America
6 years ago

San Francisco elects first black female mayor

London Breed started her career in the city government as an intern before climbing its rungs. AP photo.
London Breed started her career in the city government as an intern before climbing its rungs. AP photo.

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A black woman is to lead San Francisco for the first time in its history - at a time when African-American residents are becoming increasingly scarce in the gentrified US city.

The ascent of London Breed to the mayoralty is all the more remarkable given she was raised in poverty by her grandmother in public housing.

Winning with just over 50 per cent of votes, the 43-year-old said she felt humbled.

Breed is the only female mayor out of the top 15 largest US cities, reports the BBC.

San Francisco is currently grappling with rampant homelessness, rubbish-littered streets that have been likened to developing-world slums, and a property-price boom that is driving working families out of the city.

She was formerly president of the San Francisco Board of Supervisors, the city government’s legislative body.

Breed briefly served as acting mayor following the death of Mayor Ed Lee in December, before running for the post.

The election was on 5 June, but a result has been delayed because the outcome was so tight that city election officials had to count thousands of provisional ballots.

Rival candidate Mark Leno, who would have been the city’s first gay mayor, conceded the knife-edge race on Wednesday.

Breed is not the first female mayor of San Francisco - that was Dianne Feinstein in 1978; she is now a California senator.

She joins a small club of about 19 other black female US mayors.

But she leads a city where 5 per cent of residents are African American, and mostly living in public housing, according to the San Francisco Chronicle.

A lifelong San Francisco resident, Breed took a degree at University of California, Davis, before getting a master’s in public administration at the University of San Francisco in 2012.

She started her career in the city government as an intern before climbing its rungs.

In a 2016 interview with the San Francisco Examiner she recalled her childhood of urban deprivation in the city she now runs.

She told the newspaper “Five of us living on $900 per month.: ‘Recycling’ meant drinking out of old mayonnaise jars. Violence was never far away.”

“And once a week, we took Grandma’s pushcart to the community room to collect government-issued groceries.”

Breed’s sister died in 2006 of a drug overdose and her brother is in prison, according to SF Weekly.

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