November 10, 2011 edition of the Bay Area Reporter

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Pot activists sue feds

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Fashion designer helps DIFFA

'The Air We Breathe'

The

www.ebar.com

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

Vol. 41 • No. 45 • November 10-16, 2011

Lee appears headed to full term as mayor

Adithya Sambamurthy/The Bay Citizen

Interim Mayor Ed Lee, left, leaves Tres restaurant after speaking to supporters on Election Night.

by Matthew S. Bajko

I

nterim Mayor Ed Lee, who upturned this year’s mayoral race with his switcheroo from not wanting the job permanently to seeking a full four-year term, appears headed to clinching victory after a nasty

skirmish for Room 200 at City Hall. Based on unofficial returns Wednesday morning, Lee was the clear frontrunner with 31 percent of the vote. His closest challenger was progressive Supervisor John Avalos, with nearly 19 percent. City Attorney Dennis Herrera placed third with 11 percent.

Rick Gerharter

With his wife, Karen Zapata, at his side, mayoral candidate John Avalos speaks to his supporters during an Election Night party Tuesday.

Because Lee fell short of the 50 percent plus one vote needed to secure victory Tuesday night, the other 13 candidates will each be eliminated starting with the person who received the least votes. The second choice, and if needed third choice, votes from those candidates’ voters will then be

tabulated until a winner is declared. Stopping just short of declaring victory, Lee sounded assured during his Election Night bash that he would remain in first place. “I think San Francisco wants us to do four See page 13 >>

Mirkarimi leads in SF sheriff race

Gascón ahead in district attorney race

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A

by Matthew S. Bajko

upervisor Ross Mirkarimi held a significant lead in the race to be San Francisco’s next sheriff in the first round of voting Tuesday, November 8. According to unofficial returns Wednesday, he had a 10-point advantage over his closest rival, former undersheriff Chris Cunnie. But he fell well short of the 50 percent plus one vote needed to secure a victory on Election Night, triggering the city’s ranked choice voting system to determine a winner. The city’s Election Department planned to release the first round results in the instant runoff late Wednesday afternoon several hours after the Bay Area Reporter went to press. But it could take several days before the outcome of the race is determined. With all precincts reporting, Mirkarimi had 38 percent of the vote in the first round, while Cunnie came in second with 28 percent. There was a 13,224-vote difference between the two. Landing in third with 27 percent was Sheriff’s Captain Paul Miyamoto, while former deputy sheriff David Wong came up fourth with 6.5 percent of the vote. Under the ranked choice voting rules, Wong will be eliminated from the race and his second and third place votes will be added to the tallies

Jane Philomen Cleland

Supervisor and sheriff candidate Ross Mirkarimi addressed supporters at his election party Tuesday night.

of the other candidates. If Miyamato remains behind Cunnie – after Tuesday night he was short 1,160 votes – then his second and third place votes will be tabulated to decide the winner. Mirkarimi, a leader of the city’s progressives, See page 2 >>

by Seth Hemmelgarn ppointed District Attorney George Gascón appeared to be holding on to his job after Tuesday’s initial election returns saw him open a commanding lead in the race. Unofficial returns as of Tuesday night showed Gascón with 56,758, or 42.2 percent, of the vote. Criminal justice expert and former Police Commissioner David Onek and longtime Alameda County prosecutor Sharmin Bock were running close for second place, though, and one of them could overtake Gascón. Due to San Francisco’s ranked choice voting system, final results aren’t likely to be known for several days. Unofficial results showed Onek with 30,514 votes, or 22.7 percent, while Bock had 27,761 votes, or 20.7 percent. Gascón, who was appointed by former Mayor Gavin Newsom after District Attorney Kamala Harris was elected state attorney general, had said from the beginning that he would run to seek a full four-year term. “I feel very proud of the effort we put together,” Gascón said of supporters at his campaign party Tuesday night. He expressed gratitude for gay backers, including the Alice B. Toklas LGBT Democratic Club, which gave Gascón its sole endorsement in the race.

{ FIRST OF TWO SECTIONS }

Jane Philomen Cleland

District Attorney George Gascón thanked supporters at his election party Tuesday night.

However, he said, “It’s too early to say anything else.” He said he’d feel safe declaring victory “When we can statistically say the results are sound. I don’t think that’s the case yet.” But his closest challenger, Onek, noted in a statement Wednesday morning that he was See page 13 >>


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