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Democrat

Jennifer Esteen

Esteen is a registered nurse, working mother, and community activist, and has lived in the East Bay for nearly two decades. According to campaign materials, she is running for election to champion working families and to ensure that corporations and special interests pay their fair share so that communities have access to affordable housing, health care, and quality education. Esteen has not run for office previously. Esteen is an Emerge California Alumnus, having undergone leadership training to better represent the communities she wants to serve. She has local governing experience as a member of the Eden Municipal Area Council.

 

Her experience as a psychiatric nurse in the San Francisco General Hospital Psychiatric Emergency Room, and seeing firsthand the cycle that patients experience from diminished funding for mental-health care, galvanized her to organize for better access to health care. While serving on a steering committee on mental health in San Francisco, she put together a plan to put a progressive tax on the CEO’s income to fund mental-health services, which passed with voter support. After working five years in the Behavioral Health Center, she fought alongside residents to stop the closure of 41 permanent board and care beds in the Adult Residential Facility. It was after saving those beds that she was appointed vice president of organizing for SEIU 1021.

 

As a state legislator, Esteen intends to address racial disparities and racial injustice through concrete measures, such as repealing the Ellis Act and Costa Hawkins. She also aims to champion policies that create stronger tenant protections, a living wage that covers more than just housing and food costs, and worker protections for low-wage and gig workers. 

 

As secretary and treasurer of the Alameda Health System Board of Trustees, as well as a member of the Housing Conservatorship Working Group in San Francisco, Esteen also advocates for affordable housing and an equitable health-care system.

 

Esteen has the endorsement of many progressive leaders and groups, including Board of Equalization Member Malia Cohen, BART Director Lateefah Simon, #BlackLivesMatter Co-founder Alicia Garza, SEIU California, California Working Families Party, and Bay Rising Action. 

 

Based on our analysis, Ortega’s and Esteen’s track records and policy positions demonstrate that both will be a progressive champions for the constituents of AD-20 and will govern effectively in the best interest of this diverse district.


 

Last updated: 2023-04-05

Esteen is a registered nurse, working mother, and community activist, and has lived in the East Bay for nearly two decades. According to campaign materials, she is running for election to champion working families and to ensure that corporations and special interests pay their fair share so that communities have access to affordable housing, health care, and quality education. Esteen has not run for office previously. Esteen is an Emerge California Alumnus, having undergone leadership training to better represent the communities she wants to serve. She has local governing experience as a member of the Eden Municipal Area Council.

 

Her experience as a psychiatric nurse in the San Francisco General Hospital Psychiatric Emergency Room, and seeing firsthand the cycle that patients experience from diminished funding for mental-health care, galvanized her to organize for better access to health care. While serving on a steering committee on mental health in San Francisco, she put together a plan to put a progressive tax on the CEO’s income to fund mental-health services, which passed with voter support. After working five years in the Behavioral Health Center, she fought alongside residents to stop the closure of 41 permanent board and care beds in the Adult Residential Facility. It was after saving those beds that she was appointed vice president of organizing for SEIU 1021.

 

As a state legislator, Esteen intends to address racial disparities and racial injustice through concrete measures, such as repealing the Ellis Act and Costa Hawkins. She also aims to champion policies that create stronger tenant protections, a living wage that covers more than just housing and food costs, and worker protections for low-wage and gig workers. 

 

As secretary and treasurer of the Alameda Health System Board of Trustees, as well as a member of the Housing Conservatorship Working Group in San Francisco, Esteen also advocates for affordable housing and an equitable health-care system.

 

Esteen has the endorsement of many progressive leaders and groups, including Board of Equalization Member Malia Cohen, BART Director Lateefah Simon, #BlackLivesMatter Co-founder Alicia Garza, SEIU California, California Working Families Party, and Bay Rising Action. 

 

Based on our analysis, Ortega’s and Esteen’s track records and policy positions demonstrate that both will be a progressive champions for the constituents of AD-20 and will govern effectively in the best interest of this diverse district.


 

Last updated: 2023-04-05

Endorsed By: Courage California

20th Assembly District

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Congress

Depending on where you live, you may have one of the below congressional districts on your ballot.

10th Congressional District

Reelect Congressional Representative Mark DeSaulnier to keep CD-10 on the right track for progress.

 

The Position

Congressmembers represent and advocate for the needs of their district constituents at the United States Capital. They are responsible for creating, debating, and voting on legislation that addresses issues within their district.

The United States is divided into 435 congressional districts, each with a population of about 710,000 individuals. Each district elects a representative to the House of Representatives for a two-year term. California has 53 congressional representatives, the largest delegation in the country. There is no term limit for this position.

 

 

 

The District

California’s 10th Congressional District includes parts of Contra Costa and Alameda Counties. Democrats have held this district since 2006. Of the registered voters in this district, 23% are Republican and 48% are Democrat, and the demographic breakdown is 12% Latino, 13% Asian, and 10% Black. Since the 2021 redistricting process, CD-10 is 5% more Republican than it was during the 2020 general election cycle. The most recent election results show CD-10 voted for Joe Biden for president in 2020 by 51 points and Democrat Gavin Newsom for governor in 2018 by 28 points.

 

 

 

The Race

There are two declared candidates running for the newly redistricted CD-10, including Democrat Incumbent Representative DeSaulnier and Independent Michael Kerr. Rep. DeSaulnier’s campaign has raised $322,563 and is not funded by police union or fossil fuel money, although he is funded by corporate PAC money as well as real estate money. Kerr’s campaign has not filed any fundraising receipts for the current election cycle.

 

 

 

The Recommendation

Rep. Mark DeSaulnier, former small-business owner and mayor of Concord, CA, is originally from Massachusetts and now lives in Concord. According to campaign materials, Rep. DeSaulnier is running for reelection to continue advocating for working families in his district. Rep. DeSaulnier won his 2020 reelection against a Republican challenger by 46 points.

Rep. DeSaulnier’s priorities for CA-10 this year have included seven bills about infrastructure, and five about health, none of which have yet successfully passed the House. He holds leadership positions on two committees: he is chair of the Education and Labor Subcommittee on Health, Employment, Labor, and Pensions (HELP), and he is vice chair of the House Rules Committee. He also sits on the Committees on Transportation and Infrastructure, and Oversight and Reform. This year, Rep. DeSaulnier has voted 95% of the time with Nancy Pelosi and 96% of the time with Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez. Pelosi and DeSaulnier differed when Rep. DeSaulnier voted against the 2021 Defense Authorization Bill and against the USMCA Trade Agreement. Rep. Desaulnier voted in opposition to Rep. Ocasio-Cortez when he voted in favor of a domestic spending bill that she and other progressive representatives opposed for maintaining the Hyde Amendment, the international gag order preventing U.S. aid from being used for abortion.

Prior to his work as a civil servant, Rep. DeSaulnier was first a union member with Teamsters International and Hotel Employees and Restaurant Employees International, and then a restaurant owner; he maintains strong connections with organized labor. Throughout his time in both the U.S. and California Congresses, Rep. DeSaulnier has paid special attention to improving infrastructure, including building up sustainable industries and jobs, and expanding public transportation in his district. Rep. DeSaulnier has previously sponsored legislation that benefits his constituents, including extending protection to more acres of natural land in Contra Costa County as well as expanding local control of canal infrastructure in the district.

Rep. DeSaulnier is a member of the Congressional Progressive Caucus, and has the endorsement of many progressive groups and labor unions in the district, including Planned Parenthood, Equality California, the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers & Trainman, and IBEW Local Union 302, as well as from progressive leader Representative Ayanna Pressley. Based on our analysis, Rep. DeSaulnier’s track record and policy positions demonstrate that he will continue to be a progressive champion for the constituents of CD-10 and will govern effectively in the best interest of this diverse district.

 

 

Last updated: 2023-04-05

Reelect Congressional Representative Mark DeSaulnier to keep CD-10 on the right track for progress.

 

The Position

Congressmembers represent and advocate for the needs of their district constituents at the United States Capital. They are responsible for creating, debating, and voting on legislation that addresses issues within their district.

The United States is divided into 435 congressional districts, each with a population of about 710,000 individuals. Each district elects a representative to the House of Representatives for a two-year term. California has 53 congressional representatives, the largest delegation in the country. There is no term limit for this position.

 

 

 

The District

California’s 10th Congressional District includes parts of Contra Costa and Alameda Counties. Democrats have held this district since 2006. Of the registered voters in this district, 23% are Republican and 48% are Democrat, and the demographic breakdown is 12% Latino, 13% Asian, and 10% Black. Since the 2021 redistricting process, CD-10 is 5% more Republican than it was during the 2020 general election cycle. The most recent election results show CD-10 voted for Joe Biden for president in 2020 by 51 points and Democrat Gavin Newsom for governor in 2018 by 28 points.

 

 

 

The Race

There are two declared candidates running for the newly redistricted CD-10, including Democrat Incumbent Representative DeSaulnier and Independent Michael Kerr. Rep. DeSaulnier’s campaign has raised $322,563 and is not funded by police union or fossil fuel money, although he is funded by corporate PAC money as well as real estate money. Kerr’s campaign has not filed any fundraising receipts for the current election cycle.

 

 

 

The Recommendation

Rep. Mark DeSaulnier, former small-business owner and mayor of Concord, CA, is originally from Massachusetts and now lives in Concord. According to campaign materials, Rep. DeSaulnier is running for reelection to continue advocating for working families in his district. Rep. DeSaulnier won his 2020 reelection against a Republican challenger by 46 points.

Rep. DeSaulnier’s priorities for CA-10 this year have included seven bills about infrastructure, and five about health, none of which have yet successfully passed the House. He holds leadership positions on two committees: he is chair of the Education and Labor Subcommittee on Health, Employment, Labor, and Pensions (HELP), and he is vice chair of the House Rules Committee. He also sits on the Committees on Transportation and Infrastructure, and Oversight and Reform. This year, Rep. DeSaulnier has voted 95% of the time with Nancy Pelosi and 96% of the time with Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez. Pelosi and DeSaulnier differed when Rep. DeSaulnier voted against the 2021 Defense Authorization Bill and against the USMCA Trade Agreement. Rep. Desaulnier voted in opposition to Rep. Ocasio-Cortez when he voted in favor of a domestic spending bill that she and other progressive representatives opposed for maintaining the Hyde Amendment, the international gag order preventing U.S. aid from being used for abortion.

Prior to his work as a civil servant, Rep. DeSaulnier was first a union member with Teamsters International and Hotel Employees and Restaurant Employees International, and then a restaurant owner; he maintains strong connections with organized labor. Throughout his time in both the U.S. and California Congresses, Rep. DeSaulnier has paid special attention to improving infrastructure, including building up sustainable industries and jobs, and expanding public transportation in his district. Rep. DeSaulnier has previously sponsored legislation that benefits his constituents, including extending protection to more acres of natural land in Contra Costa County as well as expanding local control of canal infrastructure in the district.

Rep. DeSaulnier is a member of the Congressional Progressive Caucus, and has the endorsement of many progressive groups and labor unions in the district, including Planned Parenthood, Equality California, the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers & Trainman, and IBEW Local Union 302, as well as from progressive leader Representative Ayanna Pressley. Based on our analysis, Rep. DeSaulnier’s track record and policy positions demonstrate that he will continue to be a progressive champion for the constituents of CD-10 and will govern effectively in the best interest of this diverse district.

 

 

Last updated: 2023-04-05

12th Congressional District

Reelect Congressional Representative Barbara Lee to keep CD-12 on the right track for progress.

 

The Position

Congressmembers represent and advocate for the needs of their district constituents at the United States Capitol. They are responsible for creating, debating, and voting on legislation that addresses issues within their district.

The United States is divided into 435 congressional districts, each with a population of about 710,000 individuals. Each district elects a representative to the House of Representatives for a two-year term. California has 53 congressional representatives, the largest delegation in the country. There is no term limit for this position.

 

 

 

The District

California’s 12th Congressional District includes parts of Alameda County. Democrats typically hold this district. Of the registered voters in this district, 5% are Republican and 69% are Democrat, and the district’s demographic breakdown is 15% Latino, 21% Asian, and 20% Black. After the 2021 redistricting process, CD-12 retains a steady 63% Democratic registration advantage. The most recent election results show that CD-12 voted for Joe Biden for president in 2020 by 81 points and Gavin Newsom for governor in 2018 by 81 points.

 

 

 

The Race

There are five candidates running for this seat, including Democrat Incumbent Representative Barbara Lee, Democrat Eric Wilson, Republican Ned Nuerge, and Republican Stephen Slauson. Rep. Lee’s campaign has raised $1 million, and has received donations from real estate, corporate PAC, and fossil fuel interests. Wilson, Nuerge, and Slauson have not yet filed any fundraising receipts with the FEC.

 

 

 

The Recommendation

Rep. Lee, a community advocate and elected official, is from El Paso, TX, and moved to the San Fernando Valley when she was a child. According to campaign materials, she is running for reelection to continue to fight for social equity for all. Prior to redistricting, Rep. Lee represented CD-13, and won her 2020 reelection against Republican Nikka Piterman by 80 points.

Rep. Lee’s priorities for CD-12 this year have included 49 bills about health care, international development, equity, and nondiscrimination. The majority of these are in committee or referred to committee, and none have been passed by the House and Senate. She currently sits on the Budget and Appropriations committees, and serves as co-chair of the Policy and Steering Committee. She is the highest-ranking African American woman in Democratic leadership. This year, Rep. Lee has voted 99% of the time with Nancy Pelosi and 98% of the time with Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez. Notably, Rep. Lee voted in favor of the INVEST in America Act, the Libya Stabilization Act, and the Preventing Crimes Against Veterans Act, while Rep. Ocasio-Cortez voted against.

Rep. Lee had a long career in politics before winning her seat. As a young social worker, she founded a mental-health service organization, Community Health Alliance for Neighborhood Growth and Education, to benefit her local East Bay community. She then spent eleven years working on the staff of Congressmember Ron Dellums, eventually serving as his chief of staff. After her tenure in congressional staffing, she founded a facilities-management company. A few years later, in 1990, Rep. Lee launched a successful bid for a seat in the California Assembly, where she served for six years, before she was elected to the State Senate. In 1998, she won a special election for her current congressional seat. In her 24-year tenure in Congress, Rep. Lee has been outspoken on a variety of important progressive issues, including ending poverty, and has been a prolific author of legislation related to ending AIDS/HIV, malaria, and tuberculosis. She was also the only Congressmember to vote against the authorization for the use of military force after the September 11, 2001, attacks, a controversial position at the time.

Rep. Lee is a member of the Congressional Progressive Caucus, where she serves as a chair emeriti. She has the endorsement of a strong majority of progressive groups in the district. She has received several donations from problematic groups, including Realtors PAC, Energy Leaders PAC of Vistra Energy, and Amazon PAC. Despite these fundraising discrepancies, our analysis shows that Rep. Lee’s long track record and policy positions demonstrate that she will continue to be a progressive champion for the constituents of CD-12 and will govern effectively in the best interest of this diverse district.

 

 

Last updated: 2023-04-05

Reelect Congressional Representative Barbara Lee to keep CD-12 on the right track for progress.

 

The Position

Congressmembers represent and advocate for the needs of their district constituents at the United States Capitol. They are responsible for creating, debating, and voting on legislation that addresses issues within their district.

The United States is divided into 435 congressional districts, each with a population of about 710,000 individuals. Each district elects a representative to the House of Representatives for a two-year term. California has 53 congressional representatives, the largest delegation in the country. There is no term limit for this position.

 

 

 

The District

California’s 12th Congressional District includes parts of Alameda County. Democrats typically hold this district. Of the registered voters in this district, 5% are Republican and 69% are Democrat, and the district’s demographic breakdown is 15% Latino, 21% Asian, and 20% Black. After the 2021 redistricting process, CD-12 retains a steady 63% Democratic registration advantage. The most recent election results show that CD-12 voted for Joe Biden for president in 2020 by 81 points and Gavin Newsom for governor in 2018 by 81 points.

 

 

 

The Race

There are five candidates running for this seat, including Democrat Incumbent Representative Barbara Lee, Democrat Eric Wilson, Republican Ned Nuerge, and Republican Stephen Slauson. Rep. Lee’s campaign has raised $1 million, and has received donations from real estate, corporate PAC, and fossil fuel interests. Wilson, Nuerge, and Slauson have not yet filed any fundraising receipts with the FEC.

 

 

 

The Recommendation

Rep. Lee, a community advocate and elected official, is from El Paso, TX, and moved to the San Fernando Valley when she was a child. According to campaign materials, she is running for reelection to continue to fight for social equity for all. Prior to redistricting, Rep. Lee represented CD-13, and won her 2020 reelection against Republican Nikka Piterman by 80 points.

Rep. Lee’s priorities for CD-12 this year have included 49 bills about health care, international development, equity, and nondiscrimination. The majority of these are in committee or referred to committee, and none have been passed by the House and Senate. She currently sits on the Budget and Appropriations committees, and serves as co-chair of the Policy and Steering Committee. She is the highest-ranking African American woman in Democratic leadership. This year, Rep. Lee has voted 99% of the time with Nancy Pelosi and 98% of the time with Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez. Notably, Rep. Lee voted in favor of the INVEST in America Act, the Libya Stabilization Act, and the Preventing Crimes Against Veterans Act, while Rep. Ocasio-Cortez voted against.

Rep. Lee had a long career in politics before winning her seat. As a young social worker, she founded a mental-health service organization, Community Health Alliance for Neighborhood Growth and Education, to benefit her local East Bay community. She then spent eleven years working on the staff of Congressmember Ron Dellums, eventually serving as his chief of staff. After her tenure in congressional staffing, she founded a facilities-management company. A few years later, in 1990, Rep. Lee launched a successful bid for a seat in the California Assembly, where she served for six years, before she was elected to the State Senate. In 1998, she won a special election for her current congressional seat. In her 24-year tenure in Congress, Rep. Lee has been outspoken on a variety of important progressive issues, including ending poverty, and has been a prolific author of legislation related to ending AIDS/HIV, malaria, and tuberculosis. She was also the only Congressmember to vote against the authorization for the use of military force after the September 11, 2001, attacks, a controversial position at the time.

Rep. Lee is a member of the Congressional Progressive Caucus, where she serves as a chair emeriti. She has the endorsement of a strong majority of progressive groups in the district. She has received several donations from problematic groups, including Realtors PAC, Energy Leaders PAC of Vistra Energy, and Amazon PAC. Despite these fundraising discrepancies, our analysis shows that Rep. Lee’s long track record and policy positions demonstrate that she will continue to be a progressive champion for the constituents of CD-12 and will govern effectively in the best interest of this diverse district.

 

 

Last updated: 2023-04-05

14th Congressional District

Reelect Congressional Representative Eric Swalwell to keep CD-14 on the right track for progress.

 

The Position

Congressmembers represent and advocate for the needs of their district constituents at the United States Capitol. They are responsible for creating, debating, and voting on legislation that addresses issues within their district.

The United States is divided into 435 congressional districts, each with a population of about 710,000 individuals. Each district elects a representative to the House of Representatives for a two-year term. California has 53 congressional representatives, the largest delegation in the country. There is no term limit for this position.

 

 

 

The District

California’s 14th Congressional District includes parts of Alameda and Contra Costa Counties. Democrats typically hold this district. Of the registered voters in this district, 16% are Republican and 51% are Democrat, and the district’s demographic breakdown is 19% Latino, 32% Asian, and 7% Black. After the 2021 redistricting process, CD-14 has maintained the same partisan percentage. The most recent election results show that CD-14 voted for Joe Biden for president in 2020 by 45 points and Gavin Newsom for governor in 2018 by 38 points.

 

 

 

The Race

There are seven candidates running for this seat, including Democrat Incumbent Representative Eric Swalwell and Republicans Alison Hayden and Tom Wong. Swalwell’s campaign has raised $1,990,170 and is not funded by police money. He has accepted money from the real estate industry and corporate PACs, including thousands of dollars from pharmaceutical companies, insurance corporations, and defense manufacturers. As of April 2022, no other candidates in this race have filed any fundraising receipts for the current election cycle.

 

 

 

The Recommendation

Rep. Eric Swalwell, a former prosecutor and city councilmember, is from Iowa originally and moved to Dublin, CA, as a child. According to campaign materials, Rep. Swalwell is running for reelection to make the American Dream accessible for all Americans through bold solutions and big ideas. Rep. Swalwell won his 2020 reelection against a Republican challenger by 42 points.

Rep. Swalwell’s priorities for CD-14 this year have included lessening the burden of student loans by decreasing interest rates and increasing tax breaks, as well as strengthening the national security apparatus around biointelligence. This year, he has sponsored 22 bills about education and student loans, election reform, criminal justice, and gun safety. He currently holds a leadership role as chair of the House subcommittee on Intelligence Modernization and Readiness within the Committee on Intelligence. He is also a member of the House Judiciary Committee and the Committee on Homeland Security. This year, Rep. Swalwell has voted 100% of the time with Nancy Pelosi and 94% of the time with Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez. Rep. Swalwell differed from Rep. Ocasio-Cortez when he voted in favor of additional defense funding, in favor of the USMCA Agreement, and in favor of initial COVID-19 relief funding, which Ocasio-Cortez said benefitted corporate interests over individuals.

Prior to his election to Congress, Rep. Swalwell worked as a prosecutor in the Alameda County District Attorney’s office and served as a member of the Dublin City Council. Swalwell got involved in politics in college, as a congressional intern during the 9/11 attacks. He then helped create a college scholarship program for students who lost parents in the attacks. During Donald Trump’s second impeachment hearing in 2021, Swalwell served as an impeachment manager. Rep. Swalwell has supported the most progressive bills that made it to a vote. He is a longtime supporter of election and government form, as well as gun control. He has also paid special attention to the issues that affect young people: he helped found the Future Forum Caucus, a group of congressional Millennials focused on addressing the issues affecting their age group; student debt in particular.

Rep. Swalwell is not a member of the Congressional Progressive Caucus, although he has the endorsement of many progressive groups, including Planned Parenthood, the California Labor Federation, and Equality California. Based on our analysis, Rep. Swalwell’s track record and policy positions demonstrate that he will continue to be a progressive voice for the constituents of CD-14 and will govern effectively in the best interest of this diverse district.

 

 

Last updated: 2023-04-05

Reelect Congressional Representative Eric Swalwell to keep CD-14 on the right track for progress.

 

The Position

Congressmembers represent and advocate for the needs of their district constituents at the United States Capitol. They are responsible for creating, debating, and voting on legislation that addresses issues within their district.

The United States is divided into 435 congressional districts, each with a population of about 710,000 individuals. Each district elects a representative to the House of Representatives for a two-year term. California has 53 congressional representatives, the largest delegation in the country. There is no term limit for this position.

 

 

 

The District

California’s 14th Congressional District includes parts of Alameda and Contra Costa Counties. Democrats typically hold this district. Of the registered voters in this district, 16% are Republican and 51% are Democrat, and the district’s demographic breakdown is 19% Latino, 32% Asian, and 7% Black. After the 2021 redistricting process, CD-14 has maintained the same partisan percentage. The most recent election results show that CD-14 voted for Joe Biden for president in 2020 by 45 points and Gavin Newsom for governor in 2018 by 38 points.

 

 

 

The Race

There are seven candidates running for this seat, including Democrat Incumbent Representative Eric Swalwell and Republicans Alison Hayden and Tom Wong. Swalwell’s campaign has raised $1,990,170 and is not funded by police money. He has accepted money from the real estate industry and corporate PACs, including thousands of dollars from pharmaceutical companies, insurance corporations, and defense manufacturers. As of April 2022, no other candidates in this race have filed any fundraising receipts for the current election cycle.

 

 

 

The Recommendation

Rep. Eric Swalwell, a former prosecutor and city councilmember, is from Iowa originally and moved to Dublin, CA, as a child. According to campaign materials, Rep. Swalwell is running for reelection to make the American Dream accessible for all Americans through bold solutions and big ideas. Rep. Swalwell won his 2020 reelection against a Republican challenger by 42 points.

Rep. Swalwell’s priorities for CD-14 this year have included lessening the burden of student loans by decreasing interest rates and increasing tax breaks, as well as strengthening the national security apparatus around biointelligence. This year, he has sponsored 22 bills about education and student loans, election reform, criminal justice, and gun safety. He currently holds a leadership role as chair of the House subcommittee on Intelligence Modernization and Readiness within the Committee on Intelligence. He is also a member of the House Judiciary Committee and the Committee on Homeland Security. This year, Rep. Swalwell has voted 100% of the time with Nancy Pelosi and 94% of the time with Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez. Rep. Swalwell differed from Rep. Ocasio-Cortez when he voted in favor of additional defense funding, in favor of the USMCA Agreement, and in favor of initial COVID-19 relief funding, which Ocasio-Cortez said benefitted corporate interests over individuals.

Prior to his election to Congress, Rep. Swalwell worked as a prosecutor in the Alameda County District Attorney’s office and served as a member of the Dublin City Council. Swalwell got involved in politics in college, as a congressional intern during the 9/11 attacks. He then helped create a college scholarship program for students who lost parents in the attacks. During Donald Trump’s second impeachment hearing in 2021, Swalwell served as an impeachment manager. Rep. Swalwell has supported the most progressive bills that made it to a vote. He is a longtime supporter of election and government form, as well as gun control. He has also paid special attention to the issues that affect young people: he helped found the Future Forum Caucus, a group of congressional Millennials focused on addressing the issues affecting their age group; student debt in particular.

Rep. Swalwell is not a member of the Congressional Progressive Caucus, although he has the endorsement of many progressive groups, including Planned Parenthood, the California Labor Federation, and Equality California. Based on our analysis, Rep. Swalwell’s track record and policy positions demonstrate that he will continue to be a progressive voice for the constituents of CD-14 and will govern effectively in the best interest of this diverse district.

 

 

Last updated: 2023-04-05

State Assembly, 20th District

Esteen is a registered nurse, working mother, and community activist, and has lived in the East Bay for nearly two decades. According to campaign materials, she is running for election to champion working families and to ensure that corporations and special interests pay their fair share so that communities have access to affordable housing, health care, and quality education. Esteen has not run for office previously. Esteen is an Emerge California Alumnus, having undergone leadership training to better represent the communities she wants to serve. She has local governing experience as a member of the Eden Municipal Area Council.

 

Her experience as a psychiatric nurse in the San Francisco General Hospital Psychiatric Emergency Room, and seeing firsthand the cycle that patients experience from diminished funding for mental-health care, galvanized her to organize for better access to health care. While serving on a steering committee on mental health in San Francisco, she put together a plan to put a progressive tax on the CEO’s income to fund mental-health services, which passed with voter support. After working five years in the Behavioral Health Center, she fought alongside residents to stop the closure of 41 permanent board and care beds in the Adult Residential Facility. It was after saving those beds that she was appointed vice president of organizing for SEIU 1021.

 

As a state legislator, Esteen intends to address racial disparities and racial injustice through concrete measures, such as repealing the Ellis Act and Costa Hawkins. She also aims to champion policies that create stronger tenant protections, a living wage that covers more than just housing and food costs, and worker protections for low-wage and gig workers. 

 

As secretary and treasurer of the Alameda Health System Board of Trustees, as well as a member of the Housing Conservatorship Working Group in San Francisco, Esteen also advocates for affordable housing and an equitable health-care system.

 

Esteen has the endorsement of many progressive leaders and groups, including Board of Equalization Member Malia Cohen, BART Director Lateefah Simon, #BlackLivesMatter Co-founder Alicia Garza, SEIU California, California Working Families Party, and Bay Rising Action. 

 

Based on our analysis, Ortega’s and Esteen’s track records and policy positions demonstrate that both will be a progressive champions for the constituents of AD-20 and will govern effectively in the best interest of this diverse district.


 

Last updated: 2023-04-05

Esteen is a registered nurse, working mother, and community activist, and has lived in the East Bay for nearly two decades. According to campaign materials, she is running for election to champion working families and to ensure that corporations and special interests pay their fair share so that communities have access to affordable housing, health care, and quality education. Esteen has not run for office previously. Esteen is an Emerge California Alumnus, having undergone leadership training to better represent the communities she wants to serve. She has local governing experience as a member of the Eden Municipal Area Council.

 

Her experience as a psychiatric nurse in the San Francisco General Hospital Psychiatric Emergency Room, and seeing firsthand the cycle that patients experience from diminished funding for mental-health care, galvanized her to organize for better access to health care. While serving on a steering committee on mental health in San Francisco, she put together a plan to put a progressive tax on the CEO’s income to fund mental-health services, which passed with voter support. After working five years in the Behavioral Health Center, she fought alongside residents to stop the closure of 41 permanent board and care beds in the Adult Residential Facility. It was after saving those beds that she was appointed vice president of organizing for SEIU 1021.

 

As a state legislator, Esteen intends to address racial disparities and racial injustice through concrete measures, such as repealing the Ellis Act and Costa Hawkins. She also aims to champion policies that create stronger tenant protections, a living wage that covers more than just housing and food costs, and worker protections for low-wage and gig workers. 

 

As secretary and treasurer of the Alameda Health System Board of Trustees, as well as a member of the Housing Conservatorship Working Group in San Francisco, Esteen also advocates for affordable housing and an equitable health-care system.

 

Esteen has the endorsement of many progressive leaders and groups, including Board of Equalization Member Malia Cohen, BART Director Lateefah Simon, #BlackLivesMatter Co-founder Alicia Garza, SEIU California, California Working Families Party, and Bay Rising Action. 

 

Based on our analysis, Ortega’s and Esteen’s track records and policy positions demonstrate that both will be a progressive champions for the constituents of AD-20 and will govern effectively in the best interest of this diverse district.


 

Last updated: 2023-04-05

Endorsed By: Courage California

Ortega, a labor leader, grew up in the Bay Area. According to campaign materials, she is running for election to help level the playing field to help opportunities that have become increasingly out of reach be more accessible for working families. In particular, if elected, Ortega would prioritize the expansion and institutionalization of paid sick leave, securing health-care protections, and expanding affordable housing. Ortega has not run for office previously.

Liz Ortega has more than two decades of experience in labor leadership and in working with progressive Democratic leaders and community organizations. As statewide political director for AFSCME Local 3299, the University of California’s largest employee union, Ortega ensured the passage of state legislation to preserve and protect essential service jobs at every UC campus. She is the first Latina elected as executive secretary-treasurer of the Alameda Labor Council, and in this role has fought for an equitable minimum wage to support working families. As a member of the Alameda County Workforce Investment Board, she helped job-seekers develop workplace skills and find employment. 
Ortega serves on the Alameda County Vaccine Equity Task Force, where she  secured paid sick leave and hazard pay for essential public safety, health providers, and frontline workers. During the pandemic, she focused her work on testing and vaccination efforts to ensure the safety of frontline workers.

Ortega has extensive experience in coalition-building, and has demonstrated the commitment and the strategies necessary to build relationships and bring together the unions working in a broad range of jobs across the public and private sectors. She was elected delegate to the Alameda Democratic Central Committee in 2014, and in the two years that she served in that role, facilitated meetings and discussions between Democrats and labor leaders on issues facing their members.
Ortega has the endorsement of many progressive leaders and groups, including Attorney General Rob Bonta, Board of Equalization Member Malia Cohen, activist Dolores Huerta, AFSCME California, UFCW 5, and California Teachers Association. 
 

Last updated: 2023-04-05

Ortega, a labor leader, grew up in the Bay Area. According to campaign materials, she is running for election to help level the playing field to help opportunities that have become increasingly out of reach be more accessible for working families. In particular, if elected, Ortega would prioritize the expansion and institutionalization of paid sick leave, securing health-care protections, and expanding affordable housing. Ortega has not run for office previously.

Liz Ortega has more than two decades of experience in labor leadership and in working with progressive Democratic leaders and community organizations. As statewide political director for AFSCME Local 3299, the University of California’s largest employee union, Ortega ensured the passage of state legislation to preserve and protect essential service jobs at every UC campus. She is the first Latina elected as executive secretary-treasurer of the Alameda Labor Council, and in this role has fought for an equitable minimum wage to support working families. As a member of the Alameda County Workforce Investment Board, she helped job-seekers develop workplace skills and find employment. 
Ortega serves on the Alameda County Vaccine Equity Task Force, where she  secured paid sick leave and hazard pay for essential public safety, health providers, and frontline workers. During the pandemic, she focused her work on testing and vaccination efforts to ensure the safety of frontline workers.

Ortega has extensive experience in coalition-building, and has demonstrated the commitment and the strategies necessary to build relationships and bring together the unions working in a broad range of jobs across the public and private sectors. She was elected delegate to the Alameda Democratic Central Committee in 2014, and in the two years that she served in that role, facilitated meetings and discussions between Democrats and labor leaders on issues facing their members.
Ortega has the endorsement of many progressive leaders and groups, including Attorney General Rob Bonta, Board of Equalization Member Malia Cohen, activist Dolores Huerta, AFSCME California, UFCW 5, and California Teachers Association. 
 

Last updated: 2023-04-05

Endorsed By: Courage California

State Senator, 10th District

Depending on where you live, you may have one of the below State Senate races on your ballot.

Elect Aisha Wahab to push SD-10 in the right direction.

 

The Position


State senators represent and advocate the needs of their district at the California State Capitol. They are responsible for creating legislation that addresses issues within their district, as well as voting and debating on preexisting laws.

The California State Senate has 40 congressional districts. Each represents a population of about 930,000 Californians. Representatives are elected to the Senate for a four-year term. Every two years, half of the Senate's 40 seats are subject to election. Members elected before 2012 are restricted to two four-year terms (eight years) in the Senate. Those elected in or after 2012 are allowed to serve 12 years total across both the state Senate or Assembly. This 2021-2022 legislative session, Democrats currently hold a two-thirds supermajority of 29 seats in the California State Senate, while Republicans hold eleven seats.

 

The District


California's 10th Senate District includes parts of Alameda and Santa Clara Counties. Democrats typically hold this district. Of the registered voters in this district, 51% are Democrat and 14% are Republican, with a demographic breakdown of 24% Latino, 41% Asian, and 6% Black. The most recent election results show that SD-10 voted for Biden for president in 2020 by 48.4 points and Newsom for governor in 2018 by 46.4 points.

 

The Race


There are five candidates running for this seat, including Democrats Aisha Wahab and Lily Mei. Incumbent Bob Wieckowski’s term ends in 2022. Wahab’s campaign has raised more than $458,000 and is not funded by fossil fuel, police, or real estate money. Mei’s campaign is funded by several real estate and corporate interests. Although Mei’s campaign website states her support for the LGBTQIA+ community, she has a history of anti-LGBTQIA+ voting.

 

Our Endorsement


Aisha Wahab, Mayor Pro Tempore of Hayward, is the first Afghan-American woman to serve in public office in the United States. She grew up in the San Francisco Bay Area. According to campaign materials, Wahab is running for election to fight for hardworking families in the Bay Area.

As councilmember, Aisha Wahab has worked to ensure housing for low and extremely low-income individuals, worked to combat climate change, and supported small businesses. Wahab raised the minimum wage to $15, and she passed broad tenant protections, including strengthened protections for seniors and renters with disabilities. She is an advocate of community service and organizing, and has been honored by Senator Bob Wieckowski with the Unity Award in 2017 and named Woman of the Year by Assemblymember Bill Quirk in 2019.

Aisha Wahab has the endorsement of many progressive groups, including Silicon Valley Young Democrats and NARAL Pro-Choice California. She is also endorsed by Representative Ro Khanna, Assemblymember Alex Lee, Assemblymember Lorena Gonzalez, and Senator Jim Beall. Based on our analysis, Wahab’s track record and policy positions demonstrate that she will be a progressive champion for the constituents of SD-10 and will govern effectively in the best interest of this diverse district.

Last updated: 2023-04-05

Elect Aisha Wahab to push SD-10 in the right direction.

 

The Position


State senators represent and advocate the needs of their district at the California State Capitol. They are responsible for creating legislation that addresses issues within their district, as well as voting and debating on preexisting laws.

The California State Senate has 40 congressional districts. Each represents a population of about 930,000 Californians. Representatives are elected to the Senate for a four-year term. Every two years, half of the Senate's 40 seats are subject to election. Members elected before 2012 are restricted to two four-year terms (eight years) in the Senate. Those elected in or after 2012 are allowed to serve 12 years total across both the state Senate or Assembly. This 2021-2022 legislative session, Democrats currently hold a two-thirds supermajority of 29 seats in the California State Senate, while Republicans hold eleven seats.

 

The District


California's 10th Senate District includes parts of Alameda and Santa Clara Counties. Democrats typically hold this district. Of the registered voters in this district, 51% are Democrat and 14% are Republican, with a demographic breakdown of 24% Latino, 41% Asian, and 6% Black. The most recent election results show that SD-10 voted for Biden for president in 2020 by 48.4 points and Newsom for governor in 2018 by 46.4 points.

 

The Race


There are five candidates running for this seat, including Democrats Aisha Wahab and Lily Mei. Incumbent Bob Wieckowski’s term ends in 2022. Wahab’s campaign has raised more than $458,000 and is not funded by fossil fuel, police, or real estate money. Mei’s campaign is funded by several real estate and corporate interests. Although Mei’s campaign website states her support for the LGBTQIA+ community, she has a history of anti-LGBTQIA+ voting.

 

Our Endorsement


Aisha Wahab, Mayor Pro Tempore of Hayward, is the first Afghan-American woman to serve in public office in the United States. She grew up in the San Francisco Bay Area. According to campaign materials, Wahab is running for election to fight for hardworking families in the Bay Area.

As councilmember, Aisha Wahab has worked to ensure housing for low and extremely low-income individuals, worked to combat climate change, and supported small businesses. Wahab raised the minimum wage to $15, and she passed broad tenant protections, including strengthened protections for seniors and renters with disabilities. She is an advocate of community service and organizing, and has been honored by Senator Bob Wieckowski with the Unity Award in 2017 and named Woman of the Year by Assemblymember Bill Quirk in 2019.

Aisha Wahab has the endorsement of many progressive groups, including Silicon Valley Young Democrats and NARAL Pro-Choice California. She is also endorsed by Representative Ro Khanna, Assemblymember Alex Lee, Assemblymember Lorena Gonzalez, and Senator Jim Beall. Based on our analysis, Wahab’s track record and policy positions demonstrate that she will be a progressive champion for the constituents of SD-10 and will govern effectively in the best interest of this diverse district.

Last updated: 2023-04-05

Endorsed By: Courage California

Statewide

Reelect Senator Alex Padilla to the United States Senate to keep California on the right track for progress. 

 

The Position

Members of the Senate represent and advocate for the needs of their state constituency and share legislative responsibility with the House of Representatives. They are responsible for creating, debating, and voting on legislation that addresses issues of national importance. Senators have the exclusive responsibility of providing advice and consent to the executive branch on treaties, and on the nomination and approval of cabinet secretaries, ambassadors, and federal judges. The Senate also has the sole authority to bring and try an impeachment of a high official, up to and including removal from office with a two-thirds majority vote.

Each state, regardless of population, is represented by two senators. Senate elections are statewide, and senators are elected to serve a six-year term. There is no term limit for this position.

 

The District

California is the most populous state in the United States, and includes 58 counties and 331 million residents. The demographic breakdown of the total residential population is 39% Latino, 16% Asian, and 7% Black. Since 1992, Democrats have steadily held both California Senate seats. Of the 22 million registered voters in the state, 47% are Democrat, 24% are Republican, and 23% have no party preference. The most recent election results show that California voted for Joe Biden for president in 2020 by 29 points and Gavin Newsom for governor in 2018 by 24 points.

 

The Race

This Senate race will appear twice on primary ballots: as a special election marked as the “Unexpired/Partial Term,” which will fill the seat from November 2022 to January 2023, and as a regular full-term election for a six-year term that begins in January 2023. Sen. Alex Padilla is the recommended candidate for your vote in both of these races. 

Senator Alex Padilla was appointed to fill the remainder of the term for the Senate seat vacated by then Senator Kamala Harris after she was elected to the vice presidency in November 2020. Sen. Padilla is now running for his first full elected term in the United States Senate. There are 23 candidates running for this seat, including Democrat Incumbent Senator Alex Padilla and Republican Mark Meuser. Sen. Padilla’s campaign has raised $9.5 million, and has received donations from fossil fuel, real estate, and corporate PAC interests. Meuser’s campaign has raised $330,000 and is primarily funded by individual donors.

 

The Recommendation

Sen. Padilla, a longtime public official, is from the San Fernando Valley. According to campaign materials, he is running for reelection to continue his efforts to protect voting rights, defend democracy, and support working families. Sen. Padilla was appointed to the Senate by Governor Gavin Newsom in January 2021, which will make this his first electoral campaign for the seat. He was previously elected to serve as the California Secretary of State in 2014, winning his 2018 reelection bid over Republican Mark Meuser by 29 points.

Sen. Padilla’s priorities for California this year have included 32 bills about environmental and water protections, the economy, immigration, and child welfare. Of these, all are currently in committee. He currently serves on five committees, including Judiciary, Budget, and Environment and Public Works. He serves as chair of the Subcommittee on Immigration, Citizenship, and Border Safety. In his brief time in the Senate, Sen. Padilla has signed on as a sponsor of the Green New Deal and Medicare for All, and has been a strong supporter of President Biden’s Build Back Better agenda.

Prior to his appointment, Sen. Padilla served Californians in several elected roles, including two terms each in the Los Angeles City Council, in the state Senate, and as the California secretary of state. Sen. Padilla is a longtime supporter of environmental justice, and credits his parents with introducing him to activism around this issue in the Los Angeles community where he was raised. Sen. Padilla has also been a longtime supporter of voting rights and democratic protections, which was the cornerstone of his work as secretary of state. In the Senate, he co-authored the Freedom to Vote Act, and was a strong supporter of the John Lewis Voting Rights Advancement Act. 

Sen. Padilla has the endorsement of many progressive groups, including California Environmental Voters, Equality California, NARAL Pro-Choice California, and many labor unions. He is also endorsed by a broad coalition of federal and local elected officials, including Senator Elizabeth Warren, Rep. Karen Bass, Rep. Katie Porter, Governor Gavin Newsom, and Attorney General Rob Bonta. Based on our analysis, Sen. Padilla’s track record and policy positions demonstrate that he will continue to be a progressive champion for the constituents of California and will govern effectively in the best interest of this diverse state.
 

Last updated: 2023-04-05

Reelect Senator Alex Padilla to the United States Senate to keep California on the right track for progress. 

 

The Position

Members of the Senate represent and advocate for the needs of their state constituency and share legislative responsibility with the House of Representatives. They are responsible for creating, debating, and voting on legislation that addresses issues of national importance. Senators have the exclusive responsibility of providing advice and consent to the executive branch on treaties, and on the nomination and approval of cabinet secretaries, ambassadors, and federal judges. The Senate also has the sole authority to bring and try an impeachment of a high official, up to and including removal from office with a two-thirds majority vote.

Each state, regardless of population, is represented by two senators. Senate elections are statewide, and senators are elected to serve a six-year term. There is no term limit for this position.

 

The District

California is the most populous state in the United States, and includes 58 counties and 331 million residents. The demographic breakdown of the total residential population is 39% Latino, 16% Asian, and 7% Black. Since 1992, Democrats have steadily held both California Senate seats. Of the 22 million registered voters in the state, 47% are Democrat, 24% are Republican, and 23% have no party preference. The most recent election results show that California voted for Joe Biden for president in 2020 by 29 points and Gavin Newsom for governor in 2018 by 24 points.

 

The Race

This Senate race will appear twice on primary ballots: as a special election marked as the “Unexpired/Partial Term,” which will fill the seat from November 2022 to January 2023, and as a regular full-term election for a six-year term that begins in January 2023. Sen. Alex Padilla is the recommended candidate for your vote in both of these races. 

Senator Alex Padilla was appointed to fill the remainder of the term for the Senate seat vacated by then Senator Kamala Harris after she was elected to the vice presidency in November 2020. Sen. Padilla is now running for his first full elected term in the United States Senate. There are 23 candidates running for this seat, including Democrat Incumbent Senator Alex Padilla and Republican Mark Meuser. Sen. Padilla’s campaign has raised $9.5 million, and has received donations from fossil fuel, real estate, and corporate PAC interests. Meuser’s campaign has raised $330,000 and is primarily funded by individual donors.

 

The Recommendation

Sen. Padilla, a longtime public official, is from the San Fernando Valley. According to campaign materials, he is running for reelection to continue his efforts to protect voting rights, defend democracy, and support working families. Sen. Padilla was appointed to the Senate by Governor Gavin Newsom in January 2021, which will make this his first electoral campaign for the seat. He was previously elected to serve as the California Secretary of State in 2014, winning his 2018 reelection bid over Republican Mark Meuser by 29 points.

Sen. Padilla’s priorities for California this year have included 32 bills about environmental and water protections, the economy, immigration, and child welfare. Of these, all are currently in committee. He currently serves on five committees, including Judiciary, Budget, and Environment and Public Works. He serves as chair of the Subcommittee on Immigration, Citizenship, and Border Safety. In his brief time in the Senate, Sen. Padilla has signed on as a sponsor of the Green New Deal and Medicare for All, and has been a strong supporter of President Biden’s Build Back Better agenda.

Prior to his appointment, Sen. Padilla served Californians in several elected roles, including two terms each in the Los Angeles City Council, in the state Senate, and as the California secretary of state. Sen. Padilla is a longtime supporter of environmental justice, and credits his parents with introducing him to activism around this issue in the Los Angeles community where he was raised. Sen. Padilla has also been a longtime supporter of voting rights and democratic protections, which was the cornerstone of his work as secretary of state. In the Senate, he co-authored the Freedom to Vote Act, and was a strong supporter of the John Lewis Voting Rights Advancement Act. 

Sen. Padilla has the endorsement of many progressive groups, including California Environmental Voters, Equality California, NARAL Pro-Choice California, and many labor unions. He is also endorsed by a broad coalition of federal and local elected officials, including Senator Elizabeth Warren, Rep. Karen Bass, Rep. Katie Porter, Governor Gavin Newsom, and Attorney General Rob Bonta. Based on our analysis, Sen. Padilla’s track record and policy positions demonstrate that he will continue to be a progressive champion for the constituents of California and will govern effectively in the best interest of this diverse state.
 

Last updated: 2023-04-05

Reelect Governor Gavin Newsom to keep California on the right track for progress. 

 

The Position

Governors serve as the chief executive officer of a state, and have the authority to sign and implement state laws. They are responsible for overseeing the operations of the executive branch of the state government, and advancing statewide initiatives and programs through executive orders, legislative proposals, or executive budgets. Governors have the exclusive authority to nominate or appoint officials, including agency heads, cabinet secretaries, and state court judges. Gubernatorial power varies across states, as each state government operates under the guidance of a state constitution. 

Each governor is elected by popular vote in a statewide election. In California, governors are elected to serve a four-year term, and are limited to two terms in office.

 

The District

California is the most populous state in the United States, and includes 58 counties and 331 million residents. The demographic breakdown of the total residential population is 39% Latino, 16% Asian, and 7% Black. Democrats have held the governorship since 2011. Of the 22 million registered voters in the state, 47% are Democrat, 24% are Republican, and 23% have no party preference. The most recent election results show that California voted for Joe Biden for president in 2020 by 29 points.

 

The Race

There are 26 candidates running for this seat, including Democrat Incumbent Governor Gavin Newsom, Republican State Senator Brian Dahle, and Republican businesswoman Jenny Rae Le Roux. Gov. Newsom’s campaign has raised $14.4 million and has not received donations from fossil fuel, police, or corporate PAC interests. Sen. Dahle’s campaign has raised $1.2 million and has not received donations from fossil fuel, police, or corporate PAC interests. Le Roux’s campaign has raised $1.3 million and has not received donations from fossil fuel, police, corporate PAC, or real estate interests. 

 

The Recommendation

Gov. Newsom, a career public official, is from San Francisco. According to campaign materials, he is running for reelection to continue to provide steady crisis leadership for California through policy reform on economic, environmental, education, and criminal-justice issues. He was elected to serve as the California governor in 2018, winning his bid over Republican John Cox by 24 points. He defeated a Republican-backed recall election by the same margin in 2021.

Gov. Newsom’s priorities for California this term have included action on issues across the policy spectrum. On criminal-justice reform, he has paused executions across the state, and established new limitations on police use of force. On education reform, he has expanded early childhood education to include 4-year olds, established updated standards and guidelines for charter schools, and provided free school meals to all public schools during the pandemic. On the economy, he has used federal pandemic money to provide the largest economic stimulus package in state history, and signed legislation that provided protections for individuals working in the gig economy. On climate protections, he has moved the state closer to an eventual full ban on fracking, and ordered a ban on gas-powered cars by 2035. Gov. Newsom has also advanced an executive order to use state agencies to store and remove carbon from the atmosphere, and to establish a first-in-the-nation goal of conserving 30 percent of the state’s land and coastal water by 2030. Gov. Newsom has also failed to take strong action on several important issues, including replacing police with mental-health professionals, reforming the state taxation system, bringing new financial reporting standards to public education, and establishing a single-payer health-care system. Gov. Newsom’s administration has expended significant resources for responding to some of the state’s worst wildfire seasons, and has worked with local governments as they pursue resolutions to the ongoing homelessness crisis across the state.

Gov. Newsom was the target of a recall campaign in fall 2021. The recall was backed by a right-wing coalition eager to capitalize on the perception of political weakness that had resulted from the ongoing economic impact of his response to the COVID-19 pandemic. The recall effort was unsuccessful, and running the special election a year ahead of the 2022 election cycle is estimated to have cost California taxpayers an additional $200 million.

Prior to his election in 2018, Gov. Newsom served in positions across state and local governments. He served two terms as lieutenant governor under former Gov. Jerry Brown, two terms as mayor of San Francisco, and two terms as a member of the San Francisco Board of Supervisors. 

Gov. Newsom has the endorsement of many progressive groups in the state, including NARAL Pro-Choice, California Teachers Association, and California Labor Federation. Based on our analysis, Gov. Newsom’s track record and policy positions demonstrate that he will continue to be a progressive champion for the constituents of California and will govern effectively in the best interest of this diverse state.
 

Last updated: 2023-04-05

Reelect Governor Gavin Newsom to keep California on the right track for progress. 

 

The Position

Governors serve as the chief executive officer of a state, and have the authority to sign and implement state laws. They are responsible for overseeing the operations of the executive branch of the state government, and advancing statewide initiatives and programs through executive orders, legislative proposals, or executive budgets. Governors have the exclusive authority to nominate or appoint officials, including agency heads, cabinet secretaries, and state court judges. Gubernatorial power varies across states, as each state government operates under the guidance of a state constitution. 

Each governor is elected by popular vote in a statewide election. In California, governors are elected to serve a four-year term, and are limited to two terms in office.

 

The District

California is the most populous state in the United States, and includes 58 counties and 331 million residents. The demographic breakdown of the total residential population is 39% Latino, 16% Asian, and 7% Black. Democrats have held the governorship since 2011. Of the 22 million registered voters in the state, 47% are Democrat, 24% are Republican, and 23% have no party preference. The most recent election results show that California voted for Joe Biden for president in 2020 by 29 points.

 

The Race

There are 26 candidates running for this seat, including Democrat Incumbent Governor Gavin Newsom, Republican State Senator Brian Dahle, and Republican businesswoman Jenny Rae Le Roux. Gov. Newsom’s campaign has raised $14.4 million and has not received donations from fossil fuel, police, or corporate PAC interests. Sen. Dahle’s campaign has raised $1.2 million and has not received donations from fossil fuel, police, or corporate PAC interests. Le Roux’s campaign has raised $1.3 million and has not received donations from fossil fuel, police, corporate PAC, or real estate interests. 

 

The Recommendation

Gov. Newsom, a career public official, is from San Francisco. According to campaign materials, he is running for reelection to continue to provide steady crisis leadership for California through policy reform on economic, environmental, education, and criminal-justice issues. He was elected to serve as the California governor in 2018, winning his bid over Republican John Cox by 24 points. He defeated a Republican-backed recall election by the same margin in 2021.

Gov. Newsom’s priorities for California this term have included action on issues across the policy spectrum. On criminal-justice reform, he has paused executions across the state, and established new limitations on police use of force. On education reform, he has expanded early childhood education to include 4-year olds, established updated standards and guidelines for charter schools, and provided free school meals to all public schools during the pandemic. On the economy, he has used federal pandemic money to provide the largest economic stimulus package in state history, and signed legislation that provided protections for individuals working in the gig economy. On climate protections, he has moved the state closer to an eventual full ban on fracking, and ordered a ban on gas-powered cars by 2035. Gov. Newsom has also advanced an executive order to use state agencies to store and remove carbon from the atmosphere, and to establish a first-in-the-nation goal of conserving 30 percent of the state’s land and coastal water by 2030. Gov. Newsom has also failed to take strong action on several important issues, including replacing police with mental-health professionals, reforming the state taxation system, bringing new financial reporting standards to public education, and establishing a single-payer health-care system. Gov. Newsom’s administration has expended significant resources for responding to some of the state’s worst wildfire seasons, and has worked with local governments as they pursue resolutions to the ongoing homelessness crisis across the state.

Gov. Newsom was the target of a recall campaign in fall 2021. The recall was backed by a right-wing coalition eager to capitalize on the perception of political weakness that had resulted from the ongoing economic impact of his response to the COVID-19 pandemic. The recall effort was unsuccessful, and running the special election a year ahead of the 2022 election cycle is estimated to have cost California taxpayers an additional $200 million.

Prior to his election in 2018, Gov. Newsom served in positions across state and local governments. He served two terms as lieutenant governor under former Gov. Jerry Brown, two terms as mayor of San Francisco, and two terms as a member of the San Francisco Board of Supervisors. 

Gov. Newsom has the endorsement of many progressive groups in the state, including NARAL Pro-Choice, California Teachers Association, and California Labor Federation. Based on our analysis, Gov. Newsom’s track record and policy positions demonstrate that he will continue to be a progressive champion for the constituents of California and will govern effectively in the best interest of this diverse state.
 

Last updated: 2023-04-05

Reelect Lieutenant Governor Eleni Kounalakis to keep California on the right track for progress. 

 

The Position

Lieutenant governors serve as the second-highest executive officer of a state. They are responsible for acting as governor in the case that the sitting governor is temporarily absent, incapacitated, or removed from office, and have additional responsibilities that vary by state. In California, this position chairs the Commission for Economic Development and the State Lands Commission, and provides guidance to the governor on issues across state policy. The lieutenant governor serves as president of the state Senate, and casts a vote in the case of a tie. The lieutenant governor also holds a variety of leadership roles, including as a voting member of the Board of Regents of the University of California, and the Board of Trustees of the California University System. 

Each lieutenant governor is elected by popular vote in a statewide election. In California, lieutenant governors are elected to serve a four-year term, and are limited to two terms in office.

 

The District

California is the most populous state in the United States, and includes 58 counties and 331 million residents. The demographic breakdown of the total residential population is 39% Latino, 16% Asian, and 7% Black. Democrats have held the Lieutenant Governor seat since 2011. Of the 22 million registered voters in the state, 47% are Democrat, 24% are Republican, and 23% have no party preference. The most recent election results show that California voted for Joe Biden for president in 2020 by 29 points and Gavin Newsom for governor in 2018 by 24 points.

 

The Race

There are eight candidates running for this seat, including Democrat Incumbent Lieutenant Governor Eleni Kounalakis and Republican Angela Underwood Jacobs. Lt. Gov. Kounalakis’s campaign has raised $3.9 million and has received donations from fossil fuel, police, and corporate PAC interests. Underwood Jacobs’s campaign has raised $23,000 and is funded entirely by individual donors. None of the other candidates have filed fundraising receipts with the secretary of state.

 

The Recommendation

Lt. Gov. Kounalakis, a businessperson and former U.S. ambassador, is from Sacramento. According to campaign materials, she is running for reelection to continue to use her business acumen and public experience to guide California to a better economic path. She was elected to serve as California’s lieutenant governor in 2018, winning her bid over Democrat Edward Hernandez by 14 points, and is the first woman in state history to be elected to this role. 

Lt. Gov. Kounalakis has provided administrative and political support for the governor’s agenda this term, including action related to pausing executions, placing limitations on police use of force, incremental efforts to ban fracking, distributing the largest stimulus package in state history, and expanding access to early childhood education. However, her administration has failed to take significant action on several progressive priorities, including transitioning to first responders with a mental-health focus, reforming the state tax system, establishing a single-payer health-care system, or significantly reducing the population of homeless individuals in the state. More recently, Lt. Gov. Kounalakis had the individual responsibility of setting the date for the 2021 recall election, and worked in support of Gov. Newsom’s successful campaign to defeat the recall. She has also been outspoken about new efforts to ensure that abortion remains legal in California, including potentially establishing sanctuary protections for women who seek abortion care in the state. In 2022, she became the first woman in state history to sign a bill into law after she authorized an eviction-protection extension bill while Gov. Newsom was abroad. 

Prior to serving in this role, Lt. Gov. Kounalakis held a variety of positions in public service and the private sector. She served under Gov. Jerry Brown as chair of the California Advisory Council for International Trade and Investment, was a fellow at the U.S. Department of State’s Bureau of Intelligence and Research, and served as U.S. Ambassador to the Republic of Hungary under former President Barack Obama. Before her public service, Lt. Gov. Kounalakis was a businessperson who served as president of AKT Development, a housing- and land-development firm founded by her father. The firm is the largest in the Sacramento area, and primarily focuses on residential master-planned communities.

Lt. Gov. Kounalakis has the endorsement of many progressive groups in the state, including Equality California and EMILY’s List. Based on our analysis, Lt. Gov. Kounalakis’s track record and policy positions demonstrate that she will continue to be a champion for the constituents of California and will govern effectively in the best interest of this diverse state.
 

Last updated: 2023-04-05

Reelect Lieutenant Governor Eleni Kounalakis to keep California on the right track for progress. 

 

The Position

Lieutenant governors serve as the second-highest executive officer of a state. They are responsible for acting as governor in the case that the sitting governor is temporarily absent, incapacitated, or removed from office, and have additional responsibilities that vary by state. In California, this position chairs the Commission for Economic Development and the State Lands Commission, and provides guidance to the governor on issues across state policy. The lieutenant governor serves as president of the state Senate, and casts a vote in the case of a tie. The lieutenant governor also holds a variety of leadership roles, including as a voting member of the Board of Regents of the University of California, and the Board of Trustees of the California University System. 

Each lieutenant governor is elected by popular vote in a statewide election. In California, lieutenant governors are elected to serve a four-year term, and are limited to two terms in office.

 

The District

California is the most populous state in the United States, and includes 58 counties and 331 million residents. The demographic breakdown of the total residential population is 39% Latino, 16% Asian, and 7% Black. Democrats have held the Lieutenant Governor seat since 2011. Of the 22 million registered voters in the state, 47% are Democrat, 24% are Republican, and 23% have no party preference. The most recent election results show that California voted for Joe Biden for president in 2020 by 29 points and Gavin Newsom for governor in 2018 by 24 points.

 

The Race

There are eight candidates running for this seat, including Democrat Incumbent Lieutenant Governor Eleni Kounalakis and Republican Angela Underwood Jacobs. Lt. Gov. Kounalakis’s campaign has raised $3.9 million and has received donations from fossil fuel, police, and corporate PAC interests. Underwood Jacobs’s campaign has raised $23,000 and is funded entirely by individual donors. None of the other candidates have filed fundraising receipts with the secretary of state.

 

The Recommendation

Lt. Gov. Kounalakis, a businessperson and former U.S. ambassador, is from Sacramento. According to campaign materials, she is running for reelection to continue to use her business acumen and public experience to guide California to a better economic path. She was elected to serve as California’s lieutenant governor in 2018, winning her bid over Democrat Edward Hernandez by 14 points, and is the first woman in state history to be elected to this role. 

Lt. Gov. Kounalakis has provided administrative and political support for the governor’s agenda this term, including action related to pausing executions, placing limitations on police use of force, incremental efforts to ban fracking, distributing the largest stimulus package in state history, and expanding access to early childhood education. However, her administration has failed to take significant action on several progressive priorities, including transitioning to first responders with a mental-health focus, reforming the state tax system, establishing a single-payer health-care system, or significantly reducing the population of homeless individuals in the state. More recently, Lt. Gov. Kounalakis had the individual responsibility of setting the date for the 2021 recall election, and worked in support of Gov. Newsom’s successful campaign to defeat the recall. She has also been outspoken about new efforts to ensure that abortion remains legal in California, including potentially establishing sanctuary protections for women who seek abortion care in the state. In 2022, she became the first woman in state history to sign a bill into law after she authorized an eviction-protection extension bill while Gov. Newsom was abroad. 

Prior to serving in this role, Lt. Gov. Kounalakis held a variety of positions in public service and the private sector. She served under Gov. Jerry Brown as chair of the California Advisory Council for International Trade and Investment, was a fellow at the U.S. Department of State’s Bureau of Intelligence and Research, and served as U.S. Ambassador to the Republic of Hungary under former President Barack Obama. Before her public service, Lt. Gov. Kounalakis was a businessperson who served as president of AKT Development, a housing- and land-development firm founded by her father. The firm is the largest in the Sacramento area, and primarily focuses on residential master-planned communities.

Lt. Gov. Kounalakis has the endorsement of many progressive groups in the state, including Equality California and EMILY’s List. Based on our analysis, Lt. Gov. Kounalakis’s track record and policy positions demonstrate that she will continue to be a champion for the constituents of California and will govern effectively in the best interest of this diverse state.
 

Last updated: 2023-04-05

Reelect Attorney General Rob Bonta to keep California on the right track for progress.

 

The Position

The state attorney general acts as the lead attorney and law-enforcement official for the state of California, and has oversight of over 4,500 state-employed district attorneys, investigators, police officers, and administrators. The attorney general executes a variety of responsibilities in the state, including representing the people of California in criminal and civil matters in court, coordinating statewide law-enforcement efforts, providing legal counsel to state agencies, and managing special projects to protect the rights of Californians. California has 58 elected district attorneys who report to the attorney general, one for every county in the state. The attorney general is elected for a four-year term and may serve a maximum of two terms in office. This office has traditionally been held by Democrats, including current U.S. Secretary of Health and Human Services, Xavier Becerra, and current Vice President Kamala Harris.

Democrat incumbent Rob Bonta was appointed to this seat by Governor Gavin Newsom in March 2021, after Secretary Becerra was appointed to the Biden administration’s cabinet. Attorney General Bonta is the first Filipino American to serve in this role. The most recent election results show that Becerra won the statewide election in 2018 with 64% of the vote.

 

The Race

There are four candidates running in the primary for attorney general: Democrat Incumbent Attorney General Rob Bonta, Independent challenger and Sacramento County District Attorney Anne Marie Schubert, and Republican challengers Nathan Hochman and Eric Early. Attorney General Bonta’s campaign has raised over $2 million, and is not funded by fossil fuel, police, or real estate donations. Schubert’s campaign has raised $833,000, and has received donations from over ten police organizations across the state. She has also received significant donations from billionaire Angelo Tsakopoulos and his family, who work in real estate development. Hochman’s campaign has raised $900,000 and has not committed to refuse fossil fuel, police, or corporate PAC money. He is backed by a significant number of individual donors with connections to real estate, and has also received over $20,000 from companies connected to Jeong Hwan Kim, who pled guilty to tax crimes in 2017 in a case prosecuted by the attorney general’s office. Early’s campaign has raised $235,000, and has not committed to refuse fossil fuel, police, corporate PAC, or real estate money in his campaign. He previously ran for attorney general in 2018.

 

Our Endorsement

Attorney General Rob Bonta, a civil rights attorney, is from Alameda, CA. Prior to his appointment to the attorney general’s office, he was elected to serve three terms in the California State Assembly as the representative from the 18th District. According to campaign materials, Attorney General Bonta is running for reelection to continue his focus on resolving systemic injustice across the state through action on environmental justice, labor rights, and corporate accountability.

Attorney General Bonta’s priorities for California this year include establishing stronger protections for victims of hate crimes, working toward regulations that protect consumers from unjust corporate behavior, and creating a more equitable criminal-justice system. His office recently secured a judgment requiring Amazon to pay a $500,000 fine and adhere to a stricter process of reporting workplace COVID-19 prevention efforts and recorded infections to the company’s employees and the state. Attorney General Bonta has been outspoken about other forms of consumer and workplace protections, including recent efforts to curb robocalls and spearheading a nationwide investigation into targeted marketing tactics from Instagram and Meta Inc. He has also taken aim at the housing crisis with the creation of the Housing Strike Force and an online Housing Portal designed to address access, affordability, and equity. These new initiatives will enforce housing-development laws, reaffirm tenant rights, provide consumer protection and alerts, and provide legal advocacy for the right to housing.

In his first several months in office, Attorney General Bonta has demonstrated a collaborative approach to his work locally, and an interest in leveraging his position for national impact. In California, he has established the Office of Community Awareness, Response, and Engagement (CARE) to communicate directly with underrepresented community and advocacy groups in the state. This office is designed to advance equity, and to ensure that the work of the attorney general’s office is inclusive for diverse perspectives. Nationally, he has been proactive in partnering with state attorney generals across the country to file briefs on legislation of national importance, including a public opposition to Texas’s recent abortion ban (SB 8).

During his time in the State Assembly, he was an effective legislator who worked on bills related to climate protections, criminal justice and prison reform, immigrant rights, and housing protections. Bonta scored a lifetime score of 98 out of 100 on Courage Score, our annual analysis of legislators’ progressive voting records. Based on our Courage Score analysis, he supported the most progressive bills that made it to a vote.

Prior to his election to the State Assembly, Attorney General Bonta served as a deputy city attorney for both the City and County of San Francisco, as an elected member of the Alameda Health Care District Board of Directors, as board president for the Social Service Human Relations board, as board president for Alternatives in Action, and as chair of the Economic Development Commission. He is a longtime activist in the ongoing fight for racial, economic, and social justice.

Attorney General Bonta has received the endorsement of an overwhelming number of elected officials across the state, including U.S. Senator Alex Padilla, Secretary of State Dr. Shirley Weber, State Controller Betty Yee, State Senator Sydney Kamlager, and State Senator Scott Weiner. He is also endorsed by several progressive groups, including SEIU CA, NARAL Pro-Choice CA, and California Teachers Association. According to our analysis, Attorney General Bonta is the strongest choice for equitable and representative leadership in office. Based on our analysis, Attorney General Bonta’s track record and policy positions demonstrate that he will continue to be a progressive champion for all Californians and will execute his responsibilities effectively in the best interest of this diverse state.

Last updated: 2023-04-05

Reelect Attorney General Rob Bonta to keep California on the right track for progress.

 

The Position

The state attorney general acts as the lead attorney and law-enforcement official for the state of California, and has oversight of over 4,500 state-employed district attorneys, investigators, police officers, and administrators. The attorney general executes a variety of responsibilities in the state, including representing the people of California in criminal and civil matters in court, coordinating statewide law-enforcement efforts, providing legal counsel to state agencies, and managing special projects to protect the rights of Californians. California has 58 elected district attorneys who report to the attorney general, one for every county in the state. The attorney general is elected for a four-year term and may serve a maximum of two terms in office. This office has traditionally been held by Democrats, including current U.S. Secretary of Health and Human Services, Xavier Becerra, and current Vice President Kamala Harris.

Democrat incumbent Rob Bonta was appointed to this seat by Governor Gavin Newsom in March 2021, after Secretary Becerra was appointed to the Biden administration’s cabinet. Attorney General Bonta is the first Filipino American to serve in this role. The most recent election results show that Becerra won the statewide election in 2018 with 64% of the vote.

 

The Race

There are four candidates running in the primary for attorney general: Democrat Incumbent Attorney General Rob Bonta, Independent challenger and Sacramento County District Attorney Anne Marie Schubert, and Republican challengers Nathan Hochman and Eric Early. Attorney General Bonta’s campaign has raised over $2 million, and is not funded by fossil fuel, police, or real estate donations. Schubert’s campaign has raised $833,000, and has received donations from over ten police organizations across the state. She has also received significant donations from billionaire Angelo Tsakopoulos and his family, who work in real estate development. Hochman’s campaign has raised $900,000 and has not committed to refuse fossil fuel, police, or corporate PAC money. He is backed by a significant number of individual donors with connections to real estate, and has also received over $20,000 from companies connected to Jeong Hwan Kim, who pled guilty to tax crimes in 2017 in a case prosecuted by the attorney general’s office. Early’s campaign has raised $235,000, and has not committed to refuse fossil fuel, police, corporate PAC, or real estate money in his campaign. He previously ran for attorney general in 2018.

 

Our Endorsement

Attorney General Rob Bonta, a civil rights attorney, is from Alameda, CA. Prior to his appointment to the attorney general’s office, he was elected to serve three terms in the California State Assembly as the representative from the 18th District. According to campaign materials, Attorney General Bonta is running for reelection to continue his focus on resolving systemic injustice across the state through action on environmental justice, labor rights, and corporate accountability.

Attorney General Bonta’s priorities for California this year include establishing stronger protections for victims of hate crimes, working toward regulations that protect consumers from unjust corporate behavior, and creating a more equitable criminal-justice system. His office recently secured a judgment requiring Amazon to pay a $500,000 fine and adhere to a stricter process of reporting workplace COVID-19 prevention efforts and recorded infections to the company’s employees and the state. Attorney General Bonta has been outspoken about other forms of consumer and workplace protections, including recent efforts to curb robocalls and spearheading a nationwide investigation into targeted marketing tactics from Instagram and Meta Inc. He has also taken aim at the housing crisis with the creation of the Housing Strike Force and an online Housing Portal designed to address access, affordability, and equity. These new initiatives will enforce housing-development laws, reaffirm tenant rights, provide consumer protection and alerts, and provide legal advocacy for the right to housing.

In his first several months in office, Attorney General Bonta has demonstrated a collaborative approach to his work locally, and an interest in leveraging his position for national impact. In California, he has established the Office of Community Awareness, Response, and Engagement (CARE) to communicate directly with underrepresented community and advocacy groups in the state. This office is designed to advance equity, and to ensure that the work of the attorney general’s office is inclusive for diverse perspectives. Nationally, he has been proactive in partnering with state attorney generals across the country to file briefs on legislation of national importance, including a public opposition to Texas’s recent abortion ban (SB 8).

During his time in the State Assembly, he was an effective legislator who worked on bills related to climate protections, criminal justice and prison reform, immigrant rights, and housing protections. Bonta scored a lifetime score of 98 out of 100 on Courage Score, our annual analysis of legislators’ progressive voting records. Based on our Courage Score analysis, he supported the most progressive bills that made it to a vote.

Prior to his election to the State Assembly, Attorney General Bonta served as a deputy city attorney for both the City and County of San Francisco, as an elected member of the Alameda Health Care District Board of Directors, as board president for the Social Service Human Relations board, as board president for Alternatives in Action, and as chair of the Economic Development Commission. He is a longtime activist in the ongoing fight for racial, economic, and social justice.

Attorney General Bonta has received the endorsement of an overwhelming number of elected officials across the state, including U.S. Senator Alex Padilla, Secretary of State Dr. Shirley Weber, State Controller Betty Yee, State Senator Sydney Kamlager, and State Senator Scott Weiner. He is also endorsed by several progressive groups, including SEIU CA, NARAL Pro-Choice CA, and California Teachers Association. According to our analysis, Attorney General Bonta is the strongest choice for equitable and representative leadership in office. Based on our analysis, Attorney General Bonta’s track record and policy positions demonstrate that he will continue to be a progressive champion for all Californians and will execute his responsibilities effectively in the best interest of this diverse state.

Last updated: 2023-04-05

Endorsed By: Courage California

Reelect Secretary of State Shirley Weber to keep California on the right track for progress.

 

The Position

The secretary of state acts as the lead records officer for the state of California, and manages an office of 500 civil-service employees responsible for ensuring transparency and accessibility in elections, campaigning, business records, and legislative advocacy. The secretary of state’s office has a significant responsibility for election implementation and integrity, as it produces information pamphlets for voters in ten languages, provides statewide testing and approval for voting equipment, maintains the voter database, and certifies the official candidate lists and the official election results. The secretary of state’s office also oversees the filing and disclosure of campaign-finance information, the management of business records, the safeguarding of statewide address confidentiality, and the maintenance of registries for domestic partnerships and advance health-care directives. The secretary of state is elected for a four-year term and may serve a maximum of two terms in office. This office has traditionally been held by Democrats, and most recently by current U.S. Senator Alex Padilla.

Democrat incumbent Shirley Weber was appointed to this seat by Governor Gavin Newsom in December 2020, after he appointed Sen. Padilla to fill Vice President Kamala Harris’s open Senate seat. Secretary Weber is the first Black person to hold this position. The most recent election results show that Padilla won the statewide election in 2018 with 64% of the vote.

 

The Race

At this time, Democrat Secretary of State Shirley Weber is running unopposed to maintain her seat. Secretary Weber’s campaign has raised over $490,000, and is not funded by corporate PAC money. She has not publicly refused to take fossil fuel donations, and has received police donations from the California Correctional Peace Officers Association PAC, and real estate donations from the California Real Estate PAC.

 

Our Endorsement

Secretary Shirley Weber, a former San Diego State University professor and longtime member of the California State Assembly, is originally from Los Angeles, and lived in the greater San Diego area for over 30 years. According to campaign materials, Secretary Weber is running for reelection to further strengthen election integrity and transparency in the state, and to work toward expanded access to voting for all Californians.

Secretary Weber’s priorities this year include increased outreach to formerly incarcerated Californians to align election practices to the recently passed Proposition 17, which returns voting rights to parolees, to strengthen businesses across the state, and to upgrade the cybersecurity system to ensure that all California elections are protected from interference. As a public servant, Sec. Weber has established herself as a collaborative leader focused on supporting communities that have been under-resourced. In her first months in office, Secretary Weber has worked to establish connections with groups working to improve election information and engagement, including education professionals who can reach young voters and formerly incarcerated individuals now eligible to vote.

As a member of the State Assembly, she sponsored bills on a variety of issues, including school safety, full-day kindergarten, reducing the use of deadly force by police, and strengthening the CalFresh program. Her successes also included environmental cleanup, increasing food access for food-insecure communities, establishing protections for residents of long-term nursing facilities, and lowering the cost of childcare. She scored a lifetime 93 out of 100 on Courage Score, our annual analysis of legislators’ progressive voting records. Based on our Courage Score analysis, Sec. Weber supported nearly all progressive bills that made it to a vote. That said, prior to her appointment to the secretary of state seat, she did not support lowering the voting age to 17.

In 1972, early in her career, Secretary Weber founded the Department of Africana Studies at San Diego State University, and taught there for forty years. She also served as president of the National Council for Black Studies from 2002 to 2006, as president of the San Diego Board of Education from 1988 to 1996, and as chairperson of San Diego’s Citizens Equal Opportunity Commission. Secretary Weber holds three degrees from UCLA and has been a longtime champion of the power of well-funded and well-staffed public education.

According to our analysis, Secretary Weber is the strongest choice for equitable and representative leadership in office. Based on our analysis, Secretary Weber’s track record and policy positions demonstrate that she will be a progressive champion for all Californians and will execute her responsibilities effectively in the best interest of this diverse state.

Last updated: 2023-04-05

Reelect Secretary of State Shirley Weber to keep California on the right track for progress.

 

The Position

The secretary of state acts as the lead records officer for the state of California, and manages an office of 500 civil-service employees responsible for ensuring transparency and accessibility in elections, campaigning, business records, and legislative advocacy. The secretary of state’s office has a significant responsibility for election implementation and integrity, as it produces information pamphlets for voters in ten languages, provides statewide testing and approval for voting equipment, maintains the voter database, and certifies the official candidate lists and the official election results. The secretary of state’s office also oversees the filing and disclosure of campaign-finance information, the management of business records, the safeguarding of statewide address confidentiality, and the maintenance of registries for domestic partnerships and advance health-care directives. The secretary of state is elected for a four-year term and may serve a maximum of two terms in office. This office has traditionally been held by Democrats, and most recently by current U.S. Senator Alex Padilla.

Democrat incumbent Shirley Weber was appointed to this seat by Governor Gavin Newsom in December 2020, after he appointed Sen. Padilla to fill Vice President Kamala Harris’s open Senate seat. Secretary Weber is the first Black person to hold this position. The most recent election results show that Padilla won the statewide election in 2018 with 64% of the vote.

 

The Race

At this time, Democrat Secretary of State Shirley Weber is running unopposed to maintain her seat. Secretary Weber’s campaign has raised over $490,000, and is not funded by corporate PAC money. She has not publicly refused to take fossil fuel donations, and has received police donations from the California Correctional Peace Officers Association PAC, and real estate donations from the California Real Estate PAC.

 

Our Endorsement

Secretary Shirley Weber, a former San Diego State University professor and longtime member of the California State Assembly, is originally from Los Angeles, and lived in the greater San Diego area for over 30 years. According to campaign materials, Secretary Weber is running for reelection to further strengthen election integrity and transparency in the state, and to work toward expanded access to voting for all Californians.

Secretary Weber’s priorities this year include increased outreach to formerly incarcerated Californians to align election practices to the recently passed Proposition 17, which returns voting rights to parolees, to strengthen businesses across the state, and to upgrade the cybersecurity system to ensure that all California elections are protected from interference. As a public servant, Sec. Weber has established herself as a collaborative leader focused on supporting communities that have been under-resourced. In her first months in office, Secretary Weber has worked to establish connections with groups working to improve election information and engagement, including education professionals who can reach young voters and formerly incarcerated individuals now eligible to vote.

As a member of the State Assembly, she sponsored bills on a variety of issues, including school safety, full-day kindergarten, reducing the use of deadly force by police, and strengthening the CalFresh program. Her successes also included environmental cleanup, increasing food access for food-insecure communities, establishing protections for residents of long-term nursing facilities, and lowering the cost of childcare. She scored a lifetime 93 out of 100 on Courage Score, our annual analysis of legislators’ progressive voting records. Based on our Courage Score analysis, Sec. Weber supported nearly all progressive bills that made it to a vote. That said, prior to her appointment to the secretary of state seat, she did not support lowering the voting age to 17.

In 1972, early in her career, Secretary Weber founded the Department of Africana Studies at San Diego State University, and taught there for forty years. She also served as president of the National Council for Black Studies from 2002 to 2006, as president of the San Diego Board of Education from 1988 to 1996, and as chairperson of San Diego’s Citizens Equal Opportunity Commission. Secretary Weber holds three degrees from UCLA and has been a longtime champion of the power of well-funded and well-staffed public education.

According to our analysis, Secretary Weber is the strongest choice for equitable and representative leadership in office. Based on our analysis, Secretary Weber’s track record and policy positions demonstrate that she will be a progressive champion for all Californians and will execute her responsibilities effectively in the best interest of this diverse state.

Last updated: 2023-04-05

Endorsed By: Courage California

Reelect State Treasurer Fiona Ma to keep California on the right track for progress. 

 

The Position

Treasurers serve as a state’s chief banker, overseeing revenue and finances for schools, roads, housing, levees, public-health facilities, and infrastructure projects. They can be responsible for pension administration, public employee payroll, and fraud oversight. Treasurers manage the state’s investments and the sale of state bonds, and serve as the trustee of the state’s debt portfolio. In California, the state treasurer manages the banking for the world’s fifth-largest economy and typically oversees around $2.5 trillion in banking transactions during each fiscal year. 

The California state treasurer is elected by popular vote in a statewide election. The state treasurer is elected to serve four-year terms, and is limited to two terms in office.

 

The District

California is the most populous state in the United States, and includes 58 counties and 331 million residents. The demographic breakdown of the total residential population is 39% Latino, 16% Asian, and 7% Black. Democrats have held the Treasurer’s seat since 1999. Of the 22 million registered voters in the state, 47% are Democrat, 24% are Republican, and 23% have no party preference. The most recent election results show that California voted for Joe Biden for president in 2020 by 29 points and Gavin Newsom for governor in 2018 by 24 points.

 

The Race

There are four candidates running for this seat, including Democrat Incumbent Treasurer Fiona Ma and Republican Andrew Do. Treasurer Ma’s campaign has raised $3.3 million and has received donations from corporate PAC, real estate, and police interests. Do’s campaign has raised $203,000 and has not received donations from fossil fuel, police, real estate, or corporate PAC interests. 

 

The Recommendation

Treasurer Ma, a certified public accountant and public official, has lived in California for most of her adult life. According to campaign materials, she is running for reelection to continue to provide fiscal leadership on economic, environmental, and educational reforms in the state. She was elected to serve as the California treasurer in 2018, winning her bid over Republican Greg Conlon by 28 points. 

Treasurer Ma’s priorities for California this term have included action on a variety of issues. Her office worked to distribute small-business loans and to expand health-care access in response to the community effects of COVID-19, and to establish new clean-energy initiatives, including financing for the purchase of low-emissions trucks and equipment. Treasurer Ma was also a strong supporter of AB 132, which provides funding for the establishment of college savings accounts for low-income students at every grade level across the state. Although she has made progress on a collaborative initiative to create more affordable housing in the state, there has been a measurable increase in homelessness since she assumed office. Treasurer Ma has been accused of sexual harassment and wrongful termination by a former staff member in a complaint that cites lewd behavior and  excessive gifting by the treasurer. The complainant indicates that the circumstances produced a hostile work environment prior to her abrupt termination. Treasurer Ma has denied the accusations. 

Prior to her election in 2018, Treasurer Ma served in positions across state and local governments. She served one term on the California Board of Equalization, three terms in the State Assembly, and one term on the San Francisco Board of Supervisors. She has held a variety of leadership positions, including serving as the speaker pro tempore and the majority whip during her time in the Assembly, as chair of the National Association of State Treasurers ABLE Committee, and as president of Women in California Politics. Prior to seeking elected office, Treasurer Ma worked as a licensed certified public accountant in California. 

Treasurer Ma has the endorsement of many progressive groups in the state, including SEIU California, Equality California, and California Labor Federation. Based on our analysis, Treasurer Ma’s track record and policy positions demonstrate that she will continue to be a champion for the constituents of California and will manage effectively in the best interest of this diverse state.
 

Last updated: 2023-04-05

Reelect State Treasurer Fiona Ma to keep California on the right track for progress. 

 

The Position

Treasurers serve as a state’s chief banker, overseeing revenue and finances for schools, roads, housing, levees, public-health facilities, and infrastructure projects. They can be responsible for pension administration, public employee payroll, and fraud oversight. Treasurers manage the state’s investments and the sale of state bonds, and serve as the trustee of the state’s debt portfolio. In California, the state treasurer manages the banking for the world’s fifth-largest economy and typically oversees around $2.5 trillion in banking transactions during each fiscal year. 

The California state treasurer is elected by popular vote in a statewide election. The state treasurer is elected to serve four-year terms, and is limited to two terms in office.

 

The District

California is the most populous state in the United States, and includes 58 counties and 331 million residents. The demographic breakdown of the total residential population is 39% Latino, 16% Asian, and 7% Black. Democrats have held the Treasurer’s seat since 1999. Of the 22 million registered voters in the state, 47% are Democrat, 24% are Republican, and 23% have no party preference. The most recent election results show that California voted for Joe Biden for president in 2020 by 29 points and Gavin Newsom for governor in 2018 by 24 points.

 

The Race

There are four candidates running for this seat, including Democrat Incumbent Treasurer Fiona Ma and Republican Andrew Do. Treasurer Ma’s campaign has raised $3.3 million and has received donations from corporate PAC, real estate, and police interests. Do’s campaign has raised $203,000 and has not received donations from fossil fuel, police, real estate, or corporate PAC interests. 

 

The Recommendation

Treasurer Ma, a certified public accountant and public official, has lived in California for most of her adult life. According to campaign materials, she is running for reelection to continue to provide fiscal leadership on economic, environmental, and educational reforms in the state. She was elected to serve as the California treasurer in 2018, winning her bid over Republican Greg Conlon by 28 points. 

Treasurer Ma’s priorities for California this term have included action on a variety of issues. Her office worked to distribute small-business loans and to expand health-care access in response to the community effects of COVID-19, and to establish new clean-energy initiatives, including financing for the purchase of low-emissions trucks and equipment. Treasurer Ma was also a strong supporter of AB 132, which provides funding for the establishment of college savings accounts for low-income students at every grade level across the state. Although she has made progress on a collaborative initiative to create more affordable housing in the state, there has been a measurable increase in homelessness since she assumed office. Treasurer Ma has been accused of sexual harassment and wrongful termination by a former staff member in a complaint that cites lewd behavior and  excessive gifting by the treasurer. The complainant indicates that the circumstances produced a hostile work environment prior to her abrupt termination. Treasurer Ma has denied the accusations. 

Prior to her election in 2018, Treasurer Ma served in positions across state and local governments. She served one term on the California Board of Equalization, three terms in the State Assembly, and one term on the San Francisco Board of Supervisors. She has held a variety of leadership positions, including serving as the speaker pro tempore and the majority whip during her time in the Assembly, as chair of the National Association of State Treasurers ABLE Committee, and as president of Women in California Politics. Prior to seeking elected office, Treasurer Ma worked as a licensed certified public accountant in California. 

Treasurer Ma has the endorsement of many progressive groups in the state, including SEIU California, Equality California, and California Labor Federation. Based on our analysis, Treasurer Ma’s track record and policy positions demonstrate that she will continue to be a champion for the constituents of California and will manage effectively in the best interest of this diverse state.
 

Last updated: 2023-04-05

Elect Malia Cohen to be the next state controller to keep California on the right track for progress.

 

The Position

The state controller acts as the lead fiscal authority for the state of California, which is the fifth-largest economy in the world. The state controller manages an office of 1,400 public servants responsible for the disbursement of financial resources across the state. The state controller’s office oversees audits of funds distributed to state agencies and programs, acts as a steward for unclaimed property that falls to state possession, provides accounting and reporting services for government entities, and manages payroll accounting and data for state employees. The state controller also serves as a policy liaison to a variety of finance organizations, including the state’s two pension funds, CalPERS and CalSTRS, and the California Franchise Tax Board. The state controller is elected for a four-year term and may serve a maximum of two terms in office. This office has traditionally been held by Democrats, and is currently held by two-term Controller Betty Yee. The most recent election results show that Controller Yee won the statewide election in 2018 with 65% of the vote.

 

The Race

There are four candidates running for this seat, including Democrats Malia Cohen, Yvonne Yiu, and Ron Galperin, and Republican Lanhee Chen. Cohen’s campaign has raised $316,000, and is not funded by police money or corporate PAC money. Democratic opponent Yiu has raised $548,000, of which $455,000 has been self-donated. She has had an additional nine donors to her campaign, and has not received police, corporate PAC, or real estate donations. Democratic opponent Galperin has raised $26,000, and is not funded by police, corporate PAC, real estate, or fossil fuel money. Republican Chen’s campaign has raised $945,000, and has received funding from a real estate organization. The remainder of his fundraising has come almost entirely from large-dollar individual donors.

 

Our Endorsement

Malia Cohen, a member of the California State Board of Equalization, is a lifelong Californian. According to campaign materials, Cohen is running for election to pursue a more equitable economic foundation for Californians through investments in housing, job programs, health care, and education. She believes that accountability and transparency in fiscal leadership is essential to closing the state’s significant equity gap, and that she can play a critical role in guiding financial decisions that will benefit previously neglected communities.

As controller, Cohen hopes to create a more efficient system to connect unclaimed property to individuals who have ownership rights, streamline financial services for Californians who are unbanked, and create a Golden State Stimulus program that will ensure that residents have the resources they need to cover their basic living expenses.

Cohen has an extensive resume and significant experience in fiscal oversight. As a current member of the California State Board of Equalization representing District 2, Cohen has experience administering statewide policy related to property tax, alcoholic beverage tax, and tax on insurers. Prior to holding this role, she served two terms as a member and president of the San Francisco Board of Supervisors, where she chaired the Budget and Finance Committee. Cohen has also served as commissioner of the San Francisco Employee Retirement System (SFERS), which manages the city’s municipal pension fund. In each of these positions, Cohen has kept equity in focus and has worked to leverage her role to create opportunities to establish more inclusive policies. In her elected roles, she was instrumental in implementing a free community college program in San Francisco, co-authored the Fair Chance Ordinance for individuals reentering the workforce after incarceration, and championed the creation of a Department of Officer Accountability for the San Francisco Police Department. She also worked to divest SFERS investments from fossil fuels and thermal coal investments to bring a more ethical foundation to the pension system. These and other efforts demonstrate her deft ability to use her knowledge and authority to return benefits to communities that have been historically marginalized and disadvantaged by fiscal and public policy.

Democrat Yvonne Yiu, the current mayor of Monterey Park, is running on a platform that centers on financial-information security and expanding financial-skills training to reach young people, immigrants, women, and other diverse communities through the creation of a new Office of Financial Empowerment. While she is dedicated to using the authority of the office to advocate for issues related to climate, the LGBTQIA+ community, and racial injustice, she has not provided a comprehensive outline for how her work as controller would benefit these progressive priorities beyond the creation of the Office of Financial Empowerment.

Malia Cohen has the endorsement of many elected officials in the state, including Congresswoman Karen Bass, current State Controller Betty Yee, State Attorney General Rob Bonta, Secretary of State Dr. Shirley Weber, State Senator Sydney Kamlager, and State Senator Scott Weiner. She has also received the endorsement of some progressive groups in the district, including NARAL Pro-Choice California PAC, California Federation of Teachers, Elect Black Women PAC, and a variety of trade organizations, including UNITE Here PAC. Based on our analysis, Cohen’s track record and policy positions demonstrate that she will be a progressive champion for Californians and will govern effectively in the best interest of this diverse state.

Last updated: 2023-04-05

Elect Malia Cohen to be the next state controller to keep California on the right track for progress.

 

The Position

The state controller acts as the lead fiscal authority for the state of California, which is the fifth-largest economy in the world. The state controller manages an office of 1,400 public servants responsible for the disbursement of financial resources across the state. The state controller’s office oversees audits of funds distributed to state agencies and programs, acts as a steward for unclaimed property that falls to state possession, provides accounting and reporting services for government entities, and manages payroll accounting and data for state employees. The state controller also serves as a policy liaison to a variety of finance organizations, including the state’s two pension funds, CalPERS and CalSTRS, and the California Franchise Tax Board. The state controller is elected for a four-year term and may serve a maximum of two terms in office. This office has traditionally been held by Democrats, and is currently held by two-term Controller Betty Yee. The most recent election results show that Controller Yee won the statewide election in 2018 with 65% of the vote.

 

The Race

There are four candidates running for this seat, including Democrats Malia Cohen, Yvonne Yiu, and Ron Galperin, and Republican Lanhee Chen. Cohen’s campaign has raised $316,000, and is not funded by police money or corporate PAC money. Democratic opponent Yiu has raised $548,000, of which $455,000 has been self-donated. She has had an additional nine donors to her campaign, and has not received police, corporate PAC, or real estate donations. Democratic opponent Galperin has raised $26,000, and is not funded by police, corporate PAC, real estate, or fossil fuel money. Republican Chen’s campaign has raised $945,000, and has received funding from a real estate organization. The remainder of his fundraising has come almost entirely from large-dollar individual donors.

 

Our Endorsement

Malia Cohen, a member of the California State Board of Equalization, is a lifelong Californian. According to campaign materials, Cohen is running for election to pursue a more equitable economic foundation for Californians through investments in housing, job programs, health care, and education. She believes that accountability and transparency in fiscal leadership is essential to closing the state’s significant equity gap, and that she can play a critical role in guiding financial decisions that will benefit previously neglected communities.

As controller, Cohen hopes to create a more efficient system to connect unclaimed property to individuals who have ownership rights, streamline financial services for Californians who are unbanked, and create a Golden State Stimulus program that will ensure that residents have the resources they need to cover their basic living expenses.

Cohen has an extensive resume and significant experience in fiscal oversight. As a current member of the California State Board of Equalization representing District 2, Cohen has experience administering statewide policy related to property tax, alcoholic beverage tax, and tax on insurers. Prior to holding this role, she served two terms as a member and president of the San Francisco Board of Supervisors, where she chaired the Budget and Finance Committee. Cohen has also served as commissioner of the San Francisco Employee Retirement System (SFERS), which manages the city’s municipal pension fund. In each of these positions, Cohen has kept equity in focus and has worked to leverage her role to create opportunities to establish more inclusive policies. In her elected roles, she was instrumental in implementing a free community college program in San Francisco, co-authored the Fair Chance Ordinance for individuals reentering the workforce after incarceration, and championed the creation of a Department of Officer Accountability for the San Francisco Police Department. She also worked to divest SFERS investments from fossil fuels and thermal coal investments to bring a more ethical foundation to the pension system. These and other efforts demonstrate her deft ability to use her knowledge and authority to return benefits to communities that have been historically marginalized and disadvantaged by fiscal and public policy.

Democrat Yvonne Yiu, the current mayor of Monterey Park, is running on a platform that centers on financial-information security and expanding financial-skills training to reach young people, immigrants, women, and other diverse communities through the creation of a new Office of Financial Empowerment. While she is dedicated to using the authority of the office to advocate for issues related to climate, the LGBTQIA+ community, and racial injustice, she has not provided a comprehensive outline for how her work as controller would benefit these progressive priorities beyond the creation of the Office of Financial Empowerment.

Malia Cohen has the endorsement of many elected officials in the state, including Congresswoman Karen Bass, current State Controller Betty Yee, State Attorney General Rob Bonta, Secretary of State Dr. Shirley Weber, State Senator Sydney Kamlager, and State Senator Scott Weiner. She has also received the endorsement of some progressive groups in the district, including NARAL Pro-Choice California PAC, California Federation of Teachers, Elect Black Women PAC, and a variety of trade organizations, including UNITE Here PAC. Based on our analysis, Cohen’s track record and policy positions demonstrate that she will be a progressive champion for Californians and will govern effectively in the best interest of this diverse state.

Last updated: 2023-04-05

Endorsed By: Courage California

Elect Braden Murphy to the Board of Equalization to keep California on the right track for progress. 

 

The Position

The California Board of Equalization is composed of four members elected by popular vote to represent individual districts within the state. It is the only elected tax board in the country. The state controller serves in an at-large capacity as the 5th member. The board of equalization is responsible for managing  taxation in the state, including in the areas of property, alcoholic beverage, and insurance. This includes oversight of valuation assessments on public utility and railroad property, mapping and assigning tax rates to geographic areas in the state, conducting assessment surveys and compliance audits, and administering tax exemptions. In California, board members meet each month in Sacramento to execute their duties of oversight, policy setting, and regulation to guide the work of the appointed executive director and board of equalization staff. 

Board members are elected to four-year terms in office and cannot serve more than two terms. 

 

The District

California’s 1st Board of Equalization district spans across most of inland California, from San Bernardino County to the Oregon border, and includes over 60% of California’s land area. California is the most populous state in the United States, and includes 58 counties and 331 million residents, with District 1 including approximately 10 million Californians. The demographic breakdown of the total residential population is 39% Latino, 16% Asian, and 7% Black. Of the 22 million registered voters in the state, 47% are Democrat, 24% are Republican, and 23% have no party preference. The most recent election results show that California voted for Joe Biden for president in 2020 by 29 points.

 

The Race

District 1 is currently represented by incumbent Republican Ted Gaines, who is running for reelection and was a candidate to replace Gov. Newsom during the 2021 recall campaign. There are four candidates running for this seat, including Democrat Braden Murphy and incumbent Republican Ted Gaines. Murphy’s campaign has raised $25,000 and has not received any donations from police, real estate, fossil fuel, or corporate PAC interests. Board Member Gaines’s campaign has raised $186,000 and has received donations from police and real estate interests. 

 

The Recommendation

Braden Murphy, a policy advocate, lives in Folsom. According to campaign materials, he is running for election to bring fairness to California’s property tax system. He has not run for public office before. 

Murphy was born with cerebral palsy and has been an advocate for universal health care and universal early childhood education. His platform draws a connection between the property tax burden on homeowners and the crisis of home ownership and homelessness in the state, and emphasizes the importance of ensuring that low corporate taxation doesn’t shift additional burden on to middle-class property owners. Additionally, Murphy sees the intersections of health-care access, education policy, and homeownership, and how the failure to transition to universal models can limit the capacity of families and individuals with disabilities to transition to a middle-class lifestyle. He would bring this knowledge to his equity efforts as a member of the board of equalization. 

Murphy is endorsed by some progressive groups, including California Nurses Association and the California Democratic Party. He has also received the endorsement of many local leaders, including former Insurance Commissioner Dave Jones and Assemblymember Kevin McCarty. Based on our analysis, Murphy’s track record and policy positions demonstrate that he will be a progressive champion for the constituents of District 1 and will govern effectively in the best interest of this diverse district.

Last updated: 2023-04-05

Elect Braden Murphy to the Board of Equalization to keep California on the right track for progress. 

 

The Position

The California Board of Equalization is composed of four members elected by popular vote to represent individual districts within the state. It is the only elected tax board in the country. The state controller serves in an at-large capacity as the 5th member. The board of equalization is responsible for managing  taxation in the state, including in the areas of property, alcoholic beverage, and insurance. This includes oversight of valuation assessments on public utility and railroad property, mapping and assigning tax rates to geographic areas in the state, conducting assessment surveys and compliance audits, and administering tax exemptions. In California, board members meet each month in Sacramento to execute their duties of oversight, policy setting, and regulation to guide the work of the appointed executive director and board of equalization staff. 

Board members are elected to four-year terms in office and cannot serve more than two terms. 

 

The District

California’s 1st Board of Equalization district spans across most of inland California, from San Bernardino County to the Oregon border, and includes over 60% of California’s land area. California is the most populous state in the United States, and includes 58 counties and 331 million residents, with District 1 including approximately 10 million Californians. The demographic breakdown of the total residential population is 39% Latino, 16% Asian, and 7% Black. Of the 22 million registered voters in the state, 47% are Democrat, 24% are Republican, and 23% have no party preference. The most recent election results show that California voted for Joe Biden for president in 2020 by 29 points.

 

The Race

District 1 is currently represented by incumbent Republican Ted Gaines, who is running for reelection and was a candidate to replace Gov. Newsom during the 2021 recall campaign. There are four candidates running for this seat, including Democrat Braden Murphy and incumbent Republican Ted Gaines. Murphy’s campaign has raised $25,000 and has not received any donations from police, real estate, fossil fuel, or corporate PAC interests. Board Member Gaines’s campaign has raised $186,000 and has received donations from police and real estate interests. 

 

The Recommendation

Braden Murphy, a policy advocate, lives in Folsom. According to campaign materials, he is running for election to bring fairness to California’s property tax system. He has not run for public office before. 

Murphy was born with cerebral palsy and has been an advocate for universal health care and universal early childhood education. His platform draws a connection between the property tax burden on homeowners and the crisis of home ownership and homelessness in the state, and emphasizes the importance of ensuring that low corporate taxation doesn’t shift additional burden on to middle-class property owners. Additionally, Murphy sees the intersections of health-care access, education policy, and homeownership, and how the failure to transition to universal models can limit the capacity of families and individuals with disabilities to transition to a middle-class lifestyle. He would bring this knowledge to his equity efforts as a member of the board of equalization. 

Murphy is endorsed by some progressive groups, including California Nurses Association and the California Democratic Party. He has also received the endorsement of many local leaders, including former Insurance Commissioner Dave Jones and Assemblymember Kevin McCarty. Based on our analysis, Murphy’s track record and policy positions demonstrate that he will be a progressive champion for the constituents of District 1 and will govern effectively in the best interest of this diverse district.

Last updated: 2023-04-05

Elect Sally Lieber to the Board of Equalization to keep California on the right track for progress. 

 

The Position

The California Board of Equalization is composed of four members elected by popular vote to represent individual districts within the state. It is the only elected tax board in the country. The state controller serves in an at-large capacity as the 5th member. The board of equalization is responsible for managing  taxation in the state, including in the areas of property, alcoholic beverage, and insurance. This includes oversight of valuation assessments on public utility and railroad property, mapping and assigning tax rates to geographic areas in the state, conducting assessment surveys and compliance audits, and administering tax exemptions. In California, board members meet each month in Sacramento to execute their duties of oversight, policy setting, and regulation to guide the work of the appointed executive director and board of equalization staff. 

Board members are elected to four-year terms in office and cannot serve more than two terms. 

 

The District

California’s 2nd Board of Equalization district contains parts of 23 counties, spanning from Del Norte to Santa Barbara. California is the most populous state in the United States, and includes 58 counties and 331 million residents, with District 2 including approximately 10 million Californians. The demographic breakdown of the total residential population is 39% Latino, 16% Asian, and 7% Black. Of the 22 million registered voters in the state, 47% are Democrat, 24% are Republican, and 23% have no party preference. The most recent election results show that California voted for Joe Biden for president in 2020 by 29 points.

 

The Race

The current member representing District 2, Malia Cohen, is seeking election to be California State Controller in 2022, leaving the seat open this cycle. There are three candidates running for this seat, including Democrat Sally Lieber, Democrat Michela Alioto-Pier, and Republican Peter Verbica. Lieber’s campaign has raised $165,000 and has not received donations from police, fossil fuel, real estate, or corporate PAC interests. Alioto-Pier’s campaign has raised $217,000 and has not received donations from police, fossil fuel, or corporate PAC interests. Verbica’s campaign has raised $35,000 and is primarily funded by individual donors. 

 

The Recommendation

Sally Lieber, a public official, has lived in California for over 40 years. According to campaign materials, she is running for election to prioritize the needs of everyday Californians over the corporations and big money interests that are often centered in tax law. She ran for the 13th district state Senate seat in 2020, but lost to Senator Josh Becker in the primary by a margin of 7 points. 

Lieber has long been involved in advocacy and local politics. She has recently returned to the Mountain View City Council, where she had previously served terms as a councilmember and as mayor. In this role, she has worked on committees for finance, inclusion, transportation and youth services. Her current term expires in 2025, and she could maintain the seat while also serving on the board of equalization until that time. Lieber also served two terms as the assemblymember for the 22nd district. While in the legislature, she worked on bills that increased the minimum wage, addressed sea-level rise, codified human trafficking as a felony, and created the Sexual Assault Victim’s Bill of Rights. Her platform for the board of equalization seeks to build on these legislative successes by pursuing a coalition approach to highlighting equity and fairness, accountability, and climate protections in her approach to tax implementation. 

Lieber is endorsed by many progressive groups, including Equality California, California Teachers Association, and Sierra Club. She has also received the endorsement of many political leaders, including activist Dolores Huerta, Assemblymember Laura Friedman, and Senator Josh Becker. Based on our analysis, Lieber’s track record and policy positions demonstrate that she will be a progressive champion for the constituents of District 2 and will govern effectively in the best interest of this diverse district.

Last updated: 2023-04-05

Elect Sally Lieber to the Board of Equalization to keep California on the right track for progress. 

 

The Position

The California Board of Equalization is composed of four members elected by popular vote to represent individual districts within the state. It is the only elected tax board in the country. The state controller serves in an at-large capacity as the 5th member. The board of equalization is responsible for managing  taxation in the state, including in the areas of property, alcoholic beverage, and insurance. This includes oversight of valuation assessments on public utility and railroad property, mapping and assigning tax rates to geographic areas in the state, conducting assessment surveys and compliance audits, and administering tax exemptions. In California, board members meet each month in Sacramento to execute their duties of oversight, policy setting, and regulation to guide the work of the appointed executive director and board of equalization staff. 

Board members are elected to four-year terms in office and cannot serve more than two terms. 

 

The District

California’s 2nd Board of Equalization district contains parts of 23 counties, spanning from Del Norte to Santa Barbara. California is the most populous state in the United States, and includes 58 counties and 331 million residents, with District 2 including approximately 10 million Californians. The demographic breakdown of the total residential population is 39% Latino, 16% Asian, and 7% Black. Of the 22 million registered voters in the state, 47% are Democrat, 24% are Republican, and 23% have no party preference. The most recent election results show that California voted for Joe Biden for president in 2020 by 29 points.

 

The Race

The current member representing District 2, Malia Cohen, is seeking election to be California State Controller in 2022, leaving the seat open this cycle. There are three candidates running for this seat, including Democrat Sally Lieber, Democrat Michela Alioto-Pier, and Republican Peter Verbica. Lieber’s campaign has raised $165,000 and has not received donations from police, fossil fuel, real estate, or corporate PAC interests. Alioto-Pier’s campaign has raised $217,000 and has not received donations from police, fossil fuel, or corporate PAC interests. Verbica’s campaign has raised $35,000 and is primarily funded by individual donors. 

 

The Recommendation

Sally Lieber, a public official, has lived in California for over 40 years. According to campaign materials, she is running for election to prioritize the needs of everyday Californians over the corporations and big money interests that are often centered in tax law. She ran for the 13th district state Senate seat in 2020, but lost to Senator Josh Becker in the primary by a margin of 7 points. 

Lieber has long been involved in advocacy and local politics. She has recently returned to the Mountain View City Council, where she had previously served terms as a councilmember and as mayor. In this role, she has worked on committees for finance, inclusion, transportation and youth services. Her current term expires in 2025, and she could maintain the seat while also serving on the board of equalization until that time. Lieber also served two terms as the assemblymember for the 22nd district. While in the legislature, she worked on bills that increased the minimum wage, addressed sea-level rise, codified human trafficking as a felony, and created the Sexual Assault Victim’s Bill of Rights. Her platform for the board of equalization seeks to build on these legislative successes by pursuing a coalition approach to highlighting equity and fairness, accountability, and climate protections in her approach to tax implementation. 

Lieber is endorsed by many progressive groups, including Equality California, California Teachers Association, and Sierra Club. She has also received the endorsement of many political leaders, including activist Dolores Huerta, Assemblymember Laura Friedman, and Senator Josh Becker. Based on our analysis, Lieber’s track record and policy positions demonstrate that she will be a progressive champion for the constituents of District 2 and will govern effectively in the best interest of this diverse district.

Last updated: 2023-04-05

Elect David Dodson to the Board of Equalization to keep California on the right track for progress. 

 

The Position

The California Board of Equalization is composed of four members elected by popular vote to represent individual districts within the state. It is the only elected tax board in the country. The state controller serves in an at-large capacity as the 5th member. The board of equalization is responsible for managing  taxation in the state, including in the areas of property, alcoholic beverage, and insurance. This includes oversight of valuation assessments on public utility and railroad property, mapping and assigning tax rates to geographic areas in the state, conducting assessment surveys and compliance audits, and administering tax exemptions. In California, board members meet each month in Sacramento to execute their duties of oversight, policy setting, and regulation to guide the work of the appointed executive director and board of equalization staff. 

Board members are elected to four-year terms in office and cannot serve more than two terms. 

 

The District

California’s 4th Board of Equalization district contains portions of San Diego, Orange, Riverside, San Bernardino, and Imperial Counties. California is the most populous state in the United States, and includes 58 counties and 331 million residents, with District 4 including approximately 10 million Californians. The demographic breakdown of the total residential population is 39% Latino, 16% Asian, and 7% Black. Of the 22 million registered voters in the state, 47% are Democrat, 24% are Republican, and 23% have no party preference. The most recent election results show that California voted for Joe Biden for president in 2020 by 29 points.

 

The Race

District 4 is currently represented by incumbent Democrat Mike Schaefer, who is running for reelection. Board member Schaefer has been disbarred in both California and Nevada, was convicted of spousal abuse in 1993, and was successfully sued for being a slumlord in Los Angeles in the 1980s. In addition, his campaign dishonestly indicated that he had received 2022 endorsements from Gov. Gavin Newsom and Lt. Gov. Eleni Kounalakis, although neither has formally endorsed his candidacy. 

There are seven candidates running for this seat, including Democrat David Dodson, incumbent Democrat Mike Schaefer, and Republican Denis Bilodeau. Dodson’s campaign has raised $2,000 and is not funded by police, real estate, fossil fuel, or corporate PAC donors. Board Member Schaefer’s campaign has raised $127,000 and is entirely self-funded. Bilodeau’s campaign has raised $31,000 and has received donations from real estate interests. 

 

The Recommendation

David Dodson, a property tax appraiser, lives in Dana Point. According to campaign materials, he is running for election to leverage his unique tax expertise to serve the community and to guide board decisions that center constituents. He ran for this seat in 2018, but lost in the primary after earning only 15% of the vote.

Dodson has spent his 30-year career working in property tax appraisal. He worked for the Los Angeles County assessor, and now leads the Southern California office of the board of equalization. He cites this work as having allowed him to develop a strong expertise of this specialized field, and a particular understanding of the changes needed to make the system work for all taxpayers in the state. Over the course of his career, he has developed a deep network of colleagues with whom he could liaise as a member of the board of equalization. Dodson is a longtime union member, and has supported union lobbying efforts throughout his career. 

Dodson is endorsed by some progressive groups in the state, including Progressive Democrats of California. He has also received the endorsement of some local political leaders. Based on our analysis, Dodson’s track record and professional knowledge demonstrate that he will be a progressive leader for the constituents of District 4 and will govern effectively in the best interest of this diverse district.

Last updated: 2023-04-05

Elect David Dodson to the Board of Equalization to keep California on the right track for progress. 

 

The Position

The California Board of Equalization is composed of four members elected by popular vote to represent individual districts within the state. It is the only elected tax board in the country. The state controller serves in an at-large capacity as the 5th member. The board of equalization is responsible for managing  taxation in the state, including in the areas of property, alcoholic beverage, and insurance. This includes oversight of valuation assessments on public utility and railroad property, mapping and assigning tax rates to geographic areas in the state, conducting assessment surveys and compliance audits, and administering tax exemptions. In California, board members meet each month in Sacramento to execute their duties of oversight, policy setting, and regulation to guide the work of the appointed executive director and board of equalization staff. 

Board members are elected to four-year terms in office and cannot serve more than two terms. 

 

The District

California’s 4th Board of Equalization district contains portions of San Diego, Orange, Riverside, San Bernardino, and Imperial Counties. California is the most populous state in the United States, and includes 58 counties and 331 million residents, with District 4 including approximately 10 million Californians. The demographic breakdown of the total residential population is 39% Latino, 16% Asian, and 7% Black. Of the 22 million registered voters in the state, 47% are Democrat, 24% are Republican, and 23% have no party preference. The most recent election results show that California voted for Joe Biden for president in 2020 by 29 points.

 

The Race

District 4 is currently represented by incumbent Democrat Mike Schaefer, who is running for reelection. Board member Schaefer has been disbarred in both California and Nevada, was convicted of spousal abuse in 1993, and was successfully sued for being a slumlord in Los Angeles in the 1980s. In addition, his campaign dishonestly indicated that he had received 2022 endorsements from Gov. Gavin Newsom and Lt. Gov. Eleni Kounalakis, although neither has formally endorsed his candidacy. 

There are seven candidates running for this seat, including Democrat David Dodson, incumbent Democrat Mike Schaefer, and Republican Denis Bilodeau. Dodson’s campaign has raised $2,000 and is not funded by police, real estate, fossil fuel, or corporate PAC donors. Board Member Schaefer’s campaign has raised $127,000 and is entirely self-funded. Bilodeau’s campaign has raised $31,000 and has received donations from real estate interests. 

 

The Recommendation

David Dodson, a property tax appraiser, lives in Dana Point. According to campaign materials, he is running for election to leverage his unique tax expertise to serve the community and to guide board decisions that center constituents. He ran for this seat in 2018, but lost in the primary after earning only 15% of the vote.

Dodson has spent his 30-year career working in property tax appraisal. He worked for the Los Angeles County assessor, and now leads the Southern California office of the board of equalization. He cites this work as having allowed him to develop a strong expertise of this specialized field, and a particular understanding of the changes needed to make the system work for all taxpayers in the state. Over the course of his career, he has developed a deep network of colleagues with whom he could liaise as a member of the board of equalization. Dodson is a longtime union member, and has supported union lobbying efforts throughout his career. 

Dodson is endorsed by some progressive groups in the state, including Progressive Democrats of California. He has also received the endorsement of some local political leaders. Based on our analysis, Dodson’s track record and professional knowledge demonstrate that he will be a progressive leader for the constituents of District 4 and will govern effectively in the best interest of this diverse district.

Last updated: 2023-04-05

Alameda County

Have questions about voting in Alameda County? Read our guide to voting in Alameda County.

Elect Pamela Price to push Alameda in the right direction.

 

The Position

Each of the 58 counties in California elects a district attorney to manage the prosecution of criminal offenses related to the violation of state and county laws. The district attorney has investigative authority, manages the apprehension of individuals identified through the investigative process, and holds charging and prosecutorial power. The work of the district attorney includes Municipal and Superior Court operations, and serving as a legal liaison to the grand jury. The county Board of Supervisors provides financial oversight to the district attorney’s office, but holds no operational power over their work. District attorneys are elected to four-year terms in office.

 

The District

Alameda is California’s seventh most populous county, with a population of over 1,600,000. Alameda’s district attorney oversees an office of 150 deputy district attorneys, and the prosecution of criminal offenses across the county and unincorporated areas. Alameda County has a demographic breakdown of 22% Latino, 26% Asian, and 13% Black.

 

The Race

There are three candidates running for this seat, including Pamela Price, Chief Assistant District Attorney Terry Wiley, and Deputy District Attorney Jimmie Wilson. Incumbent Nancy O’Malley is retiring after 12 years as the Alameda DA. During the 2017 Alameda DA elections, O’Malley and 31 of her employees, including current challenger Terry Wiley, were alleged to have violated campaign ethics by using government email accounts to discuss campaign issues and seek donations to fund attacks against Price, who was challenging O’Malley. O’Malley’s office has not commented on the complaint. Price’s campaign has raised over $193,000, raised by more than 850 individual donors, and is not funded by corporate PAC, real estate, fossil fuel, or police money. Wiley’s campaign has raised $344,000, and received significant early donations from four former employees of the DA’s office. He has also received donations from real estate interests. Moreover, while Wiley has pledged not to accept donations from police associations and unions, he would accept endorsements. Price has said she would accept neither. Jimmie Wilson’s campaign raised more than $200,000 in 2021, and his biggest donor is a former CEO of credit card company VISA, while much of his other support comes from defense attorneys and current and former prosecutors.

 

The Recommendation

Pamela Price, a civil rights attorney, is a longtime resident of the Bay Area. According to campaign materials, Price is running for election to provide justice to the community, address ineffective and inequitable fines and fees related to criminal justice, and implement effective reentry programs for returning citizens, assisting in removing barriers to employment and education.

Price is a survivor of the Ohio juvenile justice and foster-care systems who went on to graduate from Yale and UC Berkeley Law School. Price started her professional career as a criminal defense attorney in San Francisco. In 1991, she started her own firm in Oakland, and for 30 years represented victims of wrongful termination and sexual assault, as well as discrimination based on sex, age, religion, disability, and race. In 2016, Price was elected to the Alameda County Democratic Central Committee, and was reelected in 2020. She is a longtime supporter of gender and racial justice. As a community activist, Price co-founded the Bay Area Defense Committee for Battered Women and was appointed to serve on the Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights, which protects the rights of poor and immigrant communities. Price has received multiple congressional awards for her community service.

Price is endorsed by many progressive groups and leaders in the district, including Dr. Angela Davis, Alameda Progressives, Our Revolution East Bay, and Progressive Democrats of America - Oakland Chapter. Based on our analysis, Price’s track record and policy positions demonstrate that she will be a progressive champion for the constituents of Alameda and will govern effectively in the best interest of this diverse district.

Last updated: 2023-04-05

Elect Pamela Price to push Alameda in the right direction.

 

The Position

Each of the 58 counties in California elects a district attorney to manage the prosecution of criminal offenses related to the violation of state and county laws. The district attorney has investigative authority, manages the apprehension of individuals identified through the investigative process, and holds charging and prosecutorial power. The work of the district attorney includes Municipal and Superior Court operations, and serving as a legal liaison to the grand jury. The county Board of Supervisors provides financial oversight to the district attorney’s office, but holds no operational power over their work. District attorneys are elected to four-year terms in office.

 

The District

Alameda is California’s seventh most populous county, with a population of over 1,600,000. Alameda’s district attorney oversees an office of 150 deputy district attorneys, and the prosecution of criminal offenses across the county and unincorporated areas. Alameda County has a demographic breakdown of 22% Latino, 26% Asian, and 13% Black.

 

The Race

There are three candidates running for this seat, including Pamela Price, Chief Assistant District Attorney Terry Wiley, and Deputy District Attorney Jimmie Wilson. Incumbent Nancy O’Malley is retiring after 12 years as the Alameda DA. During the 2017 Alameda DA elections, O’Malley and 31 of her employees, including current challenger Terry Wiley, were alleged to have violated campaign ethics by using government email accounts to discuss campaign issues and seek donations to fund attacks against Price, who was challenging O’Malley. O’Malley’s office has not commented on the complaint. Price’s campaign has raised over $193,000, raised by more than 850 individual donors, and is not funded by corporate PAC, real estate, fossil fuel, or police money. Wiley’s campaign has raised $344,000, and received significant early donations from four former employees of the DA’s office. He has also received donations from real estate interests. Moreover, while Wiley has pledged not to accept donations from police associations and unions, he would accept endorsements. Price has said she would accept neither. Jimmie Wilson’s campaign raised more than $200,000 in 2021, and his biggest donor is a former CEO of credit card company VISA, while much of his other support comes from defense attorneys and current and former prosecutors.

 

The Recommendation

Pamela Price, a civil rights attorney, is a longtime resident of the Bay Area. According to campaign materials, Price is running for election to provide justice to the community, address ineffective and inequitable fines and fees related to criminal justice, and implement effective reentry programs for returning citizens, assisting in removing barriers to employment and education.

Price is a survivor of the Ohio juvenile justice and foster-care systems who went on to graduate from Yale and UC Berkeley Law School. Price started her professional career as a criminal defense attorney in San Francisco. In 1991, she started her own firm in Oakland, and for 30 years represented victims of wrongful termination and sexual assault, as well as discrimination based on sex, age, religion, disability, and race. In 2016, Price was elected to the Alameda County Democratic Central Committee, and was reelected in 2020. She is a longtime supporter of gender and racial justice. As a community activist, Price co-founded the Bay Area Defense Committee for Battered Women and was appointed to serve on the Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights, which protects the rights of poor and immigrant communities. Price has received multiple congressional awards for her community service.

Price is endorsed by many progressive groups and leaders in the district, including Dr. Angela Davis, Alameda Progressives, Our Revolution East Bay, and Progressive Democrats of America - Oakland Chapter. Based on our analysis, Price’s track record and policy positions demonstrate that she will be a progressive champion for the constituents of Alameda and will govern effectively in the best interest of this diverse district.

Last updated: 2023-04-05

City of Oakland

Depending on where you live, you may have the below city races on your ballot.

Based on our analysis, the thirteen candidates for this position have distinct visions for the district. We recommend that you choose the progressive candidate who best aligns with your values in this race.

 

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. 

 

The District

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. As of the 2020 Census, Oakland had a demographic breakdown of 27% Latino, 16% Asian, and 23% Black. The most recent election results for Alameda County, which includes the city of Oakland, show that it voted for Joe Biden for president in 2020 by 62 points and for Gavin Newsom for governor in 2018 by 62 points.

 

The Race

There are 13 candidates running for this seat, including Councilmember Loren Taylor, Councilmember Sheng Thao, Councilmember Treva Reid, Derreck Johnson, and  Gregory Hodge. Taylor’s campaign has raised $169,000, and has not received donations from fossil fuel, real estate, corporate PAC, or police interests. Thao’s campaign has raised $127,000, and has not received donations from fossil fuel, real estate, corporate PAC, or police interests. Reid’s campaign has raised $109,000, and has received donations from real estate interests. Johnson’s campaign has raised $43,000, and has not received donations from fossil fuel, real estate, corporate PAC, or police interests. Hodge’s campaign has raised $37,000, and has not received donations from fossil fuel, real estate, corporate PAC, or police interests. 

 

No Recommendation

Loren Taylor, a first-term city councilmember representing District 6, is a lifelong resident of Oakland. Taylor is a longtime social-impact consultant, and is running to provide pragmatic leadership to create solutions for the economic and safety challenges facing Oaklanders. He ran for and won his city council seat in 2018, defeating a 16-year incumbent with 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. On the city council, he 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. 

Sheng Thao, a first-term city councilmember and current city council president pro tem representing District 4, was raised in Stockton and has lived in the East Bay area since attending college at UC-Berkeley. Sheng is a career public servant, and is running for mayor to use her bold leadership and strong knowledge of city budgeting to move Oakland forward. She ran for and won her city council seat in 2018 with 54% of the vote. 

Prior to launching her own political career, Thao served as chief of staff to Oakland City Councilmember Rebecca Kaplan. After winning her own seat on the council, Thao secured funding for homelessness and youth services, championed workers’ rights, and supported economic recovery from COVID-19. Thao 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, was able to support her family while putting herself through college. Thao is endorsed by many local union organizations, and by Attorney General Rob Bonta, State Treasurer Fiona Ma, Assemblymember Mia Bonta, and Oakland Vice Mayor Rebecca Kaplan. 

Treva Reid, a first-term city councilmember representing District 7, lives in Oakland. Reid is a career public servant, and is running for mayor to apply her equity-driven leadership to the local challenges of homelessness, public safety, and economic growth. She ran for and won her city council seat in 2020 with 60% of the vote.

Reid has a long history of public work, which includes her time spent as a senior aide to Sen. Nancy Skinner during her time as 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. 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. 

Derrick Johnson, an entrepreneur and community organizer, is a lifelong resident of Oakland. Johnson is running for mayor to use his coalition-centered approach to reinvest in Oakland’s diverse communities. He ran for the at-large seat on the city council in 2020, but lost to Rebecca Kaplan by a 5-point margin. 

Johnson has spent nearly 20 as a local restaurateur, where he hired formerly incarcerated staff members, donated hot meals to unhoused neighbors, and ensured that the restaurant is majority BIPOC and employee-owned. He has advocated for violence prevention through the Measure Y Committee, worked with the Workforce Development Board, provided youth scholarships through the Summit Bank Foundation, and sits on the board of the Oakland LGBTQIA+ Community Center. Johnson was raised by a single mother in Oakland’s housing projects, and believes his personal experience and professional leadership in the community will allow him to organize for meaningful progress on affordable housing, economic development, and public safety. 

Gregory Hodge, an attorney and a community organizer, has lived in Oakland for 40 years. Hodge is running for mayor to show his love for Oakland by bringing community leadership to the environmental, generational, and economic issues facing the city. He served two terms on the Oakland Unified School District Board, and ran for Oakland City Council in 2008 but did not win election.

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. Hodge also serves Oaklanders through his law and consulting practice, which has worked with clients across a range of civic issues.

Each candidate brings a unique approach and vision to the campaign for Oakland mayor’s office. We encourage you to select the candidate who best aligns with your values and who you believe will legislate in the best interest of the diverse constituents of the district.   
 

Based on our analysis, the thirteen candidates for this position have distinct visions for the district. We recommend that you choose the progressive candidate who best aligns with your values in this race.

 

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. 

 

The District

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. As of the 2020 Census, Oakland had a demographic breakdown of 27% Latino, 16% Asian, and 23% Black. The most recent election results for Alameda County, which includes the city of Oakland, show that it voted for Joe Biden for president in 2020 by 62 points and for Gavin Newsom for governor in 2018 by 62 points.

 

The Race

There are 13 candidates running for this seat, including Councilmember Loren Taylor, Councilmember Sheng Thao, Councilmember Treva Reid, Derreck Johnson, and  Gregory Hodge. Taylor’s campaign has raised $169,000, and has not received donations from fossil fuel, real estate, corporate PAC, or police interests. Thao’s campaign has raised $127,000, and has not received donations from fossil fuel, real estate, corporate PAC, or police interests. Reid’s campaign has raised $109,000, and has received donations from real estate interests. Johnson’s campaign has raised $43,000, and has not received donations from fossil fuel, real estate, corporate PAC, or police interests. Hodge’s campaign has raised $37,000, and has not received donations from fossil fuel, real estate, corporate PAC, or police interests. 

 

No Recommendation

Loren Taylor, a first-term city councilmember representing District 6, is a lifelong resident of Oakland. Taylor is a longtime social-impact consultant, and is running to provide pragmatic leadership to create solutions for the economic and safety challenges facing Oaklanders. He ran for and won his city council seat in 2018, defeating a 16-year incumbent with 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. On the city council, he 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. 

Sheng Thao, a first-term city councilmember and current city council president pro tem representing District 4, was raised in Stockton and has lived in the East Bay area since attending college at UC-Berkeley. Sheng is a career public servant, and is running for mayor to use her bold leadership and strong knowledge of city budgeting to move Oakland forward. She ran for and won her city council seat in 2018 with 54% of the vote. 

Prior to launching her own political career, Thao served as chief of staff to Oakland City Councilmember Rebecca Kaplan. After winning her own seat on the council, Thao secured funding for homelessness and youth services, championed workers’ rights, and supported economic recovery from COVID-19. Thao 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, was able to support her family while putting herself through college. Thao is endorsed by many local union organizations, and by Attorney General Rob Bonta, State Treasurer Fiona Ma, Assemblymember Mia Bonta, and Oakland Vice Mayor Rebecca Kaplan. 

Treva Reid, a first-term city councilmember representing District 7, lives in Oakland. Reid is a career public servant, and is running for mayor to apply her equity-driven leadership to the local challenges of homelessness, public safety, and economic growth. She ran for and won her city council seat in 2020 with 60% of the vote.

Reid has a long history of public work, which includes her time spent as a senior aide to Sen. Nancy Skinner during her time as 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. 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. 

Derrick Johnson, an entrepreneur and community organizer, is a lifelong resident of Oakland. Johnson is running for mayor to use his coalition-centered approach to reinvest in Oakland’s diverse communities. He ran for the at-large seat on the city council in 2020, but lost to Rebecca Kaplan by a 5-point margin. 

Johnson has spent nearly 20 as a local restaurateur, where he hired formerly incarcerated staff members, donated hot meals to unhoused neighbors, and ensured that the restaurant is majority BIPOC and employee-owned. He has advocated for violence prevention through the Measure Y Committee, worked with the Workforce Development Board, provided youth scholarships through the Summit Bank Foundation, and sits on the board of the Oakland LGBTQIA+ Community Center. Johnson was raised by a single mother in Oakland’s housing projects, and believes his personal experience and professional leadership in the community will allow him to organize for meaningful progress on affordable housing, economic development, and public safety. 

Gregory Hodge, an attorney and a community organizer, has lived in Oakland for 40 years. Hodge is running for mayor to show his love for Oakland by bringing community leadership to the environmental, generational, and economic issues facing the city. He served two terms on the Oakland Unified School District Board, and ran for Oakland City Council in 2008 but did not win election.

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. Hodge also serves Oaklanders through his law and consulting practice, which has worked with clients across a range of civic issues.

Each candidate brings a unique approach and vision to the campaign for Oakland mayor’s office. We encourage you to select the candidate who best aligns with your values and who you believe will legislate in the best interest of the diverse constituents of the district.