general election.
Now it's time to get serious.
Over the next five months Poochigian will campaign against a one-time
seminary student, ex-governor, ex-presidential candidate, ex-Senate
candidate, mayor and disciple of Mother Teresa. Of course, the resume may
have changed since we last checked. Let's just say he's running against the
same old Jerry Brown.
Distributed by Scripps-McClatchy Western Service, http://www.shns.com.