| Pete Wilson | |
| Order: | 36th Governor of California |
| Term of Office: | January 7, 1991 – January 4, 1999 |
| Predecessor: | George Deukmejian |
| Successor: | Gray Davis |
| Date of Birth: | August 23, 1933 |
| Place of Birth: | Lake Forest, Illinois |
| Profession: | Politician |
| Political Party: | Republican |
| Lieutenant Governor: | Gray Davis |
Peter Barton Wilson (born August 23, 1933) is an American Republican politician from California.
Born in Lake Forest, Illinois, and raised in Missouri, Wilson earned his B.A. from Yale University in 1955, where he was admitted to the Zeta Psi fraternity, and proceeded to serve three years as a United States Marine Corps infantry officer. Upon completion of his military obligation, Wilson earned a law degree from Boalt Hall School of Law at the University of California, Berkeley.
Wilson served as the thirty-sixth Governor of California (1991-1999), the culmination of more than three decades in the public arena that included eight years as a United States Senator (1983-1991), eleven years as Mayor of San Diego (1971-1983), and five years as a California State Assemblyman (1967-1971). Through his political life, Wilson has earned more votes in California than anyone in history.
During his tenure as mayor, Wilson also led the effort to reduce the infrastructure budget, reducing or eliminating many aspects of city maintenance. In recent years, as San Diego has struggled with keeping up with rising costs of overdue maintenance, many have pointed to the budget changes from Wilson's term as significantly contributing to the challenge of catching up in this regard.
Wilson also cosponsored the federal Intergovernmental Regulatory Relief Act requiring the federal government to reimburse states for the cost of new federal mandates. A fiscal conservative, he was named the Senate's "Watchdog of the Treasury" for each of his eight years in the nation's capital.
Wilson also enacted education reforms focused on creating curricular standards, reducing class sizes, and replacing social promotion by with early remedial education. Wilson also promoted additional programs for individualized testing of all students, teacher competency training, a lengthier instructional year, and a programs focusing on a return to phonics and early mastery of early reading, writing, and mathematical skills.
Wilson led efforts to enact tougher crime measures and signed into law "Three Strikes," (25 years to life for repeat felons) and "One Strike," (25 years to life upon the first conviction of aggravated rape or child molestation.) He also resumed the death penalty in California, after 25 years of moratorium, with the execution of Alton Harris in April 1992.
In Wilson's 1994 successful campaign for re-election against Kathleen Brown, which he won in a landslide, his two signature issues were his opposition to illegal immigration (Prop 187) and race-based quotas (affirmative action). Both of these efforts were widely seen as racist, and essentially handed the minority vote to Democrats in California, from which the Republican Party has yet to recover.
With each year of his governorship, Wilson further reduced infrastructure spending for California, much as he had done as mayor of San Diego. Many construction projects - most notably highway expansion/improvement projects - were severely hindered or delayed, while other maintenance and construction projects were abandoned completely.
While his decision to merge the California State Police into the California Highway Patrol (CHP) was applauded by some as a better way to spend money, the CHP was severely limited in enforcement capacity by a minimal budget, which would not be restored until successor Gray Davis would take office in 1999. Wilson remains to this day to be a champion for tough on crime laws and applauded by state-wide law enforcement.
Term limits, which Wilson enacted into law, prohibited him from running for the Governorship again.
Industry analysts immediately warned the law was a recipe for power outages and price gouging, as the power producers no longer had a motivation to build new power plants, while energy speculators stood to gain from shortage pricing in the newly deregulated market. As predicted, the state's energy needs continued to grow, while new generating capacity was not brought on line.
The result was the spectacular California energy crisis of 2001, which saw rolling blackouts across much of the state, while energy speculators led by Enron Corporation were able to charge the state energy prices over 1600 times the historic rate. Wilson was out of office by the time the ill effects of AB1890 came home to roost, leaving his successor Democrat Gray Davis to bear the political brunt of the crisis. Wilson defended his energy policy and urged specific policies in an article published by the Hoover Institution.
Most recently, he was co-chair of the campaign of Arnold Schwarzenegger to replace Gray Davis as governor of California. Wilson is married and lives in Los Angeles, California.
1933 births | Zeta Psi brothers | United States Marine Corps officers | Governors of California | United States Senators from California | United States presidential candidates | Members of the California State Assembly | Mayors of San Diego, California | Pro-choice politicians Living people
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