Английская Википедия:2018 San Francisco Board of Education election

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Шаблон:Short description Шаблон:Use mdy dates The 2018 election for the San Francisco Board of Education was held on November 6, 2018, to elect the next three commissioners for the San Francisco Board of Education.

Background

The 2018 San Francisco Board of Education election drew 19 candidates, which was "the most crowded in recent memory" according to San Francisco Chronicle.[1] They originally competed for two seats, with Commissioners Shamann Walton and Hydra Mendoza declining to seek re-election.[2] Walton ran for the District 10 seat on the San Francisco Board of Supervisors[3] while Mendoza opted out for a job with New York State Education Department.[2][4] Mendoza's last meeting was in the end of September 2018.[4] On October 15, 2018, Mayor of San Francisco London Breed appointed candidate Faauuga Moliga to fill Mendoza's seat for the remaining three months of her term.[5] Moliga was the first Pacific Islander to serve as a citywide official.[6]

Commissioner Emily Murase did not file for reelection in the 2018 San Francisco Board of Education race.[7] This opened up a third seat for the election.[1]

Candidates

On September 10, 2018, candidate Josephine Zhao withdrew from the race amid the resurfacing of previous racist, homophobic, and transphobic remarks made in Cantonese. Zhao was considered a leading candidate, as she fundraised more than her opponents and had support from many prominent San Francisco political figures.[14][15] Her withdrawal, however, came after the deadline to withdraw; she still appeared on the ballot, and on October 13 supporters of Zhao canvassed at the district's annual enrollment fair.[16]

Election

Endorsements

The San Francisco Examiner endorsed Alison Collins, Gabriela López, and Faauuga Moliga.[17] The San Francisco Chronicle endorsed Phil Kim, Michelle Parker, and Alida Fisher.[18] The Bay Area Reporter endorsed Martin Rawlings-Fein, Mia Satya, and Faauuga Moliga.[19] The San Francisco Bay Guardian endorsed Allison Collins, Faauuga Molina, and Li Miao Lovett.[20]

Mayor London Breed endorsed Faauuga Moliga, Michelle Parker, Monica Chinchilla, and Josephine Zhao.[5][21]

Results

On November 6, 2018, San Francisco residents chose three new members for the Board from among nineteen candidates, with Alison Collins, Gabriela López, and Faauuga Moliga being elected with the most votes.

Lopez became the first bilingual Spanish speaker and youngest woman ever elected to the school board.[22]

2018 San Francisco Board of Education election results[23]
Candidate Ballots cast Percentage
Alison Collins 122,865 15.02%
Gabriela López 112,299 13.73%
Faauuga Moliga 107,989 13.2%
Phil Kim 76,017 9.29%
Michelle Parker 65,740 8.04%
Li Miao Lovett 61,412 7.51%
John Trasviña 46,601 5.7%
Alida Fisher 37,735 4.61%
Monica Chinchilla 34,193 4.18%
Lenette Thompson 30,496 3.73%
Josephine Zhao 27,761 3.39%
Mia Satya 17,540 2.14%
Paul Kangas 13,967 1.71%
Martin Rawlings-Fein 12,950 1.58%
Darron A. Padilla 12,439 1.52%
Connor Krone 12,251 1.5%
Roger Sinasohn 12,018 1.47%
Lex Leifheit 9,605 1.17%
Phillip Marcel House 2,491 0.3%
Write-in 1,551 0.19%
Total 817,920 100%
Under votes 282,075
Over votes 16,041

Special appointment to replace Matt Haney

Commissioner Matt Haney was elected to the San Francisco Board of Supervisors in the concurrent 2018 San Francisco Board of Supervisors election in November 2018,[12] which allowed Mayor London Breed to appoint his replacement for the remainder of his term.[6] Haney had recommended that either a Chinese or transgender candidate replace him.[12]

On November 14, 2018, the Bay Area Reporter published an editorial pushing for Breed to appoint Mia Satya, who had placed 12th in the election, to the open seat, arguing that "it's time for the mayor to appoint a trans person" due to Breed's previous lack of queer appointees.[24] On January 22, 2019, Breed appointed Jenny Lam to Haney's seat on the board. Lam, who had been the Mayor's education adviser for the prior three months, is a social justice advocate as well as a parent and a second generation Chinese-American.[12] It was Breed's fourth appointment as mayor[24] and brought forth questions of potential conflict of interests between having a commissioner who also is serving as education advisor under the mayor. A similar incident occurred when Mayor Gavin Newsom's education advisor Hydra Mendoza was elected to the Board of Education in 2006.[25] Mendoza later became Mayor Ed Lee's education advisor while remaining on the Board of Education.[2]

References