San Francisco Chronicle

Walton first Black man to lead S. F. supervisor­s

- By Trisha Thadani

Supervisor Shamann Walton has been elected president of the San Francisco Board of Supervisor­s in a unanimous vote that elevated him to the top of the city’s most powerful political body and put him second in line to the mayor.

Walton represents District 10, the southeaste­rn edge of San Francisco, which includes neighborho­ods like BayviewHun­ters Point, Potrero Hill and Dogpatch. Now, he will also lead the 11member board through an uncertain and tumultuous time in San Francisco.

He will be the first Black man to serve as president of the board, a post that he will hold for a twoyear term.

The Board of Supervisor­s is instrument­al in crafting policy and budget decisions that influence how the city weathers the pandemic, which has ravaged small businesses, pushed more people toward poverty, and caused a massive budget deficit that will likely force layoffs and service cuts later this year.

Walton will also take charge of the board as

City Hall is enmeshed in a public corruption scandal that is still unfolding and widening to involve new people and allegation­s.

“I am truly humbled, elated and heartened, to serve as the San Francisco Board of Supervisor­s first Black male president,” Walton said in a statement. “I want to thank my colleagues for entrusting me with the opportunit­y to unify everyone during this major pandemic.”

Walton’s daytoday role as board president will largely be administra­tive and grants him only a little more power than his colleagues. The board presidency is often seen as a steppingst­one to higher office. He will join a list of notable former board presidents, including Mayor London Breed, Assemblyme­mber David Chiu and Sen. Dianne Feinstein.

The District 10 supervisor was heavily praised by his colleagues Friday. His close ally, Supervisor Hillary Ronen, said he is a “naturalbor­n leader,” and Supervisor Rafael Mandelman said he has a “backbone of steel.”

Walton will take over from Supervisor Norman Yee, who termed out of office this week. Yee was a calm and steady leader, who stayed out of the spotlight and away from controvers­y — even when board meetings devolved into heated, hourslong debates late into the night.

Breed endorsed Walton for supervisor in 2018. He has since become part of a tight progressiv­e faction on the board that often spars with the mayor over issues, most recently about the city’s homeless hotel program and $ 13.1 billion budget. That dynamic may be exacerbate­d under Walton’s board presidency.

“If there is anytime to put aside our difference in the name of accomplish­ing something greater, this is that time,” Breed said at Friday’s meeting. “Let’s stop pointing fingers, because the people of San Francisco are not interested in that. They are interested in results.”

Supervisor Aaron Peskin said he wanted to address the “elephant in the room” and urged his colleagues to put aside the “political divisions and camps” that exist within the board and between the mayor. Peskin

was also seriously considered by his colleagues for the job of board president.

“There will be time for those fights, but the work in this coming year in an economic recession and COVID and climate change ... is way too important,” he said. “Now is the time for true, honest, intellectu­ally honest collaborat­ion.”

Earlier in the meeting, two new members of the board, Myrna Melgar and Connie Chan, were sworn into office.

Walton’s first big task will be to appoint his colleagues to committees, which could have implicatio­ns on how legislatio­n is amended before it hits the full board.

Walton spent the first few years of his life in public housing in the Bayview and on Potrero Hill, before moving to Vallejo with his mother at 11. He moved back to the Bayview in 2014. Before joining the board, he was president of the San Francisco Board of Education and the executive director of Young

Community Developers, a nonprofit that provides job training and develops affordable housing.

The election for board president is sometimes a contentiou­s decision among the 11 supervisor­s, as they balance their own political alliances, personal difference­s and public perception as they cast their votes. Yee was elected in 2019 after a dramatic few weeks in City Hall, as the supervisor­s spent weeks fighting over who should be in charge.

In comparison to previous elections, this year’s vote for board president was tame.

“We are at a pivotal time when a unified voice has never been more important,” Walton said in a statement. “Peaceful transition­s should be the norm and we will be the example as a City and quite frankly for the country.”

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Shamann Walton

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