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Jerry Brown Wins Nomination for California Attorney General

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  • Jerry Brown Wins Nomination for California Attorney General

    Jerry Brown Wins Nomination for California Attorney General

    The New York Times
    By JESSE McKINLEY
    Published: June 8, 2006


    With all precincts reporting, Mr. Brown had received 63 percent of the
    vote versus 37 percent for Rocky Delgadillo, the city attorney of Los
    Angeles. The Republican candidate, Chuck Poochigian, a state senator
    from Fresno, was unopposed.

    On Wednesday, Mr. Poochigian blazed through a series of interviews,
    promising a serious challenge to Mr. Brown, the son of a former
    governor, Edmund G. Brown Sr., and a three-time presidential candidate
    who has spent nearly four decades in politics.

    "My biggest challenge is overcoming Jerry's name advantage,"
    Mr. Poochigian, 57, said in a telephone interview from
    Sacramento. "But Jerry has a bigger challenge to overcome, and that's
    his record."

    Mr. Brown embarked on his own campaign tour, barnstorming through the
    state on a private plane, traveling from Oakland, across the San
    Francisco Bay, to a pair of Southern California stops in Burbank and
    San Diego; then north to Sacramento; and south again to Bakersfield
    and Los Angeles.

    Along the way, Mr. Brown ventured to Mr. Poochigian's turf in the
    Central Valley to address police officials. At every stop, he sought
    to remind voters of his credentials, including his "practical hands-on
    experience" as a governor and a mayor.

    "I've been an independent leader, not just an appendage of narrow
    partisan politics," said Mr. Brown, 68, before boarding a plane in San
    Diego. "I'm running against a man who has basically been a staffer or
    bureaucrat or a legislator. He's never run a darn thing."

    But Mr. Brown said he expected a tough campaign, and predicted that
    Mr. Poochigian would use negative advertisements to try to paint him
    as being out of step with average Californians.

    Mr. Poochigian promised to run "a truthful campaign," but he was
    already hammering Mr. Brown for a recent spike in crime in
    Oakland. "In the case of Jerry Brown, the truth is going to hurt," he
    said.

    In the election to determine Mr. Brown's successor in Oakland, the
    former congressman Ron Dellums appeared to have won, although
    officials were still counting the ballots.

    Mr. Poochigian has $3.3 million in his campaign chest, aides said, and
    has already raised more money than any other Republican running for
    statewide office except Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger.

    But he probably faces an uphill battle in a state that often votes
    Democratic. Mr. Brown's vote total among Democratic voters on Tuesday
    was just 771 shy of what Mr. Poochigian received from all Republican
    voters.
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