voting recommendations

Oct 292016
 

election2016jpg

Every election, I publish a Voter Guide trying to identify the most progressive candidates running for office in Alameda County.  I do as much research as I can on the candidates, send out questionnaires and meet with them when possible.  And yet, often times I get it wrong.  I recommend a candidate who then turns out to be less than progressive while in office.

This time, I’m being more cautious.  I’m only recommending candidates who are bona fide progressives, who supported Bernie Sanders in the primary, and have a record of standing up for social justice and civil liberties.  In cases where there are no such candidates in a race, or where I’m not exactly sure of just how progressive they are, I’ll tell you how I will or would vote, but I won’t make a formal recommendation (unless it’s to avoid voting for a particularly conservative choice).

Please leave comments and questions below and check out my Progressive Voter Guide to State Propositions & Local Measures.

National & State Races

PRESIDENT: No Recommendation

As a member of the Alameda County Democratic Central Committee, I cannot advocate that anyone not vote for the Democratic Party’s nominee or that they vote for someone else. I am therefore not doing either.  However, when I ran I made it clear that I could never support Hillary Clinton and I stand by my word.

Progressives have three solid choices in California.  They can vote for Peace and Freedom Party candidate Gloria La Riva, Green Party candidate Jill Stein or write-in Bernie Sanders.   While a vote for La Riva or a write-in vote for Sanders are basically protest votes, voting for Stein will help her get the 5% of the vote the Green Party needs for it to receive public campaign financing in 2020, and thus potentially help push the Democratic Party to the left.   I’m voting my conscience and I hope you do too. 

US SENATE: Loretta Sanchez

Loretta Sanchez has accused Muslims of wanting to install a Caliphate and has insulted Native Americans. but she voted against the Patriot Act and against the war in Iraq and has a fairly liberal voting record in Congress.  While she eventually endorsed Clinton, she held a fundraiser for Bernie Sanders and she has called on Obama to put a stop to the North Dakota Pipeline.    Kamala Harris is pro-mass surveillance,  seems to have strong neo-con tendencies and wants the US to kneel before Israel.  As Attorney General she has failed to address the epidemic of police brutality against mostly people of color and has refused to investigate the police victimization of Celeste Guap.  She is a big Clinton supporter.    I’m voting for Sanchez.

US CONGRESS

CD 13: Barbara Lee

Barbara is one of the most liberal members of Congress, a strong voice against war and for civil liberties. While she didn’t endorse Bernie Sanders, she also did not endorse Clinton until Bernie was ready to do the same.  I’m voting for Barbara Lee.

CD 15: No Recommendation

Incumbent Democrat Eric Swalwell faces a weak Republican that is not campaigning and will easily win re-election. Swalwell is a corporate Democrat, a former prosecutor, that has shown concern about student debt and yet endorsed Hillary Clinton.  He has shown little interest in protecting civil liberties.  If I lived in this district, I’d write in Pete Stark.

CD 17: Ro Khanna

I first endorsed Ro Khanna when he ran in 2014 and continue to support him.  I’m impressed by his expressed commitment to a non-imperialistic foreign policy and to human rights.  Alone among all candidates to Congress, he was endorsed by former President Jimmy CarterMike Honda was a nice man, but he seems to have lost his mental faculties, is in the midst of a Congressional ethics investigation and is running a disgustingly racist campaignI’d vote for Ro Khanna.

STATE SENATE

SD 9: No Recommendation

I endorsed Nancy Skinner  when she ran on the primary and voted to give her the Democratic endorsement (ultimately, neither candidate received it), but I’m concerned about some of her actions that were directed towards harming the Progressive Revolution that Bernie Sanders has started.  I was happy to see Sandre Swanson attend the recent Bernie Sanders rally in San Francisco.  They are both strong progressives, though Skinner is a far more effective one.  At this point, I haven’t decided whom I will vote for.  I’m still undecided.

STATE ASSEMBLY

AD 15: No Recommendation

Democratic Incumbent Tony Thurmond is a pretty strong liberal, but he supported Hillary Clinton which gives me pause.  However, he’s doing a good job in Sacramento.  I’d vote for Tony Thurmond.

AD 16: No Recommendation

Incumbent Catharine Baker is a moderate Republican, but some of her votes are inexcusable. For example, she voted to deny farm workers overtime pay! Democratic challenger Cheryl Cook-Kallio is more conservative than I, but she’ll be an improvement over Baker.  I’d vote for Cook-Kallio.

AD 18: No Recommendation

Incumbent Rob Bonta will easily win this race against an invisible Republican opponent.  Bonta is a transactional politician, he is good on Labor issues- because he relies on labor to fill his campaign coffers – but not on civil liberties or other matters without big pocketed donors.  I’ll write in Lou Filipovich.

AD 20: No Recommendation

Incumbent Democrat Bill Quirk has a mixed record. He voted against the farm workers overtime bill the first time around, but redeemed himself when it came for re-vote. He’s good on surveillance and privacy issues, however.  I’d vote for Bill Quirk.

AD 25: No Recommendation

I haven’t paid any attention to what Kansen Chu is doing, so I can’t say anything about him. I’d do my research.

JUDICIAL

Superior Court Judge Office #1: No Recommendation

Superior Court Judge Office #1: No Recommendation

I have reservation about both candidates and I don’t actually support electing judges. Therefore I’m going to seat this race out.

Regional Boards

AC TRANSIT BOARD

At Large: No recommendation

Long term incumbent Chris Peeples faces retired bus driver Dollene Jones.  Peeples is a strong progressive, but he has been criticized for supporting the purchase of expensive Belgium made buses and has lost the confidence of some public transit advocates.  Jones, meanwhile, didn’t answer my questionnaire because she was afraid someone would steal her ideas. I’ll vote for Peeples.

Ward 2: No recommendations

Neither incumbent Greg Harper nor challenger Russ Tillerman responded to my questionnaire or offer to speak.  Harper has the endorsement of both the Democratic and Green parties. I’d vote for Harper.

BART BOARD

District 3: No recommendation

Updated: Incumbent Rebecca Saltzman represents my district and she has been extremely responsive whenever we’ve contacted her with any concerns. She has been particularly good on issues concerning surveillance and police brutality, and she voted to not press charges against the BART protesters.  She supported Hillary in the primary so I’m not officially recommending her, but I’ll happily vote for Saltzman.

District 5: No recommendation

Incumbent John McPartland supported prosecuting the BART protesters and would support similar prosecutions in the future, so I cannot recommend him.  His challenger, however, is former Pleasanton Mayor Jennifer Hosterman, who did not provide specific answers to my questionnaire.  In other interviews, she expressed opposition to Measure RR (the BART bond that will allow for the modernization of the system), while acknowledging that the system does need to be modernized.  She seems to be running in an anti-labor platform, and I see no compelling reason to support her.  I‘d probably just not vote on this race.

District 7: Don’t vote for incumbent Zakhari Mallett

Mallet was elected on contractor money, and has shown no interest in being accessible to the community.  He did not answer either my questionnaire or the Green Party’s.  Mallet, moreover,  strongly sided against labor in past disputes.  Both the Democratic and Green parties have endorsed Lateefah Simon, but she has not answered my questionnaire, so I don’t know anything about her views on freedom speech, surveillance and policing in BART.   Will Roscoe did not answer my questionnaire and Roland Emerson is too pro-surveillance and anti-protest to get my vote (if I was voting in that district).  I‘d probably vote for Simon as she’s the most viable candidate against Mallet.

EAST BAY PARKS BOARD

WARD 2: Dionisio “Dee” Rosario

I hesitate a little in making this recommendation because I don’t know Rosario that well.  Still, his answers to my questionnaire were good and he showed a lot of knowledge and, most imporantly, passion for parks during  the Democratic endorsement interview.  He is in favor of returning the armored vehicle that EBRP police has.  Rosario has gotten the endorsement of both the Democratic and Green parties and he supported Bernie in the primary!  I’d vote for Dee Rosario

WARD 4: No recommendation

Ellen Corbett is my former State Senator. She’s a moderate liberal, with a strong record on consumer rights.  She will surely be a competent board member, and her extensive government experience will surely be useful for the park district, but I don’t fully know how much baggage she will also be bringing into this role.  She did, of course, get the Democratic endorsement.  Daniel Chesmore is a very young, enthusiastic politician-in-the-making.  He seems quite progressive, but he works (or worked) for a charter school organization, which gives me a little bit of pause.  I’m also a bit concerned that he’s looking to run for something, rather than have a specific interest in parks.  Still, he lives in East Oakland and will represent a constituency – that of low income urban park users – that is not otherwise represented.  The issues he spoke about in his questionnaire have not been raised by other candidates and I think there is much to be said for having a diverse board in terms of age.  Otis Lee Sanders, meanwhile, did not respond to my e-mails.   I’ll be voting for Dan Chesmore.

COMMUNITY COLLEGE BOARDS

Chabot, District 7: No Recommendation

William Macedo’s answers to my questionnaire were fine.  He received the Democratic endorsement and the Green Party did not endorse in this race (the Green Party usually only endorses in the northwestern part of Alameda County).  His opponent, Edralin Maduli, is a Republican and did not answer my questionnaire. I’d vote for Macedo.

Peralta, District 6: No recommendation

Updated: I heard both Nick Resnick and Karen Weinstein speak at the Democratic Party interview.  Neither seemed to have a deep knowledge of the financial issues concerning the district, but beyond that I couldn’t decide what made a candidate better than the other.  I had a long talk with Karen Weinstein, and I’m now confident that I would vote for her if I was in the district. Karen is a psychologist and a counselor, and I think her skills will be useful in bringing professionalism to the Board.  She has very progressive political views, she sees community colleges as a fundamental tool for taking students out of poverty, she understands education as a tool for social change and she shares my distrust of police forces.  Basically, she is a bleeding heart liberal (despite her unwise support of Hillary Clinton).  Resnick, with whom I haven’t spoken, has awoken the distrust of organized labor because of his ties with a charter school organization.  I’d vote for Weinstein.

WATER AND SANITARY BOARDS

Water and sanitary boards are usually made up of engineers and people with technical knowledge. None of the races this time are in my district, so I’m weary of making recommendations. Plus, incumbents are pretty much always re-elected to these races.  So, for these races, I will allow myself to make recommendations that come from my heart, not necessarily careful analysis.

Alameda County Water District Board (choose 3): Aziz Akbari

He’s very young, energetic, has done his homework on water, seems fairly progressive and would bring a different perspective to the board.

Castro Valley Sanitary District Board (choose 3): John Maher

This is pure cronyism.  John serves with me at the ACDCC, and he’s a lovely, wonderful, super progressive, retired union worker.  I just love him.  He may not have the expertise of the incumbent board members, but there is something to be said about having good, decent human beings be in positions of power.

Oro Loma Sanitary District Board (choose 2): Dan Walters

Dan is another decent human being, more conservative than I in many ways, but a good man. He is a chemical engineer who just LOVES water treatment plans and knows everything about everything connected to garbage.  He’s also smart and fiscally conservative, so a good person to have in a board.  But mostly, I recommend him because he really has a childish enjoyment of water treatment plants that I find so cute. He is the only incumbent I’m recommending.

Oro Loma Sanitary District Board Short Term (choose 2): Chike Udemezue

Chike is a Nigerian immigrant who has written a book about the social implications of Nigerian accounting practices. How cool is that?

Cities & School Districts

City of ALAMEDA

City Council (choose 2): Don’t vote for Malia Vella

No progressives are running on this race and there are just no good or even mildly acceptable choices.  None of the candidates responded to my questions or invitation to speak.

Malia Vella is probably the worst of the bunch.  She is a political operative with endless political ambitions. She has moved around different jobs working for Democratic politicians and unions, and likes to work behind the scenes supporting candidates that can help her political career.  She is originally from San Leandro, where she has backed candidates that support mass surveillance and police militarization, while opposing rent control.  Labor has poured tens of thousands of dollars into her race and she’s supported by the Firefighters union and the conservative Alamedans United PAC.   The Green Party recommends voters do not vote for her, while the Democratic Party had endorsed her.

Incumbent Marilyn Ashcraft has also received the endorsement of the Democratic Party and the anti-endorsement of the Green Party, and is also supported by the Alamedans United PAC.  She has an undistinguished record as a Council member.  Tony Daysog is a self-described conservative who opposes rent control.  Lena Tam voted to militarize the Alameda Police when she previously in the City Council.   Jennifer Roloff is the only newcomer and she got the Green Party’s endorsement, but she didn’t reply to my questions.  I’d probably just vote for Roloff in this race.

School Board (choose 3): No recommendations

Gray Harris is a former teacher who has been active in Democratic politics.  She is very progressive and I’ve heard she’s a great teacher.  She was appointed to the Board and apparently she is doing a fairly good job.  She isn’t a Berniecrat, however, otherwise I’d recommend her.

Ardella Daily, Matt Hettich and Jennifer Williams did not answer my questionnaires, while Dennis Popalardo did, so he would get my second vote by default.  I had a great meeting with Anne McKereghan, and while she’s definitely more conservative than I am, I was impressed by her personal commitment to Alameda schools, where she has been a parent volunteer for many years. I would vote for Gray Harris, Dennis Popalardo and Anne McKereghan.

City Auditor: No recommendation

City Treasurer: No recommendation

These are two very technical positions and I did not research how good a job the incumbents were doing to be able to make a recommendation one way or the other as to whether to vote for them. I’d vote for the incumbents in both races.

ALBANY

City Council (choose 3): No recommendations

The only candidate to answer my questionnaire was Amber Whitson, though Nick Pilch has reached out and I’m trying to schedule an interview.  If I was in Albany I’d probably vote for Amber, just to bring a new voice and a very different perspective to the City Council, but she probably lacks the knowledge of City Hall that would make her an effective council member.

Incumbent Michael Barnes refused to answer my questionnaire, claiming he was no longer a Democrat.  The Green Party recommends you vote against him given his history of vitriol and personal attacks in public fora.  As mentioned, Erik Giesen-Fields and incumbent Peter Maas did not return my questionnaire.  I’d probably vote for Whitson and Pilch on this race.

School Board (choose 2): No recommendations

Kim Trutane, Jon Raj Destin and Clementina Duron all seem well qualified, progressive candidates that would do a good job in the Albany School Board.  Jacob Clark, a teacher in San Leandro schools no less, did not return my questionnaire or the Green Party’s. I’d probably vote for Trutane and Destin.

BERKELEY

Berkeley has ranked choice voting.

Mayor: Jesse Arreguin

This race is mostly between Council members Jesse Arreguin, who was endorsed by Bernie Sanders himself, and Laurie Capitelli who has refused to call himself a progressive.  Write down Kriss Worthington as your second choice. I’d vote for 1) Jesse Arreguin, 2) Kriss Worthington, 3) leave blank

City Council District 2: Cheryl Davila

Darryl Moore did not respond to either my questionnaire or the Green Party’s and he has consistently voted with the regressive forces in the Berkeley City Council.

Cheryl Davila is a strong progressive who has the guts to say she’s voting for Jill Stein – in a year where Stein supporters have been harassed and insulted ad infinitum by establishment types.  Then again, so is her opponent Nancy Armstrong-Temple.    Both come highly recommended by progressive activists I respect very much.  I believe they both will champion social justice and human rights in Berkeley.   Davila returned my questionnaire, so I’m more inclined to vote for her first.  I’d ranked choice vote 1) Davila and 2) Armstrong-Temple.

City Council District 3: No recommendations

None of the candidates answered my questionnaire and only two answered the Green Party’s.  Ben Bartlett’s complete answers are not online (or were not submitted) but he got the nod as the number one choice from the Green Party, as well as the Democratic endorsement.  He is also the choice of the progressive politicians in Berkeley.  Both Al Murray and Mark Coplan seem run-of-the mill moderate progressives. I’d probably vote for 1) Bartlett, 2) Coplan, 3) Murray

City Council District 5:  Sophie Hahn

Sophie Hahn is a strong progressive, with a history of women’s rights and human rights activism, as well as with deep involvement in her own community.  She is supported by and will vote with the progressive side of the Council. She has my full endorsement. I’d vote for Sophie Hahn.

City Council District 6: Frederick Denman Dodsworth, III

Frederick Denman Dodsworth, III is a very strong progressive and out of the box thinker.  He’s exactly the sort of morally courageous not-quite politician that you want to have make decisions at City Hall.  He has my full endorsement.  I did not get a questionnaire back form Isabelle Gaston, but I would rank her second simply because she is not incumbent Susan Wengraf, whose lack of respect for human dignity was made apparent by her advocacy of the sit-lie ordinance (which Berkeley voters wisely rejected).   Wengraf was endorsed by the Democratic Party and anti-endorsed by the Green Party. I’d vote 1) Fred Dodsworth, 2) Isabelle Gaston

School Board (choose 2): No recommendations

Incumbents Beatriz Leyva-Cutler  and Judith Appel are typical Berkeley progressives and seem competent in their positions. I would probably vote for them if I was a Berkeley resident.  Challenger Abdur Sikder did not return my questionnaire and his answers to the Green Party’s one were uninspiring. I’d vote for Leyva-Cutler and Appel.

Rent Review Board (choose 4):  Alejandro Soto-Vigil, Christina Murphy, Leah Simon-Weisberg, Igor Tregub

This is the progressive, pro-rent control slate. And they’ve actually been endorsed by Bernie Sanders! I’d vote for Soto-Vigil, Murphy, Simon-Weisberg and Tregub.

CASTRO VALLEY

School Board (choose 3): No recommendations

I received answers to my questionnaire from Tojo Thomas and heard Lavender Whitaker and Monica Lee speak at the Democratic endorsements.  The three are supported by the teachers’ union.  Suresh Gupta and incumbent Jo A.S. Loss did not return my questionnaires.  I’d vote for Thomas, Whitaker and Lee.

DUBLIN

Mayor: No recommendation

The Mayor is a Republican while his opponent is a perennial candidate, who has run for an office or the other for the last 28 years. I’d do a funny write-in.

City Council (choose 2): Arun Goel

UPDATED: Arun Goel is a strong smart growth, clean money, Bernie Sanders progressive.  He’s served in the  Planning Commission and is concern about transparency and dirty money in city politics.  I met with him for a couple of hours, and I was very impressed with his integrity and the value he puts on community input and evidence and policy-based decisions (as opposed to lobbyist based). He faces a strong challenge from Melissa Hernandez Strah, Mona Lisa Ballesteros and Republican appointed incumbent Doreen Wehrenberg.  Hernandez Strah and Ballesteros both got the endorsement of the Democratic Party, after being put on consent by the Executive Committee.  In the Tri-Valley, the Democratic party usually endorses candidates that support developer interests as the Democratic party vice-chair for that district, Angela Ramirez-Holmes, works as a lobbyist for developers.   Meanwhile, Alameda Central Labor – which is often interested in backing candidates that will create construction jobs – endorsed Hernandez-Strah and Wehrenberg, despite the latter being a Republican.   I’d vote for Goel.

(Note: this section has been updated to give the reasons why I suspect that developers are backing Wehrenberg, Hernandez-Strah and Ballesteros – though it may very well be that they just want to make sure that Goel does not get elected).

School Board (vote for 3): No recommendation

I didn’t get back questionnaires from any of the people running and I haven’t researched the candidates.

School Board, Short Term (vote for 1): No recommendations

Id.

EMERYVILLE

City Council (choose 3): No recommendations yet

Emeryville’s two blogs have done a great job of interviewing candidates, and I’m still not done going through all their answers.

School Board (choose 2): No recommendations

Barbara Inch gave great answers both to my questionnaire and the Green Party’s. She is a Clinton supporter, however.  She got both the Democratic and Green party endorsements.  Cruz Vargas didn’t answer either questionnaire and Ken Bukowski answered the Green Party’s but not mine.  I was not impressed by his answers.  Still, Emery School Board President John Affeldt just resigned, so there will be one more vacancy in the district, so it’s likely that whoever doesn’t get elected will get appointed.  I’d vote for Barbara Inch.

FREMONT

Mayor: No recommendation

Current Mayor Bill Harrison is a Democrat and active in the party, but he takes copious campaign contributions from developers and votes to do their bidding.  He has also voted for mass surveillance and against allowing marijuana cultivation or the delivery of medical marijuana within Fremont.   Challenger City Council member Lily Mei shares his anti-civil liberties agenda, but does not take money from developers or is a guaranteed vote for developer interests.  She’s running in a slate with Cullen Tiernan and Vinnie Bacon, whom I do support, but as a School Board members he voted to prohibit an AP English teacher from teaching an award winning book because she objected to the subject matter. Neither Harrison nor Mei responded to my questions or request to talk.

Update: Developers and the Police Union have skirted campaign finance laws by contributing sixty thousand dollars to the Democratic Party, which in turn and after taking a cut, has put out mailers for Harrison.  This is the type of legal but unethical behavior that makes me ashamed of being a Democrat, for this reason alone I’d wrote for Lily Mei

City Council (choose 2): Cullen Tiernan and Vinnie Bacon

Click on their names to read my full explanation for this recommendation.  I’d vote for Tiernan and Bacon.

School Board (choose 3): No recommendation

Fremont has four good candidates for School Board, who seem to have similar ideologies and commitment to education.  Ann Crosbie has been in the School Board for a while and is active in the Democratic Party.  Desrie Campbell, has been there for a term and she brings a diversity perspective that may otherwise be lacking in the Board.  Michelle Berke is a special education teacher, specializing in deaf education and Dax Choksi is a techie dad wanting to bring that emphasis into the district.  They are all intelligent people, even if not as progressive as I might like (Crosbie, Campbell and Choksi filled out my questionnaire and suggested they were Clinton supporters, Berke and Hiu Ng did not fill it out).  I know Ann Crosbie the best, and despite her Hillary-ism, I’d probably vote for her. She is extremely knowledgeable about the schools, she is committed to education and she would not ban important books from being taught in AP classes, as other Board members have before.  I also really liked Berke’s energy.  Alas, I’m uncomfortable about recommending the two white women who are running, as it makes me wonder whether I’m responding to a hidden bias in myself.  So I’d probably just go with my gut on voting day.

HAYWARD

School Board (choose 3): Don’t vote for incumbents John Taylor, Luis Reynoso and Annette Walker.

Updated: The Hayward School Board is a big mess.  Incumbent candidate John Taylor actually took advantage of the district’s print shop to get heavily discounted printing done for his business and City Council campaign, and then didn’t even pay for it.  He also had the n0w-fired Superintendent act as his Campaign Treasurer, a pretty big conflict of interest.   Meanwhile, the Superintendent was giving contracts to former Board members and the Board is in complete disarray, with members fighting and insulting each other.  Hayward schools now need a new Superintendent, but nobody will want to work with the existing Board, so it’s time to vote all the incumbents away.

Some community members have gotten together and created a slate with candidates Daniel Goldstein, Robert Carlson and Todd E. Davis.  Of the three, only Davis was able to get the endorsement of the Democratic Party.  Carlson is a Republican.  Wynn Grcich is a Republican and I couldn’t find any information, including contact info, on Joe Ramos.  If I was in Hayward, at this point I’d vote for Todd Davis and Daniel Goldstein.

NEW HAVEN SCHOOL BOARD

(choose3):  Don’t vote for  Michael Ritchie

Jeff Wang was the only candidate to answer my questionnaire, but his answers were intelligent, well thought out and progressive – which is puzzling given that he is a registered Republican. I never was able to figure out a time to meet with Lance Nishihira, but based on his blog, he sounds like an intelligent progressive candidate.  I could make no such determination about Sharan Kaur, who gives very little information about her views on her webpage.  Meanwhile, incumbent Jonas Dino does not seem to have even bothered with a web page.  After 16 years as a School Board member, he may feel like he doesn’t need it.  Alas, I couldn’t find much about him beyond the fact that he is an independent and was in the School Board when the district was sued by the ACLU for violating students’ fourth amendment rights (they settled).
Finally, appointed Michael Ritchie actually refused to answer my questions.  If I was a voter in Union City, I’d vote for Wang and Nishihira.

OAKLAND

Oakland has ranked choice elections.

City Council, At Large: Matt Hummel

Matt Hummel is a former Occupy Oakland and Bernie Sanders activist, deeply involved with the community.  He’s currently the Chair of the Cannabis Regulatory Commission.  He supports all the right things and would be perfect to have in the Council.  However, he may be too progressive even for Oakland so the ranked choice system was created just for candidates like him: so you can vote for them first, without having to worry that you’ll be splitting the progressive vote and letting a conservative win.

Your second choice vote thus should go to incumbent Rebecca Kaplan. Kaplan is sometimes too much of a politician, and often it takes her too long to throw her weight behind the right issues, but she ultimately does and she’s a strong progressive vote on most issues. Her help defeating the DAC and establishing the police accountability commission was invaluable.    Rebecca was a strong Bernie supporter during the primary and spoke at Bernie rallies.

I had a long meeting with Bruce Quan and came out impressed by his intelligence, his vast experience and his willingness to spend his own money to run a campaign he’s unlikely to win because he’s tired of the cat fighting at the City Council and the lack of progressive change in Oakland.  He seems very concerned about reforming the police, creating real affordable housing and dealing with issues of gentrification.  I’m recommending him third because he wasn’t as prominent a Bernie backer as Kaplan was.

Whatever you do, don’t vote for Peggy Moore or Nancy Sidebotham.  Sidebotham seems very conservative, she’s against the police commission, rent control and pretty much everything.  Moore, meanwhile, is running to be a vote for Mayor Libby Schaaf in the Council (she’s currently Schaaf’s Senior Advisor), was political director for Hillary Clinton, and she actually shoved a Sanders delegate and the Convention and lied to get his credentials pulled.  Moore has been accused of bullying behavior in other instances, and that cannot be tolerated in an elected official.  I’d vote for 1) Hummel, 2) Kaplan, 3) Quan.

City Council, District 1: Dan Kalb

Dan Kalb is not always my favorite politician. He often seems to lack initiative and the courage to go against the establishment, but he usually ends up voting the right way and supporting human rights and civil liberties.  He also has deep concerns about social justice issues, including affordable housing and homelessness.  He can be too political, however. For example, when I ran for re-election for Central Committee, he endorsed all the incumbents plus Peggy Moore, but not me (I didn’t ask him or anyone else for an endorsement either, because I don’t play these type of political games).    His opponent, however, showed at the Democratic candidate forum that he had very poor understanding of how the City of Oakland is ran  and that he had not even looked at the budget.  That may be acceptable in cities with low quality candidates such as San Leandro, but it doesn’t fly in Oakland.  Plus, he will be a tool of the Police Union, which is pouring money and support behind him to punish Kalb for supporting the creation of an independent police commission.  Kalb got both the Green Party and the Democratic Party endorsement.  I’d vote for Kalb.

City Council, District 3: Noni Session

Noni Session is everything you want in a progressive politician.  She grew up in West Oakland, and after going to Cornell for her PhD in Anthropology and spending time abroad doing field research, she’s back at home to make a difference in her community.  She was recruited by other neighborhood activists to run because they felt that incumbent was not responsive to their needs.  Session is a strong progressive, who registered as a Democrat to vote for Bernie Sanders, and she will be a true champion for social justice and human rights in the Council (and right now, there isn’t one).  If you heed just one of my recommendations in Oakland this year, vote for Session.

I should say that I do like incumbent Lynette Gibson McElhaney, who I find to be both intelligent and thoughtful.  However, she is sometimes slow to move on progressive issues, such as establishing an independent citizens police commission  (but at least she moves, which can’t be said for other members of the Council) and, more disturbingly, the Grand Jury this year found that she had violated Oakland ethics and conflict of interest rules, by intervening with City staff about a development near her home.  Session is too progressive for our local Demoratic Party, but she got the Green Party and the East Bay Express’ endorsements.    I’d vote for Session

City Council, District 5: No recommendation

Noel Gallo is too conservative for me to actually recommend him.  He is in favor of youth curfews, for example, and he was a supporter of the Domain Awareness Center for quite a while.  However, he proved to be a really ally on the fight for an independent citizens’ police commission.  His opponent, Viola Gonzales, opposes the Commission and has received the support of the police union.  Gallo got both the Democratic and Green party nod.   I would vote for Gallo.

City Council, District 7 (ranked choice): No recommendation

Incumbent Larry Reid has been MIA at the Oakland City Council for years. He often misses Council meetings, he’s inattentive when he does go and is otherwise disengaged from his work in the Council.  He does get paid for it, so that probably justifies his running for re-election.  Challenger Marcy Hodge failed to impress me at the candidate forum I attended.  She ran for Council before, in a different district, prodded by the Don Perata machine and was plagued by scandal when she sat in the Peralta College Board.  I was never able to touch base with Nehanda Imara, who is an independent, but I heard wonderful things about her from other candidates that I am recommending. That’s not enough for me to recommend her personally, but if I was in Oakland I’d vote for Imara as my first choice, and leave second choice blank.

School Board, District 1: Don Macleay

Incumbent Jody London is a tool of the charter schools association, she’s supported by them and has done their bidding.  Don Macleay, meanwhile, is a solid Bernie Sanders’ progressive.  He’s intelligent, thoughtful, is a dad so he has skin on the game, and  takes issues of educational policy seriously.  He’s been endorsed by the teachers union, Labor, the Green Party and progressive politicians.  Update: Since I wrote my recommendation, I found out that Macleay was an internationalist working in Nicaragua in the 80’s.  Among other things, he helped build a power plant for a rural community.  Since then he has become more convinced that education is the avenue for social change, and he is committed to seeing it happen in Oakland.  Check out this documentary about his work in Nicaragua.   I’d vote for Macleay.

School Board, District 3: Kharyshi Wiginton

Kharyshi Wiginton is another Bernie progressive that is running to champion  Oakland schools and Oakland children.  She is an educator and community activist and has been endorsed by everyone, from the Teachers’ Union, to Labor, to the Green and Democratic Parties (and yours truly).  I also heard Benjamin Lang speak during the Democratic endorsement and he seems a solid second choice.  Whatever you do, don’t vote for charter-school sponsored Jumoke Hinton Hodge.  My rank choice vote would be: 1) Wiginton, 2) Lang, 3) Narain

School Board, District 5: Mike Hutchinson

Mike is an extremely knowledgeable and  committed education activist, who has become a rallying force behind the anti-charter school forces in Oakland.  He knows the school district better than Board Members, has gone to every single School Board meeting and has fought to keep public schools open.  Mike is also a strong progressive, who understands how a society can be broken by providing substandard education to the disadvantaged.   Incumbent Roseann Torres was an ally of charger school forces, though she has since seen the light.  She’s an intelligent, dedicated School Board member, and is a solid second choice.  The charter school PAC is backing newcomer Huber Trenado and you should not vote for him.  I’d vote for 1) Hutchinson, 2) Torres.

School Board, District 7: Chris Jackson

Chris Jackson is a young, African American version of Bernie Sanders.  OK, perhaps the  comparison doesn’t really carry, but Chris is a young father in the district, with vast political experience – having served as a community college trustee in San Francisco and worked for labor and legislators -, a thorough understanding of current sociological and political currents, and a personal and family commitment to create real social change.  As a parent of two kids who will be in the district soon enough, he also has skin in the game.   I spent hours talking to Chris, and I left in love.  This is a man with a clear vision and political astuteness who can really make a difference.

His opponent, James Harris, is supported by the charter school PAC, does not live in the district (he lives in Sheffield Village, which falls within the San Leandro School District) and sends his kids to Head Royce, the most elite private school in Oakland.    I’d vote for Jackson.

PIEDMONT

City Council (choose 2): No recommendations

None of the candidates submitted a questionnaire and I didn’t pursue it further.

School Board (choose 3): Hari Titan

Hari Titan calls himself the “Bernie Sanders” of Piedmont, and his progressive credentials showed up in his questionnaire. Nobody else bothered to answer it.  I’d vote for Hari Titan.

PLEASANTON

Mayor:  Julie Testa

I’m not sure that a recommendation from a Progressive Voter Guide will help Julie Testa much in Pleasanton, a city that has no Democrats in the City Council.  She was also unlikely enough to not be able to get her statement into the Candidates Guide.  However, she is a true progressive who has been fighting against unchecked development and to reform the police.  For that reason, the regressive elements in the Pleasanton Democratic Party have opposed her. She has my full support.  I’d vote for Testa.

City Council (vote for 2): No recommendation

All candidates are Republican.  I’d write in Testa.

School Board (vote for 3) Valerie Arkin

I have served with incumbents Valerie Arkin and Jamie Yee Hintzke in the Democratic Central Committee.  Both are progressive, caring women, fully committed to making Pleasanton schools the best they can be.  They are intelligent, they know the district and I trust their decisions.  The only reason I’m not officially recommending Hintzke is that she’s a Clinton supporter and I’m only putting my recommendation behind Berniecrats.

I was never able to get in touch with former principal Steve Maher, but I was impressed with the answers that Kathlyn Ruegsegger provided.  Alas, she’s a Republican.  I’d vote for Arkin, Hintzke and Ruegsegger.

SAN LEANDRO

City Council District 2: No recommendation

Ed Hernandez‘ answers to my questionnaire show him to be a law-n-order conservative that will bend over backwards to please the police union (who did not even endorse him).  And his answer on how to keep people in their home was to build more housing – which completely begs the question.   I met with Bryan Azevedo. He’s a sheet metal worker, from a humble background, who understands first hand the importance of having a livable wage and affordable housing.  Bryan is extremely green, both new to the practice and concept of politics and policy, but he’s a good guy at heart and he seems willing to learn and listen.  I think he was a little afraid of me, which is not a bad thing.  As a union guy, Bryan will fill Prola’s shoes as the union vote in the Council, and that’s not a bad thing, so I will vote for Bryan Azevedo.

City Councils District 4 and 6: Write in the ghost of Lou Filipovich

Benny Lee and Pete Ballew are both running unopposed for Districts 4 and 6 respectively.  Benny Lee is a corrupt politico, with Mayoral aspirations, whose major non-accomplishments in the last four years were to try to raise the Chinese flag over San Leandro and to lobby the Oakland City Council for them to use a garbage company not located in San Leandro, which would cost San Leandro millions in lost taxes.  Needless to say, he then received a nice campaign contribution check from the principals in that company.  Pete Ballew is a conservative former police officer.  Neither should be in our City Council, but they have no opposition.  There are no official write-in candidates, but the Alameda County Registrar of Voters generally counts write-in votes, even if they are not for official candidates.  So while nobody will see who you wrote in, you might as well do it and stand in opposition to conservative, unchallenged candidates.

SAN LORENZO School Board

Choose 3: Don’t vote for Helen Foster

Incumbent Helen Foster no longer lives in San Lorenzo. She works in Coalinga and spends her week there – it’s outrageous she’s running for re-election.  The school district has had horrible conflicts between the administration and the teachers, and it needs a new board altogether.  However, incumbent Penny Peck has not been as bad as other Board members and it seems she has finally realized she needs to support parents and students, not the administration.  The teachers are supporting  Kyla Sinegal and Marilyn Stewart as are fellow Bernie activists.  I haven’t spoken with them, so I can’t recommend them, but I’d vote for Peck, Sinegal and Stewart.

Oct 122014
 

ballotState Propositions

Prop 1: NO

Prop 1 is a bond measure that would raise billions to be spent on water infrastructure. Over 2 billion would be use to build dams, which has negative environmental consequences. The bond would be pay back from the state’s general fund, rather than by imposing fees to the agricultural businesses that will mostly benefit from this measure. Here is a useful and simple independent analysis of the bill.

Prop 2: NO

Prop 2 requires that 1.5% of general fund revenues be put into reserves. Half the money would go to pay off debt, and the other to be used in case of a fiscal emergency.  While it sounds good in theory, it would be up to the Governor alone to declare such fiscal emergency, which concentrates too much power in the Governor’s office.  In addition, in lean years, the Legislature would have to cut spending to make its required deposit – which is likely to happen on the back of the neediest.  Indeed, the proposition also eliminates the need to pay back school districts for the years where the state does not meet its full financial obligations towards education.  In all, this may serve Wall Street, but won’t serve California.  Here is a useful and simple independent analysis of the measure.

Prop 45: YES

Prop 45 basically extends the Insurance Commissioner’s power to regulate car insurance rates to medical insurance.  It will give the Insurance Commissioner the power to not approve health insurance rate increases if they are not justified by rising expenditures.  It’s that simple.

Health insurance rates have been going up immensely in the last few years, and the Affordable Care Act has had the perverse side effect of increasing them.  This is because under the ACA, insurance companies must spend a fixed percentage of their revenue on medical care.  This means, however, that their profit has decrease. The only way they can bring it back up is by increasing their revenues, and therefore their rates.

Insurance companies have been claiming that Prop 45 interferes with Obamacare, but it’s exactly the opposite, it makes if possible for people to chose to get health insurance rather than pay the fine.

Prop 46: NO

Trial lawyers, and victims of medical malpractice, justifiably want to raise the award caps on pain and suffering.  However, in order to sell this proposition to a public weary of huge jury awards, they’ve added to the measure two very objectionable mandates.  One is random drug testing for doctors.  We don’t have enough physicians as it is in  California, driving them away by subjecting them to such humiliating and unnecessary practices is unconscionable.  The other, is the requirement that all medical professionals check a database that contains a list of schedule II prescriptions for Californians.  That means that a person’s private medical information will be massively disseminated, with potential terrible results.

Prop 47: YES

Prop 48: NO

I’m a bit torn on this proposition and I want to do a little bit more research, but as of now I’m voting “No”.  Prop 48 allows and Indian tribe whose reservation is not adequate for housing a casino, to put a casino in land they buy outside the reservation.  The proposition is being fought by the Indian tribes that already have casinos and don’t want the competition.

Personally, I think we should not be building any more casinos.  They take money away from the people who most need it, and they abuse natural resources – from electricity to water.

Still, apparently one of the reasons why they could not build a casino in their tribal lands, is that these are environmentally fragile.  Before voting No I want to make sure that the tribe will not respond by going ahead and destroying their own environment.

County Proposition

Measure BB: YES

As a matter of principle, I do not support sale taxes. They are regressive and they affect the poor the most.  Measure BB is particularly problematic as it doubles the county transportation tax to 1%. That’s a significant increase for people who are already struggling to survive day to day.

However, the proceeds from the tax will be used exclusively to fix and improve transportation throughout Alameda County, and this is something that affects us all.  Streets and roads countywide are in great need of repairs, the longer we put off doing it, the more expensive it will be both in terms of repair costs and in terms of the economic consequences of living with bad roads.  As global warming becomes a greater and greater concern, we need whatever is possible to reduce the amount of greenhouse gases we release into the atmosphere.  This means we need to drive less, walk and bike more and use public transportation.  And that means we need to invest in safe and useful bike routes and on our public transportation system.  Ultimately, this is something that will benefit everyone, including the poor, both by improving the services they already use and by stimulating the economy, which hopefully will mean more and better paying jobs.

San Leandro Measures

Measure HH: NO

Unlike Measure BB, there are no limitations on what Measure HH funds can be used.  The City commissioned a survey to let them know how to best sell this tax increase to voters.  The survey found voters were more likely to vote for a tax that would go to maintain emergency services, libraries, programs for teens, public safety and fix roads, so the City is claiming that that’s what the funds will go for.  There is no reason to believe them, however.  When they passed Measure Z in 2010, they said it was an emergency measure that would pay for exactly those same services.  Instead, the proceeds went to service accumulated debt and refinance the city’s pension obligations.  It may very well be that the City has legitimate needs for these funds, but it has not been candid with voters as to what those are.

Similarly, the City has been deceitful as to the amount and length of this tax.  It has marketed it as an “extension” of Measure Z, when Measure Z was a 1/4-cent emergency tax that was set to expire in 8 years.  Measure HH, on the other hand is, for all intents and purposes, a permanent tax (it expires in 30 years!) twice as large as Measure Z.

While we may not know exactly where Measure HH funds will go to, it’s very likely that a significant portion of them will go towards militarizing the San Leandro Police Department.   The City already has plans for an expansive upgrade to the Police Department facilities, is in the process of installing surveillance cameras in town and has been acquiring military weapons.  Another significant percentage of the proceeds will go, of necessity, to pay for employee pensions, some of which are well into the six figures.

Meanwhile, the tax will mostly affect the poorest in San Leandro, who may already be burdened by the Measure BB tax.

Measure II: NO

Measure II has the Vice-Mayor term starting in January rather than in June.   This measure came about because Councilmember Diana Souza wanted to be able to run for Mayor using the Vice-Mayor designation.  However, she could not be elected Vice-Mayor this June, as her City Council term finished in December, and she would have been unable to complete the year-long Vice-Mayor term.  This would not have been a problem if the Vice-Mayor term started in January.  Moving the term to January, therefore, will make it possible for a councilmember in the last year of their term who plans to run for mayor, to become Vice-Mayor and gain an unfair advantage over his opponents in the mayoral race.

Oct 062014
 
Mia Ousley

Mia Ousley

The race for San Leandro City Council District 5 features three middle-age women with a lot of enthusiasm for the community and city politics.  Mia Ousley, the co-founder of the Coalition to Save San Leandro Hospital, will be facing San Leandro School Board trustee Corina Lopez and Durant Avenue Task Force co-leader Leah Hall. They will be elected through ranked choice voting.  In San Leandro, all voters are able to vote for all City Council and School Board seats.

These are my recommendations for Council District 5:

First Choice: Mia Ousley
Second Choice: Corina Lopez
Third Choice: Leah Hall

Mia Ousley is such a great City Council candidate that I would endorse her and voter for her first, even if she wasn’t my friend.  I have known her for many years now and we became friends after she joined the San Leandro Community Action Network (SLCAN), a local organization of progressive activists trying to make San Leandro a more equitable city.  Mia spearheaded SLCAN’s efforts to keep San Leandro Hospital’s emergency room open, and went on to co-found the Coalition to Save San Leandro Hospital.  While the feeling back then was that there was little we could do to keep the hospital open, Mia understood that you can’t win if you don’t fight.  Her organizing and lobbying efforts were finally successful and she’s dedicated to make sure that the emergency room stays open and saving lives.

I have yet to see either of Mia’s opponent show up for a City Council meeting, much less speak out at one.  Mia, however, regularly attends meetings and is therefore up to date about how the Council functions and what issues it’s dealing with.  She also makes her positions known, with well crafted an intelligent arguments on issues as diverse as medical marijuana dispensaries, red light cameras,  the housing plan, the oversight of surveillance data and the armored vehicle the SLPD wants to get.  Mia also helped spearhead the urban farming ordinance which was finally passed last year.  She walks her talk, and she is not afraid to make her views known.

In addition to having solid progressive values, Mia has the intelligence and education to make her succeed as a Council member.  She has a BA in Economics and works as a financial analyst.  She can read and understand budgets and contribute to create a long-term strategy to assure the city’s financial stability.  She is a researcher by nature, and already makes it a point to both read background materials on issues before the City Council, and research them on her own.  She listens and pays attention, and is responsive to the community.  As a leader in the Broadmoor Neighborhood Association and the editor of its newsletter, she has often acted a liaison between the community and the authorities.

Mia and her family have made San Leandro their home for the last 17 years and they’re here to stay.  Mia’s youngest daughter attends Roosevelt Elementary, while her oldest son bought a house in San Leandro after he married.

There is one specific quality about Mia that may not belong in an endorsement for an office, but that I want to acknowledge.  She is what we call in Spanish a pan de Dios, perhaps best translated as “the salt of the earth”.  She is not Christian, and yet she is the most Christian person I know.  She buys food for the hungry, gives clothing to the poor and, yes, visits young people in prison to offer them support.  She takes in homeless young people into her home, giving them a place to live and helping them find jobs so they can straighten up their lives.  If you ever need a favor, Mia will not say no.  She is kindness personified.

More on Mia Ousley: Nextdoor/SLT questionnaire, Candidate Statement, Smart Voter, Website, FB page, twitter @Mia4Council

Corina Lopez is my second choice because she is intelligent and often has the right principles.   She is currently on the San Leandro School Board, after running unopposed in 2012, so she just some experience in a legislative body.  Corina also serves in the Alameda County Democratic Central Committee with me and I consider her a friend.  However, since getting the Police Union’s endorsement, Corina has been toeing the police line and she is likely to be a rubber stamp vote for the Police Chief.  At the last candidate forum, Corina objected to calling the Bearcat armored personnel carrier that the SLPD wants to acquire an “armored personnel carrier” and she said she’d vote in favor of acquiring it based alone on what the City Manager told her. Corina did not return the candidate questionnaire, which might suggest that she did not want to commit herself to any particular policy.  I’m recommending her for a second choice vote, however, because she is at least sane.

 More on Corina Lopez: Candidate Statement, Website

I’m placing Leah Hall as my third choice, only because there are three candidates.  If there were more, I wouldn’t even list her.   I have known Leah for four years, I have had many interactions with her, and I find her to be very difficult to communicate with, much less work with.  Her views seem to be random, and they do not follow any ideological principles as far as I can tell.  For example, she supports the legalization of marijuana but is against medical marijuana dispensaries.  She is very insular in her concerns, and she is extremely passive aggressive in the way she communicates with people.  I think it’d be a disaster to have her in the City Council, though it might be perversely fun to watch.  Leah did not return the candidate questionnaire.

More on Leah Hall: Candidate Statement, Website, Facebook page

Sep 232014
 
Tony Thurmond and his two daughters.

Tony Thurmond and his two daughters.

The race for AD 15 offers a clear choice

Dynamic.  If I had to chose just one word to describe Tony Thurmond, that’s the one I’d pick. Thurmond is certainly electrifying.  He can entrance a crowd.   When my kids, at 12 and 9 already jaded by a life lived amidst politicians, saw him give his speech at the Democratic pre-endorsement meeting back in February, they were enthralled, inspired.   Move over One Direction, here is Tony Thurman.  He has passion. He has heart. He cares.

A month later, over coffee here in San Leandro, I come to understand what my children saw in Thurmond. I was suspicious at first, I thought he might be a performer, a preacher type that knows what to say to make people clap and sing hallelujah (and yes, I’m fully aware of the racist connotation of that thought).  But on a one-to-one basis I noted no deceitfulness, no attempts at an emotional seduction.  This is a man who knows who he is, has accepted himself and knows what he wants.  He is a man with a mission.

His mission, put simply, is to help children.  He wants to improve their lives, light up their paths to success, give them opportunities.  His story is, by now, well known in political circles and still compelling.   He was born in California to a Panamanian mom and an army dad who left for Vietnam and never came back.  His mother died when he was a child, and he was raised in Philadelphia by a young cousin. As a Hebrew Pentecostal Afro-Latino growing up in a black working class neighborhood, he was somewhat of a misfit, and yet found a sense of community and belonging that he continued to seek as an adult.  He finally found it in Richmond. He lives there with his two beautiful girls.  When all is said and done, what he wants is for them to be proud of their daddy.

Currently, Thurmond works as Senior Director of Community and Government Relations at the Lincoln Child Center, where he creates and oversees programs for truancy prevention, parenting education, school-based mental health services and support services for foster youth and families.  His work with imprisoned youth led him to establish a business academy where they can learn skills that will actually lead to a job when they get out.

Thurmond learned early that while he could help kids one-on-one  and affect perhaps hundreds through his job and volunteer activities, his impact would be much greater in government.  He served a term in the Richmond School Board and another in the City Council, but it’s in the Assembly where he believes he can have the most impact.   The right policy, the right state law could improve the life of millions.

We talk about other issues, he’s pro-environment, anti-fracking, pro-abortion, pro single-payer healthcare, pro-civil liberties.  While his goal of helping kids is central, he believes they should not be abandoned as adults. “Give people training and a job, and they won’t go back to jail,” he says. He takes crime seriously, in Richmond violent crime has been radically reduced by getting cops off their cars and into the streets, getting to know the neighbors, building trust.   He works well with the police,  who have endorsed him.  He says they respect him because he’s a straight shooter. Then again, the East Bay Express just called the Richmond’s Police Chief “the most progressive police chief in the Bay Area” in an article titled When Liberals Take Control of Police

If elected, Thurmond will bring another quality to the job: an ability to speak with anyone as an equal.  Just as important, he is able to listen and translate other people’s experiences into something that he can process and act upon.  Thurmond oozes humanity in the very best sense of the word.

Thurmond’s opponent in the Assembly District 15 race is Elizabeth Echols.  She is a nice lady and has had an impressive career as Director of Public Policy at Google and later as Regional Administrator of the U.S. Small Business Administration.  I have served in the Alameda County Democratic Central Committee with her for almost four years.  I like her, but in all that time,  I don’t think I’ve ever heard her say a word during a meeting, express an opinion, advocate in favor or against a policy, a resolution, a position.  She has not stood up for anything, literally.  I am afraid that if elected to the Assembly, she will  repeat that pattern.  AD 15, a district with a diverse, educated and socially committed population, deserves a representative who will stand for them.

I have confidence that Tony Thurmond is that person.

Aug 222014
 
Dan Siegel

Dan Siegel

Teachers, Nurses Endorse Siegel

I want to congratulate the Oakland Education Association and the California Nurses Association for endorsing Dan Siegel for Mayor of Oakland.

I have heard now from many people that they love what Dan Siegel stands for, but he can’t win. That, however, can be a self-fulfilling prophesy. If we don’t support the candidates who hold our values we will never see real change. By catering to our perception of what voters want to hear, we promote demagogy instead of real democracy. We do not give ourselves a chance.

I thank the teachers and the nurses for leaving fears aside and supporting someone who can give us hope.

And Dan can. He has been fighting against government abuse and for the rights of the disenfranchised his whole life. He is intelligent, committed, and has a clear vision. And he is humble.

When I asked Dan Siegel to meet with Mike and I so I could hear more about his campaign for Mayor, I was expecting him to have airs of superiority. After all, he has had a brilliant law career, an outstanding record as an activist and was now vying to become Mayor. Lawyers, politicians and activists can be a rather arrogant bunch (me included).

Dan has no arrogance, no sense of superiority; he is not in love with himself. He is running because he is committed to turn Oakland around, to do the best for the City and all its citizens. He doesn’t seek power, he wants opportunity for others. As a human rights activist, I’ve been privileged to meet other people like him, but even in my field they are rare.

I want Dan to win because he is unapologetically a liberal, because his views and values are clear and he stands by them.  Unlike other politicians, he won’t tell you what he thinks you want to hear.

And I want him to win because things in America are getting worse.  Wealth and power continue to accumulate in the hands of the very few, America is no longer a democracy.  The middle class is disappearing and most of us have an uncertain future.   Young people graduate from college, after indebting  themselves for life, to find no jobs awaiting them.  Racism is growing in our society, and African-Americans are being stereotyped as criminals and the source of society’s problems, much like Jews were in Nazi Germany.  Black men are regularly killed by police with impunity.   Meanwhile, the government is readying for the social upheaval that this racial and economic repression is likely to lead to, by instituting methods of mass surveillance and militarizing the police.

Dan Siegel has stood against these things.  He was the only serious candidate for Oakland Mayor to loudly and clearly speak against the Domain Awareness Center anddemand accountability for police abuses.  Oakland only started talking about raising the minimum wage, after Dan Siegel made it part of his platform.

I want Dan Siegel to win so that he can help turn Oakland around, but also so that he can be an example for others.  Candidates who have strong convictions often don’t run because they believe they’ll have to sell out their principles to cater to voters’ fears.  I want Oaklanders to prove them wrong.

So go Dan Siegel!