Born inSan Francisco, he is the son ofBernice Layne Brown andPat Brown, who was the 32nd governor of California (1959–1967). After graduating from theUniversity of California, Berkeley andYale Law School, he practiced law and began his political career as a member of theLos Angeles Community College District Board of Trustees (1969–1971). He was elected to serve as the 23rd secretary of state of California from 1971 to 1975. At 36, Brown was elected to his first term as governor in1974, making him the youngest California governor in 111 years. In1978, he won his second term. During his governorship, Brown ran unsuccessfully as a candidate for the Democratic presidential nomination in1976 and1980. He declined to pursue a third term as governor in1982, instead making an unsuccessful run for theUnited States Senate thatsame year, losing to San Diego mayor and future governorPete Wilson.
After traveling abroad, Brown returned to California and served as the sixth Chairman of theCalifornia Democratic Party (1989–1991), attempting to run for U.S. president once more in1992 but losing theDemocratic primary toBill Clinton. He then moved to Oakland, where he hosted atalk radio show; Brown soon returned to public life, serving as mayor of Oakland (1999–2007) and attorney general of California (2007–2011). He ran for his third and fourth terms as governor in2010 and2014, his eligibility to do so having stemmed from California's constitutionalgrandfather clause. On October 7, 2013, he became the longest-serving governor in thehistory of California, surpassingEarl Warren.
Returning to California, Brown took the statebar exam and passed on his second attempt.[12] He then settled inLos Angeles and joined thelaw firm of Tuttle & Taylor. In 1969, Brown ran for the newly created Los Angeles Community College Board of Trustees, which oversawcommunity colleges in the city; he placed first in a field of 124 and served until 1971.[13]
In 1974, Brown ran in a highly contested Democratic primary for Governor of California againstspeaker of the California AssemblyBob Moretti, San Francisco mayorJoseph L. Alioto, RepresentativeJerome R. Waldie, and others. Brown won the primary with the name recognition of his father, Pat Brown, whom many people admired for his progressive administration.[14] In the General Election on November 5, 1974, Brown was elected Governor of California over California state controllerHouston I. Flournoy; Republicans ascribed the loss to anti-Republican feelings fromWatergate, the election being held only ninety days after PresidentRichard Nixon resigned from office. Brown succeeded Republican governorRonald Reagan, who retired after two terms.
Jerry Brown selected two frugal 1974 Plymouth Satellites from the state motor pool for his use in Northern California and Southern California. This is one of them, on display at theCalifornia Automobile Museum.
After taking office, Brown gained a reputation as afiscal conservative.[15]The American Conservative later noted he was "much more of a fiscal conservative thanGovernor Reagan".[16] His fiscal restraint resulted in one of the biggest budget surpluses in state history, roughly $5 billion.[17] For his personal life, Brown refused many of the privileges and perks of the office, forgoing the newly constructed 20,000 square-foot governor's residence in the suburb ofCarmichael and instead renting a $275-per-month apartment at 1228 N Street, adjacent to Capitol Park in downtown Sacramento.[18][19] Rather than riding as a passenger in a chauffeuredlimousine as previous governors had done, Brown walked to work and drove in aPlymouth Satellitesedan.[20][21][22] WhenGray Davis, who was chief of staff to Governor Brown, suggested that a hole in the rug in the governor's office be fixed, Brown responded: "That hole will save the state at least $500 million, because legislators cannot come down and pound on my desk demanding lots of money for their pet programs while looking at a hole in my rug!"[23]
Official portrait, 1975
As governor, Brown took a strong interest inenvironmental issues. He appointedJ. Baldwin to work in the newly created California Office of Appropriate Technology,Sim Van der Ryn as State Architect,Stewart Brand as Special Advisor,John Bryson as chairman of the California State Water Board. Brown also reorganized theCalifornia Arts Council, boosting its funding by 1300 percent and appointing artists to the council,[13] and appointed more women and minorities to office than any other previous California governor.[13] In 1977, he sponsored the "first-ever tax incentive for rooftop solar", among many environmental initiatives.[24] In 1975, Brown obtained the repeal of the "depletion allowance", a tax break for the state's oil industry, despite the efforts oflobbyistJoseph C. Shell, a former intraparty rival to Nixon.[25]
In 1975, Brown opposed Vietnamese immigration to California, saying that the state had enough poor people. He added, "There is something a little strange about saying 'Let's bring in 500,000 more people' when we can't take care of the 1 million (Californians) out of work."[26][27]
Brown strongly opposed thedeath penalty and vetoed it as governor, which the legislature overrode in 1977.[28] He also appointed judges who opposed capital punishment. One of these appointments,Rose Bird as the chief justice of theCalifornia Supreme Court, was voted out in 1987 after a strong campaign financed by business interests upset by her "pro-labor" and "pro-free speech" rulings. The death penalty was only "a trumped-up excuse"[29] to use against her, even though the Bird Court consistently upheld the constitutionality of the death penalty.[30] In 1960, he lobbied his father, then governor, to spare the life ofCaryl Chessman and reportedly won a 60-day stay for him.[31][32]
Brown was both in favor of aBalanced Budget Amendment and initially opposed toProposition 13, the latter of which would decrease property taxes and greatly reduce revenue to cities and counties.[33] After Prop 13 passed in June 1978, he changed course and declared himself a "born-again tax cutter." He heavily cut state spending, and along with the Legislature, spent much of the $5 billion surplus to meet the proposition's requirements and help offset the revenue losses which made cities, counties, and schools more dependent on the state.[17][33] His actions in response to the proposition earned him praise from Proposition 13 authorHoward Jarvis who went as far as to make a television commercial for Brown just before his successfulre-election bid in 1978.[33] The controversial proposition immediately cut tax revenues and required a two-thirdssupermajority to raise taxes.[34] Max Neiman, a professor at theInstitute of Governmental Studies at University of California, Berkeley, credited Brown for "bailing out local government and school districts", but felt it was harmful "because it made it easier for people to believe that Proposition 13 wasn't harmful".[24] In an interview in 2014, Brown indicated that a "war chest" would have helped his campaign for an alternative to Proposition 13.[35]
During his first term, Brown also signed into law various measures improving labor rights and social security. Amongst others, these included collective bargaining for school employees and teachers, the extension of unemployment benefits to farmworkers, prohibiting the employment of professional strikebreakers in labor disputes,[36] and improved rights for farm labor.[37]
Brown began his first campaign for the Democratic nomination for president on March 16, 1976,[38] late in the primary season and over a year after some candidates had started campaigning. Brown declared: "The country is rich, but not so rich as we have been led to believe. The choice to do one thing may preclude another. In short, we are entering an era of limits."[39][40]
Brown's name began appearing on primary ballots in May and he won inMaryland,Nevada, and his home state of California.[41] He missed the deadline inOregon, but he ran as a write-in candidate and finished in third behind Former Georgia GovernorJimmy Carter and SenatorFrank Church ofIdaho. Brown is often credited with winning theNew Jersey andRhode Island primaries, but in reality, uncommitted slates of delegates that Brown advocated in those states finished first. With support fromLouisiana governorEdwin Edwards, Brown won a majority of delegates at the Louisiana delegate selection convention; thus, Louisiana was the only southern state to not support Southerners Carter or Alabama governorGeorge Wallace. Despite this success, he was unable to stall Carter's momentum, and his rival was nominated on the first ballot at the1976 Democratic National Convention. Brown finished third with roughly 300 delegate votes, narrowly behind CongressmanMorris Udall but significantly behind Carter.
Brown won re-election in 1978 against Republican state attorney generalEvelle J. Younger. Brown appointed the firstopenly gay judge in the United States when he namedStephen Lachs to serve on theLos Angeles County Superior Court in 1979.[42] In 1981, he also appointed the first openlylesbian judge in the United States,Mary C. Morgan, to the San Francisco Municipal Court.[43] Brown completed his second term having appointed a total of five gay judges, includingRand Schrader andJerold Krieger.[44][45] Through his first term as governor, Brown had not appointed any openly gay people to any position, but he cited the failed 1978Briggs Initiative, which sought to ban homosexuals from working in California's public schools, for his increased support ofgay rights.[42] The governor also signed AB 489, TheConsenting Adult Sex Act, which decriminalized homosexual behavior between adults, adding to this reputation. He did, however, sign AB 607, which barred homosexual couples from receiving civil marriage licenses, in 1977.
Brown in 1978
Brown championed thePeripheral Canal project to transport water from near Sacramento around theSacramento-San Joaquin Delta into the Central Valley Project and export it to southern California. It was submitted to the voters for approval as a ballot proposition in 1982, but was turned down.[46]
In 1981, Brown, who had established a reputation as a strong environmentalist, was confronted with a seriousmedfly infestation in theSan Francisco Bay Area. The state's agricultural industry advised him, and the US Department of Agriculture's Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS), to authorize airborne spraying of the region. Initially, in accordance with his environmental protection stance, he chose to authorize ground-level spraying only. Unfortunately, the infestation spread as the medfly reproductive cycle out-paced the spraying. After more than a month, millions of dollars of crops had been destroyed, and billions of dollars more were threatened. Governor Brown then authorized a massive response to the infestation. Fleets of helicopters sprayedmalathion at night, and theCalifornia National Guard set up highway checkpoints and collected many tons of local fruit; in the final stage of the campaign, entomologists released millions ofsterile male medflies in an attempt to disrupt the insects' reproductive cycle.
Ultimately, the infestation was eradicated, but both the governor's delay and the scale of the action have remained controversial ever since. Some people claimed that malathion was toxic to humans, as well as insects. In response to such concerns, Brown's chief of staff,B. T. Collins, staged a news conference during which he publicly drank a glass of malathion. Many people complained that, while the malathion may not have been very toxic to humans, the aerosol spray containing it was corrosive to car paint.[47][48]
Brown proposed the establishment of a state space academy and the purchasing of asatellite that would be launched into orbit to provide emergency communications for the state—a proposal similar to one that was indeed eventually adopted. In 1979, an out-of-state columnist,Mike Royko, at theChicago Sun-Times, picked up on the nickname from Brown'sgirlfriend at the time,Linda Ronstadt, who was quoted in a 1978Rolling Stone magazine interview humorously calling him "Moonbeam".[49][50] A year later, Royko expressed his regret for publicizing the nickname,[51] and in 1991 Royko disavowed it entirely, proclaiming Brown to be just as serious as any other politician.[52][53]
Some notable figures were given priority correspondence access to him in either advisory or personal roles. These includedUnited Farm Workers of America founderCesar Chavez,Hewlett-Packard co-founderDavid Packard, labor leaderJack Henning, andCharles Manatt, then-Chairman of the California State Democratic Party. Mail was routed asVIP to be delivered directly to the governor. However, it is unclear as to exactly how long this may have occurred.[54]
In 1978, San Franciscopunk band theDead Kennedys' first single, "California über alles", from the albumFresh Fruit for Rotting Vegetables, was released; it was performed from the perspective of then-governor Brown painting a picture of ahippie-fascist state, satirizing what they considered his mandating of liberal ideas in a fascist manner, commenting on what lyricistJello Biafra saw as the corrosive nature of power. The imaginary Brown had become President Brown presiding over secret police and gas chambers. Biafra later said in an interview withNardwuar that he now feels differently about Brown; as it turned out, Brown was not as bad as Biafra thought he would be, and subsequent songs have been written about other politicians deemed worse.[55]
In 1980, Brown challenged Carter for renomination. The press had anticipated his candidacy ever since he won re-election as governor in 1978 over the RepublicanEvelle Younger by 1.3 million votes, the largest margin in California history. But Brown had trouble gaining traction in both fundraising and polling for the presidential nomination. This was widely believed to be because of the more prominent candidate SenatorTed Kennedy ofMassachusetts. Brown's 1980 platform, which he declared to be the natural result of combiningBuckminster Fuller's visions of the future andE. F. Schumacher's theory of "Buddhist economics", was much expanded from 1976. His "era of limits" slogan was replaced by a promise to, in his words, "Protect the Earth, serve the people, and explore the universe".
Brown opposed Kennedy's call foruniversalnational health insurance and opposed Carter's call for an employer mandate to provide catastrophic private health insurance, labeling it socialist.[57] As an alternative, he suggested a program of tax credits for those who do not smoke or otherwise damage their health, saying: "Those who abuse their bodies should not abuse the rest of us by taking our tax dollars."[57] Brown also called for expanding the use ofacupuncture andmidwifery.[57]
As Brown's campaign began to attract more members of what some more conservative commentators described as "the fringe", including activists likeJane Fonda,Tom Hayden, andJesse Jackson, his polling numbers began to suffer. Brown received only 10 percent of the vote in theNew Hampshire primary, and he was soon forced to announce that his decision to remain in the race would depend on a good showing in theWisconsin primary. Although he had polled well there throughout the primary season, an attempt to film a live speech inMadison, the state's capital, into aspecial effects-filled, 30-minute commercial (produced and directed byFrancis Ford Coppola) was disastrous.[58]
In1982, Brown chose not to seek a third term as governor; instead, he ran for theUnited States Senate for the seat being vacated by RepublicanS. I. Hayakawa. He was defeated by Republican San Diego mayorPete Wilson by a margin of 52% to 45%. After his Senate defeat, Brown was left with few political options.[59] RepublicanGeorge Deukmejian, a Brown critic, narrowly won the governorship in 1982, succeeding Brown, and was re-elected overwhelmingly in 1986. After his Senate defeat in 1982, many considered Brown's political career to be over.[59]
Brown traveled to Japan to studyBuddhism, studying with Christian/Zen practitionerHugo Enomiya-Lassalle underYamada Koun-roshi.[60][61] In an interview, he explained, "Since politics is based on illusions, zazen definitely provides new insights for a politician. I then come back into the world of California and politics, with critical distance from some of my more comfortable assumptions."[61] He also visitedMother Teresa inCalcutta, India, where he ministered to the sick in one of herhospices.[60][62] He explained, "Politics is a power struggle to get to the top of the heap. Calcutta and Mother Teresa are about working with those who are at the bottom of the heap. And to see them as no different from yourself, and their needs as important as your needs. And you're there to serve them, and doing that you are attaining as great a state of being as you can."[61]
Upon his return from abroad in 1988, Brown announced that he would stand as a candidate to becomechairman of theCalifornia Democratic Party, and won against investment bankerSteve Westly.[63] Although Brown greatly expanded the party's donor base and enlarged its coffers, with a focus ongrassroots organizing andget out the vote drives, he was criticized for not spending enough money on TV ads, which was felt to have contributed to Democratic losses in several close races in 1990, such asDianne Feinstein's attempt to become thefirst female governor of California. In early 1991, Brown abruptly resigned his post and announced that he would run for the Senate seat held by the retiringAlan Cranston. Although Brown consistently led in the polls for both the nomination and the general election, he abandoned the campaign, deciding instead to run for the presidency for the third time.
As Brown campaigned in various primary states, he expanded his platform beyond a policy of strictcampaign finance reform. Although he focused on a variety of issues during the campaign, he highlighted his endorsement ofliving wage laws and opposition tofree trade agreements such asNAFTA; he mostly concentrated on his tax policy, which had been created specifically for him byArthur Laffer, the famous supporter ofsupply-side economics who created theLaffer curve. This plan, which called for the replacement of theprogressive income tax with aflat tax and avalue added tax, both at a fixed 13% rate, was decried by his opponents as regressive. Nevertheless, it was endorsed byThe New York Times,The New Republic, andForbes, and its raising of taxes oncorporations and elimination of various loopholes that tended to favor the very wealthy proved popular with voters. Variousopinion polls at the time found that as many as three-quarters of Americans believed the current tax code was biased toward the wealthy.[citation needed]Jesse Walker wrote inThe American Conservative that he "seemed to be the most left-wing and right-wing man in the field ... [calling] for term limits, a flat tax, reforming social security, and the abolition of theDepartment of Education".[65] Brown scored surprising wins in Connecticut and Colorado and seemed poised to overtake Clinton.
Due to his limited budget, Brown began to use a mixture ofalternative media and unusual fundraising techniques. Unable to pay for actual commercials, he frequently usedcable television andtalk radio interviews as a form of free media to get his message out. To raise funds, he purchased atoll-free telephone number.[66] During the campaign, Brown's repetition of this number and moralistic language led some to call him a "politicaltelevangelist" with an "anti-politics gospel".[67]
Despite poor showings in theIowa caucus (1.6%) and theNew Hampshire primary (8%), Brown won narrow victories inMaine,Colorado,Nevada, andVermont, but he continued to be considered a small threat for much of the campaign. It was not until shortly afterSuper Tuesday, when the field had been narrowed to Brown, former senatorPaul Tsongas of Massachusetts, and front-runner then-governorBill Clinton ofArkansas, that Brown began to emerge as a major contender in the eyes of the press. On March 17, Brown received a strong third-place showing in theIllinois andMichigan primaries, and Tsongas dropped out of the race. A week later, he cemented his position as a major threat to Clinton when he eked out a narrow win in the bitterly foughtConnecticut primary.
As the press focused on the primaries inNew York andWisconsin, which were held on the same day, Brown, who had taken the lead in polls in both states, made agaffe: he announced to an audience of various leaders of New York City'sJewish community that, if nominated, he would considerJesse Jackson as his running mate.[68] Jackson, who had made a pair ofantisemitic comments about Jews in general, and New York City's Jews in particular, while running for president in 1984, was still mistrusted by the Jewish community. Jackson also had ties toLouis Farrakhan, infamous for his own antisemitic statements, and toYasir Arafat, the chairman of thePalestine Liberation Organization.[68] Brown's polling numbers suffered. On April 7, he lost narrowly to Bill Clinton in Wisconsin (37%–34%), and dramatically in New York (41%–26%).
Brown continued to campaign, but won no further primaries. Despite being overwhelmingly outspent, he won upset victories in seven states and his "votes won to the money raised ratio" was by far the best of any candidate's in the race.[69] He had a sizable number of delegates, and a big win in his home state of California would have deprived Clinton of sufficient support to win the Democratic nomination, possibly bringing about abrokered convention. After nearly a month of intense campaigning and multiple debates between the two candidates, Clinton managed to defeat Brown in this final primary, 48% to 41%. Brown did not win the nomination, but was able to boast of one accomplishment: at the following month'sDemocratic National Convention, he received the votes of 596 delegates on the first ballot, more than any other candidate but Clinton. He spoke at the convention, and to the national viewing audience, yet without endorsing Clinton, through the device of seconding his own nomination. There was animosity between the Brown and Clinton campaigns, and Brown was the first political figure to criticize Bill Clinton over what became known as theWhitewater controversy.[66]
After his 1992 presidential bid, Brown had moved from thePacific Heights neighborhood ofSan Francisco to theJack London District neighborhood ofOakland, California,[70][71] an "overwhelmingly minority city of 400,000".[71] He constructed a multi-million dollar work-live complex, serving both as his residence and as a workspace. Among other features, it included a broadcast studio and a 400-seat auditorium.[60][70]
Brown launched a nationaltalk radio show from his Oakland complex, which he would continue to produce until October 1997.[70]
In 1995, with Brown's political career at a low point, in the motion pictureJade, the fictional governor of California tells an assistant district attorney to drop a case, "unless you want as much of a future in this state as Jerry Brown". The assistant DA responds, "Who's Jerry Brown?"[72]
In Oakland, Brown became involved as an activist in local political matters, including bay-front development and campaign finance reform.[70] In 1996, Brown unsuccessfully urged Oakland mayorElihu Harris to appoint him to a seat on the Oakland Port Commission.[70]
Mayor Jerry Brown (left) with U.S. senatorDianne Feinstein (middle) and San Francisco mayorGavin Newsom (right) in 2007
After Oakland mayor Elihu Harris decided against seeking reelection,[70] Brown ran in the city's1998 mayoral election as an independent "having left the Democratic Party, blasting what he called the 'deeply corrupted'two-party system".[71] He won with 59% of the vote in a field of ten candidates.[71]
Prior to taking office, Brown campaigned to get the approval of the electorate to convert Oakland's"weak mayor" political structure, which structured the mayor as chairman of the city council and official greeter, to a "strong mayor" structure, where the mayor would act as chief executive over the nonpolitical and thus the various city departments, and break tie votes on the Oakland City Council.[71] In November 1998, Oakland's electorate voted by a landslide margin of 3 to 1 in support of Measure X, which would shift the city government to the strong mayor model for a period of six years.[73][74] A referendum permanently extending Measure X later passed in 2004, after failing to pass in 2002, thus making permanent the city's shift to the strong mayor model of governance.[74]
The political left had hoped for some of the more progressive politics from Brown's earlier governorship, but found Brown, as mayor, to be "more pragmatic than progressive, more interested in downtown redevelopment and economic growth than political ideology".[75] As mayor, he invited theU.S. Marine Corps to use Oakland harbor lands for mock military exercises as part ofOperation Urban Warrior.[76]
The city was rapidly losing residents and businesses, and Brown is credited with starting the revitalization of the city using his connections and experience to lessen the economic downturn while attracting $1 billion of investments, including refurbishing theFox Theatre, thePort of Oakland, andJack London Square.[71] The downtown district was losing retailers, restaurateurs and residential developers, and Brown sought to attract thousands of new residents withdisposable income to revitalize the area.[77] Brown continued his predecessor Elihu Harris's public policy of supporting downtown housing development in the area defined as theCentral Business District in Oakland's 1998 General Plan.[78] Since Brown worked toward the stated goal of bringing an additional 10,000 residents toDowntown Oakland, his plan was known as the "10k Plan". It has resulted in redevelopment projects in theJack London District, where Brown himself had earlier purchased and later sold an industrial warehouse which he used as a personal residence,[71] and in theLakeside Apartments District nearLake Merritt. The10K plan has touched the historicOld Oakland district, theChinatown district, theUptown district, andDowntown. Brown surpassed the stated goal of attracting 10,000 residents according to city records, and built moreaffordable housing than previous mayoral administrations.[77]
Brown had campaigned on fixing Oakland's schools, but "bureaucratic battles" dampened his efforts. He concedes he never had control of the schools, and his reform efforts were "largely a bust".[71] He focused instead on the creation of twocharter schools, theOakland School for the Arts and theOakland Military Institute.[71] Defending his support of a military charter school in Oakland, Brown once told KQED reporter Stephen Talbot, "I believe that had I been sent to the military academy, as my mother and father threatened, I would have been president a long time ago."[79]
Brown sponsored nearly two dozen initiatives to reduce the crime rate,[80] although crime decreased by 13 percent overall, the city still suffered a "57 percent spike in homicides his final year in office, to 148 overall".[71]
Brown's largely successful first term as mayor of Oakland was documented in a one-hour KQED documentary,The Celebrity and the City (2001), that evaluated his record in dealing with his four stated goals: reducing crime, improving education, attracting 10,000 new residents to a resurgent downtown, and encouraging the arts.[81]
In 2004, Brown expressed interest to be a candidate for the Democratic nomination forAttorney General of California in the 2006 election, and in May 2004, he formally filed to run. He defeated his Democratic primary opponent, Los Angeles city attorneyRocky Delgadillo, 63% to 37%. In the general election, Brown defeated Republican state senatorCharles Poochigian 56.3% to 38.2%, one of the largest margins of victory in any statewide California race.[82] In the final weeks leading up to Election Day, Brown's eligibility to run for attorney general was challenged in what Brown called a "political stunt by a Republican office seeker" (Contra Costa County Republican Central Committee chairman and state GOP vice-chair candidate Tom Del Beccaro). Plaintiffs claimed Brown did not meet eligibility according to California Government Code §12503, "No person shall be eligible to the office of Attorney General unless he shall have been admitted to practice before the Supreme Court of the state for a period of at least five years immediately preceding his election or appointment to such office." Some legal analysts called the lawsuit frivolous because Brown was admitted to practice law in the State of California on June 14, 1965, and had been so admitted to practice ever since. Although ineligible to practice law because of his voluntary inactive status in theState Bar of California from January 1, 1997, to May 1, 2003, he was nevertheless still admitted to practice. Because of this distinction the case was eventually thrown out.[83][84]
As attorney general, Brown represented the state in fighting death-penalty appeals and stated that he would follow the law, regardless of his personal beliefs againstcapital punishment. Capital punishment bylethal injection was halted in California by federal judgeJeremy D. Fogel until new facilities and procedures were put into place.[85] Brown moved to resume capital punishment in 2010 with the execution ofAlbert Greenwood Brown after the lifting of a statewidemoratorium by a California court.[86] Brown's Democratic campaign, which pledged to "enforce the laws" of California, denied any connection between the case and the gubernatorial election. ProsecutorRod Pacheco, who supported Republican opponent Meg Whitman, said that it would be unfair to accuse Brown of using the execution for political gain as they never discussed the case.[87]
In June 2008, Brown filed a fraud lawsuit claiming mortgage lenderCountrywide Financial engaged in "unfair and deceptive" practices to get homeowners to apply for risky mortgages far beyond their means.[88][89] Brown accused the lender of breaking the state's laws againstfalse advertising and unfair business practices. The lawsuit also claimed the defendant misled many consumers by misinforming them about the workings of certain mortgages such as adjustable-rate mortgages,interest-only loans, low-documentation loans and home-equity loans while telling borrowers they would be able torefinance before the interest rate on their loans adjusted.[90] The suit was settled in October 2008 afterBank of America acquired Countrywide. The settlement involved the modifying of troubled 'predatory loans' up to $8.4 billion.[91]
Brown at a campaign rally inSacramento two days before the election in 2010
Brown announced his candidacy for governor on March 2, 2010.[97] First indicating his interest in early 2008, Brown formed an exploratory committee in order to seek a third term as governor in 2010, following the expiration of GovernorArnold Schwarzenegger's term.[98][99]
Both Whitman and Brown were criticized fornegative campaigning during the election.[105] During their final debate at the 2010Women's Conference a week before the election, moderatorMatt Lauer asked both candidates to pull attack ads for the rest of the election, which elicited loud cheers from the audience.[105] Brown agreed and picked one ad each of his and Whitman's that he thought, if Whitman would agree, should be the only ones run, but Whitman, who had been loudly cheered earlier as the prospective first woman governor of the state, was booed when she stated that she would keep "the ads that talk about where Gov. Brown stands on the issues".[106]
TheLos Angeles Times reported that nearly $250 million was spent on the Governor's race.[107] At least two spending records were broken during the campaign. Whitman broke personal spending records by spending $140 million of her own money on the campaign,[108] and independent expenditures exceeded $31.7 million, with almost $25 million of that spent in support of Brown.[109] Despite being significantly outspent by Whitman, Brown won the gubernatorial race 53.8% to Whitman's 40.9%.
Brown was sworn in for his third term as governor on January 3, 2011, succeeding RepublicanArnold Schwarzenegger who had been officially term-limited. Brown was working on a budget that would shift many government programs from the state to the local level, a reversal of trends from his first tenure as governor.[110]
On June 28, 2012, Brown signed a budget that made deep cuts to social services with the assumption that voters would pass $8 billion in tax increases in November 2012 to close California's $15.7-billion budget deficit. Brown stated: "We need budget cuts. We need the continued growth of the economy for a long period of time. We're suffering from the mortgage meltdown that killed 600,000 jobs in the construction industry. ... We're recovering from a national recession slowly—over 300,000 jobs [gained] since the recession. We've got a million to go. That needs to continue, but that depends not only on Barack Obama and the Congress and the Federal Reserve, but also on [German chancellor Angela] Merkel, China, the European Union, and the self-organizing quality of the world economy."[111]
In September 2012, Brown signed legislation sponsored by California state senatorTed Lieu that prohibits protesters at funerals within 300 feet, with convicted violators punishable with fines and jail time; the legislation was in response to protests conducted by theWestboro Baptist Church.[112]
In the November 2012 general elections, voters approved Brown's proposed tax increases in the form ofProposition 30. Prop 30 raised the state personal income tax increase for seven years among California residents with an annual income over US$250,000 and increased in the state sales tax by 0.25 percent over four years. It allowed the state to avoid nearly $6 billion in cuts to public education.[113]
In 2013, Brown proposed a large, $25 billion Bay Delta Conservation Plan[114] (later renamed theCalifornia Water Fix and Eco Restore project) to build two large, four-story-tall, 30-mile-long (48 km) tunnels to carry fresh water from theSacramento River under theSacramento-San Joaquin Delta toward the intake stations for theState Water Project and theCentral Valley Project.[115] Unlike his earlier Peripheral Canal project, the two tunnels are to be funded by the agencies and users receiving benefit from the project and do not require voter approval.[116]
On September 16, 2014, Gov. Brown signed ahistoric package of groundwater legislation. The plan will regulate local agencies and also implement management plans to achieve water sustainability within 20 years.[118]
Brown meeting with U.S. secretary of the interiorRyan Zinke in April 2017
Brown announced his bid for another term on February 27, 2014. On June 3, he came in first place in the primary election by over 1.5 million votes. He received 54.3% of the vote and advanced to the general election with RepublicanNeel Kashkari, who took 19.38% of the vote.
There was only one gubernatorial debate. When asked to schedule another, Brown ultimately declined.[119] During the debate in Sacramento on September 4, 2014, Kashkari accused Brown of failing to improve California's business climate. His leading example was theTesla Motors factory investment, creating 6,500 manufacturing jobs, going to Nevada rather than California. Brown responded that the cash payment upfront required by the investment would have been unfair to California taxpayers.[120] A range of issues were debated, including recent legislation for aban on plastic bags at grocery stores that Brown promised to sign and Kashkari thought unimportant.[119]
Brown said that if he were elected to a fourth and final term, he would continue transferring power to local authorities, particularly over education and criminal justice policy, and would resist fellow Democrats' "gold rush for new programs and spending".[35]
In the general election, Brown was re-elected with 4,388,368 votes (60.0%) to Kashkari's 2,929,213. He was sworn in for a final term specifically on January Monday 5, 2015. His stated goals for his unprecedented fourth term in office were to construct theCalifornia High-Speed Rail, to createtunnels to shore up the state's water system and to curb carbon dioxide emissions. He still had $20 million in campaign funds to advance his ballot measures in case the legislature didn't support his plans.[121]
In October 2015, Brown signed off theCalifornia End of Life Option Act allowing residents of California who fulfilled strict criteria to exercise theright to die by accessingmedical aid in dying. During the sign off he took the unusual step of adding a personal message indicating his dilemma regarding the consideration of the ethical issues involved and stating that he felt unable to deny the right of choice to others.[122][123]
In 2016, Brown vetoed a bill to exemptfeminine hygiene products from state sales taxes, at the same time that he vetoed other bills which would also have exempted diapers, saying that collectively, these exemptions would have reduced state revenues by $300 million annually, and stated "As I said last year, tax breaks are the same as new spending—they both cost the general fund money."[124]
In the 2018–2019 budget plan that Brown released on January 10, 2018, the governor proposed spending $120 million to establish California's first fully online community college by fall 2019.[125]
Brown has been criticized for his links to the oil and gas industry, notably for contributions from, and his family ties to,Sempra Energy.[128]
By September 2018, Brown had granted more than 1,100 pardons since returning to office in 2011; more pardons than any California governor in recent history.[129][130] Brown commuted more than 82 sentences, the highest number since at least the 1940s.[130]
Following the conclusion of his career in public office, Brown has become increasingly involved with climate cooperation between United States non-state entities (includingMichael Bloomberg and the Bloomberg Foundation) and China.[131]: 108 Brown has also worked with former Chinese climate ministerXie Zhenhua to establish a new center for California-China climate cooperation atUniversity of California, Berkeley.[131]: 108
Brown lives on a mountain ranch in California that he allows researchers including theCalifornia Native Plant Society to use as a meeting point. In 2023 a beetle in the genusBembidium was namedB. brownorum after Brown and his wife, after it was discovered on the ranch.[132]
A bachelor in his first two terms as governor and first term as mayor of Oakland, Brown attracted attention for dating famous women, the most notable of whom was singerLinda Ronstadt.[133][134][135][136][137] In March 2005, Brown announced his engagement to his girlfriend since 1990,Anne Gust, former chief administrative officer forthe Gap.[138] They were married on June 18, 2005, in a ceremony officiated by SenatorDianne Feinstein in the Rotunda Building in downtown Oakland. They had a second, religious ceremony later in the day in theRoman Catholic Church in San Francisco where Brown's parents had been married. Brown and Gust lived in the Oakland Hills in a home purchased for $1.8 million.[139] As of 2019[update], they live on a ranch inColusa County.[140]
Brown at the LBJ Presidential Library in 2018
Beginning in 1995, Brown hosted a daily call-in talk show on the localPacifica Radio station,KPFA-FM, inBerkeley broadcast to major U.S. markets.[61] Both the radio program and Brown's political action organization, based inOakland, were calledWe the People.[61] His programs, usually featuring invited guests, generally explored alternative views on a wide range of social and political issues, from education and health care to spirituality and the death penalty.[61]
The officialgubernatorial portrait of Jerry Brown, commemorating his first period as Governor of California, was painted byDon Bachardy and unveiled in 1984. The painting has long been controversial due to its departure from the traditional norms of portraiture.[141]
Brown had a long-term friendship with his aide Jacques Barzaghi, whom he met in the early 1970s and put on his payroll. Author Roger Rapaport wrote in his 1982 Brown biographyCalifornia Dreaming: The Political Odyssey of Pat & Jerry Brown, "This combination clerk, chauffeur, fashion consultant, decorator, and trusted friend had no discernible powers. Yet, late at night, after everyone had gone home to their families and TV consoles, it was Jacques who lingered in the Secretary (of state's) office." Barzaghi and his sixth spouse Aisha lived with Brown in the warehouse in Jack London Square; Barzaghi was brought into Oakland city government upon Brown's election as mayor, where Barzaghi first acted as the mayor's armed bodyguard. Barzaghi left Brown's staff in July 2004, six days after police had responded to his residence over a complaint of domestic violence, and later moved to Morocco and then Normandy. Barzaghi died in 2021.[142][143]
In April 2011, Brown had surgery to remove abasal-cell carcinoma from the right side of his nose.[144] In December 2012, media outlets reported that Brown was being treated for early stage (the precise stage and grade was not stated) localizedprostate cancer with a very good prognosis.[145]
In 2011, Jerry and Anne Gust Brown acquired aPembroke Welsh corgi,Sutter Brown, dubbed the "first dog" of California.[146] Sutter was frequently seen in the company of the governor, accompanying him to political events and softening the governor's cerebral image.[147][148] In 2015, the couple obtained a second dog, Colusa "Lucy" Brown, a Pembroke Welsh corgi/border colliemix.[149] Sutter had emergency surgery in October 2016 to remove cancerous tissue. Sutter died in December 2016 fromcancer at the age of 13.[150]
In 2019, Brown was appointed to be a visiting professor atBerkeley.[151]
^Pack, Robert (1978).Jerry Brown, the philosopher-prince. Stein and Day.ISBN978-0-8128-2437-7. "A story appeared in theNew York Times on May 16, 1976, reporting that Brown 'now admits he is no longer a practicing Roman Catholic.' TheTimes story prompted a member of the staff ofThe Monitor, the newspaper of the archdiocese of San Francisco, to query Brown, whose answer was, "I was born a Catholic. I was raised a Catholic. I am a Catholic."
^Davis, Gray (January 23, 2020)."Governor Gray Davis on Governor Jerry Brown". RetrievedOctober 20, 2020.Another example of the governor's frugality occurred about three months into his administration. We were just finishing our morning meeting, when I mentioned to the governor that I had asked General Services to come over and not replace, but repair a 10-inch hole in the rug adjacent to his desk. "Why would you do that?" he asked. "Because it's unseemly to have a hole in the governor's rug." The Governor answered: "That hole will save the state at least $500 million, because legislators cannot come down and pound on my desk demanding lots of money for their pet programs while looking at a hole in my rug!"
^The decisive vote against the allowance was cast in theCalifornia State Senate by the usually pro-business Republican SenatorRobert S. Stevens. Shell claimed that Stevens had promised him that he would support keeping the allowance: "He had shaken my hand and told me he was with me." Brown later rewarded Stevens with a judicial appointment, but Stevens was driven from the bench for making salacious telephone calls.Walters, Dan (April 8, 2008)."For Joe Shell, character trumped ideology in California politics".The Sacramento Bee. Archived fromthe original on April 23, 2008.
^Nolte, Carl (May 30, 1999)."California rides the wave".San Francisco Chronicle.Archived from the original on November 28, 2002. RetrievedNovember 18, 2017.
^Royko, Mike (September 10, 1991)."Time to eclipse the 'moonbeam' label".Chicago Tribune.By now, the label had surely faded away, especially since Brown is obviously a serious man and every bit as normal as the next candidate, if not more so.
^Rood, W.B. (September 26, 1979)."Brown proposes $2 billion revival of space program".Los Angeles Times. p. B9. Archived fromthe original on April 11, 2013.He called it the 'first step in bringing us toward a solar-powered space satellite to provide solar energy for this planet.'
^abcKempster, Norman (November 11, 1979)."Brown calls opponents' health insurance programs part of a 'medical arms race'".Los Angeles Times. p. A4. Archived fromthe original on April 11, 2013. RetrievedJuly 6, 2017.As an alternative, the governor suggested a program of tax credits as a 'wellness incentive' for people who do not smoke or otherwise damage their own health. He admitted that he had not worked out all of the details of such a plan, but he promised to offer the specifics later. Arguing that most illness is caused by occupational hazards, environmental pollution, and bad habits, Brown said 'Those who abuse their bodies should not abuse the rest of us by taking our tax dollars.' Claffey, Charles E. (November 11, 1979)."Brown's health plan outlined at Harvard".The Boston Globe. p. 1. Archived fromthe original on April 11, 2013. RetrievedJuly 6, 2017.He also would expand such unorthodox medical procedures as acupuncture and midwifery.
^The fact that he has served two terms already does not affect him becauseProposition 140 does not apply to those who had served as public officials before the law passed in 1990, as provided in Article 20, Section 7 of theCalifornia Constitution.Term limitsArchived October 9, 2014, at theWayback Machine
^Jesse McKinley. "The New York Times".01/10/2011. "McKinley, Jesse (January 11, 2011)."Deep Social Services Cuts Outlined in California".The New York Times.Archived from the original on November 6, 2014. Retrieved2011-01-17.". January 16, 2011.
^abLewis, Joanna I. (2023).Cooperating for the Climate: Learning from International Partnerships in China's Clean Energy Sector. Cambridge, Massachusetts: TheMIT Press.ISBN978-0-262-54482-5.
^Goldman, John J. (April 7, 1979)."Board Plane for Africa".Los Angeles Times. p. A1.ProQuest158893272.Archived from the original on May 25, 2017. RetrievedJuly 6, 2017.Gov. Brown left quickly and quietly from New York Friday with rock singer Linda Ronstadt to celebrate his 41st birthday in Africa.
^"Visits Tribesmen".Los Angeles Times. April 12, 1979. p. B3.ProQuest158863960.Archived from the original on May 25, 2017. RetrievedJuly 6, 2017.Rock star Linda Ronstadt Wednesday visited Kenyan tribesmen who she said looked "like something out of National Geographic" and for the first time firmly denied she will marry California Gov. Brown during their African safari.
^Martinez, Al & Sweeney, Joan (April 17, 1979)."Brown's Back, Unmarried and Hot at the Press".Los Angeles Times. p. B3.ProQuest158817018.Archived from the original on May 25, 2017. RetrievedJuly 6, 2017.Gov. Brown arrived at Los Angeles International Airport Monday with still-unmarried rock singer Linda Ronstadt, a large rolled-up map of the world and some harsh comments on how the press treated him and the singer during their 10-day African tour.
^William Kloss; Diane K. Skvarla; Jane R. McGoldrick (2002).United States Senate Catalogue of Fine Art. Government Printing Office. p. xxviii. N6505 .U479 2002. RetrievedApril 9, 2013.
Bollens, John C. and G. Robert Williams.Jerry Brown: In a Plain Brown Wrapper (Pacific Palisades, California: Palisades Publishers, 1978).ISBN0-913530-12-3
Brown, Jerry.Thoughts (San Francisco: City Lights Books, 1976)
Rarick, Ethan. "The Brown Dynasty." inModern American Political Dynasties: A Study of Power, Family, and Political Influence ed by Kathleen Gronnerud and Scott J. Spitzer. (2018): 211–30.