Left Coast City
Progressive Politics in San Francisco, 19751991
Richard Edward DeLeon
256 pages, 5 photographs, 2 maps, 2 figures, 6 x 9
Studies in Government and Public Policy
Paper 978-0-7006-0555-2, $16.95
When Art Agnos campaigned for
mayor of San Francisco in 1987, he articulated and defended the
"left" isms--liberalism, environmentalism, and populism.
He won.
Seeing Agnos as a defender of slowgrowth vs. progrowth, the
city's progressives had high hopes. But to their disappointment,
in the wake of the passage of Proposition M--the most restrictive
growth control legislation of any large U.S. city--Agnos supported
waterfront development and proposals to build a new baseball
stadium in China Basin and a large residential and business development
in Mission Bay. In 1991 Agnos ran for reelection. He lost.
Left Coast City provides insight into how San Francisco's
progressive coalition developed between 1975 and 1991, what stresses
emerged to cause splintering within the coalition, and how the
coalition fell apart in the 1991 mayoral campaign.
Focusing on San Francisco's turbulent political history, non-conformist
traditions, and ethnic and cultural diversity, political scientist
Richard DeLeon analyzes the successes and failures of the progressive
movement as it topples the business-dominated progrowth regime,
imposes stringent controls on growth and development, and achieves
political control of city hall.
Although the movement has achieved national recognition as
a possible vanguard of social and political change in this country,
DeLeon argues that a new progressive regime has not yet emerged
to replace the defunct progrowth regime. Having helped to create
chaos out of order, progressive leaders now face the task of
creating order out of chaos.
"What the city has now is, at best, an antiregime,
a transitional political order set up defensively to block the
Lazarus-like re-emergence of the old progrowth regime,"
DeLeon writes. "Such an order cannot last." The key
to survival of the progressive movement, he contends, is creation
of a progressive urban regime, where public and private entities
function together.
"Power brokers and citizens alike would do well to read
this book."--San Francisco Examiner
"San Francisco has been labeled the capital of the progressive
movement in the U.S., and DeLeon examines this evolution in a
well-written and thoroughly documented account of the city's
transition from a community promoting physical development to
one which now endorses human development."--Choice
"DeLeon has a gift for storytelling. He takes readers
on a fascinating tour of San Francisco's political world, from
the idealistic administration of Mayor George Moscone to the
downtown boom years of Dianne Feinstein's 10-year mayoral tenure,
to the triumph and subsequent downfall of slow-growth candidate
Art Agnos."--San Francisco Daily Journal
"This keen study roughs out the contours and illuminates
the shadows of The City's political terrain between 1975 and
1991 to help solve the how-did-we-get-here-and-who-got-us-here?
puzzle."--San Francisco Magazine
"An outstanding case study of big city electoral politics
that perceptively analyzes the nuts and bolts of constructing
a progressive governing coalition and illuminates the dynamics
and contradictions of contemporary urban liberalism."--John
Mollenkopf, author of The Contested City and The
Restructuring of New York
"First-rate. It's a winner. DeLeon is a skillful writer.
His work is clear and uncluttered by jargon. At the same time,
he displays a remarkable ability to integrate seemingly diverse
theoretical strands. . . . His analysis of coalition politics
and of the referendum process shows him to be a master of the
regime concept and to be acutely aware of the tensions within
populist alliances. He sees the business community as composed
of diverse sectors, not as a monolith. And he puts the mobility
of capital into perspective, acknowledging its importance but
showing its limits as well-particularly in an advantaged location
of the kind San Francisco enjoys. This is a very sophisticated
work."--Clarence Stone, author of Regime Politics:
Governing Atlanta, 19461988
"DeLeon treats the process of regime formation as an
open and contingent historical process--as it should be treated.
He writes in a clear and lucid style. This book is a significant
contribution to the literature on urban politics. Its audience
will extend well beyond political scientists, encompassing urban
sociologists, historians, geographers, political economists,
and planners."--Michael Peter Smith, author of City,
State, and Market: The Political Economy of Urban Society
RICHARD DeLEON is founder and director of San Francisco
State University's Public Research Institute.
|