But here's the thing: the vibes from his actual campaign outreach tell a different story.
Wiener's team has been blasting out attack-oriented text messages targeting rival Aarti Chakrabarti, and the reception has been... not great. One local put it bluntly: "Just got this — it's directly from Wiener's campaign. Honestly, seems a bit panicky. I prefer Wiener's campaigning when he focuses on what he'll do — not this weird, petty shit." Another SF resident simply reported the text as spam.
The dynamics of this race are fascinating. Pelosi reportedly isn't thrilled with Wiener's candidacy — and for a deliciously personal reason. His high name recognition effectively boxed out Christine Pelosi from running for her mother's congressional seat, pushing the younger Pelosi toward a state legislature race instead. So while Wiener talks unity, the Democratic family tree is quietly splintering behind him.
Look, we'll give Wiener credit where it's due: he's a legislator who actually shows up and pushes policy, even when it's unpopular. His housing bills have been some of the boldest attempts to fix California's self-inflicted scarcity crisis. That record should be the centerpiece of any campaign.
But five house parties a week won't matter if the campaign's public-facing strategy is juvenile attack texts that make voters cringe. As one SF resident noted, "I'd much rather they focus on the positives for their favored candidate, or on real policy differences. This kind of shit is just juvenile."
Here's our unsolicited advice: run on your actual record, Senator. The housing fights, the transit votes, the fiscal trade-offs. San Francisco voters can handle substance. What they can't handle is another politician who campaigns like a desperate ex sending passive-aggressive texts at midnight.
Five house parties a week is hustle. Panicky attack messages is baggage. Pick one.





