San Jose, a million-person city in which a fifth of its residents choose the mayor, has a history of close elections. Only three of the past seven open elections could be called lopsided victories. The last time an open seat was decided in one round was 40 years ago, in 1982—the year 39-year-old Matt Mahan was born.
Read More 1Norm Mineta
Evan Low Joins the ‘Yang Gang’
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San Jose’s Annual Comedy of Errors Channels Mamma Mia!, Game of Thrones in 26th Run
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Op-Ed: San Jose Should Name a Street after Barack Obama
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Don Edwards’ Indelible Legacy
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Mike Honda Raises Campaign Cash during Birthday Weekend
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Inauguration of San Jose Elected Officials Has a Bit of Everything
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Statue Featuring Rod Diridon Sr. in Works for Diridon Station
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The Future of San Jose Politics: Change or the Status Quo
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Remembering Janet Gray Hayes, San Jose’s First Female Mayor
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Congressman Mike Honda’s Wake-up Call
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Mike Honda—Silicon Valley’s globe-trotting, karaoke-singing, hard-partying congressman—has had a charmed career. Now, a well-funded challenger, Ro Khanna, asks whether being likeable is enough, or whether the public expects a lawmaker to work hard, write laws and fight to keep valley industries competitive.
Read More 25Mineta and Other Mentors in Local Poltiics
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Bay Bridge Had to be Dedicated to a Brown
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There is no question that Willie Brown deserves the honor of having a span of the Bay Bridge named after him, given his lifetime of service to the city and county of San Francisco. Considering the political heavyweights who share that last name, there isn’t an infrastructure project since 1958 that does not have a Brown imprimatur.
Read More 11Bay Area Developers at Odds with City Hall over Lucrative Land Deal
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Big-time Bay Area developers Tom Armstrong and Chop Keenan have joined forces with former San Jose Mayor Tom McEnery to push the city to change its zoning classification of a piece of property on South King Road. The land is currently home to Asian/Indian radio station KLOK 1170 and a sprawling field that would be better off as a massive lot of single-family detached homes, according to the power brokers. But in an effort to create jobs, the city’s general plan forbids the conversion of light industrial property to residential, and current Mayor Chuck Reed and city planning director Joseph Horwedel are trying to quash the proposal. That might not make a difference, though, as some men can’t be denied.
Read More 10Kalra: My Time at the DNC
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San Jose Councilmember Ash Kalra has been in Charlotte, N.C., all week as a delegate at the Democratic National Convention. The following is a recap of his first three days at the Convention. President Obama will deliver his DNC speech tonight, and Kalra has agreed to write an additional column for San Jose Inside on Friday.—Editor
My journey to Charlotte began at Mineta San Jose International Airport on Sunday morning. During my tenure on the City Council I have found it difficult to leave the city for extended periods of time. In fact, this week in Charlotte will be my longest time away from San Jose during my entire time in office. Thankfully, there was no council meeting this week due to the short week following Labor Day. And since residents are rightfully concerned about how taxpayer dollars are spent, you should know that I’m personally paying for this trip—I am not using any city funds or special interest contributions.
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