Oakland’s leaders pressured to support ceasefire in Gaza as warfare continues

OAKLAND — City leaders are feeling pressure from residents to support a call for a ceasefire in Gaza as the death toll among Palestinians rises amid Israel’s continuing retaliation after the Oct. 7 attack by Hamas.

On Wednesday, an Oakland school board meeting descended into chaos after its president, Mike Hutchinson, halted pro-Palestinian speakers, saying their comments were out of turn, before a ceasefire resolution could be introduced later that night.

A day earlier, members of the City Council struggled to maintain decorum when an animated group of pro-Palestinian speakers urged the city’s leaders to join the call for a ceasefire.

The statement would be a starkly more diplomatic resolution than the outright support for Palestinians shown by Richmond — the first city in the country to commit to such a declaration.

Ceasefire resolutions have since been taken up by a few small cities nationwide, including Providence, Rhode Island, Easton, Pennsylvania, and the tiny Southern California town of Cudahy.

The uproar at multiple public meetings illustrated the unique balancing act faced by the leaders of a city that is often at the forefront of political action but which, by outright support of Palestinians, would separate itself from the liberal mainstream, including President Joe Biden, who has opposed a ceasefire.

“I do want to work with you,” a flustered City Council President Nikki Fortunato Bas told frustrated pro-Palestinian attendees at Tuesday’s meeting. She noted that any resolution for a ceasefire “has to go through our legislative process.”

Earlier, Bas had allowed the topic to be addressed — even though no resolution on the subject was on the meeting agenda — because the council had recognized November as Indigenous People’s Month, a designation that Bas reasoned could be extended to the Palestinian cause.

“Gaza is a graveyard for children,” Alisa Kazhni, who criticized U.S. support for Israel, told the City Council. “Can you imagine a graveyard of children on (our country’s) dime?”

Oakland Unified School District board member Valarie Bachelor takes part in a meeting at La Escuelita Elementary School in Oakland, Calif., on Wednesday, Nov. 8, 2023. The board is considering a resolution that Bachelor introduced calling for a ceasefire in Gaza. (Jane Tyska/Bay Area News Group)
Oakland Unified School District board member Valarie Bachelor takes part in a meeting at La Escuelita Elementary School in Oakland, Calif., on Wednesday, Nov. 8, 2023. The board is considering a resolution that Bachelor introduced calling for a ceasefire in Gaza. (Jane Tyska/Bay Area News Group) 

The school board meeting on Wednesday ended on more contentious grounds.

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