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Kevin Faulconer

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Mayor of San Diego from 2014 to 2020

Kevin Faulconer
Faulconer in 2019
36thMayor of San Diego
In office
March 3, 2014 – December 10, 2020
Preceded byTodd Gloria(Acting)
Succeeded byTodd Gloria
Member of theSan Diego City Council
from the 2nd district
In office
January 10, 2006 – March 3, 2014
Preceded byMichael Zucchet
Succeeded byEd Harris
Personal details
BornKevin Lee Faulconer
(1967-01-24)January 24, 1967 (age 59)
PartyRepublican
Spouse
Katherine Stuart
(m. 1999)
Children2
EducationSan Diego State University (BA)

Kevin Lee Faulconer[1] (born January 24, 1967) is an American politician who served as the 36thmayor of San Diego, from 2014 to 2020. A member of theRepublican Party, Faulconer served as the member of theSan Diego City Council for the 2nd district from 2006 to 2014.[2]

Faulconer was born inSan Jose, California, and grew up inOxnard. He entered politics in the 1990s to work on the campaigns for then-GovernorPete Wilson; he began to run in San Diego City Council elections to represent the 2nd district in the early 2000s. He was elected in a2005 special election and was re-elected in landslides in2006 and in2010. In late 2013, he announced his candidacy for the mayorship of San Diego which he later won. He was sworn in on March 3, 2014.[3] He was re-elected in2016, but he was not eligible to run in the2020 election due to term limits.

Faulconer is considered to be amoderate Republican, holdingfiscally conservative andsocially liberal views.[4][5][6] He announced his candidacy forgovernor of California on February 1, 2021, and was one of the main candidates in the2021 gubernatorial recall election, placing third in a field of 46 replacement candidates.[7]

Early life and education

[edit]

Faulconer was born in San Jose, California to Jim and Kay Faulconer (née Boger), an assistant city manager ofOxnard and an instructor atOxnard College andVentura College, respectively.[8][9][10] He grew up in Oxnard and learned Spanish while in grade school. Faulconer graduated fromOxnard High School in 1985.[11] He later enrolled in and graduated fromSan Diego State University with a degree inpolitical science. While at San Diego State, Faulconer served as student body president as a fifth-year senior and was a member ofKappa Sigma fraternity.[10][12]

Early career

[edit]

After college, Faulconer won a fellowship with theCoro Foundation and worked for Solem & Associates, a public relations firm based in San Francisco.[12] He later helped work on the campaigns forCalifornia GovernorPete Wilson.

San Diego City Council (2006–2014)

[edit]

Elections

[edit]
See also:2002,2005–2006,2006, and2010 San Diego City Council election

Faulconer ran in the 2002 city council election for District 2 but lost toMichael Zucchet in a hotly contested election.[13][citation needed] After Zucchet resigned in 2005, a special election was held that November. There were 17 candidates and none got a majority, so a runoff was held on January 10, 2006, between the two top vote-getters, Faulconer andLorena Gonzalez.[14] Faulconer won the runoff with 51.5% of the vote.[15]

Faulconer was elected to a full term in June 2006[16] and re-elected in June 2010;[17] in both cases he won an outright majority in the primary and so did not have to run in the November general election. He was ineligible to run for re-election in 2014 per city term limits.

Tenure

[edit]
Faulconer seated with the San Diego City Council in 2010.

Although Faulconer was once a supporter of alcohol being allowed on public beaches in San Diego (his 2006 opponent Gonzalez supported a limited ban), he changed his opinion after winning the city council election. Following an alcohol-fueled riot atPacific Beach in 2007, he persuaded the city council to pass a trial one-year ban on alcohol at the beaches; the next year the ban was made permanent by a citywide vote.[18] The ban has not been challenged since with the community generally approving of cleaner beaches and fewer emergency calls, and lifeguards and police said it has made their jobs easier. However, the long-term economic impact, claimed by one individual to be a 160,000 person reduction in attendance on holiday weekends and a 50% drop in revenue for beach businesses, has not been studied.[19]

In the fall of 2006, over 30 bars and restaurants in Pacific Beach agreed with one another to limit the offering of discounts on alcoholic drinks.[20] Faulconer supported the price-fixing agreement and spoke at the press conference announcing the agreement.[21]

He campaigned against a proposed sales tax increase in 2010. He promoted the North Embarcadero Visionary Plan, a project seeking to redevelop the San Diego bayfront.[22] He pushed for several years for an ordinance limiting the parking of oversize vehicles on the streets; the ordinance finally passed the city council in July 2013.[23]

Faulconer was chair of the council's Audit Committee, which is charged with clearing out an audit backlog and restoring the city's credit rating. He was vice-chair of the Rules and Economic Development Committee and a member of the Budget and Finance Committee.[24]

Mayor of San Diego (2014–2020)

[edit]

Elections

[edit]
Main articles:2013–14 San Diego mayoral special election and2016 San Diego mayoral election
Faulconer in November 2014.
Faulconer with U.S. PresidentDonald Trump in theOval Office,
June 2019

In September 2013 Faulconer entered the special mayoral election that resulted from the resignation of mayorBob Filner.[25] He was endorsed by the local Republican Party[26][27] and by former mayorJerry Sanders, now president of the San Diego Chamber of Commerce. He campaigned both in English and Spanish.[28]

In the election held November 19, 2013 Faulconer received 43.6 percent of the vote and advanced to a runoff election against fellow city councilmemberDavid Alvarez (who had received 25.6 percent of the vote) on February 11, 2014.[29] In the runoff, Faulconer was endorsed by formerSan Diego City AttorneyMike Aguirre, a Democratic mayoral candidate who had placed fourth in the first round of the election.[30] Faulconer was elected mayor with 54.5 percent of the vote in the runoff. He was sworn in on March 3, 2014.

In 2015, Faulconer declared his intention to run for a full term in 2016.[31] His opponents in the election were former state assemblywomanLori Saldaña and former San Diego City Council memberEd Harris.[32][33] Faulconer won re-election in the June 7, 2016 primary by garnering 58.2 percent of the vote.[34]

Faulconer endorsedMarco Rubio in the2016 Republican Party presidential primaries.[35] After the primary, Faulconer stated he would not vote forthen-candidateDonald Trump in2016. After the2020 election, he stated that he had voted for Trump in that year's election.[36]

Faulconer had been urged by state Republican leaders to run for governor in2018, and polls showed him as the leading Republican candidate. Faulconer consistently said he would not run, and in June 2017 confirmed it, saying his top priority was finishing out his term as mayor.[37]

Climate action plan

[edit]

In 2014, Faulconer released San Diego's first Climate Action Plan. The plan outlined Faulconer's proposed strategy for the city to meet State goals for the city to reduce greenhouse gas emissions.[38] In 2018, Faulconer proposed pursuing a city-runCommunity Choice Aggregation (CCA) program to meet the plan's goal of purchasing 100 percent renewable energy by 2035.[39] By September 2019, Faulconer had convinced four other nearby cities (Encinitas,La Mesa,Imperial Beach andChula Vista) to join San Diego's CCA through ajoint powers authority.[40][41]

Minimum wage

[edit]
Faulconer speaking at the 2015 Lincoln-Reagan Dinner hosted in San Diego, California.

In August 2014, Faulconer vetoed a measure passed by the City Council which would incrementally increase the minimum wage in San Diego to $11.50 per hour from the $9.00 statewide minimum. The Council overrode his veto by a vote of 6 to 2.[42] However, implementation of the measure was delayed by a successful signature drive led by business groups, forcing a public referendum before the measure could go into effect.[43] On June 7, 2016, the ballot measure passed with a 63.8 percent majority vote, allowing the measure to go into effect.[44]

San Diego Chargers

[edit]

A major issue during his first term was a bid by theSan Diego Chargers to move to the Los Angeles area. Faulconer campaigned to keep the Chargers in San Diego and proposed that the city build a new stadium, financed in part by the city and county governments.[45] Faulconer later endorsed a ballot measure sponsored by the Chargers that would raise the hotel tax to pay for a stadium.[46] The ballot measure failed with only 43 percent of the vote in favor. In January 2017, the Chargers announced that they would be relocating from San Diego to Los Angeles.[47]

Convention center expansion

[edit]
Faulconer andTodd Gloria atSan Diego Comic-Con in July 2014.

In 2017, Faulconer put forth a measure that would fund the expansion of theSan Diego Convention Center by increasing the hotel tax, but the City Council declined to call for a special election.[48] In 2018, Faulconer supported a citizen's initiative that would accomplish the same thing as his original measure. The measure qualified, but too late to be included on the 2018 ballot.[49] In April 2019, the City Council approved a proposal by Faulconer to move the election from the November 2020 general election to the March 2020 primary election by a vote of 5–4.[50] The ballot measure, titled Measure C, got 65% of the vote in the March election, just short of the two-thirds majority needed to pass per the language of the measure. However, the City Council amended the language certifying the election to not say it needed a two-thirds majority. This allowed litigation to continue which could potentially lower the threshold to pass from two-thirds to a simple majority.[51]

Housing and homelessness

[edit]

Faulconer has been an outspoken opponent of the "Not In My Back Yard" mentality (also known asNIMBYism). He has called for scrapping restrictions on housing development, such as building-height limits near public transit and parking requirements, as well as various restrictions on dense housing (including affordable housing). He has called for streamlining of the approvals process. Faulconer said these reforms were needed to combat San Diego's housing crisis, reduce homelessness and improve the environment.[52][53][54]

In both his 2018 and 2019 State of the City addresses, Faulconer vowed to reduce the growing number of people who are street homeless in San Diego.[55][52] Faulconer's efforts included a 40 percent increase in funding from 2018 to 2019, the opening of shelter tents, the creation of safe parking spots, a storage center for the homeless, and successful advocacy for more funding from the State.[56]

Just a month before the end of his term as mayor, Faulconer put a package of affordable housing proposals before the San Diego City Council called Complete Communities. The package incentivizes building to reduce homelessness while banning the use of said buildings for short-term rentals likeAirbnb. It also creates an "ongoing funding stream" for public transportation via fees on more suburban developers, and prioritizes improvements in parks in low-income areas.[57] The City Council approved Faulconer's Complete Communities plan on November 9, 2020.[58]

Hepatitis A outbreak

[edit]

Beginning in November 2016, San Diego had one of the nation's largestHepatitis A epidemics.[59] From 2016 to 2018, Hepatitis A caused at least twenty deaths in San Diego County, with 589 reported cases of infection. Of those cases, 291 (49%) were in people experiencing homelessness (PEH). On October 24, 2018, the Center for Disease Control's Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP) recommended that all persons aged 1 year and older experiencing homelessness be routinely immunized against HAV.[60]

One rationale for this recommendation was the observation that "Persons experiencing homelessness might have difficulty implementing recommended nonvaccine strategies to protect themselves from exposure (e.g., access to clean toilet facilities...).[60] An October 2017 news article on the San Diego epidemic noted that, in the summer of 2016, as part of preparations for the MLB All-Star Game, "the city was locking and removing bathrooms," contributing to what one infectious disease researcher described as "the perfect storm."[61]

Faulconer and his staff learned of the Hepatitis A outbreak in June 2017 and proposed plans to combat it, including installing hand washing stations near homeless encampments. However, San Diego County Public Health officials experienced delays and attributed these to "an inability to swiftly coordinate with city officials."[62] In an interview about the causes of San Diego's rapidly escalating Hepatitis A epidemic and the high rates of death, it was noted that "When those emergency tents [for PEH] were permanently closed, we began to see a dramatic increase in the number of people living on the streets." Faulconer did not deny this as a cause, but responded, "We are not looking back."[63]

COVID-19 pandemic response

[edit]

Faulconer was mayor during theCOVID-19 pandemic in California. To enforcesocial distancing, Faulconer issued an executive order on March 16 closing all bars and nightclubs and only allowing takeout from restaurants.[64] This was followed on March 23 with an order closing all city-owned beaches, parks, and trails.[65] Faulconer also announced that theSan Diego Convention Center would be opened as a shelter to protect the homeless from the pandemic, and that 240 new shelter beds would be added toGolden Hall.[66] In response to an estimated $250 million reduction in revenue associated with the outbreak, Faulconer proposed major budget cuts, including the elimination of 354 jobs.[67] On April 29, 2020, Faulconer announced San Diego would close certain streets in San Diego to encourage safe cycling and walking while maintaining social distancing.[68] Faulconer also responded to GovernorGavin Newsom's statewide beach closure, stating that it is "sending the wrong message" as Faulconer allowed beaches in San Diego to reopen on April 24, 2020.[69]

Social issues

[edit]
Faulconer marching in the 2014 San Diego LGBTQ Pride Parade.

Though a fiscally conservative Republican, Faulconer holds many socially liberal positions.[4] Faulconer supports a path to citizenship forillegal immigrants who live in the United States.[28] He also supportssame-sex marriage and had campaigned against passage ofProposition 8.[70] In 2014, he participated in and supported LGBTQPride Month.[71] In 2019, the mayor met with San Diego community leaders to voice support and encourage members of theU.S. Congress to vote for theEquality Act, a bill that would extend theCivil Rights Act to protect against discrimination based on sexual orientation or gender identity.[5] As a part of his previously mentioned effort to address homelessness, Faulconer announced he was working with local faith leaders to provide shelter to LGBTQ homeless youth.[72][73] Following themurder of George Floyd in June 2020, Faulconer pushed for a ban on the use ofchokeholds by theSan Diego Police Department.[74]

Faulconer has described himself aspro-choice on the issue of abortion.[75][76] Responding to protests againstanti-abortion legislation, Faulconer made a statement saying that he would not restrict abortion rights in San Diego and would oppose movements to restrict abortion in California.[77] He supports use of capital punishment.[78]

101 Ash Street

[edit]
Main article:101 Ash Street

In 2016, Faulconer entered into a lease-to-own agreement for San Diego’s new City Hall at 101 Ash St. The building is uninhabitable withAsbestos and other issues. 101 Ash has become synonymous in San Diego with political scandals and bad real estate deals. The city overpaid for the property by $30M. It then botched renovations and eventually discovered its own real estate broker had also been working for the building's seller.[79][80][81]

On July 23, 2021, a San Diego Union-Tribune audit report revealed, "a serious lack of policies and oversight caused the City to miss or skip key steps in the acquisition process” and that Faulconer's administration left out or misrepresented key information."[82] The audit revealed Faulconer stated the property only needed $10,000 in repairs, but ultimately needed $115 million in repairs and improvements. Faulconer's administration relied upon a dual agent who represented both the seller and the buyer (the city of San Diego) in the transaction.[82]

Statewide political career

[edit]

Shortly after leaving office as mayor, Faulconer announced his support for therecall campaign seeking to remove incumbent governorGavin Newsom from office through a referendum, tweeting: “It’s a new year. We need a new governor. Jobs are leaving, homelessness is skyrocketing, and the state can’t even issue unemployment checks to people struggling right now to get by. California is better than this. Join me in signing the recall petition".[83][84] Faulconer strongly criticized Newsom following the scandal atThe French Laundry, an expensive,five-star restaurant inYountville which the governor had attended for a birthday party in November 2020, in violation of state gathering rules that he himself had enacted.[85]

California gubernatorial campaign

[edit]
Main articles:2021 California gubernatorial recall election and2022 California gubernatorial election
Faulconer campaigning for governor inDowney, California

During the course of 2020, Faulconer was seen as a potential Republican candidate for governor of California in the2022 gubernatorial election. Faulconer was described as a "top contender" andThe San Diego Union-Tribune said that the "state may be ready to pick a Republican" in the race for governor, considering that he needs a minimum to reach second place in thenonpartisan blanket primary to advance to the general election.[86]The Mercury News noted that his campaign could make the most competitive gubernatorial pick for a Republican sinceMeg Whitman in2010.[87] Faulconer was compared to fellow moderate RepublicansLarry Hogan ofMaryland andCharlie Baker ofMassachusetts, who hold such positions in deeply Democratic states like California.[6] Speculation increased in November 2020, when Faulconer confirmed that he was "seriously considering" running for governor in the upcoming 2022 election.[88][89]

On January 4, 2021, Faulconer launched an exploratory committee to run for governor of California.[90][91] Faulconer has indicated that he could be part of the recall election's list of replacement candidates if it proved to be successful.[92]San Francisco Gate argued that Faulconer probably has the best chance of being elected in a recall election.[93]

On February 1, 2021, Faulconer officially announced that he was running for governor of California in either 2022 or a recall election and stated that, "I'm going to be a voice for Californians who are suffering because California can't do the basics".[7][94] Faulconer reiterated his support for the campaign for a recall election against Governor Newsom, which by that point had reached 1.3 million signatures out of the 1.5 million required to reach the ballot.[7][94]

The Los Angeles Times Editorial Board declared that Faulconer would be the least offensive of the replacement candidates to Gavin Newsom, and endorsed him for the replacement question.[95] Faulconer placed third out of the 46 replacement candidates on the ballot, behind fellow RepublicanLarry Elder and DemocratKevin Paffrath, though the recall vote failed with 61% voting no.

San Diego County Board of Supervisors campaign

[edit]

In 2024, Faulconer challenged SupervisorTerra Lawson-Remer for her seat in coastal District 3 in his first attempt at office since his bid for governor during the failed recall campaign against Governor Gavin Newsom in 2021.[96] In the general election, he lost to Lawson-Remer by around a 13% margin.[97]

Personal life

[edit]

Faulconer met his future wife, Katherine Stuart, in 1997. They were married in 1999.[10][12] Faulconer and Stuart have two children. She is the founder and president of Restaurant Events, a company that plans block parties and other events, and has been described as the primary breadwinner in the family.[98] He is a member of Point Loma Community Presbyterian Church, a congregation of thePresbyterian Church, and has described his faith as important to his values.[12][99]

The couple separated in September 2023, and in November the couple issued a joint statement, saying "We have decided to go our separate ways after many years together and raising two amazing children."[100]

Electoral history

[edit]

San Diego City Council

[edit]
2002 San Diego City Council district 2 election[101]
CandidateFirst-roundRunoff
Votes%Votes%
Michael Zucchet9,70534.122,61055.6
Kevin Faulconer9,06331.918,05044.3
Wayne Raffesberger4,27915.0
Jim Bell2,8299.9
Chuck Bahde1,0453.6
Jim Morrison8412.9
Woody Guthrie Deck6482.2
Total31,92910040,660100
2005–2006 San Diego City Council district 2 special election[101]
CandidateFirst-roundRunoff
Votes%Votes%
Kevin Faulconer15,91234.4415,04451.23
Lorena Gonzalez11,54324.9814,32048.77
Carolyn Chase4,0908.85
Rich Grosch2,9066.29
Tim Rutherford2,4425.29
Kathleen Blavatt1,8484.00
Ian Trowbridge1,7463.78
Pat Zaharopoulos1,2732.76
Phil Meinhardt1,0542.28
Tom Eaton7541.63
Greg Finley6151.33
David Diehl4701.02
James Joaquin Morrison4410.95
George Najjar2800.61
Robert E. Lee2500.54
Allen Hujsak2420.52
Linda Susan Finley2020.44
Total52,15410029,448100
2006 San Diego City Council district 2 election[102]
CandidateVotes%
Kevin Faulconer (incumbent)18,09771.81
Kennan Kaeder6,92027.46
Total votes25,202100
2010 San Diego City Council district 2 election[103]
CandidateVotes%
Kevin Faulconer (incumbent)17,08961.52
Patrick Finucane6,82824.58
Jim Morrison3,79613.67
Total votes27,777100

Mayor of San Diego

[edit]
2013–14 San Diego mayoral special election
CandidateFirst-round[104]Runoff[105]
Votes%Votes%
Kevin Faulconer101,95342.08153,49152.89
David Alvarez65,74027.13136,70147.11
Nathan Fletcher58,35524.09
Mike Aguirre10,7834.45
Lincoln Pickard1,1440.47
Bruce Coons1,0120.42
S. "Simon" Moghadam7480.31
Hud Collins6470.27
Michael A. Kemmer6120.25
Harry Dirks4340.18
Tobiah L. Pettus3440.14
Total242,282100290,192100
2016 San Diego mayoral election[106]
CandidateVotes%
Kevin Faulconer (incumbent)181,14757.16
Lori Saldaña73,93223.33
Ed Harris61,45819.39
Total votes316,891100

Governor of California

[edit]
2021 California gubernatorial recall election[107][108]
Vote on recallVotesPercentage
checkYNo7,944,09261.88
Yes4,894,47338.12
Invalid or blank votes54,0134.19
Totals12,892,578100
Voter turnout58.45%
RankPartyCandidateVotesPercentage
1RepublicanLarry Elder3,563,86748.4
2DemocraticKevin Paffrath706,7789.6
3RepublicanKevin Faulconer590,3468.0
4DemocraticBrandon M. Ross392,0295.3
All other candidates2,108,54828.64
Total valid votes7,361,568100
Invalid or blank votes5,531,01042.90
Totals12,892,578100
Voter turnout58.45%

References

[edit]
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  2. ^La Jolla LightArchived July 13, 2011, at theWayback Machine, lajollalight.com, December 14, 2010.
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  49. ^Weisberg, Lori (September 20, 2018)."Initiative to expand convention center has enough signatures to qualify for ballot — but not in 2018".San Diego Union-Tribune. RetrievedNovember 10, 2018.
  50. ^Mapp, Lauren J. (April 16, 2019)."City Council Votes to Put Convention Center Expansion on 2020 Primary Ballot".Times of San Diego. RetrievedJuly 11, 2019.
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  52. ^abAvitabile, Rafael (January 15, 2019)."Mayor Focuses on Homelessness in 2019 State of the City Address".NBC 7 San Diego. RetrievedJuly 11, 2019.
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  57. ^"With 'Complete Communities,' Faulconer Pushes One Final Affordable Housing Plan".KPBS Public Media. November 6, 2020. RetrievedSeptember 1, 2023.
  58. ^Huard, Christine (November 10, 2020)."Council Passes Faulconer's 'Complete Communities' Housing And Transit Plan".Times of San Diego. RetrievedSeptember 1, 2023.
  59. ^Peak, Corey M.; Stous, Sarah S.; Healy, Jessica M.; Hofmeister, Megan G.; Lin, Yulin; Ramachandran, Sumathi; Foster, Monique A.; Kao, Annie; McDonald, Eric C. (June 24, 2020)."Homelessness and Hepatitis A—San Diego County, 2016–2018".Clinical Infectious Diseases.71 (1):14–21.doi:10.1093/cid/ciz788.ISSN 1058-4838.PMC 10956402.PMID 31412358.
  60. ^abDoshani, Mona; Weng, Mark; Moore, Kelly L.; Romero, José R.; Nelson, Noele P. (February 15, 2019)."Recommendations of the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices for Use of Hepatitis A Vaccine for Persons Experiencing Homelessness".MMWR. Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report.68 (6):153–156.doi:10.15585/mmwr.mm6806a6.ISSN 0149-2195.PMC 6375653.PMID 30763295.
  61. ^Barkham, Paul (October 6, 2017)."Hepatitis A in San Diego: an outbreak waiting to happen".STAT. RetrievedNovember 28, 2020.
  62. ^"Officials Fumbled With Permits, Pilot Project As Deadly Hepatitis Outbreak Surged".KPBS Public Media. August 31, 2017. RetrievedNovember 25, 2020.
  63. ^Lipkin, KPBS News, Maureen Cavanaugh, Michael (September 22, 2017)."Mayor Seeks Solutions To Hepatitis A Outbreak, Dismisses Blame".KPBS Public Media. RetrievedNovember 25, 2020.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  64. ^Self, Zac (March 17, 2020)."San Diego Mayor signs executive order to close all bars, nightclubs".KGTV ABC 10 News. RetrievedApril 18, 2020.
  65. ^City News Service (March 24, 2020)."Mayor Faulconer Closes All City Beaches, Parks and Trails".KPBS Public Media. City News. RetrievedApril 18, 2020.
  66. ^Halverstadt, Lisa (March 23, 2020)."Convention Center Will Transform From Economic Powerhouse to Homeless Refuge".Voice of San Diego. RetrievedApril 18, 2020.
  67. ^City News Service (April 15, 2020)."San Diego Proposes Major Budget Cuts To Offset COVID-19 Revenue Losses".KPBS Public Media. RetrievedApril 18, 2020.
  68. ^"San Diego will partially close some streets to encourage safe walking, cycling".fox5sandiego.com. April 29, 2020. RetrievedApril 30, 2020.
  69. ^"Mayor Faulconer Says Closing All California Beaches 'Sends the Wrong Message'".Times of San Diego. April 30, 2020. RetrievedApril 30, 2020.
  70. ^Dillon, Liam (September 13, 2013)."Why Kevin Faulconer Changed on Same-Sex Marriage".Voice of San Diego. RetrievedSeptember 6, 2019.
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  72. ^"Mayor Faulconer asks faith leaders to help homeless LGBTQ".KFMB. March 5, 2018. RetrievedSeptember 6, 2019.
  73. ^Hoffman, Matt (March 6, 2018)."San Diego Homeless Shelter Network Looks To Help LGBTQ Youth".KPBS Public Media. RetrievedSeptember 6, 2019.
  74. ^Faulconer, Kevin (June 12, 2020)."Mayor Kevin Faulconer on the future of policing in San Diego".San Diego Union-Tribune. RetrievedFebruary 3, 2021.
  75. ^"This pro-choice, Mexico-embracing mayor could be California GOP's future - SFChronicle.com".www.sfchronicle.com. September 5, 2019. RetrievedSeptember 6, 2019.
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  77. ^Mencken, Walter (May 31, 2019)."In wake of #StopTheBans protests, Kevin Faulconer pledges support for abortion rights in Georgia, Alabama, and Missouri".www.sandiegoreader.com. RetrievedSeptember 6, 2019.
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[edit]
Political offices
Preceded by Member of the San Diego City Council
from the 2nd district

2006–2014
Succeeded by
Preceded by
Todd Gloria
Acting
Mayor of San Diego
2014–2020
Succeeded by
1 denotes acting or interim mayor
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