Following  this email is a statement by the Richmond Progressive Alliance, which they asked  me to publish – and I am happy to do so, about the November 8 City Council  election.          
             This is my  statement. 
            Some believe  that this election, where I opposed both the RPA candidates and Measure L,  isolated me and was a defeat for me and what I stand for. The fact is that for  my entire 20 years on the Richmond City Council, I have never enjoyed a  majority who aligned with my personal political beliefs, and I have butted  heads with the City Council majority a thousand times. I’m used to it. Whatever  I have accomplished these last 20 years, I have always done by building  coalitions among often unlikely individuals or sometimes even by inviting  intervention from higher authorities. 
            My first  successful run for City Council in 1995 was largely a result of frustration  with the City Council’s relationship with Chevron. The City was considering a  permit application for a major Chevron modernization project, and working with  CBE, the Richmond Toxics Coalition and others, we had been able to get the  Planning Commission to approve a $62 million community benefits package. The  City Council swiftly dismantled the community benefits package on appeal, and  the project moved forward without it. About the same time, I had questioned the  formula by which Chevron’s utility user tax was computed and filed a public  records request (over a decade later, my concerns were fully validated). The  City balked, and I sued. Then the City sued me for the costs of the lawsuit and  won. See City Officials  Threaten to Embarrass Council Member Over Unpaid Judgment. Later, the city  attorney garnished my City Council wages. It was these types of actions by the  City Council that motivated me to run. I was “madder’n hell and not going to  take it anymore.”  
            When I was  first elected in 1995 and took my seat along with eight others (we were seated  right after the election in those days), I had to work with people like Nat  Bates, Donna Powers and Richard Griffin, all of whom were closely tied to the  Richmond business establishment and the public safety unions. I was often on  the wrong end of an 8-1 vote, but I reasoned that having even one vote was  better than none. Today, the RPA rails against “corporate money,” but in those  days, the big money came from City employee unions (some things don’t change)  and developers laundered through lobbyist Darrell Reese. Chevron was so  powerful, they got a free ride and didn’t even have to spend any money to wield  influence.  
            Not long  after I was sworn in, the City Council was faced with the selection of a  consultant to prepare the reuse plan for Point Molate. Not satisfied with the  short list selected to be interviewed by staff, the City Council insisted on  interviewing all the candidates, eventually reaching down to one ranked lowest  by staff to which to award the contract. I protested, citing evidence of  meddling by notorious firefighter unionist and lobbyist Darrell Reese, and  eventually prevailed on the Navy to compel the City to repeat the whole  process. Feelings and egos of my City Council colleagues were bruised during  the process, and three Council members hired attorney John Burris  who  threatened to sue me. Eventually, the City Council took another vote, and  consultant ranked first by staff was awarded the contract. 
            Despite an  unfriendly reception from most of my new City Council colleagues beginning in  1995, I worked with Alex Evans to get an ordinance regulating lobbyists passed.  I worked with Donna Powers to bring the Rosie the Riveter WWII Home Front  National Historical Park to Richmond. I worked with Mayor Irma Anderson to set  up what became the Office of Neighborhood Safety. In 2014, I worked with Jim  Rogers and Jael Myrick to successfully negotiate a $90 million Environmental  and Community Investment Agreement (ECIA) with Chevron that would not have  passed without support from Nat Bates and Corky Booze. The RPA City Council  members voted against the ECIA. 
            I have also  worked successfully with RPA City Council members ever since Gayle was first  elected to the City Council over a decade ago. We have agreed on all  environmental and health issues, and we voted together to approve the General  Plan 2030 and joining what is now MCE Clean Energy. We collaborated to retain  Bill Lindsay when Nat Bates and Vinay Pimple voted to fire him. We worked  together to successfully defeat Measure N (Richmond Riviera) and Measure O, and  we both supported the unsuccessful Measure M (real estate transfer tax). I  nominated Ben Choi to fill the seat ultimately filled by Vinay Pimple, but the  RPA City Council members rejected Choi and ended up with Pimple. I have  appointed a number of RPA stalwarts and even RPA steering committee members to  City boards and commissions. 
            I  congratulate Melvin Willis and Ben Choi on their victory, and I look forward to  working with them. The RPA ran a superb ground campaign and outworked, outfoxed  and out fundraised all other candidates. 
            On the other  hand, this election was neither a mandate nor a blowout. There were around  20,000 voters in this election, although some 2,000 may be added when all  mail-in and provisional ballots are counted.  
            Of the 20,000  who voted: 
            
              - 35.38%  voted for Willis
 
              - 31.40%  voted for Choi
 
              - 30.05%  voted for Myrick
 
             
            That means  that around 2/3 of voters wanted someone other than Willis, Choi and Myrick.  None of the three came even close to a majority, but all they needed was a  plurality. That’s the way our political system works. It’s kind of like Hillary  won the popular vote, and Trump won the election. What remains to be seen is  whether the RPA will respect the 2/3 of residents who did not support them as  well as the 1/3 who did. If the RPA takes this as a mandate, it is going to get  contentious. If they take it as an opportunity to collaborate for a better  Richmond, we could make real progress. 
The  difference between Willis and Rogers is 1,438 votes and the difference between  Willis and Bates is 1,593 votes. The difference between Choi and Rogers is 641  votes, and the difference between Choi and Bates is 796 votes. 
            For those who  would rather have not seen an RPA majority or supermajority, I tried my best to  urge them to vote for Rogers and Myrick, neither of whom have consistently  supported me over the years. The polls also indicated, inaccurately as it  turned out,  that Bates was a shoo-in. What I saw unfold is that many  people who were staunchly anti-RPA derided my endorsement of Rogers and Myrick  and proudly announced their support instead of Pimple, Zepeda and/or Uwahemu,  and these same people also gravitated away from Bates. Amazingly, lots of  people even voted for Corky. I tried to talk to people about voting  strategically rather than emotionally, but few get the concept. If a fraction  of voters who voted for  Pimple, Zepeda and/or Uwahemu had essentially not  thrown away their votes, there could have been a very different outcome. 
            In any event,  the election is over, and we have to get to work. 
              
              
            Following the election of Ben Choi and Melvin Willis to  Richmond City Council last night, the RPA steering committee, Vice-Mayor  Eduardo Martinez, Councilmember Gayle McLaughlin, Councilmember Jovanka  Beckles, Councilmember-Elect Ben Choi, Councilmember-Elect Melvin Willis issued  the following statement: 
            Rising to the Occasion 
            We, the Richmond Progressive Alliance Steering Committee,  and incumbent and elected members of the City Council extend congratulations to  the newly elected Richmond City Councilmembers: Melvin Willis, Ben Choi and  Jael Myrick. 
            We also applaud the voters’ decision to pass Measure L: Fair  and Affordable Richmond for rent control and tenant protections. As Measure L  advocates have said from the start, this measure alone will not solve our  community’s housing crisis, but it constitutes an important step to help  seniors and working people stay in their homes and to prevent evictions without  just cause. Moving forward, Richmond must redouble its efforts to develop more  affordable housing. 
            We appreciate the democratic participation of all candidates  who ran for city council seats. We acknowledge outgoing Councilmembers Nat  Bates, who deserves recognition for his decades of participation on the  council, and Vinay Pimplé, for their dedicated service to our city. We know it  is a very difficult job. 
            These progressive victories in our city belong to all those  in the progressive movement in Richmond and beyond, who supported the electoral  struggle for progressive measures and corporate-free candidates. To each and  every one of them, our most sincere gratitude and celebration. 
            In recent years, voters have elected several corporate-free  council representatives who brought new progressive approaches to the problems  that our city faces. The grassroots movement that propelled their victories  upset the political status quo. As a result, the differences among  councilmembers often receive more attention than their many shared values. 
            It is now incumbent for the entire Council to focus on its  primary mutual interest: the betterment of Richmond. The needs facing our  community are too urgent for us to be distracted by past disagreements or  personal grievances. 
            At times, the members of the Council will surely disagree  with each other about the best ways to solve Richmond’s many challenges. Our  city will be well-served when decisions are debated with rigor, passion, and  civility. Given the extreme challenges from the outcome of the presidential  election, our national government may be wracked by division and malice, but in  Richmond, let our Council demonstrate how dissent and decency can co-exist. 
            RPA-supported councilmembers will also disagree with one  another at times, and have amply shown they do not share a single mindset for  casting votes. Faithfully adhering to requirements of the Brown Act, they will  not conspire behind closed doors about how to vote, and welcome input and open  discussion from all sectors of the community. 
            One conviction we do share deeply is that corporate money  corrupts our democracy, a belief shared by the Bernie Sanders revolution. When  Bernie Sanders urged supporters to run for local office, Ben Choi and Melvin  Willis heeded his call. Their campaigns for City Council seats (and the Measure  L effort) were fueled by hundreds of small donations and thousands of volunteer  hours. 
            We look forward to working with Mayor Tom Butt and  Councilmember Jael Myrick in a spirit of constructive collaboration. There is  common ground in many areas and it is land worth cultivating. Let us all bring  our best selves to the table and rise to this occasion. 
            - Co-coordinators Marcos Bañales & Marilyn Langlois for  the RPA Steering Committee 
              - Vice-Mayor Eduardo Martinez 
              - Councilmember Gayle McLaughlin 
              - Councilmember Jovanka Beckles 
              - Councilmember-Elect Ben Choi 
            - Councilmember-Elect Melvin Willis  |