FYI. Rather good news given the strength of US economy (traditional terms of
measurement). It suggests that alternate indicators of well-being & perhaps
sustainability are being considered.
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   Green Party's Victory Stunned Both Sides
   Ripples of discontent grew into wave of support that beat Harris
   Rick DelVecchio, Chronicle Staff Writer   Thursday, April 1, 1999
   
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   Former Oakland Mayor Elihu Harris, one of the best-known Democrats in
   the Bay Area, fell yesterday to a fringe-party opponent with no name
   and almost no money but a fervent following of Democratic voters sick
   of the same old faces and the same old lines.
   
   Green Party candidate Audie Bock, a 53-year-old East Asia scholar and
   businesswoman from Piedmont, beat Harris in their head-to-head contest
   Tuesday for the East Oakland-Piedmont-Alameda seat in the state
   Assembly -- a post Harris held from 1979 to 1991 and hoped to reclaim
   with a boost from San Francisco Mayor Willie Brown and the state
   Democratic Party.
   
   Bock's stunning upset makes her the highest-ranking elected member of
   the Green Party in the nation and continues a year of sweeping
   political change in Oakland that started with former Governor Jerry
   Brown's comeback as mayor of the East Bay's largest city.
   
   The Alameda County voter registrar will not declare a winner until
   tomorrow. But with fewer than 50 votes uncounted as of yesterday
   afternoon, Bock had 14,663 votes to Harris' 14,327.
   
   ``There is a change going on,`` Bock said at a victory party last
   night with well-wishers, including Jerry Brown. ``People are not
   satisfied with what the two major parties have to offer. . . . This
   race reflects that dissatisfaction at the national level.''
   
   Bock's victory over a journeyman Democrat with an organization 20
   years in the making and credentials for
   
   leadership in a term limits-churned Capitol was a serial slap to
   Harris, Willie Brown and state Democratic leaders. By the time they
   saw it coming, a few days before the election, it was too late.
   
   Bock accused them all of ``machine politics'' in an improvised runoff
   campaign that stopped the so- called Democratic machine when no one
   thought it could be done.
   
   At one point, a Bock volunteer dressed in a chicken suit greeted
   voters by clucking ``bock, bock, bock,'' goading Harris to debate and
   lampooning the Democrats' use of chicken-dinner vouchers to get
   Oakland voters to the polls in a February primary for the 16th
   District seat.
   
   Bock's upset -- however fleeting it may be, as Democrats want the seat
   back in 2000, a presidential year -- was roundly hailed as historic
   for ending nearly 30 years of Democratic representation in the
   district. ``It's just showing people are sick and tired of machine
   politics,'' said Nancy Sackett-Goss, an Oakland Democrat who switched
   sides to run Bock's no-budget phone campaign. ``They really want
   something different.''
   
   Sackett-Goss called Harris ``an excellent person'' who has grown
   tired.
   
   ``The chicken thing just did it for me,'' she said. ``I was appalled.
   I called Audie the next morning.''
   
   A reflective Harris phoned Bock yesterday to offer his assistance. He
   said he intends to remain active in public life and did not rule out
   another try for his old Assembly job in the March 2000 primary.
   
   Richie Ross, a Harris campaign consultant, said he had a gut feeling
   that there might be problems for his candidate.
   
   ``I paid for a poll a couple of weeks ago, and it showed that things
   were pretty serious,'' he said.
   
   Ross talked to state Democratic Party leaders about the poll, but
   ``they all thought I was crying wolf,'' he said.
   
   State party officials acknowledged that they should have done more for
   their candidate. ``Clearly there should have been a better effort,''
   said party spokesman Bob Mulholland.
   
   Bock's victory embodied sentiment against Harris' mayoral record and
   Democrats' campaign style. Also in the mix was a backwash from Jerry
   Brown's popular juggernaut to break up the old networks and throw out
   the old ideas at City Hall.
   
   ``The Jerry Brown candidacy, anti-Harris rhetoric, anti-establishment
   and pro-reform desires all contributed,'' said Assemblyman Kevin
   Shelley, D-San Francisco, the Assembly majority leader. ``The vote was
   anti- Harris, pro-reform. She was a fresh face. There's a real
   throw-the-bums- out mood in that city.''
   
   As a mature woman with a younger person's idealism and a bright and
   personal manner, Bock not only looked different from her opponent but
   looked like the kind of leader who would be unlikely to bring scandal
   down on voters' heads.
   
   A few days before the election, Harris spoke apprehensively of his
   first contest ever against a white woman. He felt racial voting
   patterns -- particularly low turnout in predominantly black
   neighborhoods -- could hurt him, and they did.
   
   But race was just one of many factors on Tuesday.
   
   ``They're tired of impeachment hearings, they're tired of not being
   heard,'' Sackett-Goss said. ``With Audie, they will be heard. She
   answers the phone.''
   
   The Greens, least of all, expected victory in February when their
   candidate qualified for a runoff against Harris to pick a successor to
   Alameda Democrat Don Perata, who was elected to the state Senate.
   
   About two-dozen Greens hold local offices in California, but in
   legislative races in this state and elsewhere, they typically try more
   to energize ideological opposition than to win. Bock, whose icon of
   political leadership is consumer advocate Ralph Nader, is the nation's
   first Green elected to an office higher than county supervisor.
   
   Bock ran for election for the first time in February, when she
   received about 3,000 of 37,000 votes cast. The election, which drew no
   Republican candidates, was one of a series prompted by Representative
   Ron Dellums' resignation last year.
   
   Harris, a few hundred votes short of the majority needed to avoid a
   runoff, found himself in a two-person contest against the Piedmont
   scholar, whose presence had helped delay his return to Sacramento.
   
   Everything had to go wrong for Harris, and everything right for Bock,
   for Harris not to realize his wish. And, apparently, everything did.
   
   Democrats who had aligned themselves with Oakland lawyer Frank Russo
   and Oakland educator Enrique Palacios, Harris' two Democratic foes in
   February, broke party ranks in the runoff.
   
   And Bock attracted all manner of non-Democratic voters frustrated with
   the party's dominance in the district. Non-Democrats make up one-third
   of the district's voters.
   
   An election in which only 15 percent of eligible voters participated
   had no groundswell, but there was enough of a gathering of
   non-Democrats behind Bock to blunt Harris' advantage in identity and
   numbers.
   
   The Alameda County Conservative Exchange, for example, endorsed Bock
   because she was not of the establishment.
   
   ``I don't know if we have any communists in the group, but I wouldn't
   be surprised,'' said John Cromwell, an Alameda cafe owner who advised
   Bock. ``It's the only way to make this work, the conservatives working
   together with the progressives.''
   
   Finally, Harris and the Democrats failed to motivate their core
   voters, despite plenty of advertising. In Oakland, 6,000 fewer voters
   turned out at the polls on a rainy Tuesday than in February.
   
   ``No. 1, people were comfortable in assuming he had it, because of the
   turnout in the last special election,'' said Brenda Knight, a Democrat
   for Harris. ``They let their guard down.
   
   ``I also feel that for some reason, our Oakland community is ready for
   change, and they don't care how they get it. Those who have been part
   of our community for years are finding their way out, and not by their
   own will.''
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