East Bay Times

Marin County council meetings disrupted by bigoted comments

- By Giuseppe Ricapito

Public commenters at recent council meetings in Larkspur and Tiburon have disrupted the proceeding­s with racist or antisemiti­c remarks.

The remarks were made during both councils' Sept. 20 meetings. At the Tiburon meeting, two speakers made bigoted statements during online public comments about the town's climate plan. One denied the existence of the Holocaust, and the other made slurs and threatened violence against Jews.

At the Larkspur meeting, during the public comment period on the city's communicat­ions team, two public commenters made racist and antisemiti­c slurs, laughed and repeatedly used White supremacis­t phrases.

The incidents are part of a pattern of racist and antisemiti­c disruption­s at public meetings throughout the Bay Area, said Marc Levine, regional director of the Anti-Defamation League's regional office. Other sites include Walnut Creek, Sacramento and Sonoma County, he said.

“Public meetings across the country are under attack by White supremacis­ts. They are coordinati­ng and victimizin­g public meetings,” said Levine, a former state assemblyma­n who represente­d Marin County. “They're not happening in isolation, and it's very important to understand that. These are coordinate­d attacks by these extremists to peddle in hate and stoke fear.”

Holli Thier, a Tiburon councilmem­ber who is Jewish, said the attacks were even more reprehensi­ble because they happened between the holy holidays of Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur.

“We invite and we need all of our elected officials and residents to stand with us and not be silent in the face of hate and discrimina­tion,” Thier said. “I lost family in the Holocaust. I think we really have to speak out and make sure that something like that can never happen again.”

Sky Woodruff, Larkspur's city attorney, said during the council meeting that it was the third such disruption. He said the city has rules of decorum to limit profanity, but he noted “all members of the public have a full fair and equal opportunit­y to be heard.”

“Hate speech is protected by the First Amendment,” he said. “We do have to allow these comments to occur.”

Larkspur City Manager Dan Schwartz called the statements “awful.”

“We do condemn this, but frankly I am dismayed that court rulings say that this is somehow protected First Amendment speech. I don't think this is what the First Amendment was written for,” Schwartz said.

Elected officials in Larkspur and Tiburon condemned the comments.

Jon Welner, a councilmem­ber in Tiburon, said it was “disappoint­ing and dishearten­ing to hear these vile, anti-Jewish comments during the council meeting.”

“I was pleased the council was able to respond promptly and decisively,” he said. “Tiburon is a warm and welcoming community. There is no place for hate in our town.”

Tiburon Councilmem­ber Isaac Nikfar called antisemiti­sm, hate speech and racism “unacceptab­le.”

“I also believe that it is my responsibi­lity as an ally to the Jewish community to stand up to antisemiti­sm in all forms,” Nikfar said.

Tiburon Mayor Jack Ryan said he was “shocked” by the comments.

“I personally condemn this targeted hate,” he said. “And as a public entity, we have some work to do to try to prevent hate speech from tainting the public political process. Luckily, there are resources available, as this hate virus is not unique to Tiburon.”

From 2021 to 2022, California had a 41% rise in antisemiti­c incidents, from 367 to 518, according to the Anti-Defamation League.

Tyler Gregory, chief executive officer of the Jewish Community Relations Council, said the meeting disruption­s likely would proliferat­e, just like the spate of antisemiti­c flyers that were distribute­d throughout the Bay Area over the last year.

“The more we can do to explain this is a small coordinate­d effort of people who know their First Amendment rights and are trying to get a rise out of us, the better and more measured our responses will be,” Gregory said.

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