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Brown hits back at Whitman attack ad

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Democratic gubernatorial nominee Jerry Brown pushed back at rival Meg Whitman’s 1960s-themed attack ad, saying decades of experience ought to be valued.

“My reaction is ‘60s, ‘70s, ‘80s, ‘90s, I’ve been around a long time. I know stuff. Knowing is better than not knowing,” he said on the ‘Good Day L.A.’ morning show on KTTV, the Fox affiliate in Los Angeles.

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Brown was commenting about a 60-second ad that Whitman released last week that had a Vietnam War-era theme and sought to portray Brown as a relic of the past and a failed public official.

Brown painted Whitman, the former chief of EBay, as a dilettante.

“Were I a CEO and someone said, ‘You know what, I’ve never been in this company, I never saw the product and I want to be a boss,’ I’d say, ‘Hey, why don’t you start at the bottom and work your way up,’ ” he said. “That’s the same way with government -- you can’t wake up one morning and say, ‘Gee, I’ve got a billion dollars and I want to be governor.’ You got to learn something because those people up in Sacramento are sharks.”

He made light of the ad’s imagery, which featured grainy, decades-old pictures of Brown.

“Did you see those ads when I was young and I had all the hair? I thought I looked pretty good to tell the truth,” said the now-bald candidate. “I looked a hell of a lot better than I do now.”

Brown noted that a recent poll showed him with a 6-point lead over Whitman, which he called “amazing” given the candidates’ funding gap.

“Mrs. Whitman has spent over $100 million and I think I’ve spent a few hundred thousand. I haven’t even started yet and I’m not going to start for while,” he said. “She’s advertising every day and I’ve got to wait because I don’t have the same kind of money. I’m not a billionaire.”

Brown discussed his implementation of Prop. 13 despite his earlier opposition to it, as well as support for the 2nd Amendment and same-sex marriage. He said he opposed efforts to legalize marijuana, which will be on the November ballot.

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“We got to compete with China, and if everybody’s stoned, how the hell are we going to make it?” he said.

-- Seema Mehta in Los Angeles

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