California
Lt. Governor Newsom won't seek Boxer's U.S. Senate seat
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[January 13, 2015]
By Sharon Bernstein
SACRAMENTO, Calif. (Reuters) - California
Lieutenant Governor Gavin Newsom, whose support for same-sex marriage
while mayor of San Francisco kicked off a tidal wave of social and
political change, said on Monday he would not run to replace retiring
U.S. Senator Barbara Boxer in 2016.
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Newsom's decision leaves the field wide open for a growing host of
potential candidates, among them California Attorney General Kamala
Harris and former Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa, both
Democrats.
"...My head and my heart, my young family's future, and our
unfinished work all remain firmly in the State of California - not
Washington, D.C.," Newsom wrote on his Facebook page on Monday
morning.
Boxer's departure when her term ends in 2016, announced last week,
is the first of three anticipated retirements among California's top
leaders that should open up room for a younger generation of
politicians who have been waiting in the wings for decades.
Governor Jerry Brown, 76, will have to leave office when his fourth
term ends in 2018 because of term limits. U.S. Senator Dianne
Feinstein, 81, will be 85 when her term ends.
Newsom, 47, is viewed by some close to him as inclined to think more
like a chief executive than a legislator, and is widely believed to
be pondering a gubernatorial run when Brown leaves office.
Harris, 50, who like Newsom hails from the San Francisco political
scene, is a former district attorney who has used her position to
develop policy ideas as well as handle prosecutions.
The state capital was abuzz with speculation on Monday evening that
Harris would soon announce her candidacy. The Los Angeles Times,
citing an anonymous Harris adviser, reported on its website on
Monday that she would announce her campaign for Senate on Tuesday.
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Harris has been notably silent on her ambitions but has been
frequently mentioned as a candidate for either the U.S. Senate or
for governor.
Of African-American and South Asian descent, she is the daughter of
two college professors and grew up during the civil rights turmoil
of the 1960s in the Bay Area.
Villaraigosa used Facebook over the weekend to announce that he was
seriously considering running to replace Boxer.
Others considering running include environmentalist Tom Steyer, a
Democrat. Republican candidates have not yet emerged, although the
Los Angeles Times reported that Assemblyman Rocky Chavez and two
former state party chairmen are considering bids.
(Additional reporting by Alex Dobuzinskis in Los Angeles, Editing by
Eric Walsh and Ken Wills)
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