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5 Takeaways From KQED and San Francisco Chronicle’s Mayoral Debate | KQED

Autor: Sydney Johnson

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San Francisco mayoral candidates (from left) Ahsha Safaí, Daniel Lurie, Mayor London Breed, former mayor Mark Farrell and Aaron Peskin participate in a debate at KQED in San Francisco, California, on Thursday, Sept. 19, 2024, moderated by KQED politics reporters Scott Shafer and Marisa Lagos and San Francisco Chronicle reporter Joe Garofoli. (Beth LaBerge/KQED)

Breed fends off attacks from left and right

The candidates wasted no time launching critiques at Breed, who missed two recent debates. The incumbent mayor was largely on the defensive over her record on housing, homelessness, public safety and recent ethics scandals under her watch in City Hall.

San Francisco mayoral candidate Daniel Lurie listens to fellow candidates during a debate at KQED in San Francisco on Thursday, Sept. 19, 2024. (Beth LaBerge/KQED)

But Breed appeared relaxed — and, at some points, annoyed — standing center stage and swinging back at her opponents, including swipes at Farrell for crime rates during his stint as interim mayor and Lurie’s lack of government experience. Meanwhile, she painted a picture of San Francisco that’s back and better than ever.

“This past summer has been one of the best summers in our city, and especially downtown, with night markets and open space and raves and events and activation and fun,” she said.

Peskin carves out lane as a pro-tenant progressive

Fielding questions about concerns over his past behavior and his own recovery after entering alcohol treatment, Peskin appeared calm and made the case for his plans for the city moving forward while opponents largely launched attacks on one another.

San Francisco Board of Supervisors president Aaron Peskin speaks during a mayoral debate at KQED in San Francisco on Thursday, Sept. 19, 2024. (Beth LaBerge/KQED)

Peskin, the only progressive in the race, stressed that he wanted to make San Francisco more affordable and livable for everyday residents, not just “billionaires,” like he accused some of his opponents of doing.

He has taken hits from other candidates and housing advocates for opposing developments in places like Telegraph Hill and North Beach. On Thursday night, he said he wants to expand rent control across the city and supports building affordable housing — but will seek to preserve neighborhood integrity and will not hand out blank checks to developers.

“We need to reject the narrative of the real estate speculators and developers,” he said.

Safaí says students and studios will save downtown

In a Q&A with reporters after the debate, Safaí shared his plans for the city’s downtown recovery that didn’t make it to the debate stage.

San Francisco mayoral candidate Ahsha Safaí speaks during a mayoral debate at KQED in San Francisco on Thursday, Sept. 19, 2024. (Beth LaBerge/KQED)

Among his ideas to reenergize the city’s economic hub? Bringing TV and film production back to San Francisco, as well as another university.

“We need to invite Hollywood back to the city,” he said. “You can’t buy that kind of advertisement. It’s the thing that drove SF to being a tourist destination.”

Farrell doubles down on Breed’s failures but flounders on personal record

Farrell said the city has had its steepest decline under Breed’s leadership, calling out residents’ concerns over crime and a sluggish economic recovery.

Former San Francisco mayor Mark Farrell speaks during a mayoral debate at KQED in San Francisco on Sept. 19, 2024. (Beth LaBerge/KQED)

There was certainly irony in the room when the former supervisor said crime and safety is “the reason why conventions left San Francisco” while the city was simultaneously hosting one of its largest tech conferences, Dreamforce, just across town.

Farrell also received a few groans from KQED’s live studio audience when asked what he has had to sacrifice in his relatively privileged life. He spoke of his immigrant parents’ modest upbringing — and said he has had to take out student loans.

Lurie takes swings at City Hall

Lurie, who recently launched campaign ads criticizing his opponents, took an onslaught of direct attacks from Breed as well as Peskin. He managed to slip in some of his ideas, like bringing in a new downtown police station near Moscone Center and touted his work building an affordable housing project through his nonprofit — which he said was built faster and cheaper than the average city project.

San Francisco mayoral candidate Daniel Lurie speaks during a debate at KQED in San Francisco on Thursday, Sept. 19, 2024. (Beth LaBerge/KQED)

Ultimately, the Tipping Point founder came back repeatedly to his Day One message: City Hall insiders created the mess, and it will take an outsider to fix things.

“The definition of insanity is electing the same people over and over again and expecting a different result,” Lurie said. “They’ve built up this corrupt system, then they exploit it. Then they have the audacity, like they did tonight, to tell you they’re the only ones that can fix it. I have a proven track record of getting big things done.”

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