Local Obama Warriors Strive for Black-Latino Unity
Featured Article RIVERSIDE

 

By Chris Levister


There was never a question of Black-Latino unity between Linnie Frank Bailey and Jose Medina. The 44th District Congressional super delegates became fast friends long before the bruising Democratic contest between Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton and Sen. Barack Obama.


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Karen Bass Makes History Print E-mail
Thursday, 15 May 2008
SACRAMENTO

 

Assembly Member Karen Bass made history when she was sworn in as the first African American woman to lead a legislative body in the United States. Former Assembly Speakers Honorable Robert T. Monagan; Honorable Willie L. Brown, Honorable Herb J. Wesson, Jr.; Honorable Cruz M. Bustamante; and Honorable Antonio R. Villaraigosa; joined Speaker Emeritus Fabian Núñez and Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger to usher in Bass as the 67th Speaker of the California State Assembly.

Several hundred people were on hand to witness this historic moment, which included a special poetic reading from academy award winning actress and activist Alfre Woodard and a special presentation from Congresswoman Diane Watson. Attendees included federal, state and local elected officials; representatives for business, labor and community sectors, including members of the Community Coalition, an organization that Bass founded in 1990 located in South Los Angeles.

After the swearing-in, which was conducted by Speaker Emeritus Núñez, Speaker Bass delivered the following speech:

"To the former Speakers who joined me today as my escorts - -you honor us with your presence the way your service honored this house and this state. Thank you for taking the time to be here today. Since I have been in the legislature I have sought each of you for your guidance, critique and solidarity. And I thank you for that - and assume you'll be available for many more phone calls.

Members....honored guests...dear friends and family....since my election on February 28th to be the 67th Speaker of the Assembly, I have had the opportunity and experience to be part of an incredible transition -  part of a complex and comprehensive process of receiving the torch from the 66th Speaker of the Assembly, Fabian Núñez.Image

I know the job ahead of me as Speaker will be both easier and harder because of the example set by Speaker Núñez.

Easier because of the outstanding processes he has put in place for this house. Harder because of the high threshold he has set for results.

Mr. Speaker, thank you so much for your leadership, your friendship, and, especially, for the enormous generosity of spirit you have shown me during this seamless transition.

Members, as Mr. Speaker mentioned, I do feel the weight of history on my shoulders today - as the first African American woman in U.S. history elected to head a state legislative body.

Consistent with the African side of African-American tradition, I begin today by acknowledging and honoring those people who have shaped my life but are no longer here to share my life.

My mother who taught all of us that the most important words in our vocabulary must be dignity, integrity and honor.

My last image of her was watching her walking down the hospital corridor - she held her head high - yet I knew she knew her life was about to end.

My father who never wanted me to run for office - because he was afraid I'd be hurt.

But yet he was the one who introduced me to politics, watching the civil rights movement on the nightly news and trying to help me understand the concept of legal segregation in the South where he was from--he instilled in me the passion to fight for justice and equality.

They are not here, but their presence is constantly felt and is represented today by my three brothers - Kenneth, Keith and Kevin Bass.

Will my brothers please stand.

My beloved daughter and son-in-law - who I miss every single day.

I look out on the floor - I sat where Assemblymember Eng sits and the memory is seared in my mind - of my daughter Emilia, who sat next to me during my first swearing in and giggled at the formality.

Her then boyfriend - Mike - who would soon become my son-in law, sat in the gallery with eyes as big as saucers at the enormity of it all.

Emilia and Mike are not here, but their presence is constantly felt and she is represented today by her siblings - my step children - who have been in my life since the day you were born---Scythia, Omar and Yvette Lechuga - please stand.

And Emilia's best friends - my other daughters - who are very much a part of my life - Denise-Julia, Rolanda, Sterling, Ebony and Tiffany - will you please stand.

Members, throughout the past 18 months I have experienced the best of your hearts - and I'm not sure I can fully express how much that has meant to me.

So many of us have faced personal tragedies and losses - we have stood with each other - we have embraced each other - and helped each other though the bad times.

And we've embraced each other through new children - Lori Krekorian - and grandchildren - life's blessings as well.

If we could only harness the power of our common humanity, I don't think there's anything we couldn't do for the people of this state.

And members, they truly do need us now.

People are losing their homes. People are losing their jobs. People are scared about the future in a state that should be all about hope for the future.

Think about it. We represent California - the 8th largest economy on the planet. If California was our own nation, we would be better off than Russia or India or Spain.

We have it all.

The movie studios I represent in the 47th Assembly District use software created in Ms. Lieber's district.

Professors at Ms. Wolk's UC Davis help Mr. Berryhill's farmers improve their crops.

And who wouldn't enjoy a glass of Ms. Evans Napa Valley chardonnay watching the sun set over Mr. Plescia's La Jolla coast?

More than 50,000 companies in our districts export products around the globe.

20% of all U.S. trade - about a half a trillion dollars - passes in some way through California. Workers at our ports handle more than 40% of the nation's container cargo.

Almost one-third of all U.S. biotech firms are located in California, and we have more biotech jobs here than all the other states put together.

And it's no coincidence the biotech industry was founded here when more than 50 Nobel Prize winners have been associated with the University of California.

We are a $94 billion tourism industry and the nation's top travel destination. Millions of visitors come here every year to enjoy 1100 miles of coast and 300-foot redwood trees.

The laptops on our desk should remind all of us that the California visionaries who founded Silicon Valley in a garage, have changed the way the world lives, learns and leads.

Thanks to California you can find anything you could possibly want on Google...and then when you get tired of it you can turn around and sell it on E-bay.

Our 80,000 farms and ranches produce more than $30 billion worth of goods.  And we export more than $10 billion of those goods - 350 commodities in all - everything from almonds and artichokes to turkeys and tangerines.

Among us we represent Koreatown, Little Saigon, Little Ethiopia, Little India and Little Armenia- little pieces of a lot of places.

California is a giant of a state - but we are a giant in crisis.

Over the last two months I have visited with business leaders in the Silicon Valley who are relocating overseas....I've met with farmers in the Central Valley who can not afford to plant crops-resulting in the abandonment of the workforce in nearby small towns. I have visited schools and met with teachers and school board members in San Diego and Norwalk where teachers received layoff notices.

I have met with students who are saddled with debt when they finish college - we should be able to provide more opportunity than that for the next generation.

California is a giant in crisis - and now it is up to us to solve that crisis.

It is up to us to take the fear out of California's future.

Tomorrow, the governor will unveil his May budget revision.

By all accounts it will not be good news. We have to decide how we will address that news. We have to decide how we will come together to mobilize the incredible assets and resources at this state's command to solve the budget crisis.

If we can mobilize our resources to respond to major disasters like Northridge and Whittier and Loma Prieta - we must be able to respond to the budget crisis.

The wildfires in Sierra Madre in April reminded us all too well of the infernos we faced in 2007.

The combination of economic recession, the mortgage meltdown and skyrocketing prices for food and fuel are having the same destructive force as an earthquake or fire.

When you lose your home, can't feed your family, or can't afford health care for your kids, it's an earthquake.

When there is a disaster like that, an earthquake or a fire or a flood, leaders put their ideologies aside and step up and say "people are suffering - what do we do to alleviate the pain?"

Members, we have to respond to the current economic crisis the same way we would a natural disaster.

We have to toss aside the boxes we put ourselves in and the labels we place on others and come together to get the job done.

I believe part of that job has got to involve looking at the big picture and really examining California's overall economic structure.

Most importantly, we have to ask the question of whether a tax structure that was established in the 1930s is sufficient to meet the needs of Californians in 2008.

And, frankly, members I think we need an answer to that question that is developed outside the day-to-day give-and-take here in the legislature.

To answer this question I have asked for help. I have asked 2 former Governor's - Governor Pete Wilson and Governor Gray Davis to assist the legislature in identifying the leadership and membership of an independent Commission to examine California's tax structure.

This will be a bipartisan group of California's brightest to work together for one year to develop recommendations on how we can identify more consistent sources of revenue - the way 12 other States have already accomplished.

As we work to resolve the immediate challenge before us, the efforts of this commission can help us find ways to prevent California from cycling through crisis after crisis after crisis.

Mr. Villines, I am just as committed to working with you and your team. I want to continue and maintain the high level of civility that has been a hallmark of Speaker Núñez tenure.

I want to urgency of our cause to be marched by the unity in our commitment.

The weight of history is not just on my shoulders.

As we all move forward, it should be with the understanding that a society will be judged on the way it cares for its people.

As Speaker, I want you to judge me on how I am able to bring together the best of your talents, your experience, and, yes - the best of your hearts - to help build the kind of society that California deserves.

Thank you members. Let's get to work."




 
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