SAN FRANCISCO >> Levi Strauss heir Daniel Lurie, who has never held public office, promised on Friday that as San Francisco’s mayor he will do what seasoned politicians before him have not — clean up city streets and bring an end to its open-air drug markets.
“Your voices and your call for accountable leadership, service and change have been heard,” Lurie said at a park in San Francisco’s Chinatown, delivering his first public remarks since Mayor London Breed called him to concede the race the previous day.
Lurie said he chose Chinatown for Friday’s event to underscore how important the area’s health is to turning San Francisco around. He walked the neighborhood the day after Tuesday’s election and visited again Friday. Chinese voters are also critical to winning citywide in San Francisco.
The Associated Press has not declared a winner in Tuesday’s election because tens of thousands of ballots have not yet been counted and added to the ranked-choice voting calculations. San Francisco uses a system that allows voters to list up to 10 candidates in order of preference.
But on Friday, Lurie held a commanding lead in early election results, and Breed called Lurie on Thursday to congratulate him. She said in a statement that she and her staff will work to ensure a smooth transition when he takes over as mayor of a city. “I know we are both committed to improving this City we love,” Breed wrote.
Lurie’s ascent was remarkable for a candidate with little name recognition who appears to have bested two San Francisco supervisors and a former interim mayor. His deep pockets helped. Lurie spent nearly $9 million of his own money on his first-time campaign for mayor and raised more than $16 million, including $1 million from his mother Mimi Haas. Lurie is the stepson of the late Peter Haas, a great-grandnephew of Levi Strauss and longtime CEO of the iconic San Francisco-based clothing company.
Breed’s victory six years ago as the city’s first Black female mayor — who grew up impoverished in public housing — showed that no dream was impossible in the progressive, compassionate and equitable city. But the honeymoon was short-lived as the COVID-19 pandemic shuttered stores and tech workers retreated to home offices. Tent encampments proliferated, as did public drug use. Streets did become cleaner and homeless tents harder to find this year, but the daytime shooting in September of 49ers rookie Ricky Pearsall in a popular central shopping district reignited a debate over public safety. She faced off with multiple opponents who accused her of doing too little too late.
Voters’ dissatisfaction with how the city is handling crime and safety was also reflected Friday in their successful recall of Alameda County District Attorney Pamela Price, who campaigned on promises to reduce incarceration rates. She struggled to defend herself during a double-digit percentage increase in violent crime countywide in 2023 and has now been voted out along with George Gascón, Los Angeles County’s progressive prosecutor.
On policy, Lurie does not differ much from Breed. Lurie said he wants to build more housing, crack down on drug dealers, get homeless people off the streets and take a compassionate yet firm approach to drug users who refuse help.
But he said that as a political outsider, he would bring a critical eye to bureaucracy, weed out nonprofits and department heads who fail to deliver, and focus on results. As mayor, he would oversee more than 30,000 employees and a $15 billion annual budget.
Lurie plans to beef up the city’s police presence, declare a fentanyl state of emergency, set up 1,500 shelter beds within six months, and drastically streamline the permitting process so small businesses can thrive, he said.
His opponents on the campaign trail trashed Lurie for spending so much money, but his supporters did not seem to mind, nor did they seem bothered by his lack of experience in government. Several people at Friday’s event said they were familiar with the anti-poverty nonprofit he founded in 2005, Tipping Point Community.
“I’m so happy to have Daniel here because, you see, special interests is gone. He doesn’t need the money, it’s all about passion for this city,” said Shirletha Holmes-Boxx, 67, a community organizer.