Successful Fundrasier for Betty Yee

The Club’s immediate past President and California Democratic Party Controller Hilary Crosby hosted a fundraiser on Sunday, November 17 in El Cerrito for Betty Yee who is running for State Controller. For those who are poltically engaged, this was the place to mingle, eat and drink on a Sunday morning. Sixty people attended including many of our Club members, local candidates and electeds.

To name a few:   

El Cerrito City Council members- Rebecca Benassini and Janet Abelson

Stege Sanitary District Board member-Al Miller

West Contra Costa County School District board member-Todd Groves

Senator-Ellen Corbet

Oakland City Council members-Dan Kalb and Libby Schaaf 

Oakland School Board member-Jody London

Antioch City Council member-Monica Wilson

Solano County Board of Education member-Dana Dean

Solano County Supervisor-Linda Siefert

Candidate for AD 15 and EBMUD board member-Andy Katz

Peralta Community College District-Meredith Brown and Abel Guillen

California Democratic Party Regional Directors-Martha Gamez and Hene Kelly

Also in attendance were members of the CDP Women’s caucus, National Women’s Political Caucus and Emerge graduates.

Betty Yee thanked all attendees and  spoke about how she’s the most qualified candidate in the race. The event was a huge sucesss and raised several thousand dollars for Betty’s campaign.

 Betty Yee 8 Betty Yee 7 Betty Yee 6 Betty Yee 5 Betty Yee 4 Betty Yee 3 Betty Yee 2 Betty Yee 1 Betty Yee 9

All photos curtousey of Betty Yee for Controller 2014 Facebook page.

Remembering the Life and Impact of Nelson Mandela

On Thursday, December 5, the world lost the influential leader, historical figure and man, Nelson Mandela.  Club President Scott Lyons shares his connection with the former President of South Africa.  Do have a story or feelings on the loss of Nelson Mandela? Please feel free to share on the ECDC website and/or facebook page.  

“In 2000, I spent a month traveling in South Africa as a tourist. The country made for wonderful travel–cheap accommodations, relatively sparse tourist traffic, beautiful parks and reserves for hiking and safaris, and a patchwork of cultures and peoples. Nelson Mandela had recently stepped down from the presidency, but the turmoil and trauma and optimism and hope of the revolution were still fresh in everyone’s minds.

On Robben Island, only a few miles off the coast of Cape Town, with views of the city just as stunning as those we have from Alcatraz, former prisoners acted as tour guides and showed us where this and that had occurred. Mandela’s cell was (and is still) a highlight of the tour. I imagined him living there, serving a life sentence, spending decades waiting and hoping and holding faith in the future.

As we filed into the cafeteria to hear the stories of the facility, our guide looked across the room of Brits and Germans and Americans and said, “Let me start by thanking you for your help in ending apartheid.” It was a perfect reflection of the reconciliation that Mandela had willed on the country. We had done little to end apartheid–perhaps a few in the room had written their congressmen or MPs to support economic sanctions or had supported the disinvestment effort. Our guide, on the other hand, had risked his life and spent a decade in prison fighting against the system.

Later on the trip I spoke with a white South African about Mandela. “We just love him so much,” she said, somewhat wistfully. Many people said similar things. There was always an unspoken “but…” that hid their fears for the post-Mandela era. But no one doubted that, in those years in the early 90s when the country hung in the balance, it was Mandela alone who had averted the nascent three-way civil war, who had inspired an inclusive and liberal constitution, who had led the commissions of reconciliation that had done so much to heal and help the country to move on.

So I, along with millions of others, have been inspired by Mandela’s life to hope for a better future. His incredible triumph should remind us that dramatic changes are possible, even in the relatively short period of a human lifetime. And as we continue our own struggles for justice we should remember just how much it is possible to achieve.”

December Meeting Preview

We’re in the thick of the holiday season and you know what that means:

ECDC Holiday Party

7:00 p.m.

Friday, December 13, 2013

1001 Elm Court, El Cerrito

Hilary Crosby is hosting the Holiday Party at her home in El Cerrito. Please bring a dessert and/or drinks to share.  The party takes place of our regular December meeting and it starts at 7:00 p.m. (not 6:30 p.m. as a previous newsletter noted).  

Because we aren’t having a formal meeting in December and holiday amnesia is sure to set in, here are a few important items to keep on your radar:

  • At our January meeting, we will be electing new executive board members. Open seats include: President, VP of Membership, VP of Records and VP of Media.  What do those positions do? Ask our Club President Scott Lyons ecdc.pres@gmail.com . More information will be included in the January newsletter as well.
  • Save the date for our endorsement meeting on Saturday, February 22.  Be sure to check your membership status. Not a member or a “voting” member? Complete the membership form included in the newsletter.