Gavin Newsom for lieutenant governor: San Francisco mayor’s achievements in education prove that he can help California

Gavin Newsom at the Democratic Vote 2010 Rally at UCLA on Oct. 15.
Jerry Brown for governor: State's former executive has the experience, passion for education Californians need
Barbara Boxer for senator: Supportive actions for education make incumbent the ideal choice for students
Henry Waxman for representative: House veteran must continue his efforts toward helping students
No on proposition 19: Prop. 19 is vague, poorly written; it would do more harm than good to the legalization debate
No on prop. 23: This initiative has all the wrong ideas for helping California's environment and financial situation
Yes on proposition 25: A two-thirds majority to pass state's budget causes delays; a simple majority will prevent this
No on Proposition 27: This measure will revert an already suspect redistricting system back to full corruption
By Editorial Board
Nov. 1, 2010 12:49 a.m.
California’s lieutenant governor has an important role for university students, acting as a member of the UC Board of Regents and Cal State Board of Trustees. The clear choice for students is Democrat Gavin Newsom.
As mayor of San Francisco for the past six years, Newsom helped pass laws that positively influenced education, such as a 2010 program that provides all kindergarten students in the city with a seeded college savings account. In 2009, he prevented more than 400 public school teacher layoffs by taking $24.5 million out of the city’s rainy day fund. San Francisco is currently rated the highest performing urban school district in California.
Although his opponent, Republican Abel Maldonado, mentioned plans to limit student fee increases, his campaign has not given education the same emphasis as Newsom’s resume and campaign.
Newsom’s achievements in primary and secondary education will help California’s economy in the long run by fostering a larger college-educated community, which will undoubtedly funnel into his higher education policies.
Newsom is someone who students can look to for support in influencing Sacramento policy-making.
