Nancy Pelosi torched by San Franciscans for endorsing Connie Chan

0



Rep. Nancy Pelosi’s long-awaited endorsement in the race to succeed her after four decades in Congress has enraged San Franciscans on both sides of the city’s deep-blue political spectrum.

Pelosi formally backed San Francisco Supervisor Connie Chan on Monday, choosing the labor-aligned candidate over state Sen. Scott Wiener and progressive multimillionaire Saikat Chakrabarti.

“I know this district, I know the Congress, and I know Connie,” Pelosi said in a short campaign video released alongside the endorsement.

Connie Chan won the congressional endorsement of Rep. Nancy Pelosi just two weeks before the election.

“I’m proud to endorse Connie Chan, and I ask you to join me in electing her to Congress.”

Reactions to Pelosi’s endorsement suggested the 86-year-old may not know her city as well as she thinks.

The endorsement quickly sparked a war of words over San Francisco’s future — exposing simmering anger from moderates, housing activists, tech leaders and even far-left progressives who view Pelosi as the embodiment of the city’s political establishment.

“WTF. Pelosi endorsed Connie Chan, a progressive supervisor in SF who opposed the Chesa Boudin recall, blocked every form of housing, and voted against streamlining permits and cutting red tape,” investor Sheel Mohnot posted on X. “The opposite of an abundance candidate.”

Daniel Owens, a pro-housing activist in the city, blasted Pelosi as out of touch with San Francisco’s needs.

“Pelosi isn’t pro-housing. She doesn’t even understand local SF issues on a deep level,” Owens wrote on X. 

“She’s been disconnected from SF culture for decades. She relies on a small inner circle here, while almost entirely focused on national DC politics.”

Pelosi was called out of step with her district after endorsing Chan. Getty Images for Vox Media

Pelosi curiously waited until just weeks before the June 2 primary election to publicly choose a successor after months of staying neutral in the race. The former House speaker, who has represented San Francisco in Congress for nearly 40 years, announced last year she would retire when her term expires in January 2027.

The endorsement led others to speculate that the decision to back Chan had less to do with ideology than long-standing friction with Wiener, who’s built a national reputation championing aggressive pro-housing and LGBTQ+ laws in Sacramento.

“The theory is she’s mad that Scott blocked [Pelosi’s] daughter out from running,” tech investor Kim-Mai Cutler posted on X.

State Sen. Scott Wiener has been leading the race but didn’t get Pelosi’s endorsement due to past grievances. San Francisco Chronicle via Getty Images
Saikat Chakrabarti could take the biggest hit from Pelosi’s endorsement. San Francisco Chronicle via Getty Images

The post was in reference to Christine Pelosi’s decision to seek Wiener’s seat in the state Senate after he announced an exploratory committee in 2023 for the former House speaker’s seat in Congress. 

Pelosi’s endorsement also sparked criticism accusing Chan of cloaking progressive politics in identity politics.

“Our community needs to care more about the policies that affect Asians and less about the color of people’s skin,” Garry Tan, CEO of Y Combinator, posted on X.

“SF has produced an unusual kind of grifty Asian American politician that virtue signals by hurting our community like Connie Chan,” he added. “This must stop.”

Chakrabarti — who was notably snubbed for the endorsement of his old boss, Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, despite obsessively mentioning her throughout the race — dismissed Pelosi’s blessing of Chan, arguing voters would ultimately reject establishment politics.

“That’s how we’re going to win this thing, not because of corporate PACs or establishment endorsements but through the support of San Franciscans,” he said.

Polling shows Chan and Chakrabarti in a neck-and-neck tie for second with around 20% of the vote, while Wiener has a firm grip on first place with roughly 40% support.

The primary vote is set for June 2.


Download The California Post App, follow us on social, and subscribe to our newsletters

California Post News: Facebook, Instagram, TikTok, X, YouTube, WhatsApp, LinkedIn
California Post Sports Facebook, Instagram, TikTok, YouTube, X
California Post Opinion
California Post Newsletters: Sign up here!
California Post App: Download here!
Home delivery: Sign up here!
Page Six Hollywood: Sign up here!




LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here