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EDMUND
GERALD BROWN, JR.
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39th Governor of California Born: April 7, 1938, in San Francisco, California
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A third-generation Californian and
the son of California’s 32nd governor,
Edmund G. Brown, Jr. is known as Jerry. |
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Early Life |
Jerry Brown was born and grew up in
San Francisco. He attended
the University of Santa Clara, Sacred Heart
Novitiate (a Jesuit seminary where he studied for the priesthood), and
the University of California (Bachelor
of Arts degree in Latin and Greek in 1961). In 1964 Brown graduated
from Yale Law School. |
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Career |
Brown’s first statewide elected office was secretary of state in 1970. He moved from that to the governor’s office in 1975. In 1978 the California voters returned him for a second term with the largest vote margin in California’s history. In the 1982 election, Brown had an unsuccessful
run for the U.S. Senate. After traveling in Japan and India, he practiced
law in Los Angeles. He was an unsuccessful candidate for the 1992 Democratic
presidential nomination. Brown’s radio broadcast We the People
began early in 1994 and continued for several years. In 1998 Jerry Brown
was elected mayor of the city of Oakland. In 2006 Brown returned to State
office as Attorney General of California. |
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As |
Styling himself as a “minimalist” governor who refused the trappings of political power (such as an executive jet, limousine, or governor’s mansion), Jerry Brown was welcomed by those who had lost faith in government, and particularly by young people. He himself was only 37 years old when he became governor. Brown favored less government spending, as had Governor Reagan before him. An outspoken environmentalist, he urged enactment of the California Coastal Protection Act. He supported both alternative energy sources and alternative medicine. Brown appointed more women, young people,
and minorities to government positions (including the first woman, first
African-American, and first Latino on the California Supreme Court),
but was criticized for some of his choices. Proposition 13, which cut
state property taxes, was passed in 1978. At first Brown opposed this measure,
but he changed his view after it passed. |
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As |
Brown's goals for California include creating more jobs, improving education, reforming the budget process, protecting the environment and water resources, creating clean energy, and defending civil rights. |
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