Sheng Thao

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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. [17] [18] 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] [19] [20]

During the campaign, Thao related her own experiences, including childhood poverty, surviving domestic violence as a young adult, and being a renter, to her campaign for increasing funding for the Department of Violence Prevention in Oakland, increasing access to affordable housing and reducing homelessness. [21] [22]

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. [23] By the end of the campaign, Thao and Taylor were considered to be the two front-runners. [24]

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, and the staffer was fired after refusing to work on Thao's campaign. [25] [26] Thao denied the allegations and the ethics commission opened an investigation in June 2022. [25] After the matter was reported by a political blogger that supported one of Thao's competitors in October 2022, the allegations gained media attention. [26] [25]

On November 18, 2022, Thao won the election by 677 votes through a rank-choice voting system. [1] On November 22, 2022, the margin of victory increased to 682 votes, and her opponent Councilmember Loren Taylor conceded. [27] [21] A recount was formally requested, but the required funding was not raised for the costs. [28] Thao stated she supported the recount. [29]

Mayoralty

Thao took office on January 9, 2023. [30] 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 unhoused residents, hiring more police officers, and increasing spending for education and violence prevention programs. [1] [31] [32]

After a law firm hired during the previous year by the City of Oakland released an investigative report on January 18, 2023, alleging misconduct in the Oakland police department, Thao placed Oakland Police Chief LeRonne Armstrong on administrative leave on January 19. [33] [34] 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. [33] Thao fired Armstrong on February 15, 2023, [34] and indicated she had lost confidence in his ability to reform the police department. [35]

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. [36] [37] In April 2023, the team president announced an agreement to buy land for a stadium in Las Vegas. [36] [37] On April 20, Thao indicated she was open to continuing negotiations despite the announcement by the team. [37] 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. [38]

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. [39] [40] 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. [41] [42]

In September 2023, Thao announced $2.5 million in more funding for the 911 response system. [43] [44] 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, as well as a grant application deadline that was missed by her administration for funding to increase efforts to counteract retail theft. [45]

Personal life

Thao has lived in Oakland during her entire adulthood. [8] She lives with her partner, Andre, and their two children. When she served on the Oakland City Council, she was one of three council members who rented their home. [46] She is the first renter to be elected as Oakland's mayor. [1]

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References

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Sheng Thao
Mayor-Thao-Headshot (3x4a).jpg
Thao in 2022
51st Mayor of Oakland
Assumed office
January 9, 2023
Political offices
Preceded by Mayor of Oakland
2023–present
Incumbent