The primary time I noticed Willie Brown he was grinning extensively, drawing inquisitive eyes and carrying a trendy Nehru jacket.
“And beads,” he jogged my memory the opposite day with a chuckle.
That was way back — 59 years — when Brown first confirmed up within the state Meeting chamber to be sworn in as a freshman legislator.
He was a 30-year-old Black lawyer from San Francisco in an odd sea of white males who have been attired in conventional darkish enterprise fits with collared shirts and ties.
The Nehru jacket was typically an emblem of counter-culture revolt — and, for Brown, an indication of self-confidence and independence.
Brown instructed me just lately he deliberate to put on the same jacket — he now calls it a mandarin-collar outfit — to one of many eight ninetieth birthday bashes being thrown in his honor this week and past in San Francisco. His precise birthday was Wednesday.
One factor Brown has all the time prided himself on: his fashionable, high quality garments — principally standard, however not all the time.
Brown didn’t enter these giant mahogany Meeting doorways in 1965 simply to slot in. He finally did, however greater than that he led, turning into some of the necessary political leaders in California historical past — the primary Black Meeting speaker and, in 1995, the primary Black mayor of San Francisco.
No matter shade, Brown’s achievements would have landed him a distinguished place within the historical past books. He served twice so long as Meeting speaker — greater than 14 years — as anybody else as a result of his colleagues saved reelecting him.
However on that first day, many lawmakers rolled their eyes or winced on the different-looking fellow standing within the Meeting’s again row.
“Who’s that?” somebody requested me.
“That’s the man who beat Eddie Gaffney,” I answered.
Edward Gaffney, then 78, a candy gentleman first elected to the Meeting in 1940, was greatest recognized for 2 issues: Every March, he’d don a inexperienced derby and lead the Meeting in celebrating St. Patrick’s Day. And he was a loyal vote for no matter Speaker Jesse “Massive Daddy” Unruh wished.
Within the 1964 election, Unruh supported Gaffney over upstart challenger Brown, who was backed by the political machine of then-San Francisco Assemblyman Phillip Burton.
As soon as on the Capitol, Brown instantly introduced his presence by refusing to help Unruh’s reelection as speaker.
“I used to be the primary [Democratic] vote ever forged towards Unruh as speaker as a result of he had funded the man who was my opponent,” Brown instructed me just lately.
Brown paid the value. He landed within the Unruh doghouse — with the smallest workplace and the worst committee assignments.
However Unruh and Brown have been survivors. Unruh was additionally a instructor and Brown a scholar. One lesson “Massive Daddy” taught: “If I’d killed all my enemies yesterday, I’d don’t have any mates right this moment.”
They finally grew to become friends. Unruh acknowledged that Brown was not solely brash, he was good — an adjective virtually everybody who is aware of Brown makes use of to explain him.
In gauging Brown, one ought to think about his roots in segregated rural Texas.
His mother cleaned white individuals’s houses. Willie labored in a barbershop cleansing up. White males tipped him with quarters and nickels, dropped right into a spittoon. He wanted the cash and fished it out.
Brown caught the primary bus for San Francisco the day after graduating from Mineola Coloured Excessive College in 1951. He labored in his uncle’s unlawful playing home, went to regulation college and obtained the most effective job a younger Black lawyer may discover on the time: defending pimps, prostitutes and drug sellers.
“He was born right into a household of bootleggers and gamblers and so they outsmarted and out-hustled everybody,” Brown biographer James Richardson as soon as wrote. “He realized the talents of politics on the toes of masters: a pair of uncles who knew the best way to work the system earlier than it labored them.”
“He has a political thoughts that I feel is unparalleled,” says Democratic marketing consultant Gale Kaufman, a former Brown advisor and longtime good friend. “He’s in a position to see all sides of a problem and to assume two or three steps forward.”
Brown obtained into politics at San Francisco State when he tried to elect the primary Black scholar physique president. There, he met John Burton, brother of Phil. Willie and John have been each elected to the Meeting the identical yr. John finally grew to become the state Senate chief.
Again then, there have been solely 4 Black legislators. As we speak there are 12. In 1964, Californians voted to retain housing discrimination based mostly on race — unthinkable right this moment.
“There was dramatic change” in racial discrimination, Brown says. Most likely extra so in California than wherever else, he provides.
Brown failed in his first try to grow to be speaker in 1974. However he succeeded in 1980 due to Republican assist.
Republican Meeting members gave Brown extra votes (28) than Democrats did (23). In change, Brown allowed Republicans to call committee vice chairs and add workers.
“Republicans had been so mistreated through the years,” Brown says. “Most Republicans had been serving nearly like indentured servants.”
However due to his flamboyance, obsession for fancy sports activities automobiles, flashy costume and — let’s face it — a smidgen of racism in some voters, Brown was disliked by many who didn’t know him, particularly Republicans. He was not humble and subdued. Those that labored with Brown, nonetheless, revered and appreciated the person, together with Republicans. And he was thrilling to be round.
“He all the time saved his phrase,” remembers Steven Merksamer, who was Republican Gov. George Deukmejian’s chief of workers. “Belief is the coin of the realm. Should you don’t have belief, you possibly can’t get a rattling factor completed.”
Sure, however this “Ayatollah of the Meeting” — as Brown dubbed himself — additionally grew to become what he acknowledged was “the poster boy” for legislative time period limits. In 1990, voters supported time period limits to oust Brown as speaker.
It didn’t assist that the FBI had simply carried out a large sting of the Capitol that generated corruption convictions for a dozen legislators, lobbyists and staffers.
Mockingly, the sting was instigated by the Meeting minority chief, Pat Nolan of Glendale, who satisfied the Reagan administration that Brown was a ripe goal. The feds by no means discovered something on Brown, however they stung Nolan, who went to jail.
Politics nonetheless is Brown’s life and fervour. He stays up on it regardless of deteriorating eyesight from retinitis pigmentosa by listening to plenty of tv information — and conversing with a lifetime of political mates.
He thinks President Biden can beat Donald Trump “if individuals simply let Biden be Biden. Like he has been within the final two weeks.”
How has politics modified? “Politics are now not dominated by A college students. Now there are many C college students,” he says, explaining that they’re extra concerned about reelection than long-term coverage achievement. He thinks educators ought to begin pushing for extra political high quality.
He believes it was a mistake for governments to close down companies, faculties and places of work in the course of the COVID pandemic with out deeper dialogue. “We ruined the financial system of our nation.”
Brown’s secret to longevity and success, it appears to me, is that he’s consistently upbeat, he enjoys individuals and he loves his work. He’s a cheerful man and makes others blissful.
By no means throw away the Nehru jacket, Willie. And blissful birthday.