November 5, 2015 Edition of the Bay Area Reporter

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2013 Pride shooting case heads to trial

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'Looking East'

BenDeLaCreme

The

SF voters seek some change www.ebar.com

Serving the gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgender communities since 1971

Vol. 45 • No. 45 • November 5-11, 2015

Election alters balance of power at SF City Hall

Jane Philomen Cleland

Sheriff-elect Vicki Hennessy celebrated her victory Tuesday night.

Hennessy easily wins sheriff’s race by Seth Hemmelgarn

V

icki Hennessy trounced San Francisco Sheriff Ross Mirkarimi in Tuesday’s election, ending a bumpy tenure for the incumbent. Hennessy, a former interim sheriff and retired deputy captain, received 61.1 percent of the vote as of Wednesday morning, easily defeating Mirkarimi, who had 32.9 percent, according to unofficial returns. The race was called by 10 p.m. Tuesday, although there are still some ballots to be counted. John C. Robinson, a retired sheriff ’s deputy, trailed far behind, at 5.9 percent. At her election party at the South of Market restaurant Don Ramon’s Tuesday night, after her victory had become clear, Hennessy, the city’s first female sheriff, said she planned to take a vacation, “then hopefully work on a transition plan.” The sheriff’s department is primarily responsible for overseeing the jails, but also performs other duties, such as security in courtrooms and San Francisco General Hospital. See page 17 >>

Jane Philomen Cleland

Aaron Peskin celebrated his return to the Board of Supervisors at an election party Tuesday night. Unofficial returns show him with a solid lead over Supervisor Julie Christensen.

by Matthew S. Bajko

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ayor Ed Lee coasted to victory Tuesday night, easily winning a second four-year term in Room 200 at City Hall. But the moderate former bureaucrat awoke Wednesday to find the balance of power on the Board of Supervisors tipped toward the city’s progressive political camp due to Aaron Peskin’s commanding victory in the race for the

Khaled Sayed

San Francisco Mayor Ed Lee, who spoke to supporters Tuesday night, easily won re-election as he had no major opponents.

District 3 supervisor seat. Peskin, who previously served two terms as District 3 supervisor as well as president of the board, ousted Julie Christensen, Lee’s appointee to fill the vacancy created by the election last fall of Assemblyman David Chiu (D-San Francisco). More than $2 million was spent on the contest to represent the city’s North Beach and Chinatown neighborhoods due to its deciding control of the board. With Christensen, mod-

erates currently hold a 6-5 majority. But that will flip come January to a 6-5 progressive majority after Peskin garnered 52.99 percent of the vote in the November 3 election, according to unofficial returns Wednesday morning. It was enough to avoid having the race be decided by the city’s ranked-choice voting system. “I have mellowed with age but am still passionate about the issues I have been hearing See page 17 >>

Victory and defeat for gays in local races in U.S. by Lisa Keen

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here were anti-gay smear campaigns and surprise victories in conservative strongholds, as 30 of 48 out LGBT candidates won election Tuesday night in local races around the country. In Salt Lake City, Jackie Biskupski appears to have become the first out lesbian to be elected mayor of the conservative Mormon stronghold, taking 52 percent of the vote, according to preliminary returns. Incumbent Mayor Ralph Becker has refused to concede the race so far, even though Biskupski also beat him soundly during the primary in August. The Salt Lake City Tribune endorsed Biskupski, citing her 13 years in the state Legislature and current work in the sheriff ’s office. She proudly included her

work for LGBTQ citizens in her campaign material. Many of her supporters and campaign workers wore long, curly blond wigs in an affectionate mocking of Biskupski’s wildly curly mop. Also in Salt Lake City, Derek Kitchen, one of the plaintiffs in that state’s lawsuit seeking the right to marry, appears to have won his bid to join the City Council, with 52 percent of the vote, according to unofficial returns. And in South Bend, Indiana, incumbent Mayor Pete Buttigieg won 80 percent of the vote for a second term Tuesday, less than five months after coming out as gay. The Associated Press said there was only “scant discussion” of his sexual orientation by his opponent during the campaign. In Indianapolis, the city’s first openly gay city

councilmember, Zach Adamson, won re-election Tuesday. Since his first election, Adamson garnered considerable media attention when he and his partner traveled to Washington, D.C., to marry because they couldn’t get a license in Indiana. And earlier this year, Adamson joined the council majority in urging the state Legislature to repeal its law allowing discrimination against LGBT people by claiming a religious motivation. Other hopes of “firsts” in conservative areas were denied Tuesday. Jocelyn Pritchett, a Democrat from Jackson, Mississippi, was the first out LGBT candidate for a statewide position in that state. She ran against incumbent Republican Stacey Pickering for the job of state auditor. According to campaign finance See page 17 >>

Courtesy Biskupski for Mayor

Jackie Biskupski has apparently won the Salt Lake City mayor’s race, according to unofficial returns.

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