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Home · Articles · News · City Hall · Why Sam Adams Drifted Away
August 3rd, 2011 COREY PEIN | City Hall
 

Why Sam Adams Drifted Away

By dropping his re-election bid, the mayor admits his political weakness and reveals some realities of power in Portland.

news1_samadams_3739SITTING IT OUT: Mayor Sam Adams last month at Posies Cafe in his Kenton neighborhood. - IMAGE: vivianjohnson.com
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Many tough things have been said about Sam Adams over the years, but no one has ever accused him of being a quitter.

Adams overcame a poor childhood in Newport to be elected in 2008 as the first openly gay mayor of a major American city. Four years earlier, he had stormed back from a lousy primary showing to win a seat on the City Council. And during his years as a political aide to Mayor Vera Katz, Adams was relentless and cunning.

So the news July 29 that he wouldn’t seek re-election after one term as mayor shocked the city. Adams acknowledges he faced a difficult campaign.

But less tenacious politicians have survived more damaging scandals than Adams’ sexual relationship with an 18-year-old former legislative intern. Weaker politicians have won re-election.

So why did Adams walk away? He says he would have to become a full-time campaigner if he wanted to hold office. “I’m just not willing to phone it in as mayor,” Adams says.

But there’s more to it. The process of Adams’ decision-making, pieced together through interviews with the mayor and people close to him, opens a window into the calculus of power in Portland. The lesson is that even a savvy, battle-scarred politician cannot overcome certain realities—namely, the need to raise large sums of money to win, the influence of labor unions in Oregon, and the lingering public memory of a scandal.

Adams learned the most crucial facts to inform his political future on Monday, July 25, when the political consultant who had helped engineer his rise, Mark Wiener, privately shared some results from a voter opinion poll. The poll had bad news for Adams: He was in a statistical dead heat with the two declared candidates, former City Commissioner Charlie Hales and New Seasons grocery co-founder Eileen Brady.

Wiener confirmed to WW that the poll showed Adams, Hales and Brady essentially tied, with support in the low-20-percent range.

Those numbers are reasonable for candidates just starting out in a citywide campaign, but not for a sitting mayor.

Adams told WW that the poll “showed me, frankly, at a better place than I thought I was going to be.”

That doesn’t explain why the poll—as Adams told people privately—was key in his decision to fold his re-election hopes. Commissioner Nick Fish says Adams cited the poll first in explaining his decision. “He said, ‘I’m making an announcement today. I’ve been giving a lot of thought to re-election, I saw a poll on Monday, and I’ve got a pretty big hill to climb,” Fish recalled.

What’s not been reported before is that the AFSCME Council 75 and Service Employees International Local 49 commissioned the poll at the suggestion of political strategist Kevin Looper, who last year left the directorship of liberal activist group Our Oregon to run his own independent political consultancy. (Our Oregon spokesman Scott Moore says the group had nothing to do with the poll.)

“I did suggest it would be important information for them to have going into the election cycle,” Looper says.

Union leaders say the poll shows Adams could have won and weren’t sending him a message to step out of the race. “I think Sam could go down in history as one of the more pro-working-families mayors ever,” says Ken Allen, executive director of AFSCME Council 75.

Adams’ exit from the mayoral race means the unions, whose political power rests in large part in their ability to get out the vote, have no obvious favorite. Union leaders say Brady is a question mark; New Seasons employees are not unionized, although Brady is a confirmed liberal. Portland firefighters still steam over Hales’ efforts to reform that bureau.

Adams’ departure means unions may be shopping around for a different candidate. Multnomah County Commission Chair Jeff Cogen says he didn’t ask for his name to be tested in a mayoral campaign poll but heard that it was. Cogen told WW that he’s heard that some polling “has me looking very good,” but he’s sticking by his decision not to run for mayor.

SAM ON SUNDAY: Adams updates Twitter from the Willamette River.
Credits: Rebecca Pool

On July 31, a Sunday, the last day of what he called a “staycation,” Adams drifted in a blue inflatable raft down the Willamette River past crowds of Portlanders along the waterfront as part of a fundraiser for Willamette Riverkeeper, an environmental advocacy group. 

Adams must have known that things would not be the same when he went back to the office on Monday. Two days earlier he had become a lame duck, and here he was, doing what ducks do best: floating. 


FACT: Mayoral candidates Charlie Hales and Eileen Brady have raised a combined $208,000 for their campaigns. Mayor Sam Adams’ campaign account is $139 in the hole.


 
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08.03.2011 at 09:23 Reply

I think Mayor Adams has known for awhile he wanted to be a one termer; and has been travelling wide selling his "green" credentials.  So, he's probably got a few well paying job leads.  Can't blame someone for getting out of the public eye, and enjoying a more routine life.  But it stinks for the public he spent a lot of public resources pushing "green" inorder to advance his own future job potential.

 

08.03.2011 at 10:44 Reply

I think that the scandal was part of the issue but I do not believe that it was a major contributing issue in voter distaste for Adams, most of the people I know that cite the scandal were not voting for him in the first place. He has not shown himself to be honest or competent in my book. Even in his council days running the traffic bureau a study showed that it was poorly run and paved roads in such a scattered manner that it would continually have an ever increasing amount of road needing paving.

He was major contributor to the South Waterfront fiasco, the overruns on renovating PGE and then sat quietly when the Beavers left. He seems willing to lie at the drop of a hat- did he ever release the statistics he cited about arrests for prostitution that he was called on?  I am for mass transit but it sure seems that the Lake Oswego streetcar is just a political give away to developers, same with his desire to grow and add Urban Renewal districts. He throws out poorly thought out ideas such as a Costco in the Rose Quarter or taking over the Sheriffs’ river patrol, and then seemingly does nothing after the initial presentations. It costs money for others to check on these wild ideas, and then nothing. He has a problem that I see in lots of career politicians- he views tax payers as an ATM that can be continually tapped for all projects. He creates an Office of Equity without any idea what it was going to do-it had a budget prior to a mission.  His creation of an education staff, his creating scholarships, funds for startups- none of this is what he is supposed to be doing.

The main job, to provide leadership and to govern, seems to have completely eluded him. He never had the courage to rein in Randy Leonard even when it was obvious that he was wasting money. He used the sewer and water funds for any purpose he felt like, and duplicates services, such as the Dept of Equity and Education efforts, that are done by the county, and often the state and Fed as well. He has added to the cost of living in Portland without enhancing the quality of life and I think that has become increasingly clear to the voters. Sorry for the long rant.

 

08.03.2011 at 11:17

Well said and thanks for the long rant.

 

08.06.2011 at 03:07

TL;DR

 

08.03.2011 at 12:11 Reply

Who's the hot guy in the foreground of the bottom pic?

 

08.03.2011 at 01:30 Reply

What's kind of a shame is that no one has stepped up and said, "heck, no, Sam, run again, please!"

Even among the Green, the Hipsters, the Libs, not a peep has been heard asking him to reconsider?  Or, it's been a really quiet peep?

Maybe it's because we simply respect someone's decision and we're good if he's good...but, it's deeper than that.  Very few people, regardless of their persuasion, are having a good time in Portland right now.

Housing prices continue to drop, jobs continue to leave.  The one-dimensional definition of Portlandia that's our new mythos is sadly, well, sad (and 20 years behind the times of the worship of Slacker).

The public schools are a disaster and getting worse. Violent crime seems more casual and random.  And instead of extending TriMet's "free zone" they are hiring guards to issue fines.

It's too bad Sam won't stay around and keep working on his vision (delete his Twitter account and get to work); I fear we'll elect someone practical without vision on the next go-round.

The future isn't nearly as bright as the weather's been. 

 

08.03.2011 at 02:05 Reply

Yet strangely, nobody--including Adams, of course--will discuss the most likely and most obvious reason that Adams isn't running: he's lousy at the job.

Any delusional, kumbayah hand-holding fantasies that city residents have about Portland are, one by one, dissipating. The environment is NOT getting better, jobs are LEAVING, not coming, the cost of living is too high for most middle class families, businesses (yes, including food carts) are dropping like flies, and the showboating of developer friend handjobs that Adams gives in the name of "green" (ahem, Gerding Edlen) are ridiculous--and ineffective.

The mayor's focused on bike paths, high school graduation rates, and...handguns? Isn't it odd that only one of those has gotten millions of dollars, lots of Mayoral attention, and involved thousands of hours of governmental work? And that the real priorities of the city barely get a mention?

Sigh.

 

 
 

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