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           | Get ready for  a series of book releases in 2017 describing how the Richmond Progressive  Alliance saved Richmond and made it a paragon of progressiveness that can serve  as a national model. Fiirst off the press will be Refinery Town: Big Oil, Big Money and the Making of An  American City by Steve Early, which is already being reviewed and  will be released in January 2017. You can preorder your own hard  cover copy for $18.16 at Amazon. 
            Steve is both  a good and prolific writer and a nice guy. He has published numerous articles  on Richmond politics over the last several years. I have reviewed the draft of Refinery Town: Big Oil, Big Money and the Making of An  American City and actually had an opportunity to fact check it at  Steve’s invitation. I think you will find it interesting and reasonably  accurate, but Steve had a thesis that represented a certain viewpoint, which  the book is written to support. From my viewpoint, the last few years in  Richmond have had a more complex cast of players and a more complicated set of  events than the simple proposition that the RPA rode into Richmond, ran out the  bad guys, and everyone lived happily ever after.  
            As I have  pointed out many times, anything the RPA has taken credit for is only because  they were able to collaborate with other non-RPA City Council members, or  vice-versa. Up until now, Richmond politics has been a team sport. 
            Following is  part of what I wrote Steve after reviewing his draft: 
            
              I have a much longer and more strategic view  of change at City Hall than you do.  I see it as more of an evolution and  a continuum than a revolution led by the RPA. I have been at this for over 20  years, and I have been fighting Chevron that entire time. So have people like  former Mayor Rosemary Corbin and to a more limited extent (with all his flaws),  Jim Rogers. 
              I look at it more like the RPA joining the  fight that people like Rosemary and I have been carrying for years and  providing the votes to make a majority.  
              Historically, the “Nat Bates for Mayor” is  very instructive about the evolution. For years, the African American vote in  Richmond was manipulated by Chevron, industry, developers, the public safety  unions and power brokers like Darrell Reese to control the City Council. You  saw the last gasp of all that in “Nat Bates for Mayor.” Richmond is now a more  diverse city with a lot of new people in it who want good government and good  quality of life and understand what it takes to get there. 
              Until Eduardo was elected in 2014, the RPA  never had more  than two seats on the City Council. Everything the RPA has accomplished has  depended on working with non-RPA allies, including Jael and me. This should be  a story about collaborations more than RPA leadership. 
              The RPA is not as popular as they think they  are. We actually have two polls only a few weeks apart from February and March  2016, that  provide insight into how voters feel about individual City  Council members. In both polls, I had the highest rating, 55% in one and 58% in  another. RPA members continue to chastise me for not appreciating that it was  the RPA who got me elected. Maybe it was the other way around. Gayle McLaughlin  was second in the polls, with 46% in one and 47% in another. Nat Bates had the  highest unfavorable rating in both polls, but his “strongly favorable” rating  in one poll was higher than mine or Gayle’s. 
              The point is that the progressive coalition  is fragile and needs to be nurtured, with people looking for collaboration and  common ground. Instead, we are fighting each other. 
             
            The RPA will  not actually seize complete power in Richmond until next month, and what they  do with it and how Richmond fares under their regime will be the real story. 
            I don’t have  a title or release date, but by all accounts Gayle McLaughlin has also been writing  her book on her Richmond experience for the last two years. She has not been  very effusive about it but has acknowledged it. 
            Below is an  interview with Steve Early by Kathy Kiely of Moyers & Company: 
              
               
               
              What A  California Refinery Town Can Teach America 
              A  soon-to-be-published book by a longtime labor organizer chronicles how a  grass-roots democracy movement overcame corporate money. 
   
  By Kathy  Kiely | December 13, 2016  
               
              What  A California Refinery Town Can [...] 
    
   
              In Richmond,  California, a refinery town near San Francisco, a vibrant community coalition  is proving that democracy is powered by votes, not money. (Photo by Allen J.  Schaben/Los Angeles Times via Getty Images) 
   
  When longtime  labor activist Steve Early moved to Richmond, California, he thought San  Francisco’s gritty neighbor would be a good place to observe and participate in  a vibrant local political community whose battles against corporate neighbor  Chevron have been chronicled by Bill Moyers.  What he didn’t know was that he’d find the topic for his latest book — one that  is all the more timely following the results of last month’s elections. In his  forward for Early’s Refinery Town: Big Oil, Big Money and the Making of An  American City, Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-VT) writes: “Our country  obviously need a great deal of change at the state and federal levels. But  laying a solid local foundation, like activists in Richmond have done, is an  important first step.” Early’s book will be available next month; in an  interview with Kathy Kiely of BillMoyers.com, he provides a sneak preview. 
   
  Kathy  Kiely: So tell me why you decided to write this book. 
   
     
   
  Steve Early: Well, I moved  to Richmond five years ago, after working as a labor organizer and a union  representative in New England for about 30 years. I immediately got involved in  the Richmond Progressive Alliance in 2012 and — 
   
  Kiely: So let me  stop you there. What made you move to Richmond? Did you move because you knew  what was going on there, or was it just happenstance?  
   
  Early: I knew, through  the labor movement and a national network of labor activists called Labor  Notes, some folks in Richmond who were very much involved in the Richmond  Progressive Alliance and who had moved here earlier from Detroit. And I had  stayed with them. I had seen some of the campaigning that had gone on in 2008  and 2010 before we moved out. And it just seemed to me to be a very exciting  place where good things were happening politically, where there was a terrific  sense of community, and where progressives were really succeeding in building a  kind of multiracial working class-oriented progressive political organization  at the local level.  
               
              As you know, I’m  sure, much of our activity on the left is marginalized and involves symbolic  protest activity and casting often third-party votes, which I’ve done many times  myself [laughs] in the past. But here we had a group that was actually  contesting in local elections and winning them, electing people to city  council, electing a member of the Green Party mayor, and then using City Hall  as kind of an organizing center to link up with local grass-roots movements and  unions and community organizations to strengthen and support their activities  and involve many of the leading activists in the function of city government. 
   
  Kiely: So that’s  really interesting. It sounds like what you’re saying is that you and a number  of other people in your network deliberately chose to move to Richmond because  you saw something interesting happening there. Is that accurate?  
               
              Take  A Look: Bill Moyers talks to a Richmond leader and student journalist 
   
  Early: Yeah, I would  say most of the migration isn’t from as far away as Boston or Detroit. But  because of its historic problems with crime and violence and industrial  decline, you know, the city’s housing prices and rents until recently were more  reasonable than in other parts of the East Bay and certainly a cheaper place to  live than across the bay in San Francisco. So as gentrification has become a  bigger Bay Area problem and people have been pushed out of San Francisco and  forced to move to Oakland and then forced up the coast from Oakland, a number  of them have landed here. And I think part of it is economic necessity, finding  what may be the last refuge for people with moderate incomes in the East Bay.  And also, because they’re attracted to the idea that political activism here  was making a difference, making the community better, and the scale of the city  110,000, which is much smaller than both Oakland and San Francisco — would  enable people to have perhaps a greater impact than they had in previous  political community or even union activity they were involved in, in other  parts of the Bay Area. 
   
  Kiely: So  getting back to my original question, did you move out with the idea that you  were going to make a book of this or did that come later?  
   
  Early: No, not at all.  I redeployed, as I say — retired from my full-time job as a national union  staff member in 2007, and my objective then was to write about labor, and I did  produce over the last 10 years three labor-related books. But I did not have  any immediate plan to kind of stray from the labor beat and start writing more  about municipal politics, about community policing, about housing  affordability, about environmental issues. But I was confronted with all of  them here in Richmond and started to cover these things locally and turned that  reporting over the last three years into the book that’s coming out next month. 
    
  Sanctuary  city  
   
  Kiely: What do  you think are the lessons that this book has for people who are dismayed by the  2016 election?  
   
  Early: Well, sadly,  but it’s going to turn out to be good timing in terms of readership interested  in the book, since Nov. 8 there’s been a big discussion about the need to go  local. People are realizing that in the next four years at least, avenues,  pathways to progress at the state level in many states and certainly the  federal government are going to be blocked and so much of the focus of  progressive political activity is going to have to be in various forms at the  municipal level. And I don’t want to make too much of a virtue out of  necessity, but the Richmond experience over the last decade and a half really  shows that you can simultaneously block kind of a reactionary tide coming from  inside the Beltway, whether it’s the Bush administration or the forthcoming Trump  years, and you can also be a source of progressive policy innovation at the  local level.  
               
              And we’re seeing  right now that there’s emerging resistance to what people expect will be Trump  policies on immigration, the whole sanctuary city movement has revived.  Richmond actually was one of the pioneer sanctuary cities more than 20 years  ago, declaring it would not cooperate with federal immigration officials  rounding up undocumented immigrants in the city. And that position was  reaffirmed 10 years ago when there were major problems created by ICE coming  into the city, rousting people out, identifying themselves as the police and  undermining work that was already underway to reestablish closer ties between  the Richmond police department and foreign-born residents of the city. So our  new mayor, Tom Butt, just issued a very strong statement stressing the fact that this city is not going to cooperate with the Trump  administration on any crackdown on immigrants, is not going to be an agent of  federal law enforcement, and that protecting the immigrant community here is a  foundation of more than 10 years’ worth of community policing reform that makes  the city safer for everybody. 
               
              The  lesson of the Richmond progressive movement is that you have to dig in. 
   
  Kiely: Do you  think people have the patience to reenact and replicate the Richmond  experience? Talk a little bit about what it took to turn that city around.  
   
  Early: Well, I think  you put your finger on a key element: patience and persistence. In many ways,  engaging in politics at the local level is not as glamorous and exciting as  being involved in larger national or international causes or campaigns. One of  the challenges I think that Bernie Sanders faces in rallying his supporters now  and trying to redirect them to electoral politics at the level of local school  boards and city councils and mayoral races and county supervisory boards and  state legislative campaigns is many people may find that there’s not the  excitement and the big issues that led them to support him when he ran for  president.  
               
              But the lesson  of the Richmond progressive movement is that you do have to dig in, you do have  to develop expertise about local problems, you do have to develop an agenda for  reform that’s driven by the needs of local people and not necessarily your own  political priorities, though they may largely overlap. And as I describe in the  book, the Richmond Progressive Alliance started out not really with an  electoral focus. Initially, the group conducted campaigns around single issues  objecting to police brutality, to mistreatment of immigrants, to the  longstanding problems of pollution coming from the Chevron refinery — a whole  range of issues, and then people decided that if they were really going to have  an impact on these local problems, they had to have some people on the inside.  They had to have city council members and a mayor who would support demands for  change and for reform of how the city operated and for a different approach to  dealing with its largest employer, Chevron. 
    
  An  ecumenical movement  
   
  Kiely: One of  the things that struck me in reading your book is how often sort of ideological  purity clashed with pragmatism, and sometimes you had the labor movement  disagreeing with some things or there were different groups representing  African American constituents who disagreed with certain things within the  alliance. Can you talk a little bit about how that worked out and are there  larger lessons for other communities and national politics out of that?  
   
  Early: Well, I think  the success of the Richmond Progressive Alliance as an electoral force really  is due to the fact that it has taken an exceptionally ecumenical approach. It  has welcomed people who are left-leaning Democrats, who are independents, who  are registered members of third party like the California Greens or the  California Peace and Freedom Party. There are members of different socialist  groups. But it’s a broad charge, and under the banner of a local progressive  movement, people have agreed to set aside disagreements that they or the  organizations they belong to nationally might have about some issues in the  interest of getting things done in a kind of united front at the local level.  And that’s, as I’m sure you know, not characteristic left behavior in this  country. Too often, people can’t get beyond their petty factional squabbles and  ideological differences and compete rather than cooperate. So creating that  kind of united front and kind of rebranding as the Richmond Progressive  Alliance and welcoming people with different views and organizational  affiliations on a left-liberal spectrum was really important.  
               
               
              Richmond Revisited: What It Takes to Beat the Elite 
                            BY Kathy Kiely | April 14,  2016 
               
              The politics of  the city, as you know from the book, are very complicated. The corporate  influence, mainly from Chevron, has really shaped African-American politics in  the city for decades. Chevron has been a major benefactor of conservative  African-American Democrats on the city council for decades and the  African-American political establishment in the city, connected to some of the  leading churches, for a long time was very hostile to the emergence of a new  political force that was multiracial, that tried to rally younger  African-Americans and Latinos under the RPA banner. 
               
              I think our most  recent election was a real turning point. The oldest member of the council, an  86-year-old conservative African-American Democrat by the name of Nat Bates,  was defeated and the top — 
   
  Kiely: This is  just this past November you’re talking about?  
   
  Early: Yeah, Nov. 8.  He’s been on the council for four decades, the leading — 
   
  Kiely: Yes, and  he figures largely in your book.  
    
  A  new generation  
   
  Early: Yeah. Yeah,  well, he ran for mayor two years ago and it was assumed that he was going to be  a shoo-in for reelection. I think he’s been on the council for close to 40  years. And he lost. I mean, he was on the wrong side of rent control. And the  top vote getter was Melvin Willis, who’s 26  years old, was inspired to run by Bernie Sanders, was endorsed by Bernie’s  post-campaign organization, Our Revolution, was the leading campaigner in  Richmond for rent control that was passed on Nov. 8 here by a 2-to-1 margin,  and who’s been a community organizer for the last four years for the Alliance  of Californians for Community Empowerment, the successor to ACORN. And so I  think that’s really a generational shift in the city that’s tremendously  significant. Because in the past, politicians like Bates were able to take  corporate money. They were able basically to race bait their white leftist  opponents. They were able to rally the black community with a kind of reverse  dog-whistle politics. And that started to fail two years ago and it really  flopped this year.  
   
  Kiely: You talk  in the book, or some of the people you talk to in the book talk about ceding  their leadership roles in the progressive alliance to younger people because  they worried that they were perceived as kind of these white outsiders. What is  happening there and does that  
  tension still exist and do you think they’ve  negotiated it successfully?  
               
              There’s  been a wonderful and successful and really inspiring generational passing of  the torch. 
   
  Early: No, I think  there’s been a wonderful and successful and really inspiring generational  passing of the torch within the organization as well. Our two successful city  council candidates this fall, Melvin Willis, who I just mentioned, and Ben Choi, who’s a fellow  planning commission member and environmentalist — they were both part of the  new RPA steering committee elected about a year ago. It’s predominantly — that  body is now predominantly people of color and women. And again, it’s very rare  that in a political organization on the left, people in leadership who built an  organization are willing to turn the reins over to a new generation. I mean, we  see a lot of dysfunctional organizational behavior flowing from founder  syndrome problems. We see certainly in the labor movement, unions I’ve worked  with for years, too much leadership concentrated among people who are in their 50s,  60s, even 70s. And so this is a very important model for an organization to  kind of reinvent itself, recruit new people, become more diverse. And I think  that had positive electoral impact this fall as well. I mean, it’s a little  hard to bait the Richmond Progressive Alliance as the Richmond Plantation  Alliance when the candidate slate is people of color and, you know, in one case  a Richmond native. So I think the outsider baiting has subsided as the  composition of the leadership of the organization has changed.  
    
  Rent  control  
   
  Kiely: And what  do you see happening in the future? Is the Chevron influence tamed or is it a  sleeping giant? What’s it doing in Richmond these days?  
   
  Early: Well, Chevron  kind of stepped back this election cycle. There was, thanks to the reporting of  Moyers and many others, tremendous public opinion backlash against its huge  amount of independent spending on the council races and the mayor’s election  two years ago. The company really did get a lot of bad press for that. It was criticized  by some shareholders. This time around, they ceded the field to the landlord  lobby. The big corporate spender this fall in Richmond was the California  Apartment Association and related real-estate interests that spent hundreds of  thousands of dollars unsuccessfully trying to defeat rent control. And by a  2-to-1 margin, voters made Richmond one of the first cities in 30 years to  reintroduce, or to introduce rent regulation and a new form of legal protection  against eviction of tenants without just cause. 
   
  Kiely: So that  was a ballot measure in the City of Richmond?  
   
  Early: Yes. And it was  a ballot measure that was necessary because after the city council  democratically by a majority vote introduced rent control a year ago, the  Apartment Association, as I describe in the book, went out and spent tens of  thousands of dollars on paid canvassers and they got enough signatures to  nullify the city council’s adoption of rent control, which forced us to put it  on the ballot and run a referendum campaign. And it’s an 80 percent non-white  city, predominantly poor and working class with rising rents, and so this was a  very, very popular issue and the landlord lobby was defeated. So one of the  challenges going forward is creating an effective rent control board and making  this important stopgap measure a first step in the direction of greater housing  affordability, which ultimately requires building more low-income housing, not  just restraining rent hikes. 
    
  A  vibrant local media  
   
  Kiely: You’ve  mentioned the media coverage and I wanted to ask you a little bit about that.  Reading your book, it sounded to me like Richmond just had a plethora of local  news outlets, some of them funded by Chevron, but others, the Berkeley site of  course, and then it sounded like there were some other local sites. Is it  unusual in that respect, from your experience, and how important was that?  
   
  Early: Yeah, well, we  do benefit from our proximity to the University of California journalism school  and they have a wonderful community journalism project called the Richmond  Confidential, which is essentially an online community newspaper. And every  semester, we get a new crop of enterprising young would-be student journalists  who cover the city, and as was the case two years ago, they did some of the  best investigative reporting on Chevron’s political spending and other election  issues. This year they’ve covered the rent-control fight. And I think it’s a  great experience both for the young journalists in training who get to write  for the Richmond Confidential and the city benefits  from coverage that you’re not going to get from the San Francisco Chronicle or the East Bay Times, which is a kind of a countywide daily newspaper  and part of a corporate-owned chain. 
              We also have a  monthly community newspaper hardcopy called the Richmond Pulse. That is  a wonderful outlet for Richmond-based young people — black, Latino, Asian — who  write about the city themselves. They’re not in journalism school. They’re in  high school or going to Contra Costa Community College or they’re working, and  under the leadership of a wonderful editor by the name of Malcolm Marshall,  they put out a great and very lively community newspaper. 
              The Chevron news  site that you mentioned, Richmond Standard, has been much criticized by  media watchdogs because it does present itself somewhat deceptively as a source  of news and commentary that’s nonpartisan, when in fact it is funded, as the  site acknowledges, by Chevron and is a mouthpiece for its own views about local  politics and policy questions. 
   
  Kiely: And it  sounded like there were some local bloggers as well?  
   
  Early: We have a  mayor, Tom Butt, who is a very prolific blogger and commentator on local  politics. We have another site called Radio Free Richmond, again, more  conservative, tends to side with Chevron more on environmental issues and is  more critical of the progressive movement in the city. So yeah, I think  Richmond benefits from a variety of political voices, and thanks to the  internet, they’re able to get their message, for better or worse, out to many  people and people can pick through the competing versions [laughs] of local  reality and choose the one that fits their own experience best. 
    
  Public  campaign financing  
   
  Kiely: Do you  feel that this experience can be replicated, and if so, what would the handbook  look like? What would you tell people who say, “I’d like to do something like  that in my community?”  
              Given  the contacts that we’ve had recently from people in other cities in California  and out of state, there definitely is a lot of interest in the Richmond model.” 
   
  Early: Well, I think  given the contacts that we’ve had recently from people in other cities in  California and out of state, there definitely is a lot of interest in the  Richmond model. And I think it can be replicated. One key thing that people  need to do in other places, however, is do more than just get involved in  elections every two years. What has made the Richmond Progressive Alliance  effective is its year-round program of organizing on a multitude of issues. It  functions as a membership organization. People pay dues, they elect a steering  committee, they go to meetings, they participate in committees and they do this  all the time. They don’t just come together as kind of a pickup team in  election years and run candidates. They’re holding those candidates accountable  and they’re starting much earlier than electoral political campaigners do in  many other places when there is a vote coming up. 
              The other  dividing line really between Richmond progressives and their opponents, both  liberal, centrist and more conservative, is that the RPA candidates do not  accept corporate contributions, no business donations. And that has really  helped distinguish them from the rest of the pack, both in this most recent  election and the 2014 election. People respect the fact that our candidates are  corporate-free. They may disagree with them on particular issues but they know  that their votes are not going to be influenced by the landlord lobby, by big  oil, big soda, big banks — whoever is banging away on something in Richmond  that they don’t like.  
              The other thing  that makes it possible for people here to run and win, refusing the usual  source of campaign funding, is a program of public financing, partial public  financing, where if you raise $25,000 in private donations, you qualify as a  city council or mayoral candidate for $30,000 in city funds. So it’s not the  most generous match in the world, but having a program like that is a very,  very important reform for people in other cities who want to try to replicate  the electoral success of the RPA.  
   
  Kiely: And how  long has that program been in place?  
   
  Early: That’s been in  effect for about a decade now. And, you know, it was controversial initially.  Those who have tried to shut it down argue that it’s a drain on the treasury.  Actually, the expenditures are not that great because a number of candidates  who run don’t have a significant enough grass-roots base of their own to be  able to raise enough money to quality for the incremental matching grants. 
   
     
   
              Author and  retired labor organizer Steve Early (Photo by Robert Gumpert) 
   
  Kiely: So it  sounds like what you’re describing is a very active community in which the  political results are kind of the side effect of a very active community rather  than someone who went out and started to try to get a political result and  developed community around it.  
   
  Early: Yeah. I think  that the other interesting organizational feature of the RPA is it’s kind of a  hybrid organization. There’s about 300-400 individual dues-paying members, but  there’s also organizational affiliates, several local environmental  organizations, Communities for a Better Environment, the Asian  Pacific Environmental Network. There’s also several unions that have  a representative on the steering committee. So I think that there’s an attempt  to be an umbrella organization, not to replicate the work of existing  single-issue groups, but to keep them in a coalition structure that’s going to  make everybody stronger.  
   
  Kiely: Okay. Any  single moral of the story you’d like readers to take away?  
   
  Early: I think we have  to do this kind of work in more places, as hard as it is, because if we don’t  create a progressive populist alternative that’s multiracial and working  class-oriented, we’ve just seen on Nov. 8 who fills that void and what fills  that vacuum and it’s not pretty and we’re going to be suffering greatly from it  for the next four years due to what’s coming out of Washington. So I think  communities like Richmond are going to continue to be a beacon of light and  hope and hopefully creating more models for the kinds of public policies that  in more places over time will be adopted at the state and federal level. 
     
   
  Kathy Kiely 
   
  Kathy Kiely, a Washington,  DC-based journalist and teacher, has reported and edited national politics for  a number of news organizations, including USA TODAY, National Journal, The New York Daily News and The Houston Post. She been involved  in the coverage of every presidential campaign since 1980.
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