News

DSA SF Calls for Day of Action Against GOP Tax Scam

Comrades,

Last week, at the end of the disastrous first year of the Trump presidency, the GOP’s long-waged war on the poor reached its most egregious stage yet, exposing their ruthless agenda to millions of Americans. Capitalism, and the violence it begets, are poised for an unprecedented assault on our paychecks, our healthcare, our education, our homes (should we ever have the privilege of affording one), and what little security still exists for millions of working and even middle-class families. This bill is pure evil. It puts an untenable burden on working people and they know it.

This is class war.

Larry Summers, the Nobel Laureate who served as Secretary of the Treasury for Bill Clinton and economic advisor to Barack Obama, predicted on Monday that 10,000 people per year would die as a direct result of this legislation, if it becomes law. Progressive organizations have placed the estimated number far higher.

The Republican Party is becoming ever more shamelessly plutocratic. Their tax bill does not even pretend to offer anything to the vast majority of Americans. Got a private jet? There’s an exemption for that. But if you’re a grad student making under $30,000 per year, your tax rates will go up 400%. They want to take the money you need to survive and give it to billionaires. They want to kill you to make people so rich that their children’s children will never have to work a day if they don’t feel the need to be just a little richer.

It has also created an unprecedented opportunity. For increasingly many of our friends and neighbors, the veil is dropping. They know, as we do, that this is not just about Trump. The GOP has been working toward this day for generations. The Democrats have revealed themselves unwilling to fight for working people’s interests. We must fight for each other.

We must fight back.

For the last year, across the country, we have been busily building the necessary infrastructure for national action. No organization is better poised to make both the case against capitalism, and a vision for a future free of brutal exploitation by the wealthiest citizens of this country, a part of the national discourse. Now is the time to center our politics in the fight for a better future.

Therefore, we are asking that DSA chapters join us in protest on December 15. We propose a national day of action in opposition to this nightmare bill. We must stop this monstrosity while we still have the chance – and show the ruling class that we won’t take this lying down. We must change the nature of the dialogue. And we must prepare ourselves for the long fight ahead, should it pass, because make no mistake, as the deficits rise the GOP and their ultra-wealthy puppet-masters will be coming for Medicare and Social Security next.

The time for an unapologetic class struggle is now, and we socialists must be at the fore. A day of action will show our enemies in Washington what we’re capable of. Together, from the largest city to the smallest town to college campuses across the country, we work within our communities to build alternatives, organize resistance, and to provide hope, even in these stressful times, that another world is possible. Let’s make our presence known.

In Solidarity,
Democratic Socialists of America, San Francisco

Sign up and share

RSVP for the national event: https://www.facebook.com/events/158754068211543/
RSVP for the rally in San Francisco: https://www.facebook.com/events/377357829376724/

Housing justiceNews

SF Right To Counsel Ballot Measure Kickoff

A coalition of tenant groups, neighborhood leaders, and senior advocates gathered on December 2nd  at the San Francisco Tenants Union to kick off the SF Right To Counsel Ballot Measure signature gathering. We’re working towards putting an historic initiative on the June 2018 ballot that would give all tenants faced with eviction the right to legal representation.

DSA San Francisco, along with SF Tenants Union, Neighbors United, Harvey Milk LGBT Democratic Club, #SaveMidtown, and many others are committed to gathering 17,000 signatures to put the measure on the June 2018 ballot.

Get involved!

Upcoming trainings:
December 9, starting at 11am
350 Alabama Street

Office hours at DSA SF headquarters:
3pm-7pm Monday – Friday
350 Alabama Street

Email jencsnyder(at)gmail.com for more!

News

DSA SF makes early endorsements for June 2018 elections

 

On November 18, 2017, the San Francisco Democratic Socialists of America (DSA SF) gathered in a special meeting to consider early electoral endorsements for the June 5, 2018 elections.

The chapter voted overwhelmingly to endorse the No Eviction Without Representation city ballot initiative, the San Francisco Arts and Families Funding city ballot initiative, and Gayle McLaughlin for California Lieutenant Governor.

At over 500 dues-paying local members, most of whom are under age 35, DSA SF has quickly become one of the largest active, independent political organizations in the city. DSA knows that electoral politics is just one of a variety of tactics, and we also know that you cannot reform capitalism into socialism. Therefore, endorsements are made on the strict condition that the campaign is able to build working class power or weaken the parasitic effects of capitalism.

 

No Eviction Without Representation Initiative

The No Eviction Without Representation ballot initiative, proposed by Dean Preston of Tenants Together, would make San Francisco the first city in California with a universal right to civil counsel for tenants facing eviction. It would require the city to fully fund legal representation for all San Francisco tenants who receive an eviction notice, regardless of their age, income, medical status, housing type, or how long they have lived in San Francisco.

After the ballot initiative was filed, two elected San Francisco supervisors claimed, in what has been described as a “political power play by City Hall politicians desperate to try to derail a citizens’ ballot initiative,” to be introducing a bill to create a right to counsel through legislation at the Board of Supervisors.

Unfortunately, they have not yet released the text of their proposed legislation and have made statements that indicate it will be a limited, watered-down bill that does not create a universal right to counsel. DSA SF is proud to stand with tenant advocates in supporting the No Eviction Without Representation ballot initiative to create a universal right to counsel for tenants facing eviction.

More information on the initiative, including donation and volunteer information, can be found at www.sfrighttocounsel.com.

 

San Francisco Arts and Family Funding Initiative

The soon-to-be-filed San Francisco Arts and Family Funding ballot initiative, co-authored by community activist Tony Kelly, would restore allocations of a portion of the City’s Hotel Tax to funding the arts, with an emphasis on greatly expanding the Cultural Equity Endowment for artists and arts organizations focused on under-served populations. It also creates allocations to a new Neighborhood Arts Program, a new Cultural Districts Stabilization Fund, and a new Ending Family Homelessness Fund. It would not raise the hotel tax.

The Ending Family Homelessness Fund would provide $50 million over four years for subsidies and case management programs to house homeless families, provide services to low-income families at risk of becoming homeless, and to develop, rehabilitate, and acquire new housing for homeless families.

This initiative follows in the footsteps of the very similar 2016 Proposition S, which received 63.71% of the vote but nonetheless failed under the old rule that initiatives dedicating specific funding needed a 2/3 majority vote. However, under an August 2017 California Supreme Court ruling, this new initiative requires only a simple majority vote to pass.

 

Gayle McLaughlin for California Lieutenant Governor

DSA SF is proud to endorse Gayle McLaughlin for California Lieutenant Governor. Gayle is the former two-term Mayor of Richmond, a co-founder of the Richmond Progressive Alliance, and a socialist who believes in the collective democratic control of the institutions of our society.

As Mayor and a co-founder of the RPA, Gayle led the city to pass the first rent control law in California in 30 years, increase the minimum wage, reduce homicides 75% in 8 years, sue Chevron for hurting the population and force it to pay an additional $7.5 million (averaged) in taxes per year, and promoted Community Choice Aggregation resulting in 85% of homeowners and businesses receiving greener, cheaper energy.

Gayle also prioritized the interests of Richmond residents and families, advocating for residents evicted by banks and speculators and approving policies to hold Wall Street accountable. Gayle proudly stood up for her community with Richmond CARES (Community Action to Restore Equity and Stability), the foreclosure prevention program that seeks to acquire underwater mortgages in Richmond from the banks (either through voluntarily sales or through eminent domain) so the City can refinance the loans for the homeowners with reduced principals in line with current home values.

Gayle is running as an independent (“No Party Preference”) candidate, and faces a top-two primary against several corporate-funded Democrats on June 5, 2018. Full information about Gayle’s campaign, including donation and volunteer information, can be found on her campaign website.

Housing justiceNews

DSA SF Stands With Save Midtown

Midtown should have been a triumph. In its heyday, the unique community homeownership cooperative was a model for how cities and their less advantaged citizens could work together to find creative solutions to housing challenges.

It was supposed to offer those things our capitalist, for-profit housing system so seldom provides: stability, affordable rents, community self-determination and a path to ownership for its predominantly black tenants. Instead what followed was a half century of broken promises and bureaucratic neglect, culminating in the most stinging betrayal of all: the city wants to tear the Midtown Park Apartments down.

Yet the residents aren’t going down without a fight. In response to plans to demolish their home, as well as new rental rates that threaten the sustainability of Midtown’s community even if it remains, the residents have kicked off the longest rent strike in San Francisco history. Save Midtown, the group organizing the protest, has been withholding rent since 2015. Their demands of the city are simple: keep your promise, don’t tear down Midtown, and let it continue as a unique tenant-controlled space where the community, not faceless bureaucracy, can set rents and meet its own needs.

DSA SF stands with Save Midtown, and has been showing up to support them at rallies and community forums, including a recent hearing on demolition that local Supervisor London Breed couldn’t even be bothered to attend. For a full rundown of that meeting, and more context on Midtown and why this fight matters, check out this article in the San Francisco Phoenix from a DSA member that was there.

If you’re interested in joining the fight to save Midtown, contact our Housing Committee at housing@dsasf.org to find out how to get involved.

HomelessnessJusticeNews

#NoTasersSF – Police Commission Vote

Friday, November 3 marked the fifth vote on “conducted energy devices” in the last decade and a half, and perhaps the most contentious — met with large-scale protests from our chapter, the Frisco 500, Coalition on Homelessness, Do No Harm Coalition, and many more.

After 7 hours of protest, public comment that was overwhelmingly against the adoption of tasers, and a series of underhanded bureaucratic action, the police commission voted against the will of the community to give SFPD tasers.

You can read a long form account of the action here.

News

North Bay Fire Donation Drive

Starting October 8th, 15 wildfires broke out in the North Bay forcing 20,000 people to evacuate. We responded with a donation drive to bring material aid to evacuation shelters in Sonoma County. What started as a one day drop-off turned into a fully staffed four day effort that ended in 4 car loads and $500 donated to the Santa Rosa IWW.

HomelessnessNews

Fighting the pointless “chop shop” bill.

We showed up to oppose the “chop shop” ordinance, introduced earlier this year. This bill authorizes the arbitrary confiscation of property from our most vulnerable citizens, those living on the city streets, and does nothing to stem bike theft.

The bill continues to target individuals rather than organized operations, and create an opaque bureaucracy with no real due process. Shifting the enforcement of this law from SFPD to DPW does nothing more than change the uniforms of the City employees conducting unconstitutional seizures; it does nothing to change the fundamental unfairness and cruelty of this bill. It allows the DPW to act as judge and jury of citizens’ claims to the property they possess and maintain. It creates a storage and paperwork nightmare for the already overworked department. It is a civil asset forfeiture bill that will subject our citizens to unwarranted, unconstitutional seizures.

Many San Francisco citizens, homeless or otherwise, depend on bicycles for transportation and the conduct of their work. Their use of public space to repair their vehicles infringes upon no other citizens’ rights. This ordinance would create a framework for arbitrary enforcement of a law for the convenience of the DPW, at the expense of people who are already subject to routine harassment, dispossession, and administrative citation.

The existence of illegal bicycle sales operations is not in dispute, with thousands of bicycles reported stolen in San Francisco annually. However, the city already has the means to address illegal bicycle trafficking, including the SAFE Bike serial number registry and laws prohibiting semi-permanent operations blocking public spaces.

This ordinance will have little impact on bike theft but will serve as another tool of abuse against the poorest among us. It will deepen the class divides in a city already riven by inequality and a profound housing and transportation crisis.

JusticeNews

SFPD Does Not Need Tasers

DSA SF has joined a coalition of community groups in standing up and fighting back against a push from the right-wing San Francisco Police Officer’s Association to equip the San Francisco Police Department with deadly Taser weapons, and we need your help! Reuters has reported that over 1,000 people have been killed by police using Tasers, and we’ve seen some of those deaths occur here in the Bay Area, including a man killed by police using Tasers in Oakland this Fall. Studies show that Tasers don’t reduce police shootings, they simply add another weapon to the arsenal, at a time when we should be focusing on de-escalation tactics and community-led violence reduction programs that actually work.

Tasers, like all police violence, target the most vulnerable members of our community, including the poor, the unhoused, people of color, and those experiencing physical or mental health crises. DSA SF is committed to standing in solidarity with the poor and working class against police violence and racism.

DSA SF members have been organizing with community groups, researching Taser studies, and meeting with members of the San Francisco Police Commission, the body that will ultimately decide whether or not to allow the police to carry electroshock weapons. The Commission hastily arranged two “community meetings” on Tasers, and despite the lack of publicity or lead time, many DSA SF members turned out to both meetings. Although the stated goal of the meetings was to seek feedback from the public, uniformed and armed officers were on hand to push back against any criticism of Tasers. DSA SF members acquitted themselves well, armed with knowledge against anecdotes, and refused to back down.

DSA SF has begun collecting postcards to send to the Police Commission, to demonstrate, once and for all, that the community wants less violence, not more weapons. Look for these cards at our events and please make your voice heard! DSA SF members have also been showing up to Police Commission meetings, and will keep showing up, and ratcheting up the pressure. The vote on Tasers may happen as early as November, and we’ll need all hands on deck. Please, join us!

 

For more information and updates, contact: justice@dsasf.org

To tell the Police Commission you don’t want these weapons, email them at: sfpd.commission@sfgov.org

Or call: 415 837-7070

Additional ResourcesResources

KPFA radio

KPFA radio (94.1FM and online at KPFA.org) features listener sponsored programming, much of which is relevant to the interests and goals of DSA.  Programs of special interest include:

Economic Update, hosted on Friday mornings at 10am PST by economics professor Richard D. Wolff.  Professor Wolff and his guests “discuss the current state of the economy, locally and globally. The program explores alternative ways to organize, markets, and government policies.”