Sheng Thao

Sheng Thao
51st Mayor of Oakland
Assumed office
January 9, 2023
Preceded byLibby Schaaf
President pro tempore of the Oakland City Council
In office
January 4, 2021 – January 9, 2023
Preceded byDan Kalb
Succeeded byDan Kalb
Member of the Oakland City Council
from 4th district
In office
January 2018 – January 9, 2023
Preceded byAnnie Campbell Washington
Succeeded byJanani Ramachandran
Personal details
Born (1985-07-19) July 19, 1985 (age 38)
Stockton, California, U.S.
Political partyDemocratic
EducationMerritt College (AA)
University of California, Berkeley (BA)

Sheng Thao (born 1985) is an American politician and the 51st and current mayor of Oakland, California. She is the first Hmong American mayor of a major city in the United States.

Early life and education

Thao was born and raised in Stockton, California. Her parents were refugees from Laos who escaped Hmong genocide and eventually immigrated to the United States. Thao was the seventh of ten children and grew up in poverty, spending some of her childhood in public housing.

At age 17, Thao moved out of her home and began working at a Walgreens in Richmond. After moving to Oakland in her 20s, she became a victim of domestic violence while in an abusive relationship. Thao left the relationship when she was six months pregnant, and then lived in her car and couch surfed before and after her son was born. When her son was ten months old, Thao began attending Merritt College in Oakland while raising her son as a single mother and working as a research assistant.

After she completed an associate's degree in legal studies from Merritt, Thao transferred to the University of California, Berkeley, where she earned a bachelor's degree in legal studies and a minor in city planning. While at UC Berkeley, Thao helped create the Bear Pantry, a program which provided food to food-insecure students.

Early career

Following her graduation from UC Berkeley in 2012, Thao worked for At-Large Councilmember Rebecca Kaplan as a paid intern. Thao later worked for Kaplan at the Oakland City Council and became her chief of staff in 2017.

Oakland City Council

Portrait of Thao during her tenure on the Oakland City Council

Thao served in the Oakland City Council's 4th district seat, representing the neighborhoods of Montclair, Laurel, Melrose, Redwood Heights, and the Dimond District. She was the first Hmong woman to be elected as a member of the city council in the state of California and the first Hmong person elected to the Oakland City Council. On the city council, Thao served as president pro tempore.

Thao decided to run for office in 2018, when the election for the district 4 City Council seat was an open race, lacking an incumbent. Thao defeated six other candidates and won with 54% of the vote after seven rounds of instant-runoff voting tabulation. For each of the 7 rounds she had the most votes of any candidate. Thao's priorities which she ran on were tackling Oakland's housing crisis, improving public safety with better response systems and community policing, and building public infrastructure such as libraries and parks. One of Thao's opponents Charlie Michelson, had been endorsed by Mayor Libby Schaaf. During her campaign, Thao and fellow candidates Pamela Harris and Nayeli Maxson co-endorsed each other in the ranked-choice voting. Dubbing themselves the "Women's Leadership Slate", they urged voters to rank the three of them as their first three picks.

After Kamala Harris was elected vice president of the United States, Thao and other elected officials lobbied Governor Gavin Newsom to appoint Barbara Lee to the U.S. Senate seat that Harris would vacate. Alex Padilla was ultimately appointed to the seat.

Mayoral campaign

On November 10, 2021, Thao announced her candidacy for the 2022 Oakland mayoral election.

During her campaign, Thao was supported by many trade unions, and she was endorsed by the local Democratic Party and Rep. Ro Khanna. Loren Taylor, one of her opponents, was endorsed by Libby Schaaf, the incumbent mayor of Oakland, as well as London Breed and Sam Liccardo, the mayors of nearby San Francisco and San Jose. By the end of the campaign, Thao and Taylor were considered to be the two front-runners. Thao was viewed as a progressive candidate, while opponents Taylor and Ignacio De La Fuente were viewed as more centrist.

In June 2022, a former staffer filed an informal verbal complaint with the Public Ethics Commission that alleged Thao had City Council staff work on her campaign in a possible violation of state election laws, and the staffer was fired after refusing to work on Thao's campaign. Thao denied the allegations and the ethics commission opened an investigation in June 2022. After the matter was reported by a political blogger that supported one of Thao's competitors in October 2022, the allegations gained media attention.

Thao won the ranked-choice election by 677 votes in the final round of tabulation.

Mayoralty

Thao took office on January 9, 2023.

Days into her mayoralty, Thao placed Oakland Police Chief LeRonne Armstrong on administrative leave over allegations that he had obstructed an investigation into a hit and run incident that involved a police officer. After a probe was conducted, Thao fired Armstrong on February 15, 2023.

In April 2023, Thao announced that city would end long-standing negotiations with the owners of the Oakland Athletics for a waterfront ballpark making it likely that the MLB team will relocate to Las Vegas, Nevada after reaching an agreement to build a $1.5 billion new ballpark on the Las Vegas Strip. Thao later met with Commissioner of Baseball Rob Manfred during the 2023 MLB All-Star Game in which she outlined the city's plans for a new ballpark at the Coliseum or Howard Terminal from years prior through a document sent to him and 29 other MLB owners in a bid to keep the Athletics from relocating to Las Vegas three months after the Athletics' ballpark received public financing from the state of Nevada in a special session and the team beginning the relocation process to Las Vegas.

Personal life

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


This page was last updated at 2023-09-19 12:53 UTC. Update now. View original page.

All our content comes from Wikipedia and under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License.


Top

If mathematical, chemical, physical and other formulas are not displayed correctly on this page, please useFirefox or Safari