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		 Former 
		lawmaker seeks to succeed Sacramento's basketball star mayor 
		
		 
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		[October 29, 2015] 
		By Sharon Bernstein 
		  
		 SACRAMENTO, Calif. (Reuters) - The former 
		top Democrat in the California Senate said on Wednesday he will run for 
		mayor of Sacramento in what is expected to be an expensive contest to 
		succeed former NBA star Kevin Johnson, who has helped revitalize his 
		hometown. 
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			 The announcement by Darrell Steinberg, a former president pro tem of 
			the state Senate, puts an end to months of speculation that the 
			popular lawmaker would run. 
			 
			"Today for the future of the city I love I announce proudly that I 
			am a candidate for the office of mayor of Sacramento," Steinberg 
			said at a rally at the site of a new housing development near 
			downtown, vowing to take the city's renaissance "to the next level." 
			 
			Johnson, a Democrat, used his star power to begin to revitalize the 
			state capital of Sacramento, a Central Valley city that was hard-hit 
			by the economic crisis. 
			  
			He made headlines in 2013 when he led a successful campaign to keep 
			the Kings NBA basketball team in town, complete with a new arena 
			that has already spawned other revitalization efforts. 
			 
			Under his stewardship, fading neighborhoods became hip and 
			entrepreneurs who could not afford to open businesses in booming San 
			Francisco tried their hands in this city 90 miles inland. 
			 
			Johnson, a former point guard for the Phoenix Suns and Cleveland 
			Cavaliers, said last week he would not seek a third term, days after 
			a decades-old allegation resurfaced that he had dated and fondled a 
			16-year-old girl while a basketball player in Phoenix. No charges 
			were ever filed. 
			 
			The battle to replace Johnson is sure to be competitive, as 
			contenders in this mostly Democratic city face off with campaigns 
			likely funded at least in part by competing labor unions. 
			
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			Voters will go to the polls in June 2016, but if none of the 
			candidates gets more than 50 percent of the votes in the 
			non-partisan, open primary, the two highest vote-getters will 
			compete in November. 
			 
			If elected mayor, Steinberg said, he would continue the city's 
			economic comeback while also focusing on its difficult challenges 
			with poverty and homelessness. 
			 
			Hours after Johnson said he would not run again, Democratic City 
			Councilwoman Angelique Ashby announced her candidacy at the 
			headquarters of the city's firefighters union. 
			 
			(Reporting by Sharon Bernstein; Editing by Eric Beech) 
			
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