Sheng Thao
| |
---|---|
51st Mayor of Oakland | |
Assumed office January 9, 2023 | |
Preceded by | Libby Schaaf |
President pro tempore of the Oakland City Council | |
In office January 4, 2021 – January 9, 2023 | |
Preceded by | Dan Kalb |
Succeeded by | Dan Kalb |
Member of the Oakland City Council from 4th district | |
In office January 2019 – January 9, 2023 | |
Preceded by | Annie Campbell Washington |
Succeeded by | Janani Ramachandran |
Personal details | |
Born | Stockton, California, U.S. | July 18, 1985
Political party | Democratic |
Children | 2 |
Education | Merritt College (AA) University of California, Berkeley (BA) |
Sheng Thao (RPA: Seeb Thoj, Pahawh: 𖬀𖬶𖬤𖬵 𖬒𖬲𖬟𖬰; born July 18, 1985) is an American politician who is the 51st and current mayor of Oakland, California. She is the first Hmong American mayor of a major city in the United States.[1][2] She was elected as mayor of Oakland in November 2022 and started her term in January 2023. On November 5, 2024, Thao was recalled.[3][4] She is the first mayor in Oakland’s history to be recalled.
During her tenure as mayor, Thao pledged to focus on crime, homelessness, and affordable housing. Thao's administration has faced a series of challenges, including public safety, business departures and budget deficits. In June 2024, the FBI raided Thao's home, which she shares with her partner Andre Jones, as part of an ongoing investigation.[5] On August 6, 2024, Oakland's police union called on Thao to resign.[6]
Early life and education
[edit]Thao was born on July 18, 1985[7] and raised in Stockton, California.[1][8] Her parents were refugees from Laos who escaped from the Hmong genocide and eventually immigrated to the United States.[1] Thao was the seventh of ten children and grew up in poverty, spending some of her childhood in public housing.[9]
At age 17, Thao moved out of her home and began working at a Walgreens store in Richmond.[10] After moving to Oakland in her 20s, she became a victim of domestic violence while in an abusive relationship.[11][12] Thao left the relationship when she was six months pregnant, and then lived in her car and couch-surfed before and after her son was born.[11][9][1] When her son was ten months old, Thao began attending Merritt College in Oakland while raising her son as a single mother and working as a research assistant.[10][8]
After she completed an associate's degree in legal studies at Merritt College, Thao transferred to the University of California, Berkeley, where she earned a bachelor's degree in legal studies and a minor in city planning.[12][13][10] While at UC Berkeley, Thao helped create the Bear Pantry, a program which provided food to hungry students.[13]
Early career
[edit]Following her graduation from UC Berkeley in 2012, Thao worked for At-Large Councilmember Rebecca Kaplan as a paid intern.[10][12] Thao later worked for Kaplan at the Oakland City Council, becoming her chief of staff in 2017.[10][1]
Oakland City Council
[edit]Thao decided to run for office in 2018, when the election for the district 4 City Council seat was an open race, lacking an incumbent. Thao ran on the priorities of tackling Oakland's housing crisis, improving public safety with better response systems and community policing, and building public infrastructure such as libraries and parks.[14] Thao defeated six other candidates and won with 54% of the vote.[15]
Thao began her term as a member of the Oakland City Council in January 2019.[16] Thao served in the Oakland City Council's 4th district seat, representing the neighborhoods of Montclair, Laurel, Melrose, Redwood Heights, and the Dimond District.[17] She was the first Hmong woman to be elected as a member of a city council in the state of California and the first Hmong person elected to the Oakland City Council.[2][18] On the city council, Thao served as president pro tempore.[12]
During her tenure on the city council, Thao led efforts to expand the number of police academies from four to five, and co-authored ordinances approved by the council to address housing insecurity by expanding access for code-compliant RVs and mobile homes in the city.[19][20]
Mayor of Oakland
[edit]Thao took office on January 9, 2023.[21] As mayor-elect, her proposals included the development of 30,000 units of new housing over eight years, rent control and other protections for tenants, improving safety and sanitation for homeless residents, hiring more police officers, and increasing spending for education and violence prevention programs.[1][22][23]
Campaign
[edit]On November 10, 2021, Thao announced her candidacy for Oakland mayor and the endorsements of council president Nikki Fortunato Bas, vice mayor Rebecca Kaplan, and Attorney General Rob Bonta.[24][25] Her campaign also received support from labor unions, the Alameda County Democratic Party, and Ro Khanna, the U.S. representative for the 17th congressional district of California.[1][26][27] Loren Taylor, one of her opponents, was endorsed by Libby Schaaf, the incumbent mayor of Oakland, as well as London Breed and Sam Liccardo, the mayors of nearby San Francisco and San Jose.[28] By the end of the campaign, Thao and Taylor were considered to be the two front-runners.[29]
Thao, relating her own experiences, including childhood poverty, domestic violence, and renting, campaigned for increasing the funding of the Department of Violence Prevention in Oakland to improve access to affordable housing and reduce homelessness.[30][31]
In June 2022, a former staffer filed an informal verbal complaint with the Public Ethics Commission that alleged Thao had Oakland City Council staff work on her campaign in a possible violation of state election laws. The staffer claims to have been fired after refusing to work on Thao's campaign.[32][33] Thao denied the allegations and the ethics commission opened an investigation in June 2022.[32] After the matter was reported by a political blogger that supported one of Thao's competitors in October 2022, the allegations gained media attention.[33][32]
On November 18, 2022, Thao won the election by 677 votes through a ranked-choice (instant-runoff) voting system.[1] On November 22, 2022, the margin of victory increased to 682 votes, and her opponent Councilmember Loren Taylor conceded.[34][30] A recount was formally requested and received support from the city's chapter of the NAACP, but the required funding was not raised for the costs.[35] Thao stated she supported the recount.[36]
Public safety
[edit]After a law firm hired during the previous year by the City of Oakland produced an investigative report which was officially published on January 18, 2023, alleging misconduct in the Oakland police department, Thao placed Oakland Police Chief LeRonne Armstrong on administrative leave on January 19.[37][38] During a press conference on January 21, Thao said "it's important that we look at taking the corrective action that is needed to make sure that we stay on track to make sure that we get out of the federal oversight," referring to the oversight the police department had been subject to for the past twenty years.[37] Thao fired Armstrong on February 15, 2023,[38] and indicated she had lost confidence in his ability to reform the police department.[39] Armstrong filed a wrongful terminational lawsuit against the city of Oakland and Thao.[40] In March 2024, Thao appointed Floyd Mitchell as the new police chief.[41]
Thao's administration faced criticism from community leaders after missing a deadline to apply for the Organized Retail Theft Prevention (ORTP) Grant Program.[42] The grant awards cities millions of dollars to fight retail crime through allocating funds "to hire more officers, create task forces and develop investigative units."[43] An audit released in May 2024 conducted by the acting City Auditor of Oakland found that, "there was poor communication, within departments and between departments, there was no project management and no one really took charge."[44] The City of Oakland prepared, but "did not successfully submit an application for the ORTP (Organized Retail Theft Prevention) grant."[44]
In September 2023, Thao announced $2.5 million in more funding for the 911 response system.[45][46] In her State of the City address on October 17, 2023, Thao discussed crime and public safety, including efforts to improve the 911 system, obtain new California Highway Patrol officers, and hire a person responsible for applying to grants.[47]
The Oakland Police Department statistics for 2024 show "33 percent fewer violent crimes overall this year compared to last year." Robberies rose 11% and residential robberies rose 118%.[48]
In July 2024, Gavin Newsom, the Governor of California, urged Oakland to allow more police pursuits. Currently, Oakland only allows police pursuits when a suspect is armed with a gun or involved in a forcible violent crime,[49] a policy that has been in place since 2014.[50] Gavin Newsom has described this policy as an “outlier.”[49][51][52][53][54]
Business closures
[edit]Several businesses have closed in Oakland due to safety concerns. In-N-Out, Denny's, Starbucks, Black Bear Diner, and Subway have cited safety concerns for their employees and customers as the reasons for the closures.[55] Other businesses, Raising Canes and Taco Bell, have shut down dining rooms to reduce the risk of crime.[56] Kaiser Permanente, Clorox, and Blue Shield have increased security and warned employees about crime in the area.[55] In a statement to KTVU, Thao claimed to prioritize public safety and said "that she added police presence and employed technology 'to deter and respond to criminal behavior.'"[57] Thao's office provided statistics that show a decline in some areas of crime in the Hegenberger Road corridor where In-N-Out was located.[57]
Oakland Athletics negotiations
[edit]For several months, Thao's administration continued negotiations with the owners of the Oakland Athletics for the team to stay in Oakland, which had begun during the administration of Thao's predecessor, Libby Schaaf.[58][59] In April 2023, the team president announced an agreement to buy land for a stadium in Las Vegas.[58][59] On April 20, Thao indicated she was open to continuing negotiations despite the announcement by the team.[59] In July 2023, Thao and other Oakland officials met with MLB Commissioner of Baseball Rob Manfred and Deputy Commissioner Dan Halem to discuss the proposal for the A's to stay in Oakland.[60] John Fisher, owner of the Oakland Athletics, rejected the City of Oakland’s "offer for a five-year, $97 million lease extension on the Coliseum" and a revised, "final three-year, $60 million lease," ultimately relocating the team to Las Vegas.[61]
Thao announced on May 22, 2024 that the City of Oakland would sell its share of the Coliseum (the former home of the Oakland A's) to the African American Sports & Entertainment Group (AASEG) for $105 million.[62] The money from the sale was expected to "help fill shortfalls in the city's budget" and city officials said the sale would pave "the way for a proposed sports and entertainment destination site, thousands of new affordable housing units, and community benefits for historically neglected East Oakland."[62] The deal has thus far not been completed.
Budget
[edit]In May 2023, Thao proposed a two-year $4.2 billion budget with city department mergers and hiring freezes proposed to help account for a $360 million budget deficit.[63][64] A $4.2 billion budget was passed by the city council in June 2023 to address the deficit with some department mergers, hiring freezes to prevent layoffs, and spending cuts.[65][66]
In 2024, Oakland faced a $117 million deficit. Thao and Oakland's city council approved budget changes that "will avoid drastic cuts but also rely on the still-pending sale of the city’s most valuable real estate property."[67] The pending sale of the Coliseum is "estimated to bring in $105 million." Financial analysts warned city officials against relying on sales of assets to "remedy short-term budget shortfalls."[67]
Recall
[edit]A group called Oakland United to Recall Sheng Thao (OUST) organized to recall her from office and submitted a petition on June 5, 2024. On June 18, 2024, the Alameda County Registrar of Voters received around 40,000 petition signatures. A random sample projected that roughly 26% of the petitions, or somewhere around 10,753 signatures, were not “valid signatures of qualified registered voters” in the city.[68] Alameda County’s elections office estimated that the whole batch would exceed 110% of the necessary threshold, or enough to trigger a recall election outright without a full manual count of signatures.[68] The recall was be the first mayor recall election in Oakland's history.[3]
A small group of protestors rallied outside of Oakland City Hall calling for Mayor Thao to address a Juneteenth celebration mass shooting at Lake Merritt that wounded 15 people and the FBI raid at her home.[69][70] The group supported the recall election and demanded Thao's resignation.[70] The election was scheduled to coincide with the presidential election.
She was successfully recalled on November 5, 2024.[4]
Investigations
[edit]The Federal Bureau of Investigation, along with agents from the Internal Revenue Service and United States Postal Inspection Service, raided Thao's home on June 20, 2024.[5] Three other residences and properties belonging to the owners of Cal Waste Solutions, the Duong family, were also raided on the same day.[71] Following the raid, the Oakland chapter of the NAACP called on Sheng Thao to resign.[72] On July 8, 2024, the U.S. Attorney’s Office ordered the city of Oakland to hand over documents and records. Among the requested records in the subpoena are "communications related to Andre Jones and all calendar entries or records of the existence of planned or scheduled meeting with Thao or Jones from June 2022 to the present."[73] On July 10, 2024, the U.S. Attorney for the Northern District of California issued a new subpoena that "appear to be after police reports related to the Duong family, the owners of the city’s recycling contractor".[74]
Personal life
[edit]As of 2024, Sheng Thao was living with her partner, Andre Jones, and their two children in a 4-bedroom home on Maiden Lane in Oakland's Lincoln Highlands neighborhood.[75][76][77] She met Jones, at the time Kaplan's chief of staff, during her internship with Oakland city Councilmember Rebecca Kaplan.[78]
References
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External links
[edit]- Profile at Vote Smart
- Media related to Sheng Thao at Wikimedia Commons
- 1985 births
- 21st-century American women politicians
- 21st-century mayors of places in California
- American mayors of Asian descent
- American politicians of Hmong descent
- City council members of Asian descent
- Asian-American people in California politics
- Democratic Party mayors in California
- Living people
- Mayors of Oakland, California
- Merritt College alumni
- Oakland City Council members
- Politicians from Stockton, California
- Recalled American mayors
- University of California, Berkeley alumni
- Women city councillors in California
- Women mayors of places in California