Safaí chaperones Farrell, ‘mi amigo,’ through Excelsior

[ad_1] For the last two weeks before the election, Mission Local’s campaign dispatches are switching daily between the major candidates. Today: Ahsha Safaí. Read earlier dispatches here. Since Ahsha Safaí declared his candidacy for mayor in May 2023, he has walked the Mission Street corridor in the Excelsior many times, asking shop owners to put a…

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For the last two weeks before the election, Mission Local’s campaign dispatches are switching daily between the major candidates. Today: Ahsha Safaí. Read earlier dispatches here.


Since Ahsha Safaí declared his candidacy for mayor in May 2023, he has walked the Mission Street corridor in the Excelsior many times, asking shop owners to put a Safaí sign in the window and asking residents for their vote. 

Nowadays, however, Safaí has company — Mark Farrell, his opponent in the mayoral race, with whom he recently formed a ranked-choice voting alliance, one that can only help Farrell as the termed-out District 11 supervisor will likely be the first of the frontrunners to have his votes redistributed.   

So on Thursday, Safaí took on the staffer-like role of introducing Farrell to business owners. When Farrell ran into his linguistic limitations with Spanish-speaking voters, Safaí helped to translate. 

“My name is Ahsha. I’m running for mayor,” Safaí said to one shop owner. “This is my friend Mark. He’s also running for mayor. We are running as a team.” 

This introduction left most voters surprised, if not confused. Many were not familiar with the ranked-choice voting system that allows voters to select up to 10 people for mayor on the ballot. But two candidates campaigning together also flummoxed some of the business owners. 

Not Safaí. “People see it as a breath of fresh air, because candidates are usually just attacking each other,” he said. “I think voters really respond well. They see it as a collaboration. They see it as a mature decision.” 

Two men in conversation with a woman at the counter of a Salvadoran and Mexican food establishment. Bottles and menu visible in the background.
Ahsha Safaí and Mark Farrell speak with a Spanish-speaking business owner on a merchant walk on Oct. 24, 2024. Photo by Junyao Yang.

This wasn’t their first joint appearance since early October when they announced the alliance. They’ve also been together to Crocker Amazon Park, the Castro and Noe Valley.

The alliance is clearly an effort to blunt all of those second-choice votes that the polls say are going to Farrell’s rival Daniel Lurie, but Jim Ross, a long-time political consultant in San Francisco said forming alliances is often “a sign of desperation” and not “necessarily an effective campaign tool.” 



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Source: missionlocal.org