Monday, November 16, 2009

Women Leaders Support

Women Leaders Unite in Support of Das Williams for State Assembly

Local Santa Barbara City Councilmember Das Williams reports today that his campaign for the 35th Assembly District has received the endorsements of numerous California women leaders thus far:

  • Patricia Bellasalma, President, California NOW*
  • Linda Joplin, former President, California NOW*
  • Janice Rocco, Southwest Regional Director of NOW*
  • Six Former Presidents of the Santa Barbara Women's Political Committee:
    • Assemblymember Hannah-Beth Jackson (ret.)
    • Santa Barbara Mayor Marty Blum
    • Santa Barbara Mayor Elect Helene Schneider
    • Goleta City Councilmember Margaret Connell
    • Sharon Hoshida, Former Director of the UC Santa Barbara Women's Center
    • Janet Barron, President, Ventura County NOW

In announcing their support of Das' campaign, leaders cited his record of support on women's issues and his years of involvement in campaigns and other movements to increase equality, close the gender gap, protect women's rights, and create more opportunities for women to succeed.

"For years, Das Williams has been a leader on women's issues," said Patty Bellasalma, President of California NOW. "There is no other candidate in this race that has fought harder on our issues than Das Williams."

Bellasalma added "Women in this state need more than just one-issue candidates right now. To advance the fight for women's equality, we need principled leaders who have experience balancing budgets and fighting for health care, education, and jobs - - leaders who have a proven track record of standing up for women. Das has that history and is that person."

Das Williams has long been a staunch advocate for women. He serves as one of only two male national board members of NOW, helped start the Women's Economic Justice Conference, which is a yearly event that focuses on empowering women in low-wage jobs and led to the creation of South Oxnard's Centro Mujer. As a City Councilmember, Das helped lead the charge to increase Santa Barbara's commitment to youth and children, including the provision of free child care in Downtown, Westside, and Eastside Schools in the summer. Das has also worked to elect some of Santa Barbara's most prominent women leaders such Assemblywoman Hannah-Beth Jackson, Santa Barbara Mayor Elect Helene Schneider, Goleta City Councilmember Margaret Connell, and Santa Barbara County Supervisor Doreen Farr.

"I am honored to have the endorsements of so many women leaders," said Das. "I have fought hard both in my political and personal life for women's rights and opportunities, and I will continue to advocate on their behalf in the State Assembly."

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Friday, November 06, 2009

Marta Jorgensen Endorses Das

Marta Jorgensen, candidate for Congress (24th CA), has announced her endorsement of Das for California State Assembly District 35.



( Marta Jorgensen image courtesy of Jorgensen For Congress )


[ From: Jorgensen for Congress 2010 endorses Williams for Assembly District 35, by Robert Cuthbert, Central Coast Democrat Examiner, November 3, 2009 ]


Today, Marta Jorgensen candidate for Congress (24th CA), announced her endorsement of Das Williams for California State Assembly District 35.

Marta Jorgensen stunned long time political activists in the 2008 Democratic Primary when she defeated politically established candidates. She lost the general election to long time Republican incumbent Elton Gallegly.

"I heartily endorse Das for State Assembly for our 35th Assembly District,’ said Jorgensen. “His work on Measure C has been a real inspiration. I feel he will give his all to the job. We need to repair the broken government in Sacramento and I believe Das will work toward that goal."

Jorgensen, who has known Williams for some time, was impressed with his leadership in Ventura County on development issues. Measure C is a City of Ventura ballot measure banning retail stores, with floor space over 90,000 square feet, to sell groceries. The intent of the measure is to prevent big-box sprawl.

Williams is seeking the 35th Assembly seat being vacated by Pedro Nava due to term limits. The assembly candidate was elected to the Santa Barbara City Council in November 2003, then re-elected November in 2007. The 35th Assembly District is solidly Democratic making the real race the 2010 Primary.

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Thursday, October 22, 2009

Appreciations

Dear Friends,

I would like to extend my deepest thanks and appreciation to everyone who helped make our event in Ventura last Saturday a success. It was great to see some old friends and supporters as well as meet so many new folks from Ventura. I believe that one of the most important things I can do in this campaign is reach out to folks face-to-face. Listening and learning more about people's concerns and priorities and sharing my vision for winning real solutions to our greatest challenges is what will help make this campaign a success.

I know that positive change and real progress will only be achieved by working together. That is why I am truly honored and inspired by everyone who has helped to build this campaign with their ideas, hard work, encouragement and support. I would like to give a special thanks to George Roberts and Jan Standing-Roberts for opening up their home for this event; Assemblywoman Hannah-Beth Jackson, Debbie Golden, Vice President of the Ventura Unified School District Board of Education; Former Ventura County Supervisor Susan Lacey; Ed Lacey; Nan Waltman, and the Sheet Metal Workers.

If you missed the event there will be many more opportunities in the months to come. I encourage you to stay in touch with me on Facebook, my blog or by email at das.williams2010@gmail.com as the campaign progresses. Thanks again and I look foward to working together to get California back on track.

-- Das

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Thursday, October 08, 2009

Fundraiser October 17th

You are cordially invited to a meet and greet fundraising event in support of Das Williams for State Assembly District 35, at the home of George Roberts and Jan Standing-Roberts on Saturday October 17th from 2PM to 4PM at 7020 Etna Court, Ventura, CA.

Come meet Das and lend your support!

Das added: "... several prominent Ventura County friends and supporters are hosting a meet and greet fundraiser in support of my campaign. I urge everyone to attend. It is a great opportunity to meet me and learn more about my vision for our state and community."

Hosted by:

-- Assemblymember Hannah-Beth Jackson (ret.)
-- Debbie Golden, Vice President, Board of Education, Ventura Unified School District
-- Susan Lacey, former Ventura County Supervisor
-- Ed Lacey
-- George Roberts and Jan Standing-Roberts
-- Nan Waltman

Please RSVP to:  das.williams2010@gmail.com

Suggested Contribution Levels:

Sponsor: $1000
Co-Sponsor: $500
Supporter: $250
Guest: $50

If you would like to make a contribution but are unable to attend, contributions can also be mailed to:

Das Williams for Assembly 2010
PO Box 22557
Santa Barbara, CA 93121
FPPC # 1316591

Das at the EDC, August 2009

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Wednesday, September 23, 2009

Longshore and Warehouse Union Endorse

[ From: "Longshore and Warehouse Union Endorses Williams for Assembly - Local 46 is the latest labor group to support the candidate," By Christopher Patterson, Noozehawk, 09.17.2009 ]


Assembly candidate Das Williams announced Wednesday that his campaign has received the endorsement of the International Longshore and Warehouse Union Local 46.

Local 46, which represents longshoreman and warehouse workers at Port of Hueneme, joins several other unions that already have announced support for Williams.

“I am so grateful to have received such an overwhelming amount of support from local labor in this race,” Williams said. “I’ve worked hard on the Santa Barbara City Council to create jobs and opportunities for our working families, and I will continue to fight for them in the Assembly.”

Williams is running to succeed termed-out Assemblyman Pedro Nava in 2010.

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Friday, September 18, 2009

Clash in Ventura

[ From: Assembly Candidates Clash in Ventura By Tony Biasotti, Ventura County Star, September 17, 2009 - please view original posting for full text, podcast and comments ]


... two of the three candidates for California’s 35th District Assembly seat tangled in a lively debate in Ventura.

Democrat Das Williams, a Santa Barbara city councilman, and Republican Mike Stoker, a former Santa Barbara County supervisor, focused on the state government’s fiscal problems and the best way to balance the budget and restore the quality of public schools...

... Williams and Stoker took turns speaking before a small breakfast crowd, and then faced off in a question-and-answer session in which they frequently talked over each other and challenged each other’s answers. When it was nearly over, Williams joked, “Next time we’ll put on some gloves.”

Williams and Stoker are both Ventura County natives and veterans of Santa Barbara County politics, and both pointed to their records in local government as signs of how they would vote in the Legislature. Both claimed credit for streamlining local government and balancing budgets in tough times — Williams during the current recession and Stoker in the early 1990s.

When the talk turned to the problems that plague the state, though, their differences were clear. Stoker said the state’s budget crisis is a spending issue, and could be solved with a return to the policy in effect in the 1980s, which tied increases in state spending to inflation and population growth. He also advocated cutting the work force of all state agencies by 10 percent.

State spending, Stoker pointed out, is about 40 percent more than it was when Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger took office in 2003.

“Did you see a 40 percent increase in California in your state getting better, in your schools getting better, in your roads getting better?” Stoker asked.

Williams said he doesn’t support a spending cap, and said the state needs some spending cuts but also more revenue. Higher taxes on tobacco and alcohol would raise billions of dollars that could offset the deficit and reverse some of the recent cuts to schools, he said.

The most important thing, Williams said, is funding public schools well enough to return California to the top of the nation in education.

“I believe the state has made a significant error in cutting public education,” he said. “It’s short-sighted. ... It’s not just something for kids, it’s an investment in our business climate in the long run.”

...


Das with Nephew, 2008, reading a family favorite: "Frog and Toad Are Friends"

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Tuesday, September 15, 2009

Das is Pro Oil ?

Das recently replied to a comment on his Facebook page about where he stood on the Tranquillon [trank-E-on] Ridge Project:

Pedro [Nava] and Susan [Jordan, his wife] are intentionally misleading people on this issue and playing political games. My position is the same as Congresswoman Lois Capps, the local chapter of the Sierra Club, and every local environmentalist in SB County (except for Susan and Pedro). We want to get rid of oil drilling - both existing and new. I opposed the Governor's legislation and I oppose the latest legislative attempt by Republican leader Sam Blakeslee. I think it is absolutely ridiculous to call the Santa Barbara environmental community pro oil for trying to bring a REAL end to oil drilling.

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Friday, September 11, 2009

SBPOA Endorse Das

Press Release, 9/10/2009: Santa Barbara Police Officers Association Endorses Das Williams for Assembly


SANTA BARBARA, CA – Santa Barbara City Councilman Das Williams today announced that his campaign for the 35th Assembly District received the endorsement of the Santa Barbara Police Officers Association (SBPOA), which represents 130 sworn police officers in the Santa Barbara area.

“Das Wiliams’ experience and solid track record on public safety issues are the reasons why Santa Barbara’s police officers support his candidacy in this race,” said Charles McChesney, president of SBPOA. “In the midst of city budget deficits, Das Williams found a way to maintain local law enforcement and other vital public services, and has consistently demonstrated a clear and unwavering commitment to keeping our communities safe. Das Williams is unquestionably the most qualified individual to represent this District, and I am calling on all of our region’s public safety officials to join SBPOA in supporting his campaign.”

SBPOA is one of dozens of organizations, unions, and other notable state and local leaders to have endorsed Das Williams for Assembly since his campaign kick-off announcement just two months ago.

“I am deeply honored to have the support of rank-and-file police officers who put their lives on the line every day for the people of this state,” said Das Williams. “I know that government has no more important responsibility than to make sure its citizens are safe, and in the Assembly I’ll continue to fight hard to ensure that public safety officials have the resources they need to protect our streets and neighborhoods and return home to their families at the end of each day.”

Das Williams is running to succeed termed-out Assemblymember Pedro Nava in 2010.


####


Das Williams grew up on the Central Coast and is a product of local public schools. In 2003, Das Williams became the youngest person ever to be elected to the Santa Barbara City Council, and was re-elected in 2007. Das has worked as a teacher, a policy aide for former Assemblywoman Hannah-Beth Jackson, and a community organizer working to stop the development of a Wal-Mart in Ventura and enact local living wage laws in Santa Barbara and Ventura. Das serves on the Peabody Charter School Board and is a national board member of the National Organization for Women (NOW). Das received his undergraduate degree from the University of California, Berkeley and holds a graduate degree in Environmental Science & Management from the University of California, Santa Barbara.

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Thursday, September 03, 2009

Special Reception 9/18/2009

A message from Das:

I would like to cordially invite you to join myself, friends and supporters at a special reception in support of my campaign for California State Assembly District 35. The reception will take place in the beautiful Santa Barbara Riviera on September 18th 2009 from 5:30 to 7:30PM. The address will be provided upon RSVP.

Please RSVP to das.williams2010@gmail.com

I would like to thank the following sponsors for their generous support:

Adrianne and Andrew Davis
John Bahura
Mike Getto
Oreana Winery
Fernand and Ingrid Sarrat
Jan and Joanna Von Yurt
Judy and Rob Egenolf

Sponsor: $1000 Co-Sponsor: $500 Guest: $100

If you would like to make a contribution, but are unable to attend please click:

Das Campaign Donations via Act Blue

Contributions can also be mailed to:

Das Williams for Assembly 2010
PO Box 22557
Santa Barbara, CA 93121
FPPC # 1316591
Sincerely,

Das

Paid for by Das Williams for Assembly 2010 FPPC# 1316591

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Tuesday, September 01, 2009

Strong Labor Support

A Message from Das:

I would like to take a moment to share some exciting news about my campaign and extend an invitation to an upcoming event.

I am proud to announce the recent endorsements my campaign has received from several prominent local labor unions. As a Santa Barbara City Councilmember, I have successfully fought for working families, fair wages and worked towards building a strong economy in our community. In the Assembly, I will continue to fight to create good paying jobs and make investing in the green economy of the 21st century a priority. Please see the official announcement below.


Labor Comes Out Strong in Support of Das Williams for Assembly

SANTA BARBARA, CA August 18, 2009 - Local Santa Barbara City Councilman Das Williams today announced that his campaign for the 35th Assembly District has received the endorsements of a number of key local labor organizations:

International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers Local 952
International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers Local 413
International Brotherhood of Teamsters Local 186
Ironworkers Local 433
Plumbers & Steamfitters Local 484
Sheet Metal Workers International Association Local 273
Southwest Regional Council of Carpenters
UA Plumbers & Pipefitters Local 114

Labor leaders, in citing their reasons for supporting Das' campaign for the assembly, pointed to his long record of success in creating local jobs and opportunities for working families. Labor leaders hailed Das' approach to governing and applauded his efforts to build the green economy of the 21st century. Das Williams has been at the forefront of efforts to fund energy efficiency projects, invest in renewable energy technologies like solar power, expand local public transportation, and create affordable middle-income housing in downtown Santa Barbara.

"Das Williams doesn't just talk about creating jobs, he makes it happen," said Steve Weiner, Executive Secretary-Treasurer of the Tri-Counties Building & Construction Trades Council, AFL-CIO. "In the midst of the toughest economic times we have ever faced, it is absolutely critical that we elect experienced leaders like Das, who will bring fresh ideas, innovative vision and new energy to Sacramento. As a Santa Barbara City Councilman, Das found ways to balance the City budget while protecting vital services, avoiding layoffs and continuing to invest in projects that create good paying green jobs for hard working middle class families. That's exactly the type of representative we need in Sacramento."

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Tuesday, August 04, 2009

85% vs. 22%

[ From: "AD-35: Williams Emphasizes Local Fundraising, Goes on the Offensive," by: David Atkins (thereisnospoon), CALITICS, Mon Aug 03, 2009 ]


Full disclosure: I have endorsed Das Williams, but do not have any official involvement in the campaign. I am attempting to cover this race as evenhandedly as possible.

In my previous analysis of the AD-35 primary race, I included the competing press releases between the Williams and Jordan campaigns. The gist of the issue was that while Jordan's release emphasized a $10,500 advantage in cash on hand and $1,600 advantage in total funds raised, the Williams campaign emphasized the $12,500 personal loan made by Jordan to her own campaign to give those numbers a boost. Also noted was the attempt by the Williams campaign to portray Jordan, despite her having held no elected office in the past, as a Sacramento pol, even as the Jordan campaign painted Williams as untrustworthy, opportunistic and overly aggressive and ambitious.

Williams' latest press release is already doubling down on this campaign theme, emphasizing the comparatively large number of donations coming to Jordan from outside the district, compared to Williams. And it is a staggeringly wide discrepancy to the tune of 85% to 22%:


Santa Barbara, CA - Following recent reports of strong early financial numbers, Assembly Candidate Das Williams today released the following comments regarding a breakdown of contributions that shows 85 percent of his campaign's donations come from within the 35th Assembly district, while his main opponent, Susan Jordan, received only 22 percent of her contributions from district sources:
"I'm humbled by the outpouring of local grassroots support and enthusiasm about my candidacy," said Williams. "Voters are ready for a new vision, new direction and new priorities."

As of the June 30th reporting deadline, Das Williams for Assembly raised over $120,000 - with no personal loans and no unpaid debt to report.

Das Williams is running to succeed Assemblymember Pedro Nava who will be termed out in 2010.

Das Williams grew up on the Central Coast and is a product of local public schools. In 2003, he became the youngest person ever to be elected to the Santa Barbara City Council, and was re-elected in 2007. Das has worked as a teacher, a policy aide for former Assemblywoman Hannah-Beth Jackson, and a community organizer who worked to stop the development of a Wal-Mart in Ventura and enact local living wage laws in Santa Barbara and Ventura. Das serves on the Peabody Charter School Board and is a national board member of the National Organization for Women (NOW). Das received his undergraduate degree from the University of California at Berkeley and holds a graduate degree in Environmental Science & Management from the University of California at Santa Barbara.


This is a risky strategy for Williams. The numbers are impressive, certainly, and reinforce the idea that Jordan is leveraging statewide connections rather than local chops. But it's also the second aggressive release from the Williams campaign in a couple of days, and will do nothing to dispel the negative image helpful to the Jordan campaign of Mr. Williams as a back-climbing career politician. At this early stage, the question seems to be: will the Williams campaign gain on substance from surprisingly good fundraising and strong local support, or lose on tone from negativity?

With no publicly available poll numbers yet, only time will tell.

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Sunday, August 02, 2009

Campaigns Fundraising

Both Das' and Susan Jordan's campaign war chests are basically even at present time. Although Ms. Jordan has slightly more cash on-hand, Das raised more funds per day since entering the race for the 35th Assembly District and without taking any loans out. The exact figures for the mandatory reporting period are as follows:

Susan Jordan for Assembly 2010
Reporting period: 01/01/2009 - 06/30/2009
Contributions from this period: $124,129.00
Expenditures from this period: $11,006.82
Ending cash: $119,228.07

Das Williams for Assembly 2010
Reporting period: 01/01/2009 - 06/30/2009
Contributions from this period: $122,656.08
Expenditures from this period: $13,988.46
Ending cash: $108,767.62


Please read on, below. An article by David Atkins is followed by campaign statements from both Das' campaign staff and Susan Jordans:


[ From: "CA-35 Update," by David Atkins (thereisnospoon), posted at Calitics.com, Sat Aug 01, 2009 ]

One of the many flaws of California's term limits law is that it creates needless conflict and enmity between would-be allies each vying to do their part to make the State a better place, as each candidate is forced to abandon a job they have just barely learned, to campaign for a different job. Conflicts arise in this perpetual game of musical chairs, accountability is minimal, and activists are left in a jam deciding whom to support.

Nowhere is this more apparent than in AD-35, where Assemblymember Pedro Nava has been termed out, forcing a run at the Attorney General job. The power vacuum left by in Nava's absence has opened the field for two impressive candidates, both of whom are well-liked in the district: Susan Jordan, Mr. Nava's wife and co-founder of the California Coastal Protection Network (CCPN) and Vote The Coast, and Das Williams, Santa Barbara City Councilman and longtime community activist through CAUSE as their legislative analyst. Williams also serves as a national board member of the National Organization for Women, and is on the Peabody Charter School Board.

The Republican banner will be carried by former Santa Barbara County Supervisor Mike Stoker. However, given the 20-point voter registration advantage favoring Democrats in the district, the winner of the Democratic primary is almost certain to hold this safe Democratic seat.

Most activists here in the Ventura and Santa Barbara areas know each of these individuals well, and have worked with them on multiple issues. As the race intensifies, it is painful for many to make a choice between them, and many have avoided doing so to date. I personally have endorsed Mr. Williams, having worked with him on a number of different issues here already in less than a year of local activism, while my contact with Ms. Jordan has been more limited.

Each candidate has amassed a long list of endorsers (in-fighting remains about who exactly has endorsed whom at this point, adding to the confusion), and a large number remain on the fence. Ms. Jordan's biggest ally, obviously, is Assemblymember Nava; Mr. Williams, however, counters with the almost equally hard-hitting support of Hannah-Beth Jackson, whom he served as Chief of Staff in the SD-19 2008 election.

On a personal level, there is already significant rancor between the two sides: while both have promised a positive campaign, and neither candidate has made overt attacks on the other, various operatives have been busy attempting to earn support with some negative charges. Williams is extremely active in the community and had expected to be next in line for the spot; his backers have hinted at nepotism between Nava and Jordan; Jordan backers paint Das as overly ambitious and opportunistic because Williams previously ran unsuccessfully for Supervisor, because of his comparative youth at 34 years of age, and because many say that Williams had told them earlier in the year that he would not run for the seat. Williams is in his second term on the Santa Barbara City Council, and will be termed out -- needlessly adding increased stakes under the guise of "reform" through term limits.

Also an issue in the race is the vaunted PXP drilling: during the early days of the proposed deal, Williams backed a variety of local environmental organizations in supporting the deal. Jordan and Nava were opposed, due to precedent and the belief, later reinforced by various agencies, that the deal's sunset provision would be unenforceable. The deal eventually became the famous statewide issue it is today. It will sure to be a major attack avenue against Mr. Williams by Ms. Jordan.

To date, the race is playing out similar to the Clinton-Obama primary war in a battle between youth/change and experience/responsibility -- but with an added wrinkle. While Mr. Williams is young, he also boasts greater experience in elected office, particularly in the field of balancing budgets, an issue particularly crucial to Assembly candidates. Mr. Williams has repeatedly referenced Santa Barbara's continued balanced budgets as proof of his ability to make difficult budget choices in a progressive fashion in a tough economic environment, and contrasted his record in Santa Barbara with that of the legislature in Sacramento (somewhat unfairly, as the SB city council is not hamstrung by a 2/3 rule). Ms. Jordan, meanwhile, will be running ostensibly (and probably unfairly) to the left of Mr. Williams on environmental issues, will be leveraging her longstanding statewide activism, and will portray herself as something of an outsider to the political process despite her connection with Mr. Nava, while attempting to frame Mr. Williams as a career politician.

It is in this somewhat unpleasant context that the Williams campaign released their surprisingly strong fundraising numbers yesterday evening (the Jordan campaign released its own press release this afternoon.) While it was expected that Ms. Jordan would outraise Mr. Williams due to greater large-scale institutional support and an earlier head start (including a high-profile fundraiser at the home of Pierce Brosnan), the campaigns are essentially even in terms of fundraising, with each campaign spinning the numbers as coming out in their favor: the Williams campaign is emphasizing Jordan's $12,000 loan to her own campaign to even up the numbers, while the Jordan campaign is emphasizing its $10,000 advantage in cash on hand.

The full text of the competing press releases follows below the fold:


Local Santa Barbara City Councilman Das Williams Outraises Main Opponent In Campaign for Assembly District 35

Santa Barbara, CA - Showing that local residents are looking for a new kind of elected leader in Sacramento, local Santa Barbara City Councilman Das Williams today reports having raised over $120,000 in his campaign for Assembly District 35 as of the June 30th reporting deadline. In significantly less time, Das Williams outraised his main opponent Susan Jordan - wife of the District's current Assemblymember Pedro Nava - who raised $110,000.

Das' strong financial showing complements his already strong grassroots network and growing list of local endorsers and supporters.

"Das Williams raised more money than Susan Jordan in just half the time," said campaign spokesperson Josh Pulliam. "Loaded with a $12,500 personal loan and strapped with unpaid debt, Susan Jordan's financial report comes straight out of the same Sacramento playbook that brought us a historic budget crisis. These financial reports illustrate that voters in the district are ready for change. As a local councilmember, Das already represents nearly a quarter of the Assembly District, and today's numbers prove that he's going to have the necessary resources to mount a successful campaign."

Das Williams is campaigning to succeed termed-out Assemblymember Pedro Nava.

Das Williams grew up on the Central Coast and is a product of local public schools. In 2003, Das Williams became the youngest person ever to be elected to the Santa Barbara City Council, and was re-elected in 2007. Das has worked as a teacher, a policy aide for former Assemblywoman Hannah-Beth Jackson, and a community organizer working to stop the development of a Wal-Mart in Ventura and enact local living wage laws in Santa Barbara and Ventura. Das serves on the Peabody Charter School Board and is a national board member of the National Organization for Women (NOW). Das received his undergraduate degree from the University of California at Berkeley and holds a graduate degree in Environmental Science & Management from the University of California at Santa Barbara.


Jordan Shows Strong Support for Assembly District 35 Race

"Never before has it been so important that we make fundamental changes to the way of doing business in Sacramento. The voters know that fixing the problems won't be easy, and it will take someone with experience, integrity and determination to stand up to the special interests," said Assembly candidate Susan Jordan. "The people in Santa Barbara and Ventura counties who encouraged me to run have backed up their encouragement with campaign contributions. In my first run for elective office, I am inspired by their early show of support."

Jordan leads fundraising for the primary election, which will be held June 8, 2010, with an impressive $124,129 raised between January 1 and June 30. Jordan notes that she is very fiscally conservative, spent little during that period, and has $119,228.07 cash on hand.

Jordan added, "I am deeply honored to have the help of so many local and statewide leaders who have placed their trust in my abilities to get the job done, including Santa Barbara County Supervisor Janet Wolf, Oxnard Mayor Tom Holden, Oxnard City Council members Bryan MacDonald and Dr. Irene Pinkard, Former State Senator Sheila Kuehl, Former Santa Barbara County Supervisor Susan Rose, Former Santa Barbara Mayor Harriet Miller, and many more."

Jordan is an award-winning environmental leader, a successful business woman, health advocate and mother with 15 years of experience working to protect the coastline of Santa Barbara and Ventura counties - and for all of California. As a former Chair of the Santa Barbara County Planning Commission, Jordan tackled regional planning concerns with an analytical and balanced approach. After leaving her business career, Jordan founded the California Coastal Protection Network (CCPN) in 1999 and serves as its executive director. CCPN is considered one of the most effective environmental advocacy organizations in the state and Jordan has received numerous awards for her precedent-setting work.

Jordan is being challenged by Das Williams. Williams initially supported Jordan, and stated in the Santa Barbara Independent that he would not run and that his own personal ambitions would have to take a back seat for the "greater good of the community," while praising Jordan's environmental credentials and statewide connections. Williams and Jordan split largely over the issue of offshore oil drilling, with Williams supporting a proposal to open the coast to new drilling, while Jordan opposed it. Jordan is leading a statewide coalition of more than 60 groups who oppose the governor's efforts to approve the first new offshore oil lease in state waters in 40 years.

"As I walk this district, people tell me that they want someone in Sacramento who has life experience and can be trusted to stand up to special interests and address the serious challenges facing our state, our economy and our livelihoods. This is a responsibility I take to heart. I will not let them down," said Jordan.

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Friday, July 31, 2009

Campaign Kick-Off Pics


Thursday, July 23, 2009

Das Announcement Video

Video of Das' Announcement:



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Thursday, July 16, 2009

Early Endorsements

[ From: "Local Elected Leaders Endorse Assembly Candidate Das Williams
Supporters include several of Santa Barbara's county supervisors and City Council members ," By Christopher Patterson | Published on 07.15.2009


Only a little more than a week after officially announcing his candidacy for the 35th Assembly District, Santa Barbara City Councilman Das Williams announced Wednesday that he has received a number of early endorsements from local elected leaders, including:


» Santa Barbara County Supervisor Salud Carbajal

» Santa Barbara County Supervisor Doreen Farr

» Santa Barbara Mayor Marty Blum

» Santa Barbara City Councilman Roger Horton

» Santa Barbara City Councilman Grant House

» Santa Barbara City Councilwoman Helene Schneider

» Ventura County Supervisor Steve Bennett

» Former Ventura County Supervisor Susan Lacey

» Ventura City Councilman Brian Brennan

» Carpinteria City Councilwoman Kathleen Reddington

» Carpinteria City Vice Mayor Al Clark

» Goleta City Councilman Ed Easton

» Goleta City Councilman Michael Bennett

» Goleta City Councilwoman Margaret Connell

» Oxnard Mayor Pro Tem Andres Herrera

Supporters cited Williams’ history of experience on a variety of key issues such as education, protecting the environment and balancing city budgets, as well as his deep roots in the district and his track record for leadership.

“I am endorsing Das Williams for Assembly because he will be this community’s strongest and most effective advocate in our state’s Capitol,” Blum said. “As somebody who has worked with Das on many key issues affecting our region — from balancing city budgets to protecting the environment, from public safety to education — I know firsthand that Das Williams has the right balance of experience, innovative leadership and is focused on finding solutions to our toughest challenges.”

Carbajal added: “Hardworking Californians here and everywhere are struggling right now. Das Williams understands our community and what people are going through. He is exactly the type of leader we need in Sacramento, he will fight for us.”

“I am truly honored to have earned the support of so many of our area’s local elected leaders,” Williams said. “These endorsements show that this community is ready for new leadership that will put California back on the right track by bringing a new energy, a renewed commitment to Democratic values, innovative problem-solving and personal responsibility that is missing in Sacramento’s broken political system.”

Assembly District 35 is currently represented by Assemblyman Pedro Nava, who is termed out in 2010.

Williams grew up on the Central Coast. In 2003, he became the youngest person ever to be elected to the Santa Barbara City Council, and was re-elected in 2007.

He has worked as a teacher, a policy aide for former Assemblywoman Hannah-Beth Jackson, and a community organizer working to stop the development of a Wal-Mart in Ventura and enact local living wage laws in Santa Barbara and Ventura.

Williams serves on the Peabody Charter School Board and is a national board member of the National Organization for Women.


— Christopher Patterson represents the Das Williams Campaign for Assembly District 35

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Thursday, July 09, 2009

Das Announces


Das Announces 4

[ From: "Race For 35th Assembly District Heats Up," KEYT-TV, July 7, 2009 - SEE VIDEO ]


Ventura, CA-- There are now two democrats in the primary race for the 35th District Assembly.

Santa Barbara City Councilman Das Williams formally announced his candidacy on Monday morning in Ventura and in Santa Barabara.

Williams, who is no stranger to politics believes his time is now "because the decisions being made in Sacramento are putting our state and region in dire straits."

Also running on the democratic ticket is Susan Jordan, wife of current 35th Assemblyman Pedro Nava. Term limits prevent Jordan's husband, Pedro Nava from running for the same seat.
.
Williams says he wants to fight for education, the environment and labor. He also says he wants to stop the gridlock in Sacramento.

The winner of the June primary in 2010 will likely run against former Santa Barbara County Supervisor Mike Stoker. The republican announced his candidacy in May.

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Das Announces 3

[ From: "Williams makes assembly run official," By Eric Lindberg, DAILY SOUND, July 7, 2009]


Das Williams made official yesterday what had been presumed for months in local political circles — he is running for the 35th District State Assembly seat next year.

The Santa Barbara councilmember hopes to beat out challenger Susan Jordan in the Democratic primary and face off against the Republican nominee in the race to succeed termed-out Assemblymember Pedro Nava.

“I am running for the State Assembly because I believe we can no longer follow this same broken path and expect real change,” he said in a campaign statement. “We need to reprioritize and refocus, holding true to our progressive values of creating educational opportunities for our kids, protecting our coastline and ensuring that the burden of our economic recovery isn’t shouldered on our most vulnerable citizens.”

He kicked off his campaign with two official announcements, one at a school in Ventura and another at a fire station in Santa Barbara. Williams has served on the council since 2003 and was re-elected to another term two years ago.

He has already secured the endorsements of Hannah-Bath Jackson, a former assemblymember who employed Williams early in his political career as a policy aide, and Ventura County Supervisor Steve Bennett.

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Das Announces 2

[ From: "Santa Barbara City Councilman makes run for Assembly," Reported by Melissa Mecija, KSBY-TV, Tuesday, July 7, 2009 ]


Santa Barbara City Councilman Das Williams officially declares his candidacy for State Assembly in the 35th District.

In 2003, Williams became the youngest person ever to be elected to the Santa Barbara City Council. He says his main priorities include protecting public education and fixing the state's fiscal crisis. Williams is a Democrat who grew up in the Santa Barbara area.

"This is my home. It's in my blood. I can't just go to Sacramento and disappearing and having an understanding that when you make decisions up there in Sacramento, it has effets for kids and people here at home. I think that's really fundamental," Williams said.

Williams will be running against longtime businesswoman and community advocate, Susan Jordan, the wife of current Assemblyman Pedro Nava. He will also square off against Republican Mike Stoker, an attorney and former Santa Barbara County Supervisor.

The 35th District covers part of Ventura and Santa Barbara Counties.

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Das Announces 1

[ From: "Das Williams Kicks Off Campaign for 35th District Assembly Seat - The candidate says that despite tough times at the state level, there is still a way to 'get things done'" written by Giana Magnoli, Noozhawk, 07.07.2009 ]





Das Williams, with Santa Barbara Mayor Marty Blum and county Supervisor Salud Carbajal by his side, announces his candidacy on Monday for the California 35th District Assembly seat. (Giana Magnoli / Noozhawk photo)


Williams, a second-term member of the Santa Barbara City Council, announced his candidacy for the Assembly on Monday. Surrounded by a group of supporters at Fire Station No. 3 on East Sola Street, he started his second news conference of the day at least 15 minutes early and quickly got down to business.

“As a local City Council member and activist in Ventura, I have seen firsthand how the state’s displaced priorities and budget cuts have wreaked havoc in our communities,” he said. The 35th District includes parts of Ventura and Santa Barbara counties.

Working in “that madhouse in Sacramento” would be his opportunity to protect public education, fair wages, safety, the environment and the economy on a local level, Williams said.

“I know all too well that Sacramento is broken,” he said. “When Sacramento is broken, bad things happen to real people.”

Though Williams’ core issues of education, the environment and the economy are repeated in many candidates’ campaigns, he said he relies on his experience to do most of the talking.

On the City Council, he helped balance the city’s budget to enact $10 million worth of changes. Councilmembers tried to protect “basic” programs and services such as public safety, parks and recreation and education without creating the need for layoffs, he said.

“Even in the most challenging of times, there is still a way to get things done,” he said. “There’s no reason we can’t get them done in Sacramento as well.”

Though state government has given tax breaks and loopholes to corporations “so big oil and tobacco can get richer while everyone else gets by on less,” Williams believes that one person can make a difference in resolving state budget issues and representing local areas one vote at a time.

“Now is the time for action, for new ideas and for new energy,” he said. “Now is the time for leadership that puts local communities first and has renewed focus on just getting some basic things done.”

His first priority, if elected, would be to contain the damage to the public education system, he said. His education experience, outside of politics, includes years as a local teacher and involvement with the Peabody Charter School board.

Williams hopes his history of environmentalism will contribute to his votes in the Capitol, as well. He said the difference between a 20th- and 21th-century environmentalist translates not only to saying no to things such as offshore drilling, but saying yes to opportunities such as alternative energy, green jobs and transportation issues.

Campaign plans for Williams include strong fundraising, much like his second-term City Council run, and a mixture of new media and more traditional methods. While he has profiles on Twitter and Facebook, walking miles of sidewalk to meet local residents face to face is his main goal.

“I know I look younger than I am, so it makes it more important to talk to people face to face so they know that I have experience, that I’m not just some kid,” Williams said.

Former Assemblymember Hannah-Beth Jackson introduced Williams with strong words of support, emphasizing his “right mix” of experience, energy, leadership and commitment to his local community.

“He has an independent and no-nonsense approach to issues affecting the community,” she said.

Williams is running against fellow Democratic candidate Susan Jordan, wife of incumbent Pedro Nava, and Republican Mike Stoker.

Many people have drawn comparisons between the two Democrats, especially in their priorities of education and environmentalism, but Williams said his experience gives him the edge.

“You can tell everybody anything you want until you actually have to vote on a budget; that proves the priorities that you have,” he said. “To me, it’s more than talking about an issue; it’s about having background dealing with an issue like education, budgets or public safety.”

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Friday, June 26, 2009

Mike Stoker Responds

In case you did not see this press release from Mike Stoker, please read on...

-----------------------------------

From: Mike Stoker for Assembly 2010
Re: Endorsement of Hanna Beth Jackson of Das Williams
Date: June 24, 2009
Contact; Mike Stoker (805) 478-4975


The following is a statement Mike Stoker released today commenting on the endorsement of Hanna Beth Jackson of SB City Councilman Das Williams:

"I congratulate Das on his endorsement by Hanna Beth Jackson. However it should be noted that Hanna Beth has been dubbed the Queen of Taxes and hence the nickname Taxin Jackson. has picked up the endorsement form the Queen of Taxes herself, Taxin Jackson. And Das has been following in her footsteps ever since his first job for Hanna Beth as one of her field representatives.

[Forced paragraph break by DAS Blog]

This is exactly why I decided to run for office so the voters would have a choice of more of the same by politicians who want to keep taking money out of our pocketbook's which is what Das and Hanna Beth believe we should do vs. getting a reality check and pursuing policies that will require the state to live within its means. (I issued a statement last month expressing specifying what real solutions the state should pursue at this time and will provide to you upon request to mikestoker@aol.com.)

[Forced paragraph break by DAS Blog]

Bottom line, me and the vast majority of people in the 35th Assembly District get it and we all voted no to Prop. 1A-1E last month in the special election. (67% voted NO!) Taxin Jackson and her young protege Das Williams didn't get, and still don't, and voted yes. Should we be surprised that Das has teamed up with Taxin Jackson to make his run for the Assembly seat? Absolutely not. I would have been shocked if Taxin Jackson supported anyone other than Das. The race really comes down to two choices....more of the same that got our state into this mess or real solutions requiring fiscal restraint and spending caps as to restore California to the prosperous state it once was?"

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Tuesday, June 23, 2009

Hannah-Beth Jackson 4 DAS

A Message from Assemblywoman Hannah-Beth Jackson (Ret.):

PLEASE JOIN ME IN SUPPORTING DAS WILLIAMS
FOR STATE ASSEMBLY



Dear Friends,

California is in a time of crisis. As the state faces a growing budget deficit, cuts to schools, a shrinking economy and continued environmental challenges, we need a State Assemblymember who can face these challenges head-on and bring real change to Sacramento.

That is why I urge you to join me in supporting Das Williams for California State Assembly District 35.

I was honored to represent the 35th District for 6 years, and I know that Das has the right experience and leadership to be an effective advocate for our interests in Sacramento. I have known and worked with Das for over a decade -- working on issues ranging from the environment and education to economic justice and women’s rights. As a Santa Barbara City Councilmember, he understands first-hand how decisions-made-in-Sacramento affect people in their daily lives.

Das has taken an independent, results-oriented approach while on the Santa Barbara City Council. Under his leadership, the city has balanced budgets, saved for the future, and expanded after-school programs. Das spearheaded initiatives that have made Santa Barbara a model green city, while working with many up and down the Central Coast to protect local businesses and jobs; ensuring working folks get fair and equal pay. It is this kind of innovative and creative leadership that Das will bring to Sacramento.

Das will bring new energy, new ideas, and a renewed commitment to the Democratic values reflective in our community -- values which are desperately needed in Sacramento.

Das’ campaign for the Assembly is in a critical stage. Das is already off to a strong start. We need to maintain momentum by continuing to show that his supporters are willing to step up to the plate with the dollars that are necessary to run a winning campaign. The first deadline to donate is June 30, 2009.

Use the ActBlue form below to make a contribution today. Help bring new energy, new ideas, and real change to Sacramento by donating today.

Sincerely,


Assemblywoman Hannah-Beth Jackson (Ret.)



My contribution: $






P.S. Please spread the word to your friends, family and neighbors by forwarding this message.

For more information about the campaign and volunteer opportunities please email Das at daswilliams2010@gmail.com - Das is also on Facebook and Twitter

Hanna-Beth and Das Working Together, 2003

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Friday, June 19, 2009

Williams - Stoker Videos

PlanetSantaBarbara.com has two half hour interviews with Das and Mike Stoker. Take the following link and then go to the section "Politics":

Williams - Stoker Videos

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Wednesday, June 03, 2009

Calculated Drag

Mike Stoker, Republican contender for the 35th Assembly District seat, thinks... his low-tax, less-government, pro-business, “100 percent economic agenda” will hold strong crossover appeal for independents and moderate Democrats in the district.

... Stoker’s betting on a stars-are-aligned political calculus to beat the odds and pull off an upset in 2010. For starters, there is a contested primary on the other side, which will require both [Susan] Jordan and [Das] Williams to spend money and other resources to get to the general election, an obstacle course Stoker likely will be spared.

Because 2010 is not a presidential election year, when voter turnout peaks, he believes he’ll also benefit from low vote totals in the liberal districts around Isla Vista and UCSB, giving the overall electorate a more centrist cast. Finally, he points to 2004, the last contested election race for an open seat in the 35th district, when Republican Bob Pohl made a competitive run, eventually losing 52.8-47.2 percent to Nava. In that race, Pohl’s final percentage was more than 15 points higher than GOP registration that year, while Nava ran about eight points ahead of his party on the Democratic side; from Stoker’s perspective, this means that Pohl captured about twice as many independent/decline-to-state voters as his rival.

... The problem for the Republican, however, is that since the 2004 race, the gap in partisan registration has accelerated even more, with the GOP’s registration level falling further behind the Democrats’ in just six years. But Stoker believes that the results of the May 19 special election, in which voters overwhelmingly defeated five state budget ballot initiatives sponsored by Gov. Schwarzenegger and the Democratic leadership of the Legislature, clearly signal a political sea change... Armed with this political prognosis, Stoker will try to position himself as the agent of change, portraying either Jordan or Williams as the status quo candidate of Democratic legislative leaders...

---------------------------

For the full text, images and comments, please go to:

-- "Blue Dog Republican - Mike Stoker Seeks Democratic Votes in GOP Assembly Bid," By Jerry Roberts, SB INDEPENDENT, June 2, 2009

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Sunday, May 31, 2009

Republicans Eye The 35th

... Mike Stoker has embraced [Tony Strickland's] spending cap scheme and intends to hammer it after he launches his candidacy for the 35th District, which he planned to formally announce May 29. Democrat Nava is termed out and has announced plans to vie for state attorney general, and his wife, Susan Jordan, is running for his seat.

Jordan faces a Democratic primary challenge from Das Williams, a Santa Barbara city council member who jumped in the race after state regulators reversed an offshore drilling compromise between environmentalists and an oil firm after Nava – and Jordan – raised objections.

Stoker told the Business Times he sees an opportunity to take the 35th District into the GOP column.

“There’s a big split in the Democratic party between the labor wing and the environmental wing,” he said. “The labor wing likes jobs. The labor wing doesn’t support [economically costly environmental] policies, and the labor wing is what you find in Ventura.”

-- "Assembly fights get serious," by Stephen Nellis, PACIC COAST BUSINESS TIMES, May 29, 2009

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Saturday, May 30, 2009

Stoker in 35th Race

Former Santa Barbara County Supervisor Mike Stoker has enterred the race for the 35th District Assembly seat...

KEYT Video:



See, also:

  • the DAILY SOUND: Stoker Announces Bid

  • the SB INDEPENDENT: Stoker

  • VENTURA COUNTY STAR: 35th


  • The following is from: "Mike Stoker Joins the Race for 35th District Assembly Seat - The former county supervisor says he represents the change needed to get the state back on track," By Lara Cooper, Noozhawk, 05.29.2009

    Former Santa Barbara County Supervisor Mike Stoker announced Friday that he’s entering the race for the 35th District Assembly seat...

    With Friday’s announcement, Stoker joins the race with activist and environmentalist Susan Jordan and City Councilmember Das Williams, whom Stoker said “stand for more of the same and business as usual.”

    He served on the Board of Supervisors from 1986-94, when he said he was instrumental in turning a $20 million deficit into a $10 million surplus, through cost-cutting measures such as laying off nonessential employees...

    When Stoker was asked about his alignment with Greka, a South Coast oil company that has made headlines in the past from uncontained spills, Stoker made no apologies. He said the company owner brought him in, along with a new president, when the company decided they wanted to be a “responsible corporate citizen.”

    He said he’s expecting his opponents to bring up the issue, but said that the company has made huge improvements since he began working with them. “We haven’t had one spill out of containment since January of 2008. I’m proud of that,” he said. Stoker said he also supported PXP, and he welcomes discourse about environmental issues...

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    Tuesday, May 26, 2009

    Assembly 2010

    Dear Friends,

    As many of you know, over the course of the past few months I have been considering whether to become a candidate for the California State Assembly.

    After talking with many of you, I experienced a great sense of urgency and responsibility. I know many of you feel it too. Now, more than ever, we need to take action, stand up for our beloved community and progressive principles and lead our state in a new direction.

    I'm blessed to call the Central Coast home. I was raised here and attended our public schools. Growing up here, I developed a deep respect and passion for the environment. And it was my time working with folks here on dozens of efforts to protect the environment and better the lives of working families that has inspired me to run for the State Assembly in 2010.

    Politicians in Sacramento have put our state in dire straits. For too long, problems have been brushed aside and quick fixes have been favored over long-term solutions. As a Santa Barbara City Councilmember, I have come to know the consequences of Sacramento's failures all too well. Never-ending budget deficits force cities to struggle to provide for even the most basic of needs. Teachers and local schools face the prospect of debilitating layoffs--year after year. Too many hard working families struggle to make ends meet -- juggling skyrocketing health care and college tuition costs, while trying to survive in a shrinking economy. Our environment is threatened and our state has yet to meet its renewable energy potential.

    Yet, in the face of all these challenges, we have accomplished so much in our own community. We have managed to hire needed police officers and expand youth programs to meet the challenge of gang violence. We've fought hard to ensure our brave firefighters have the tools they need to keep our city safe. At the same time, we have done the hard work of balancing our budgets through shared sacrifice. We continue to do our utmost to minimize or avoid layoffs at local schools. I've worked with many community leaders up and down the Central Coast to protect local businesses, jobs and ensure working folks get fair and equal pay. Santa Barbara has become a model green city--we've taken bold steps that will ensure 30% of our energy is from renewable sources by 2011.

    We've proven that we can overcome the challenges we face here at home. With the right energy, passion and hard work, we can overcome the challenges in Sacramento.

    Real progress and change will not come easily and it will certainly not come from one person alone. That is why I need your support in this campaign. Over the course of the next year, I intend to speak personally with people all over the Central Coast, to listen and learn more about the challenges we face and what we can do to overcome them. In the coming months, I will discuss more of my plans and ideas to put our state on the right track.

    We are currently in the beginning stages of the campaign and your support and input is critical. I am honored by the enormous outpouring of encouragement and support that I have received in our local community and it with this support that we can bring change to Sacramento.

    This campaign can only succeed with your support and leadership.

    Sincerely,

    Das Williams



    HOME FUNDRAISING EVENT - SATURDAY MAY 30TH

    Please join Hosts: Stephen and Melissa Murdoch & Abe Powell

    Co-hosts: Barney Bergland, Ken Fahn & Suzanne Perkins

    Sponsors:

    Bob & Carol Bason
    Embody Dance
    Max & Betsy Drucker
    Nancy Goldsholl
    Matthew Stotts & Carol Sacks Stotts
    Councilmember Roger Horton


    Saturday May 30th with live music, food & friends
    from 2-4 PM at the home of Stephen & Melissa Murdoch

    1564 Ramona Ln Montecito, CA

    Co-Host: $1000 Sponsor: $500
    Friend: $100 Guest: $75

    RSVP: das.williams2010@gmail.com

    Signup for Email: Send us an email so we can add you to our supporters list: das.williams2010@gmail.com

    Become a Supporter on Facebook: Das Williams Facebook Page

    Follow me on Twitter: www.twitter.com/daswilliams


    To Make a Contribution to: "Das Williams for Assembly 2010"

    Online: Das Campaign 2010 at ActBlue

    Mail:

    PO Box 22557
    Santa Barbara, CA 93121

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    Thursday, May 21, 2009

    Governor's Oily Surprise

    [ From: "Governor Arnold’s Big Oily Surprise - Disputed Santa Barbara Offshore Oil Deal Makes a Comeback," by Jerry Roberts, SB INDEPENDENT, May 21, 2009 ]


    Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger’s bid to resurrect a defeated plan to authorize a new lease for oil drilling off the Santa Barbara County coast...

    “This hit us out of the blue,” said Linda Krop, chief counsel for the Environmental Defense Center (EDC)...

    That deal, negotiated between the EDC and the Houston-based PXP Energy Company, involved a novel swap to give both sides some of what they wanted: PXP, already drilling in federal waters off the coast near Vandenberg Air Force Base, would gain additional drilling rights in nearby state waters until 2022; in exchange, they agreed to permanently shut down four existing platforms that year, along with a batch of other pro-environment concessions.

    “We’re definitely hearing a whole lot more concern about this process,” Krop said, after a weekend taking the temperature of the enviro community. “We [want] to make sure that whatever process unfolds is fair, and respectful of the various agencies and jurisdictions.”

    ... a consensus among environmentalists seemed to be coalescing in opposition to Arnold’s proposal; opinions remain polarized about the PXP deal itself, however. The dynamic is clear in the Jordan/Das Williams Democratic primary race for Nava’s soon-to-be-vacant seat...

    Williams said he “stands with EDC” in looking for alternative ways to breathe new life into the agreement with PXP, and to address environmental concerns raised by Lands Commission staff. But he added, “It’s not right to sidestep the process just because [the commission vote] didn’t go our way.”

    “My gut feeling is [Schwarzenegger’s plan] is the right thing obtained the wrong way,” he said...

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    Wednesday, May 20, 2009

    Picking Sides

    [ From: "Democrats Pick Sides in 2010 State Assembly Race - Supervisor Endorsements Ring in for Das Williams and Susan Jordan in Sure-to-Be Major Showdown," By Chris Meagher, SB INDEPENDENT, May 20, 2009 ]


    ... Santa Barbara County’s 2nd District Supervisor Janet Wolf... is endorsing Susan Jordan, the wife of the current Assembly seat holder Pedro Nava, who the supervisor called “extremely thorough and very bright.” Wolf’s colleague Doreen Farr, the county’s 3rd District Supervisor, indicated she will be supporting Das Williams, the Santa Barbara City Councilmember who is running against Jordan, and citied Williams' hard work in the community on a number of issues...

    Though he welcomed Farr’s support, Williams, however, wasn’t happy about Wolf’s support of his new opponent. “I’m very disappointed given how closely we’ve worked on a number of issues,” said Williams, who also enjoys the support of 1st District Salud Carbajal and a majority of South Coast city councilmembers...

    ... Farr said that Williams’ understanding of what matters most locally is what drew her support. “Growing up here and being involved, he understands and knows local issues,” Farr said, explaining that he was raised in Isla Vista, knows about the needs of the Santa Ynez Valley (also in Farr’s district), and has a working knowledge of many issues facing the region, such as water supplies. Williams worked hard on Farr’s behalf to get her elected in the fall, walking precincts in Isla Vista...

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    Saturday, May 16, 2009

    Governor's Oil Drilling Plan

    [ From: "Governor keen to revive Santa Barbara oil-drilling plan" By Timm Herdt, Ventura County Star, May 15, 2009 - Podcast of this article ]


    SACRAMENTO — A controversial proposal to allow the first new oil drilling in state waters since the Santa Barbara oil spill 40 years ago has been resurrected by Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger in the revised budget plan he presented to lawmakers this week.

    The proposal, which had been supported by environmental groups in Santa Barbara, was shot down earlier this year on a 2-1 vote of the State Lands Commission.

    Schwarzenegger, who says the Tranquillon Ridge oil lease would generate $1.8 billion in advance royalties to the state over the next 14 years, is seeking legislation as part of any upcoming budget deal that would allow the project to bypass Lands Commission review.

    Under the proposal, the oil company would speed up royalty payments to the state, providing $100 million that could be used to help balance next year’s budget.

    The proposal would allow slant drilling from an existing oil platform in federal waters. The new wells would draw from an oil reservoir beneath state waters.

    As part of its application, the Plains Exploration & Production oil company had agreed to decommission three existing oil platforms and oil-processing facilities in Gaviota in 14 years. That trade-off won the support of traditional offshore-oil foes in Santa Barbara, such as the Environmental Defense Center, whose executives believed the deal provided the means to achieve their ultimate objective: to permanently rid the Santa Barbara coast of oil drilling.

    State Natural Resources Agency Secretary Mike Chrisman said Friday those agreements would stay in place under the administration’s proposal. “A lot of folks in that part of the state put a lot of work into this,” he said. “We think it’s a fair proposal. It generates significant revenues. We think it’s time.”

    The executive director of the Environmental Defense Center, however, said Friday that his group has grave concerns about Schwarzenegger’s proposal because of the precedent it would set in subverting the established environmental review process.

    “The EDC and our clients all believe this continues to be a good deal and should move forward,” said David Landecker. “The procedure is a little frightening, because we believe the process is a good one even if we didn’t get the result we wanted in this case.”

    Assemblyman Pedro Nava, D-Santa Barbara, has been a leading critic of the proposal from the outset and helped lobby the Lands Commission to reject the plan.

    He said he will immediately begin rallying opposition among other legislators who represent coastal districts. “I think it’s important to step up, and step up early.”

    Nava said he anticipates Schwarzenegger will seek to have the drilling plan incorporated into any upcoming budget deal — which means it could be encompassed in what are known as budget “trailer bills,” which typically receive little public review.

    “It is the antithesis of intelligent public policy evaluation,” Nava said. “You completely avoid the public hearing process.”

    Nava said that because of the 1969 oil spill, which is often cited as the event that spurred the creation of the modern environmental movement, Santa Barbara holds a special, symbolic position in the public’s perception of offshore oil drilling. He said the Santa Barbara coast should be treated with the same reverence as the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge in Alaska.

    “My concern is that if you can drill in Santa Barbara, you can drill anywhere in California,” he said. “If you cannot protect the environment in these places, you can’t protect it anywhere.”

    Nava noted Santa Barbara County’s review of the proposal concluded it would increase the risk and severity of oil spills. In addition, testimony from the Attorney General’s Office to the Lands Commission expressed doubt on whether the agreement to terminate drilling activities by 2022 could be “reliably enforced.”

    The issue has created a fracture among Democrats in Santa Barbara County that has spilled over into the political jockeying over who will replace Nava in the Assembly after he is “termed out” next year.

    Susan Jordan, an environmental activist and Nava’s wife, appeared to have a clear path to the nomination. But because of Jordan’s and Nava’s opposition to the project, Santa Barbara Councilman Das Williams rescinded his endorsement of her and announced he will enter the race.

    The two sides remain divided over the merits of the proposal but now appear to be united in their opposition to the end-run approach Schwarzenegger is proposing.

    “It’s problematic that the governor wants to ignore the process,” said Landecker. “Let’s take Cabrillo Port (a proposed liquefied natural gas terminal off the Oxnard coast). The Lands Commission, after days of hearings and listening to hours of testimony, decided it was not a good project, although the decision probably cost the state some revenue.

    “What if, after that decision, the Governor’s Office had said, ‘Let’s overrule it?’ ”

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    Tuesday, April 14, 2009

    Differences

    [ From: "Candidates Test Waters for 35th Seat," By Katie Tullsen, DAILY NEXUS, April 13, 2009 ]


    Though still a year and half away, the race for the 35th District State Assembly seat is heating up as two former political allies prepare to square off...

    Environmentalist Susan Jordan, the wife of current Assemblymember Pedro Nava, was the first candidate to publicly announce...

    Jordan will likely face Santa Barbara City Councilman and UCSB alum Das Williams for the Democratic nomination, but Williams has yet to make an official declaration concerning his rumored candidacy.

    “I have not made an official announcement,” Williams said recently of his intentions in the race. “But I am not denying that I am in the race.”

    ... Though they have been fervent allies on the Santa Barbara political scene in recent years, Jordan and Williams maintain that they offer voters two distinctive candidates with very different professional backgrounds.

    Jordan, for her part, comes with many years of experience in both business and non-profit work. She co-founded the Vote the Coast organization and has been active in California Democratic politics since 1996.

    “My strengths are thirty years of nonprofit advocacy in women’s issues and the environment,” she said. “I will bring a background of both business and advocacy together. These two skills best qualify me to fight for the people in this district.”

    Williams, meanwhile, worked for a few years in the Sacramento legislature and has six years experience serving as a member on the Santa Barbara City Council. Williams, who grew up in and around Santa Barbara, said he believes that a true understanding of the community is key.

    “I stay really close to grassroots,” he said. “I know what’s going on in our community and the community next to us, and I know what’s important to both.”

    Jordan and Williams have slightly different political platforms, yet they both agree that the environment is one of their top three priorities. If elected, Jordan also plans on focusing on healthcare and education, and says that she is concerned with the economy and its effects in this district...

    For his part, Williams’ top three priorities are the environment, public safety and education. He says that he fears that the public education system is being destroyed.

    “I was going to school in 1996 it was $4,000 per quarter,” he said. “And depending on the school district, eight to ten percent of teachers are being pink-slipped. We are underestimating what it will do to our ability to educate kids and have an educated work force. I believe it’s going to take strong leadership to help avoid total destruction of public education system.”

    ... Williams says that his reputation for putting action to his words will aid him in this election.

    “I think I’ve been effective at not being a wishy-washy politician,” he said. “I’ve really pushed hard, and been an advocate and activist myself, rather than just a wishy-washy politician.”

    -----------------------

    For full text, please go to:

    DAILY NEXUS: Candidates Test Waters

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    Tuesday, April 07, 2009

    Why DAS Runs

    Das wrote to SantaBarbarasBlog.com, giving his reasons why he's running for the 35th Assembly District:


    “As I visited teachers last week, and I saw how many were getting laid off, a feeling that had been growing inside me became urgent.

    I know you’ve felt it too, that overwhelming sense of wrong, when we look at our society and realize we’ve truly failed at adequately planning for a future. With a damaged economy, hundreds of teachers being laid off, and our environment in peril, it is an intimidating time to be in government; but a time when it is more important than ever to present solutions for our time.

    I’ve searched my heart and found the truth that I don’t know all the answers, but I have the energy and passion to work on those solutions.

    The challenges of gang violence, fires, and budget deficits have seasoned me, helped to prepare me for this time. In fact I think of these challenges much as a firefighter does: you don’t hope for a fire, but you have to be trained for one.

    The combination of doing legislative work here and in the Capitol, nonprofit advocacy in Ventura County, and City government in Santa Barbara has given me a host of experiences in different policy areas, each one that will help prepare me for a different aspect of serving you. The fire that is consuming this state is a fiscal one, and year after year I have been faced with balancing the needs of parks, public safety, roads, transit, water, waste-water, saving money in disaster reserves, but still investing in our future.

    I have weighed a tough decision, and asked many in the community for their input on it. Do I move on from my public service, retire so to speak (I am prevented by term limits from running a third time), or do I run for the Assembly next year? I’m in the race, and I hope that you can join me.” - Das Williams

    ------------------------------

    To read the posting at SantaBarbarasBlog.com and comments, please go to:

    SantaBarbarasBlog.com » Blog Archive » Das and the 35th Assembly District

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    Friday, April 03, 2009

    Das to Run

    Das will be running for the 35th Assembly District seat currently held by Pedro Nava:

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    Thursday, April 02, 2009

    Das 2 Run

    [ From: "Williams to run for Assembly," By Colby Frazier, DAILY SOUND, April 2, 2009 ]


    Less than a month after organizing an exploratory committee to probe his chances at winning the State Assembly’s 35th District seat, Santa Barbara City Councilmember Das Williams yesterday said he’s decided to officially enter the race.

    The 34 year old, who is serving his final term on the city council and will be termed out in 2011, said his political career is at a crossroads: in one direction, he said retirement awaits, and in the other, the State Assembly.

    “I’ve searched my heart to see if I can continue serving this community or if I should retire, and the way I can continue serving this community is to run for the assembly,” he said. “I feel I have more to give.”

    As it stands, Williams will square off against Democratic colleague and friend, Susan Jordan, who is married to current 35th District Assemblymember Pedro Nava. Nava will be termed out next year.

    When Jordan, 57, declared her intent to seek the seat a few months ago, Williams initially said he’d support her campaign.

    But in January, after the duo fell on different sides of a controversial offshore oil drilling project, rumors swirled that Williams was considering entering the race.

    Those rumors solidified in early February when 1st District County Supervisor Salud Carbajal announced he would “enthusiastically support” Williams if he decided to run.

    Now it’s official, and so far, Williams said he’s received an outpouring of support from the community.

    “I got an overwhelming response,” he said. “The people don’t want me to retire in 2011 and want me to continue serving.”

    Williams, a teacher at Antioch University who at one time taught middle school in Los Angeles, decried recent cuts to public education, saying he doesn’t feel there are enough people at the state level defending education.

    “It’s something that as a teacher I’m really passionate about,” he said.

    If he’s elected, Williams also said he’d like to champion alternative energy causes, an arena he’s had success in at the city level.

    ... If Williams wins the seat, it will cut his final term on the city council short by a year.

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    For full text plus comments, please visit:

    DAILY SOUND: Williams to Run

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    Wednesday, April 01, 2009

    "I'm In"

    [ From: "Das Williams: 'I’m in' - Santa Barbara City Councilman Throws Hat into State Assembly Race," by Jerry Roberts, SB INDEPENDENT, April 1, 2009 ]


    ... Das Williams told The Independent early Wednesday that he will definitely run for the 35th Assembly District seat.

    The decision by the Santa Barbara city councilmember ends months of speculation and sets up a lively Democratic primary battle between two former allies: Williams and environmental attorney Susan Jordan, wife of Pedro Nava, the district’s outgoing incumbent.

    “I don’t want to be coy,” Williams said in an April 1 interview. “I’m in.”

    Williams said he would make a formal announcement of his candidacy “within the next couple of weeks,” and expected to have an impressive list of endorsements at that time. He said that while he has been eyeing a run for the Legislature for several years, he hesitated to jump into this campaign because of his past alliances with Jordan and Nava working on environmental issues.

    Shortly before Jordan announced her candidacy last year, Williams said he met with her and Nava and was very surprised to hear that she was running. At that time, Williams spoke glowingly of Jordan in an interview with The Independent’s Nick Welsh, who reported that Williams “all but endorsed” Jordan for what Williams said then was “the greater community.” One reason for his statement at the time, Williams said Wednesday, was that he was working hard on Hannah-Beth Jackson’s Democratic bid for a state senate seat and didn’t want “to split progressives” in the middle of that campaign.

    “I stand by those comments” in which he praised Jordan, Williams said on Wednesday. But he added that he also told Jordan and Nava “you can run, but I’m going to do it.”

    Williams said that a decisive event in his final decision to run was the action taken by Jordan and Nava in helping to sink a painstakingly negotiated agreement between major environmental groups and Plains Exploration and Production oil company. With most local environmentalists and many elected officials lined up behind the agreement, Nava and Jordan angered many in the progressive community by strongly opposing the plan, which was voted down by the State Lands Commission in January. The deal would have expanded PXP drilling rights at the Trainquillion Ridge offshore from Vandenberg Air Force Base, in exchange of a mandatory shutdown date of 2022, thousands of acres of permanently protected onshore lands, approximately $350 million of tax revenue for Santa Barbara County, and at least $2 billion for the state...

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    For full text, plus image and comments, please go to:

    SBI: "I'm In"

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    Sunday, March 15, 2009

    Assembly Race?

    [ From: "Assembly race already heating up," By Eric Lindberg, DAILY SOUND, March 12, 2009 ]


    It’s still 20 months away, but the race for the State Assembly’s 35th District seat is already stirring up interest in the political community, particularly on the Democratic side of the ticket...

    In recent days, Santa Barbara Councilmember Das Williams has started testing the waters with an exploratory committee and statement of intent to enter the race, allowing him to start raising funds to bankroll a possible campaign...

    Williams preferred not to discuss the potential primary showdown with [Susan Jordan], adding that he doesn’t even want to set a date certain for when he’ll officially enter the race or back down.

    “I think it’s just really important right now to concentrate on some of the problems in the city itself and I don’t want to be distracted by the assembly race when we’re dealing with things like the budget and gang violence,” he said.

    Nonetheless, Williams said the pinch of the state’s budget nightmare is starting to be felt locally, describing how he visited a school yesterday where a large percentage of teachers had received pink slips.

    “I’m pretty passionate about what’s happening — the destruction of our public education system,” he said. “It’s definitely made me even more serious about running.”

    The councilman is also feeling out how his potential bid sits with a handful of voters in the district, which sprawls across a huge chunk of the Santa Ynez Valley and South Coast, as well as a portion of Ventura County.

    Williams said he is speaking with 100 people from “all walks of life” throughout the district to get feedback...

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    For full text, please go to: DAILY SOUND: Assembly Race Heats Up

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    Saturday, March 14, 2009

    Oil Drilling Split

    [ From: "Oil-drilling deal splits Democrats - Fracture opens the way for contested Assembly primary," By Timm Herdt, VENTURA COUNTY STAR, March 11, 2009 ]


    The fallout from a state agency’s controversial rejection of an offshore oil deal brokered by Santa Barbara environmentalists has created a potentially bitter fracture among area Democrats that could spill over into Ventura County.

    An immediate effect of the split is the decision by Santa Barbara City Councilman Das Williams to open an exploratory committee to run for the 35th Assembly District. Williams had previously pledged to endorse Susan Jordan, the wife of termed-out incumbent Pedro Nava.

    Nava and Jordan opposed the deal, which would have allowed the first new drilling in the Santa Barbara Channel in 40 years in exchange for the oil company’s agreement to virtually shut down all oil production off the Santa Barbara coast by 2022 and close the oil processing facility in Gaviota.

    The agreement was enthusiastically supported by such longtime anti-oil crusaders as the Environmental Defense Center and Get Oil Out, which saw it as the realization of their decades-long dream of ridding Santa Barbara of offshore oil rigs once and for all.

    “It would have gotten rid of all the infrastructure,” said Linda Krop, chief counsel for the Environmental Defense Center. “For the first time in the nation’s history, you had members of a local community shutting down offshore oil.”

    The deal was approved by Santa Barbara County and was backed by Rep. Lois Capps. But the State Lands Commission shot it down on a 2-1 vote in late January thanks at least in some measure to Nava’s leadership in organizing opposition among Democratic legislators.

    Some Santa Barbara environmentalists are still stinging over the defeat and are focusing their anger on Nava and Jordan.

    The situation played a major role in convincing Williams to abandon his support for Jordan and move toward entering the race himself.

    “People who I thought would be part of her base are not supporting her,” Williams told me this week. “It’s definitely something that caused a lot of environmentalists in Santa Barbara to approach me about running.”

    Williams was an aide to former Assemblywoman Hannah-Beth Jackson and is now an organizer for Central Coast Alliance for a Sustainable Economy (CAUSE), a community-based advocacy group in Ventura and Santa Barbara counties.

    At 34, Williams will be termed out of the Santa Barbara City Council in 2011 an age, he figures, “a little too young to retire from politics. I have to at least explore the idea of running.”

    The 35th Assembly District strides the two coastal counties, with 56 percent of voters in Santa Barbara County and 44 percent in the cities of Ventura and Oxnard.

    Because he works for a Ventura County-based organization, has longtime family roots in the county and was reared in Ojai, Williams says he has strong ties to both counties.

    An avid surfer, Williams says his psychic home remains in Ventura. “I feel most at home right there at Surfer’s Point.”

    Still, Williams is an elected official in Santa Barbara. And if he and Jordan, another Santa Barbaran, are in the race, that could create an opening for a candidate from Ventura County.

    Ventura City Councilman Bill Fulton has told associates not to rule him out as a potential candidate, and Ventura insurance agent Irene Henry, a one-time City Council candidate, told me Tuesday she is researching the idea of running.

    The staying power of the fracture in Santa Barbara remains to be seen.

    Jordan, director of the California Coastal Protection Network, is a longtime environmental activist who has built trust and allies in the environmental community — notably for her leadership in stopping a proposed liquefied natural gas terminal off the Oxnard coast.

    Jordan notes that her objections about the offshore oil deal were substantive, based principally on concerns that the terms of the agreement that called for dismantling of platforms, pipelines and the processing facility may not have been enforceable.

    She cites a State Lands Commission analysis that reports the conclusion of the Attorney General’s Office that “the goals of the agreement could not be reliably enforced.”

    Jordan is a long-standing friend and ally of Krop at the Environmental Defense Center. And while some have split with Jordan over the issue, Krop is withholding judgment.

    Asked if there will be political repercussions from Jordan’s opposition, Kropp told me, “It’s too early to say.”

    At this point, the split over the offshore oil issue has at least created an opening for Williams and appears to have ensured a contested Democratic primary next spring.

    Such primaries can become nasty, but Williams said he hopes this one won’t. He says he has nothing but “friendship and love” for Jordan.

    “I would really, really not like to see a primary that’s about knocking people down.”

    -----------------------------

    Timm Herdt is chief of The Star state bureau. His political blog “95 percent accurate*” is at http://www.TimmHerdt.com.

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    Thursday, February 12, 2009

    35th District Politics

    [ From: "Carbajal Takes on Nava by Proxy for 35th District - When Politics Gets Personal," by Nick Welsh, SB INDEPENDENT, February 12, 2009 ]

    "In the latest installment of the political soap opera now engulfing South Coast Democrats, 1st District Supervisor Salud Carbajal put to rest months of intense speculation last week that he’d be running for the state’s 35th Assembly District against environmental activist Susan Jordan for the Democratic Party nomination. Instead, Carbajal announced he intends to remain in Santa Barbara, be an attentive father, and focus on the challenges now confronting the County Board of Supervisors. But the real punch line was that Carbajal  —  who in recent weeks has been uncommonly vocal about his displeasure with Assemblymember Pedro Nava, who happens to be Jordan’s husband  —  would be “enthusiastically” endorsing Santa Barbara City Councilmember Das Williams in his bid for the post. That, of course, assumes that Williams will run. For the moment, he is strenuously studying his options..."





    ( Salud Carbajal photo courtesy of www.selfesteem.org )

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    Friday, February 06, 2009

    Tranquillon Ridge Project

    Lotsa talk about the Tranquillon Ridge Project, how it relates to the upcoming election for the 35th Assembly District, and the push for Das to run. Here are some websites with relevant info:

  • SBI: When Friends Become Rivals
  • KEYT-TV: 35th District Election


  • The most comprehensive article was printed in the DAILY SOUND:

    "Assembly seat could hinge on failed oil deal - Carbajal endorses Williams, if he runs," By Colby Frazier, DAILY SOUND, Feb. 6, 2009

    The fallout from a State Lands Commission vote last week that killed an agreement between local environmental groups and an oil company to expand offshore oil drilling in exchange for the early decommission of several offshore platforms, continued yesterday when First District County Supervisor Salud Carbajal announced he wouldn’t run for the 35th Assembly District seat in 2010.

    Carbajal’s public announcement that he wouldn’t run came before he publicly stated he would.

    His interest, however brief, in replacing current Assemblymemeber Pedro Nava, appeared to gain traction after the oil deal failed. Nava did not support the project while Carbajal was an outspoken proponent.

    Carbajal said many people have encouraged him to seek the office, “especially the environmental community.”

    While Carbajal, who was just elected to his second term on the board of supervisors after running uncontested, has opted not to seek the seat, he threw his support behind Santa Barbara City Councilman Das Williams. He said he would “enthusiastically support” Williams if he decides to run.

    Williams said he has not yet decided if he’ll run. But like Carbajal, he feels the pressure to succeed Nava bearing down from the environmental community.

    Williams, who will be termed out of his council seat in 2010, said the failure of the oil deal isn’t his “primary” motivation to run, but it is at the forefront of the minds of those encouraging him to do so.

    “There’s people who are my strong supporters who have said ‘No, you don’t have a choice. You have to run. We need you.’”

    Many in the environmental community were less than thrilled that Nava didn’t give the oil deal his blessing.

    Nava, who is serving his final two-year term in office and has expressed interest in running for California attorney general, was already thought to have a successor in Susan Jordan, his wife.

    Jordan opened a campaign committee last month, announcing she planned to run for the office.

    But Jordan, the director of the nonprofit environmental advisory group the California Coastal Protection Network, also criticized the oil deal, known as the Tranquillon Ridge Project.

    If Williams decides to run against Jordan, he’ll be doing so against a person he worked closely with to help get Nava elected, and whom he considers “a capable and talented activist.”

    While it’s difficult to know how much sway Nava and Jordan’s concerns about the oil deal played in the commission’s 2-1 vote against it, some feel slighted by the duo’s take on the matter.

    David Landecker, executive director of the Environmental Defense Center (EDC), which was one of a trio of environmental groups that brokered the deal with Plains Exploration and Production (PXP) to drill, acknowledged that there is a lot of “anger and resentment” about the project’s failure.

    “People are upset and I think when people are upset about a political decision, they tend to be angry with the people behind it, that’s just the way it is,” he said, speaking for himself and not on behalf of EDC.

    “[Nava] used his considerable influence to undermine it, but didn’t work to get us to understand what his issues were,” Landecker said. “People felt betrayed. There are ways that one disagrees and there are ways that one works through issues that keep your friends and keep good feelings.”

    Nava said his concerns were two fold. The first centered on the confidential agreement between the environmental groups and PXP. He said the fine print was never made public to anyone other than the commission’s staff.

    His second concern was that the commission’s staff, presumably based to in part on the contents of the confidential agreement, recommended the project be denied.

    One of the main thrusts of this recommendation was the staff’s belief that the early decommission dates of four offshore platforms operated by PXP could not be enforced. In other words, because the federal office of Minerals Management Service oversees the leases, it could insist the leases remain open and pumping as long as oil remained in the ground, deal or not.

    Nava said kinks like these could have been worked out had the deal been made public, and the project would have had a better chance of being approved.

    “Other people could have seen it and figured out its flaws and there would have been a much greater chance of an enforceable agreement,” he said. “I think the fundamental mistake that was made was insisting on the confidentiality. That caused a great deal of suspicion.”

    While Williams described Nava and Jordan’s non-endorsement of the PXP deal a “strategic difference of opinion,” it appears to have dug deeper with Carbajal.

    He declined to comment at length on Nava and Jordan, saying: “I’ve said enough about my concerns and disappointments. Quite frankly, I don’t want to continue the soap opera.”

    Carbajal was more animated in his comments to the Santa Barbara Independent. He’s quoted there as saying: “Like many residents of Santa Barbara County, I, too, have experienced the non-responsiveness and lack of customer service our Assemblymember Pedro Nava has inflicted on us, and I regret that his wife, who wants to succeed him in office, will continue the same way.” He goes on to say: “It’s about time someone said it. My phone has been ringing off the hook [with] environmentalists, labor, and social justice people,” urging him to run.

    Nava didn’t take Carbajal’s comment lightly.

    “His remarks about Susan are recognized by many as sexist, paternalistic, condescending and demonstrate an ignorance of how difficult it has been for women to distinguish themselves based on their own accomplishments,” he said. “That’s exactly how I feel.”

    Nava, like Williams, characterized his feelings on the PXP deal as a “difference of opinion,” and one he hopes everyone can get past.

    “I firmly believe that this disagreement will resolve itself and that all of us who are fighting to protect the environment in a very short time will once again be standing together,” he said.

    Nava added that he feels it’s important to not forget the commission staff, and ultimately the lands commission denied the project, not him or Jordan.

    “I don’t think it’s reasonable to blame Susan Jordan for that result,” he said. “I don’t think it’s reasonable to blame me for that result.

    “Everyone shouldn’t be expected to have the same opinion all the time.”

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