
"(Christina House / Los Angeles Times) Matt Mahan, the mayor of San José and latest entrant into the jam-packed race for California governor, has in recent years raised his profile outside his Silicon Valley-area city by doing something most other elected Democrats would never: publicly criticize Gov. Gavin Newsom. With the primary election almost four months away, candidates have already been busy trying to convince Californians that they can lead the state through its biggest challenges, including what they might do differently than Newsom on homelessness, crime and the high cost of living."
"The 43-year-old-mayor began carving a moderate path in 2024, when he broke with Newsom and other Democrats to back Proposition 36, which increased penalties for theft and crimes involving fentanyl. Despite opposition from Newsom and legislative leaders, voters overwhelmingly approved it. Mahan has also given mixed reviews to the Newsom administration's approach to homelessness; he has praised efforts to make it easier for cities to clear homeless encampments but criticized inconsistent funding from the state to help local governments build interim housing."
"Although most Democrats running to replace Newsom have praised his fiery opposition to President Trump and the Republican-led Congress, including the governor's outlandish online trolling of Trump and his allies, Mahan was not impressed. "Instead of spending so much energy attacking his opponents, the governor and his team should be addressing the high cost of energy, helping hard-pressed families make ends meet and keeping them and their employers from fleeing our state," Mahan wrote last summer in a piece for the San Francisco Standard."
Matt Mahan, mayor of San José, entered the California governor's race while publicly criticizing Gov. Gavin Newsom and adopting a moderate posture. He broke with many Democrats to back Proposition 36 in 2024, supporting increased penalties for theft and fentanyl-related crimes, and that measure passed despite opposition from Democratic leaders. Mahan offered mixed assessments of the Newsom administration's homelessness approach, praising easier clearance of encampments but faulting inconsistent state funding for interim housing. He emphasized addressing high energy and living costs to prevent families and employers from leaving the state.
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