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Shark fins also may prove an unexpected ingredient in this year's mayoral race, which includes three prominent Asian-American candidates: Yee, Board of Supervisors President David Chiu and Assessor-Recorder Phil Ting. San Francisco is home to the largest percentage of Asian Americans of any county in the continental U.S. Political observers expect voter turnout from that community to be high in November, following the momentum generated earlier this year by the appointment of Edwin Lee as interim mayor
-- the city's first Asian-American leader. Chiu and Ting appeared at a news conference Friday organized by WildAid and expressed their support for a shark fin ban. Afterward, Ting said the legislation presented an "important opportunity to talk about the importance of sustainability," but that he didn't think it was among Asian-American voters' top concerns. "The economy, jobs, the city budget -- Chinese-American voters are focused on those issues," he said. A poll released Friday by the Monterey Bay Aquarium indicated strong support of a fin ban among Californians. More than three-quarters of the 600 registered voters surveyed said they support the bill. Of the 218 respondents who were Chinese-American, 70 percent said they support it. "There's an attempt to portray this debate as an east-versus-west cultural thing," said Peter Knights, executive director of WildAid. "The reality is this is east and west versus a small minority of people." The measure is awaiting a hearing by the state Assembly. Hawaii has already adopted a ban, and similar legislation is advancing in Oregon and Washington state.
[Associated
Press;
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