Based on our analysis, the ten candidates for this position have distinct visions for the district. Of the five candidates reviewed here, we recommend that you select the one who best aligns to your values in this race.
Endorsements: Councilmember Sheng Thao is endorsed by many local union organizations, California Working Families Party, Planned Parenthood, and Everytown for Gun Safety. She has also received the endorsement of Attorney General Rob Bonta, State Treasurer Fiona Ma, Assemblymember Mia Bonta, and Oakland Vice Mayor Rebecca Kaplan. Gregory Hodge is endorsed by California Working Families Party and some local leaders, including State Senator Josh Becker, California Superintendent of Public Instruction Tony Thurmond, and affordable housing advocate Patricia Wells. Allyssa Victory is endorsed by California Working Families Party, Communications Workers of America Local 9415, San Leandro Vice Mayor Victor Aguilar, Run for Something, and Our Revolution East Bay. Loren Taylor is endorsed by many local leaders, including Alameda County Supervisor Keith Carson, Berkeley Councilmember Ben Bartlett, and Oakland NAACP Vice President Cynthia Adams. Treva Reid has been endorsed by Assemblymember Mia Bonta and some labor groups.
Key initiatives: Since winning her seat on the council in 2018, Councilmember Thao has been instrumental in several progressive initiatives. She brokered a collaboration between labor and business to establish an increase in corporate taxation to generate revenue to address affordable housing and homelessness. She worked to pass a paid sick-leave guarantee for city employees, and created layoff protections during the COVID-19 pandemic. She also successfully championed wildfire-mitigation measures, increasing the budget for infrastructure updates, and supporting the funding of violence-prevention programming and police academies.
Hodge is a longtime community advocate, particularly on issues related to young people in the Black community. He serves in a leadership role for the Brotherhood of Elders Network, which offers intergenerational mentoring to Black men, and has been actively involved with Executive Alliance for Boys and Young Men of Color, Safe Passages, Urban Strategies Council, COVID-19 Racial Disparities Task Force, and Equal Voice for America’s Families Campaign during his 40 years in the East Bay.
Victory is a criminal-justice attorney with the ACLU of Northern California and serves as legal counsel for union and labor organizations. She has litigation experience in wage theft, housing rights, employment discrimination, and criminal-justice law, and has used her expertise to advise the cities of San Francisco and Oakland on public banking. She has been a strong supporter of the diversification of the legal field, and has provided bar-exam tutoring to nontraditional law students.
As a member of the Oakland City Council, Taylor has worked on initiatives related to affordable-housing development, a local entrepreneurship incubator, funding for public works projects, and COVID-19 relief programs. He currently serves on the board of directors for two local organizations, West Oakland Health Council and 100 Black Men of the Bay Area.
Reid has a long history of public work, which includes her time spent as a senior aide to Sen. Nancy Skinner when she was a member of the State Assembly. On the city council, Reid has activated mass vaccination sites during the COVID-19 pandemic and allocated budget funding for workforce development and violence-prevention programs.
Governance and community leadership experience: Councilmember Thao has served on the Oakland City Council since 2018, when she won her seat with over 54% of the vote.
Prior to launching her own political career, Councilmember Thao served as chief of staff to Oakland City Councilmember Rebecca Kaplan. She is the daughter of refugees, and her family received social services and benefitted from public housing while she was growing up. Her young adulthood was plagued by abuse and homelessness as she navigated single parenthood, and through welfare and the use of Head Start for her son, she was able to support her family while putting herself through college.
Hodge ran for Oakland City Council in 2008 but did not win.
In addition to his local advocacy work, Hodge has also served Oaklanders through his law and consulting practice, which has worked with clients across a range of civic issues. He is a racial-equity facilitator, an artist, and a healing practitioner. During his career, he has worked with the Workforce Investment Board, Rockwood Leadership Institute, and California Funders for Boys and Men of Color.
Victory has not run for public office before.
Victory has a long history of engagement in Oakland that dates back to her childhood, including food distribution, organizing with Oakland’s Youth Together, and teaching STEM with Girls, Inc. When she was a child, her working-class family experienced housing insecurity, and this experience shaped her interest in community engagement and supporting unions through her legal work. As a law student, she worked with the Oakland City Attorney’s Office and the U.S. District Court of the Northern District of California. She has also served as the head of service programs for the Afrikan Black Coalition and as an instructor with the Prison University Project.
Taylor ran for Oakland City Council’s 6th district seat in 2018 and won the race with more than 64% of the vote.
Taylor founded Custom Taylor Solutions to provide consulting to organizations that are working to improve the experiences of disadvantaged communities, focusing particularly on issues related to poverty and economic inequality.
Reid ran for Oakland City Council’s 7th district seat in 2020 and won the race with over 60% of the vote.
Reid has overcome significant challenges in her life, including violence, abuse, poverty, and housing instability, and her personal understanding of social inequity and resource limitations informs her approach to public policy. Reid has also served on the Alameda County Democratic Central Committee, served as a state policy advisor for Black Women Organized for Political Action, and is an alumna of Emerge California.
Other background: Councilmember Thao was raised in Stockton and has lived in the East Bay area since attending college at UC-Berkeley. Gregory Hodge has lived in Oakland for 40 years. Allyssa Victory is a lifelong resident of Oakland and has lived in every district of the city. Loren Taylor is a lifelong resident of Oakland. Treva Reid lives in Oakland.
The Race
Primary election results: This race did not have a June primary election. There are ten candidates vying for this seat in November, including Councilmember Sheng Thao, Gregory Hodge, Allyssa Victory, Loren Taylor, and Treva Reid.Candidate: Sheng Thao
Candidate fundraising and pledges: Thao’s campaign has raised $169,000 and is not funded by police, fossil fuel, corporate PAC, or real estate interests.
Candidate: Gregory Hodge
Candidate’s fundraising and pledges: Hodge’s campaign has raised $81,000 and is not funded by police, fossil fuel, corporate PAC, or real estate interests.
Candidate: Allyssa Victory
Candidate’s fundraising and pledges: Victory’s campaign has raised $5,000 and is funded entirely by individual donors.
Candidate: Loren Taylor
Candidate’s fundraising and pledges: Taylor’s campaign has raised $138,000 and is not funded by police, fossil fuel, corporate PAC, or real estate interests.
Candidate: Treva Reid
Candidate’s fundraising and pledges: Reid’s campaign has raised $79,000 and is not funded by police, fossil fuel, corporate PAC, or real estate interests.
The District
City: Oakland is Alameda County’s most populous city. Oakland’s mayor and city council oversee the needs of 440,000 people and manage an estimated operating budget of $1.7 billion annually.District demographics: As of the 2020 Census, Oakland had a demographic breakdown of 27% Latino, 16% Asian, and 23% Black.
Recent election results: Alameda County, which includes the city of Oakland, voted for Joe Biden for president in 2020 by 62 points and for Gavin Newsom for governor in 2018 by 62 points.
The Position
Oakland is governed by a city council of eight elected representatives. A city council is responsible for establishing policy, passing local laws (called ordinances), voting on budget appropriations, and developing an overall vision for the city. These bodies are often augmented by two additional seats held by a mayor and a vice mayor. Oakland uses the mayor-council government structure, so a mayor is elected at large and acts as chair of the city council and the city’s chief executive officer. The Oakland mayor does not hold any special legislative power. In Oakland, the mayor is elected to a four-year term, with a limit of two terms.Based on our analysis, the ten candidates for this position have distinct visions for the district. Of the five candidates reviewed here, we recommend that you select the one who best aligns to your values in this race.
Endorsements: Councilmember Sheng Thao is endorsed by many local union organizations, California Working Families Party, Planned Parenthood, and Everytown for Gun Safety. She has also received the endorsement of Attorney General Rob Bonta, State Treasurer Fiona Ma, Assemblymember Mia Bonta, and Oakland Vice Mayor Rebecca Kaplan. Gregory Hodge is endorsed by California Working Families Party and some local leaders, including State Senator Josh Becker, California Superintendent of Public Instruction Tony Thurmond, and affordable housing advocate Patricia Wells. Allyssa Victory is endorsed by California Working Families Party, Communications Workers of America Local 9415, San Leandro Vice Mayor Victor Aguilar, Run for Something, and Our Revolution East Bay. Loren Taylor is endorsed by many local leaders, including Alameda County Supervisor Keith Carson, Berkeley Councilmember Ben Bartlett, and Oakland NAACP Vice President Cynthia Adams. Treva Reid has been endorsed by Assemblymember Mia Bonta and some labor groups.
Key initiatives: Since winning her seat on the council in 2018, Councilmember Thao has been instrumental in several progressive initiatives. She brokered a collaboration between labor and business to establish an increase in corporate taxation to generate revenue to address affordable housing and homelessness. She worked to pass a paid sick-leave guarantee for city employees, and created layoff protections during the COVID-19 pandemic. She also successfully championed wildfire-mitigation measures, increasing the budget for infrastructure updates, and supporting the funding of violence-prevention programming and police academies.
Hodge is a longtime community advocate, particularly on issues related to young people in the Black community. He serves in a leadership role for the Brotherhood of Elders Network, which offers intergenerational mentoring to Black men, and has been actively involved with Executive Alliance for Boys and Young Men of Color, Safe Passages, Urban Strategies Council, COVID-19 Racial Disparities Task Force, and Equal Voice for America’s Families Campaign during his 40 years in the East Bay.
Victory is a criminal-justice attorney with the ACLU of Northern California and serves as legal counsel for union and labor organizations. She has litigation experience in wage theft, housing rights, employment discrimination, and criminal-justice law, and has used her expertise to advise the cities of San Francisco and Oakland on public banking. She has been a strong supporter of the diversification of the legal field, and has provided bar-exam tutoring to nontraditional law students.
As a member of the Oakland City Council, Taylor has worked on initiatives related to affordable-housing development, a local entrepreneurship incubator, funding for public works projects, and COVID-19 relief programs. He currently serves on the board of directors for two local organizations, West Oakland Health Council and 100 Black Men of the Bay Area.
Reid has a long history of public work, which includes her time spent as a senior aide to Sen. Nancy Skinner when she was a member of the State Assembly. On the city council, Reid has activated mass vaccination sites during the COVID-19 pandemic and allocated budget funding for workforce development and violence-prevention programs.
Governance and community leadership experience: Councilmember Thao has served on the Oakland City Council since 2018, when she won her seat with over 54% of the vote.
Prior to launching her own political career, Councilmember Thao served as chief of staff to Oakland City Councilmember Rebecca Kaplan. She is the daughter of refugees, and her family received social services and benefitted from public housing while she was growing up. Her young adulthood was plagued by abuse and homelessness as she navigated single parenthood, and through welfare and the use of Head Start for her son, she was able to support her family while putting herself through college.
Hodge ran for Oakland City Council in 2008 but did not win.
In addition to his local advocacy work, Hodge has also served Oaklanders through his law and consulting practice, which has worked with clients across a range of civic issues. He is a racial-equity facilitator, an artist, and a healing practitioner. During his career, he has worked with the Workforce Investment Board, Rockwood Leadership Institute, and California Funders for Boys and Men of Color.
Victory has not run for public office before.
Victory has a long history of engagement in Oakland that dates back to her childhood, including food distribution, organizing with Oakland’s Youth Together, and teaching STEM with Girls, Inc. When she was a child, her working-class family experienced housing insecurity, and this experience shaped her interest in community engagement and supporting unions through her legal work. As a law student, she worked with the Oakland City Attorney’s Office and the U.S. District Court of the Northern District of California. She has also served as the head of service programs for the Afrikan Black Coalition and as an instructor with the Prison University Project.
Taylor ran for Oakland City Council’s 6th district seat in 2018 and won the race with more than 64% of the vote.
Taylor founded Custom Taylor Solutions to provide consulting to organizations that are working to improve the experiences of disadvantaged communities, focusing particularly on issues related to poverty and economic inequality.
Reid ran for Oakland City Council’s 7th district seat in 2020 and won the race with over 60% of the vote.
Reid has overcome significant challenges in her life, including violence, abuse, poverty, and housing instability, and her personal understanding of social inequity and resource limitations informs her approach to public policy. Reid has also served on the Alameda County Democratic Central Committee, served as a state policy advisor for Black Women Organized for Political Action, and is an alumna of Emerge California.
Other background: Councilmember Thao was raised in Stockton and has lived in the East Bay area since attending college at UC-Berkeley. Gregory Hodge has lived in Oakland for 40 years. Allyssa Victory is a lifelong resident of Oakland and has lived in every district of the city. Loren Taylor is a lifelong resident of Oakland. Treva Reid lives in Oakland.
The Race
Primary election results: This race did not have a June primary election. There are ten candidates vying for this seat in November, including Councilmember Sheng Thao, Gregory Hodge, Allyssa Victory, Loren Taylor, and Treva Reid.Candidate: Sheng Thao
Candidate fundraising and pledges: Thao’s campaign has raised $169,000 and is not funded by police, fossil fuel, corporate PAC, or real estate interests.
Candidate: Gregory Hodge
Candidate’s fundraising and pledges: Hodge’s campaign has raised $81,000 and is not funded by police, fossil fuel, corporate PAC, or real estate interests.
Candidate: Allyssa Victory
Candidate’s fundraising and pledges: Victory’s campaign has raised $5,000 and is funded entirely by individual donors.
Candidate: Loren Taylor
Candidate’s fundraising and pledges: Taylor’s campaign has raised $138,000 and is not funded by police, fossil fuel, corporate PAC, or real estate interests.
Candidate: Treva Reid
Candidate’s fundraising and pledges: Reid’s campaign has raised $79,000 and is not funded by police, fossil fuel, corporate PAC, or real estate interests.
The District
City: Oakland is Alameda County’s most populous city. Oakland’s mayor and city council oversee the needs of 440,000 people and manage an estimated operating budget of $1.7 billion annually.District demographics: As of the 2020 Census, Oakland had a demographic breakdown of 27% Latino, 16% Asian, and 23% Black.
Recent election results: Alameda County, which includes the city of Oakland, voted for Joe Biden for president in 2020 by 62 points and for Gavin Newsom for governor in 2018 by 62 points.