Silicon Valley DSA Helps Pass Measure A (Along With Prop 50)

SVDSA members canvassing with the South Bay Labor Council.

The following is a summary of an interview John MarienthaI conducted with Silicon Valley DSA officer Jessen Fox on November 9.

Our chapter had a unique experience in working with the local Prop 50 coalition. We endorsed a second, local campaign alongside it:  Measure A, a temporary Santa Clara County sales tax that will expire in five years. Measure A passed by a 57%-43% margin.

Measure A created a 5/8 of one cent general sales tax increase, beginning April 1, 2026, to raise $330 million a year to replace the federal funding cut by Trump and the Republican Congress to the Santa Clara County Health System. Starting with the process of endorsement, our chapter allied with the South Bay Labor Council to do both phone banking and canvassing.

We started with the Communications Committee making daily announcements of phone banking. We also worked with SEIU local 521. We participated in two three-day phone banking blitzes. What made our presence unique was we showed up in specially designed chapter T-shirts that identified us as DSA volunteers. When canvassing we also tabled and wherever we went we brought a small quarter-page flier on our DSA activities. We learned it would be helpful to list upcoming chapter events on the flier and added a QR code that people could scan for more information. Our tabling also allowed local politicians Ash Kalra and Betty Duong to be in the pictures.

SVDSA election night partygoers.

Jasmine was responsible for our superlative social media. Many of the Instagram-tagged photos were of DSA members in their unique shirts. On November 1st we had a big push. On election night itself, DSA was recognized by the South Bay Labor Council as one of the larger groups participating in the Measure A coalition. As a result of the campaign, we are also developing a working relationship with SEIU.

Marienthal adds: The capitalist system is stacked against us. Property taxes are more progressive but require a two-thirds vote, which is very difficult to get. Sales taxes are regressive, and as socialists we're generally for progressive, not regressive taxes. Given a choice, however, between our hospital care cratering and a regressive tax we chose the latter.

John Marienthal

John Marienthal is a member of Silicon Valley DSA

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