A SLATE FOR SAN FRANCISCO
San Francisco hasn’t elected a Republican to office in more than 20 years.
There are 10,000 fewer Republicans in the city today than when George W. Bush left the White House.
It’s time for a change. It’s time to start winning again.
Meet Our Candidates for Republican County Central Committee
Thank you San Francisco! Click here for an election update
Thank you San Francisco! Click here for an election update
Assembly District 17
Bill Jackson*
比爾·傑克遜
Assembly District 17
Startup Founder & CEO,
CAGOP/SFGOP Delegate
Christopher Lewis
克里斯多福·路易斯
Assembly District 17
Bank Executive
Charles Page Chamberlain
查爾斯·佩奇·張伯倫
Assembly District 17
Professor,
US Coast Guard Veteran
David Cuadro*
大衛·庫德羅
Assembly District 17
Portfolio Manager
Jennie Feldman
珍妮·費德曼
Assembly District 17
Attorney
Christian J. Foster
克里斯蒂安·J·福斯特
Assembly District 17
Trade Consultant,
CAGOP/SFGOP Delegate
Josh Wolff*
喬許·沃爾夫
Assembly District 17
Startup Founder
Jamie H. Wong*
李凱明
Assembly District 17
Community Manager
William Kirby Shireman
威廉·柯比·希爾曼
Assembly District 17
Energy Solutions Entrepreneur
Assembly District 19
Martha Conte
瑪莎 •·康特
Assembly District 19
Marketing/Branding Professional,
Civic Leader
Nicholas Berg
尼可拉斯·伯格
Assembly District 19
Real Estate Executive
Jeremiah Boehner*
耶利米·博納
Assembly District 19
Marketing Professional,
US Army Veteran
Peter Elden
彼得·埃爾登
Assembly District 19
Real Estate Executive
Deah Williams
迪亞·威廉斯
Assembly District 19
Security Professional
Jennifer Yan
嚴正人
Assembly District 19
Technology Investor
Jay Donde*
傑·唐德
Assembly District 19
Attorney,
CAGOP Delegate
Jan Diamond
珍·戴蒙德
Assembly District 19
Real Estate Partner,
Community Advocate
Tom Rapkoch
湯姆·拉普科奇
Assembly District 19
Product Manager
Grazia Monares
葛拉齊亞·莫納雷斯
Assembly District 19
Small Business Owner
Voter Resources
Too many names to remember? We got you. Print these ballot images with our candidates' names circled and take them with you to your polling place.
Latest News
This Group of San Francisco Republicans Wants To Revive Their Party in 2024 — The San Francisco Standard
Revenge of the Normies: Effort to Revive San Francisco GOP Leads to Leadership Clash — National Review
An Interview With Jay Donde of the Briones Society (starts at 1h7min mark) — Radio Free California
San Francisco Republicans Elect New Party Leadership — The San Francisco Standard
Join Our Movement!
You can support our campaign by donating and signing up to volunteer below.
WHAT IS THE RCCC?
The Republican County Central Committee is the governing body of the San Francisco Republican Party. It comprises 25 elected members and a handful of ex officios who are the party’s nominees in various state and federal races. The RCCC matters because it speaks for the Republicans of San Francisco by, among other things, endorsing candidates and taking positions on ballot measures. You’ve probably never heard of the RCCC — and that’s because too many of its members today use the committee as a platform for their own advancement instead of reaching out to and representing YOU. We aim to change that.
(A FEW OF) OUR ENDORSERS
The San Francisco Police Officers Association
Greg Suhr — SFPD Chief of Police, 2011-2016
Tony Ribera — SFPD Chief of Police, 1992-1996
Kevin Ryan — US Attorney for the Northern District of California, 2002-2007
The San Francisco Apartment Association
The Marina Times
Susan Dyer Reynolds — investigative journalist
Lou Barberini — investigative journalist
Pirate Wires
Take Action SF / No B.S. Voter Guide
Vote & Change SF
Stephen Martin Pinto — SFFD Firefighter; Veterans Affairs Commissioner; Major, USMC (res.)
Quentin Kopp* — Supervisor, 1971-1986; State Senator 1986-1998; Judge 1998-2004
Trevor Traina — US Ambassador to Austria, 2018-2021
OUR COMMITMENT
No drama. Central Committee members are public servants. It’s the RCCC’s job to educate, register, and organize voters, and to source, train, and support candidates — not to settle personal scores or pursue niche agendas.
Big tent politics. The San Francisco Democratic Party has more than two dozen chartered clubs. This allows the DCCC to market itself in versatile ways, build broad coalitions, and unite diverse constituencies without forcing everyone to agree on everything. The SFGOP has only one chartered club, which is a recipe for conflict on our Central Committee.
Do the work. Success in politics is the result of early mornings and late nights, blockwalking and phone banking, gathering signatures and handing out flyers — not of yelling at the TV.
Voter education. Ballots in San Francisco are often 10 or 12 pages long. Voters need help learning about the differences between and among candidates from both parties and the various measures and propositions. It’s not enough to publish a barebones voter guide once every two years.
We want to earn your vote!
OUR TRACK RECORD
Our slate comprises proud San Francisco Republicans. We are a mix of successful businesspeople and experienced activists. We know we can meet our commitments above, because we’ve done it before. Over the past two years, the Briones Society has produced a weekly news digest, a monthly podcast, and an annual policy journal that reach more than 11 thousand San Francisco voters. Candidates on our slate pounded pavement for months gathering signatures and raising awareness for both the district attorney and school board recalls, including two candidates who coordinated all the volunteers for the district attorney recall.
OUR PLATFORM
A hand-up, not a hand-out, for the homeless. Enforce laws against public intoxication, drug use, and urban camping. Invest in compulsory treatment programs based on inpatient “campus” model with wraparound services and behavioral standards. Expand Homeward Bound program to reunite individuals who’ve come from other cities (and who are now homeless in San Francisco) with their communities.
If we don’t have public safety, we don’t have public spaces. Double the size of SFPD to 3,500 sworn officers to achieve parity with police-per-capita numbers in London, Paris, and other Western European cities. Support challenges to lenient judges at the ballot box. Support efforts to repeal Propositions 47 and 57, which make it more difficult to prosecute criminals.
When it comes to government: Keep it simple, stupid. Cut the number of commissions by at least two thirds and transfer authority back to the mayor. Add between two and four at-large seats to the Board of Supervisors. Mandate independent audits under the City Charter.
Build more housing where housing is needed. Support market-based solutions to reduce the cost of housing and make it possible for the young and the working class to make San Francisco their home. Pass a Standard Environmental Requirements Ordinance to increase the number of new residential developments exempt under CEQA. Incentivize office-to-residence conversions and revitalize downtown with university partnerships. Allow increased residential development on commercial-zoned parcels, as well as industrial and production, distribution, and repair districts.
A rigorous education is the best platform for success. Civic education, not political indoctrination. Bring back 8th grade algebra. Preserve merit-based admissions to Lowell High School. Empower teachers and administrators to enforce high behavioral and academic standards. Support school choice and charter academies.
Public infrastructure, private innovation. Concentrate all permitting and approvals for new small businesses in a single application and mandate approval within 90 days of completed submission. Repeal Proposition C (2018), a poorly designed tax increase that caused multiple large employers to flee the city.
*Candidates endorsed by Judge Kopp are marked with an asterisk above.