Over the course of three days, attendees will hear from thought leaders from across the country and around the world.

The Gathering 2018: Speakers

Jane O’Meara Sanders
Jane O’Meara Sanders is Co-Founder of the Sanders Institute and now serves as a Fellow. A political scientist, Jane has served as a president of two colleges, a political consultant, and held appointed and elected office.

Jane and her husband, Senator Bernie Sanders, have four children and seven grandchildren. She has volunteered in Senator Sanders Congressional office as Chief of Staff and Policy/Press Advisor, and was a top advisor in the Bernie 2016 presidential campaign.

Jane earned her Ph.D. in Leadership and Policy Studies from Union Institute & University and subsequently completed the Harvard Institute for Educational Management and Presidents Seminar.

Jane O’Meara Sanders

Co-Founder, Fellow, The Sanders Institute

Senator Bernie Sanders
Bernie Sanders is serving his third term in the U.S. Senate after winning re-election in 2018. His previous 16 years in the House of Representatives make him the longest serving independent member of Congress in American history.

Born in 1941 in Brooklyn, Sanders attended James Madison High School, Brooklyn College and the University of Chicago. After graduating in 1964, he moved to Vermont. In 1981, he was elected (by 10 votes) to the first of four terms as mayor of Burlington. Sanders lectured at the John F. Kennedy School of Government at Harvard and at Hamilton College in upstate New York before his 1990 election as Vermont’s at-large member in Congress.

The Almanac of American Politics calls Sanders a “practical and successful legislator.” Throughout his career he has focused on the shrinking American middle class and the growing income and wealth gaps in the United States. As chairman of the Senate Committee on Veterans’ Affairs, Sanders in 2014 passed legislation reforming the VA health care system. Congressional Quarterly said he was able “to bridge Washington’s toxic partisan divide and cut one of the most significant deals in years.”

Today, Sanders remains on the veterans committee and was tapped by Senate leadership to be the chairman of the Senate Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions (HELP) Committee. He also serves on the Environment and Public Works Committee, where he has focused on global warming and rebuilding our nation’s crumbling infrastructure. He is a member of the Energy and Natural Resources Committee, where he has championed efforts to transform our energy system from fossil fuels to renewable power sources like solar and wind. He also sits on the Senate Budget Committee, which he was chairman of last Congress, and led the committee’s fight against corporate greed.

Senator Bernie Sanders

US Senator (I) VT

Abdul El-Sayed
Earlier this year, El-Sayed ran for Governor of Michigan on a progressive platform, advocating for universal healthcare, clean water for all, debt-free and tuition-free higher education, and a pathway to 100% renewable energy.
Before running for Governor, El-Sayed served as Health Commissioner in Detroit where he rebuilt Detroit’s Health Department after it had been privatized during the City’s municipal bankruptcy. Under his leadership, the Department created a program to provide every child in Detroit a free pair of glasses, stood up to corporate polluters like Marathon Petroleum to force them to reduce emissions and invest in parks; and had every school, daycare and Head Start building tested for lead in the Water after Flint.

Abdul El-Sayed

Physician, Public Health Expert & Activist

Ada Briceno
Ada Briceño has dedicated her career to building grassroots organizations among working families, uplifting marginalized voices, and bringing together diverse communities into powerful progressive coalitions. In addition to union organizing and political work, she has led social justice campaigns including for immigrant rights, women’s rights, and environmental justice. The Orange County Register named her in their “100 Most Influential” four times.

Ada Briceño immigrated to the United States from Nicaragua at age 7. Her family fled a hostile dictatorship. Today, Ada serves as Co-President of UNITE-HERE Local 11, representing over 32,000 hotel workers in Southern California and Arizona. Ada sits on the National Steering Committee Member for the Labor Campaign for Single-Payer fighting for Medicare for All, and she is an instrumental part of living wage efforts.

For over 25 years, Ada has worked to help transform Orange County by expanding the electorate, helping immigrant families become citizens, registering voters in under-represented Latino communities, and improving voting rights and voting access. She was elected Chair of the Democratic Party of Orange County in 2019, and she is the first immigrant to hold that role.

In 2020, Ada was elected a Democratic National Committee Member representing California. As a DNC member, Ada has strengthened an inclusive and accessible national organization, encouraging women to run for office and lifting up under-represented voices from immigrants, the working poor, and communities of color.

Ada Briceno

Coming Soon

Ada Colau
Ada Colau Ballano (Barcelona, 1974) was elected in 2015 as Barcelona's first-ever woman mayor. Her professional life has been devoted to researching and championing human rights, with special emphasis on the right to housing. Under her leadership, Barcelona has increased social spending to historic levels, spearheaded initiatives to prevent gentrification by increasing public and social housing, created a municipal energy company and mainstreamed a gender perspective across all city policy.

Ada Colau

Mayor, Barcelona

Alan Minsky
Alan MInsky is the Executive Director of Progressive Democrats of America (PDA).
Before joining PDA in 2018, Alan worked as a journalist for over two decades. He was the Program Director at KPFK Radio Los Angeles and the Coordinator of Pacifica Radio's national political coverage. He launched the original podcasts for The Nation and Jacobin Magazines; and is the co-creator of the Ralph Nader Radio Hour. Alan frequently contributes articles to The Nation, Truthdig, Common Dreams, and other journals.

Back in 2000, Alan co-founded the Los Angeles Independent Media Center; and in the summer of 2011, having completed a project with the magazine Adbusters, Alan became one of the first organizers of Occupy Wall Street.

Alan Minsky

Coming Soon

Anne Miskey
Anne Miskey is a highly respected and accomplished leader who recently served as the President and Chief Executive Officer of Union Station Homeless Services. With her extensive experience and expertise, Anne is widely recognized as a national expert in developing innovative and effective strategies to end homelessness. She has been recognized for her leadership during times of chaos and was nominated as a woman CEO by the Los Angeles Business Journal as part of their Women's Leadership Series and Awards.

Anne is deeply committed to advocating for and empowering the most vulnerable members of society, and she has a proven track record of creating long-term positive change and building strong support systems for those experiencing poverty, violence, racism, and homelessness. Prior to joining Union Station Homeless Services, Anne was the CEO of the Downtown Women's Center and the first-ever Executive Director of Funders Together to End Homelessness.

Throughout her career, Anne has worked closely with government agencies such as the Department of Housing and Urban Development, Health and Human Services, Veterans Affairs, and the Department of Labor to champion support for vulnerable individuals and families in the areas of housing, health, and employment.

In addition to her work at Union Station Homeless Services, Anne is a sought-after speaker and community leader who fosters conversations about the systemic issues that drive homelessness and works to debunk myths about those experiencing homelessness. She was invited to speak at the White House on topics related to women and youth homelessness and has played a key role in former First Lady Michelle Obama's Joining Forces Campaign to support veterans.

Anne is also actively involved in various community initiatives. She serves as Commissioner on the City of Pasadena's Health & Human Services Commission and was on the National Board for the Technical Assistance Collaborative (TAC), a nonprofit dedicated to the intersection of human services, healthcare, and affordable housing. She has also served as co-chair of the Business Oversight Committee of Councilmember John Kennedy's "We Must Breathe" advisory group, which aimed to achieve racial equality in Pasadena businesses and organizations. She served on the Los Angeles Homeless Services Authority Ad Hoc Committee on Women's Homelessness and the Steering Committee for the Provider Alliance, a network of over 70 nonprofit organizations working on homelessness.

Anne spent much of her life in western and central Canada before moving to the United States. She received a Bachelor of Arts in history and theater from the University of Lethbridge in Alberta and a Master of Divinity degree from the University of Toronto.

Podcast: https://changingthenarrativepodcast.buzzsprout.com/

Anne Miskey

Housing & Homelessness Expert and Advocate

Alex Lee
Alex Lee (李天明) represents California’s 24th Assembly District which includes the Alameda County communities of Fremont, Newark, and Sunol, and the Santa Clara County communities of Milpitas and San Jose.
Assemblymember Lee was elected in 2020, and became the youngest Asian American legislator ever elected and the first openly bisexual state legislator in California history. He currently Chairs three committees: The Committee on Human Services, the Select Committee on Social Housing, and the Legislative Progressive Caucus. He is also a member of the Committee on Housing and Community Development, the Committee on Labor and Employment, and the Budget Subcommittee on Human Services.

Alex Lee

Assemblymember

Ben Cohen
Ben Cohen and childhood friend Jerry Greenfield opened Ben & Jerry’s Homemade Ice Cream Parlor in Burlington, Vermont, in 1978, and over the years the pair turned Ben & Jerry’s into a worldwide phenomenon.

A tireless activist, Cohen has put his wealth to use in founding such groups as TrueMajority and Business Leaders for Sensible Priorities, both of which are active in advancing various social and political causes.

Ben Cohen

Activist, Co-Founder, Ben & Jerry’s Ice Cream

Ben Jealous
Benjamin Todd Jealous is a former candidate for Governor for the state of Maryland and a founding fellow of the Sanders Institute. Jealous is also the former president and CEO of the NAACP, where he led successful state and local movements to ban the death penalty, outlaw racial profiling, defend voting rights, secure marriage equality, and free multiple wrongfully incarcerated people.

Prior to leading the NAACP, he spent 15 years serving as a journalist and community organizer.
A Rhodes Scholar, he has been named to the 40 under 40 lists of both Forbes and Time magazines.

He also serves as an advisor for multiple tech startups that work to close gaps, particularly in the areas of financial inclusion, justice tech, and low wage work.

Ben Jealous

Former President and CEO, NAACP
Founding Fellow, The Sanders Institute

Benjamin Henwood
Benjamin Henwood, PhD, LCSW is the Albert G. and Frances Lomas Feldman Professor of Social Policy and Health at the University of Southern California (USC). He directs the Center for Homelessness, Housing and Health Equity Research at the USC Suzanne Dworak-Peck School of Social Work and co-directs the Homeless Policy Research Institute at the USC Sol Price School of Social Policy. Trained a clinical social worker and researcher, Dr. Henwood is an expert in health and housing services research whose work connects clinical interventions with social policy. He is a co-author of the book “Housing First,” published by Oxford University Press, and lead the launch of the American Academy of Social Work and Social Welfare grand challenge to end homelessness. Dr. Henwood’s research has been supported by the National Institutes of Health, the National Science Foundation, the Patient Centered Research Outcomes Institute, and the Conrad N. Hilton Foundation. His research on guaranteed basic income for people experiencing homelessness was recently funded by Google.org. Since 2017, Dr. Henwood has served as the methodological lead for the Greater Los Angeles Homeless Count, which is the largest unsheltered count in the United States.

Benjamin Henwood

Albert G. and Frances Lomas Feldman Professor of Social Policy and Health at the University of Southern California

Bill de Blasio
Bill de Blasio is the Democratic mayor of New York in New York. First elected in 2013, de Blasio won a new term in the general election on November 7, 2017. De Blasio also ran on the Working Families ballot line.

From 2010 to 2013, de Blasio served as New York City Public Advocate. He represented the District 39 on the New York City Council from 2002 to 2009. In 1999, he was elected to District 15's school board in Brooklyn. De Blasio also served as regional director for the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development from 1997 to 1998 and managed Hillary Clinton's 2000 New York Senate campaign.

Bill de Blasio

Mayor of New York City

Bill McKibben
Bill McKibben is an author and environmentalist. He is a founder of 350.org, the first planet-wide, grassroots climate change movement and a founding fellow of the Sanders Institute.

In 2014 McKibben was awarded the Right Livelihood Prize, and was the 2013 winner of the Gandhi Prize and the Thomas Merton Prize. His book The End of Nature is regarded as the first book for a general audience about climate change; he’s gone on to write a dozen more books.

He is currently the Schumann Distinguished Scholar in Environmental Studies at Middlebury College and a fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. 

Bill McKibben

Author & Founder, 350.org
Founding Fellow, The Sanders Institute

Brenda Torpy
Brenda Torpy, Champlain Housing Trust’s CEO, has 40 years of experience in affordable housing starting with community organizing and rural community development in Vermont. As housing director under Mayor Bernie Sanders, Brenda led the development of the Burlington Community Land Trust, served as its first board president, and joined the staff in 1991. Brenda is past chair and board member of Grounded Solutions Network; member of the Federal Home Loan Bank of Boston and past member of the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston’s Advisory Councils, and the Vermont Governor’s Housing Council. Brenda’s leadership in the field of CLTs and permanent affordability was recognized with a Ford Leadership Award, and under her stewardship, CHT received the United Nations World Habitat Award. Brenda is a frequent speaker at national and international forums and has provided technical assistance to community groups and government entities on CLT development throughout the US and abroad.

Brenda Torpy

CEO, Champlain Housing Trust

Carolyn Fowler
CAROLYN FOWLER BIOGRAPHY

Carolyn Fowler is a distinguished former AT&T executive and currently serves as the Government Affairs Advisor for LAUSD Board member Dr. George J. McKenna III. She is deeply involved in her community, holding the position of DNC member and serving as the California State President of the National Federation of Democratic Women (NFDW). Additionally, she is the Controller for the California Democratic Party and Chair of the Women's Caucus. Her leadership extends to being the former Lead-Co-Chair of the Justice, Equity, Diversity, and Inclusion committee.

Ms. Fowler is also a dedicated member of the City of Inglewood Planning Commission. As Vice Chair and Senior Assembly Member of the California Senior Legislature, her legislative efforts include a successful proposal for oral health care in skilled nursing facilities, which resulted in a bill signed by Governor Gavin Newsom.

Carolyn is a key member of the L.A. County Voting Solutions For All People Advisory Committee (VSAP). Her exceptional leadership and contributions have earned her numerous accolades, including the California Legislative Black Caucus Unsung Shero Award and National Action Network Los Angeles Vanguard Award for Extraordinary Leadership.

In addition to her professional achievements, Carolyn is an active member of the Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority Incorporated, IAM Local 1932, California Black Women's Collective (CABWC), and the California Alliance for Retired Americans (CARA).

She holds a BA in Business Administration from the University of Michigan and has completed the Wharton Global MBA International Certificate program at Pennsylvania State University. Carolyn resides in Inglewood, California.

Carolyn Fowler

Government Affairs Advisor for LAUSD Board member Dr. George J. McKenna III

Carmen Yulin Cruz
Hon. Carmen Yulín Cruz Soto is the Mayor of San Juan City.

Cruz was born and attended elementary and high school in Puerto Rico. Cruz completed her Bachelor's degree at Boston University and her Master's degree at Carnegie Mellon University.

Cruz worked as a Manager and Human Resources Director for various companies after graduating. Following 12 years in the US, Cruz returned to Puerto Rico and worked as an advisor for the San Juan City Major and for the President of the Puerto Rico House of Representatives.

Cruz is a member of the Political Education Institute of the Popular Democratic Party (PPD) and was elected National President of the PPD Women Organization. In 2005 the Governor of Puerto Rico named her a member of the San Juan Reorganization Commission. Cruz was also part of the PPD Government Platform Program Committee and in 2008 was elected Representative by Accumulation. In 2012 Cruz was elected Mayor of San Juan City.

Carmen Yulin Cruz

Mayor, San Juan Puerto Rico; Fellow, The Sanders Institute

Carroll Fife
Carroll Fife is a mother, an organizer, and a "hell-raising humanitarian" committed to doing her part to build strong, healthy communities. After decades of work in education, human services, and grassroots organizing, Carroll was "volun-told" to run for office by her movement family and residents city-wide. Amid the COVID-19 pandemic, she took on the challenge.
As a founder of Moms for Housing, Carroll has fought to make the human right to housing state law in California and the San Francisco Bay Area. Her activism in the streets and her work inside the halls of power seek to protect and grow the rights of the voiceless. Her actions have inspired a host of legislative actions while capturing the attention of supporters worldwide.
Councilmember Fife's primary mission is to build lasting relationships in diverse communities by strengthening connections to people, the planet, and our shared humanity. Carroll's historic campaign win in 2020 was supported by virtually every endorsing entity in Oakland and powered by over 1000 active volunteers. Her campaign engine has transitioned into a permanent political organization dedicated to civic engagement and education, supporting transformative legislation, and building progressive electoral majorities in Oakland, California, and abroad.

Carroll Fife

Council member

Chirlane McCray
As First Lady of New York City, Chirlane McCray has redefined the role of First Lady, managing a robust portfolio to advance an ambitious agenda in support of all New Yorkers.

Ms. McCray created ThriveNYC, the most comprehensive mental health plan of any city or state in the nation and she is recognized nationally as a powerful champion for mental health reform.

Additionally, Ms. McCray spearheads the Cities Thrive Coalition of mayors, with representation from 200 cities from all 50 states, advocating for a more integrated and better-funded behavioral health system.

As Chair of the Mayor’s Fund to Advance New York City, Ms. McCray brings together government, philanthropy and the private sector to work on some of the most pressing issues of our time, including mental health, youth employment and immigration.

She also launched and leads the NYC Unity Project, an unprecedented citywide effort to make sure LGBTQ young people in New York City are safe, supported and healthy.

Ms. McCray’s other responsibilities are extensive: As co-chair of the Commission on Gender Equity, she is a persistent voice for creating a 50-50 city and world. In partnership with NYC’s Police Chief, she leads the Domestic Violence Task Force. And in 2015, with her signature, New York City became the first city in the country to join the United Nations Women’s Safe Cities Global Initiative.

The First Lady is a graduate of Wellesley College. She and Mayor Bill de Blasio live in Gracie Mansion, the official residence, and are proud parents of Chiara and Dante.

Chirlane McCray

First Lady of New York City, Writer, and Activist

Cynthia Nixon
Nixon is an award winning actress and political activist. Earlier this year, Nixon announced her campaign for Governor of New York as a challenger to Democratic incumbent Andrew Cuomo. Her platform focused on income inequality, renewable energy, establishing universal health care, stopping mass incarceration in the United States, and protecting undocumented children from deportation. Nixon is an advocate for LGBT rights in the United States, particularly the right of same-sex marriage. She received the Yale University Artist for Equality award in 2013 and a Visibility Award from the Human Rights Campaign in 2018.

Cynthia Nixon

Actress, Activist & Politician

Cenk Uygur
Cenk Uygur is the host and founder of The Young Turks, the largest online news show in the world, and CEO of TYT Network. Before founding The Young Turks, Uygur graduated from the University of Pennsylvania Wharton School of Business. With a passion for policy, he moved directly into Columbia University Law School. Upon fulfilling a degree in law, he made great strides in the entertainment industry, landing a position as host on MSNBC Live and heading The Young Turks with Cenk Uygur on Current TV. Uygur is still a vital part to TYT Network, which has a verified global audience of more than 150 million views a month and three billion total video views, making it one of the most-watched online news networks in the world. Leading the teleprompter-free show every weekday, thousands of people stream live to listen to his opinion on topics within news and politics. Outside of his own show, he has also appeared numerous times on CNN, Headline News,E!,Al Jazeera, ABC News, Voice of America, NPR and FOX News Channel. Uygur is among the top five most popular bloggers on The Huffington Post and is heading the era of politics on YouTube.

Cenk Uygur

Journalist and Political Commentator

Danny Glover
Danny Glover is an actor, producer and humanitarian. He is a founding fellow of the Sanders Institute and serves as UNICEF Ambassador and Ambassador for the United Nations International Decade for People of African Descent and has served as a Goodwill Ambassador for the United Nations Development Program.

Glover has also been a commanding presence on screen, stage and television for more than 30 years. Glover’s film credits range from noted movie roles in Dreamgirls, Color Purple, Witness, the blockbuster Lethal Weapon franchise and the recent film Sorry to Bother You to smaller independent features, some of which Glover also produced. In 2005 Glover co-founded Louverture Films with writer/producer Joslyn Barnes, and later partnered with Susan Rockefeller and Bertha Foundation.

Danny Glover

Actor, Producer & Humanitarian
Founding Fellow, The Sanders Institute

David Driscoll
David Driscoll is the Executive Director and co-founder of the Sanders Institute.

As a son of Jane and Bernie Sanders, Driscoll has been involved in politics and government from a young age. Most recently, Driscoll led the Bernie 2016 "Art of the Political Revolution" effort, which incorporated the creative community into the campaign.

Driscoll, a global brand marketing expert, built his career in the private sector, at Vermont-based Burton, Inc., and in Oregon at Nike. His leadership role in developing these global brands and consumer loyalty had Driscoll traveling the world, recruiting and managing talent/athletes, and producing content and world-stage sports industry events.

He received a B.A. in Political Science and Economics from the University of Vermont.

David Driscoll

Co-Founder, Executive Director, The Sanders Institute

David McWilliams
David McWilliams is one of Ireland’s leading economic commentators. He is a writer, journalist, lecturer, broadcaster and documentary maker and has written four bestsellers, presented award-winning documentaries and performed an economics stand-up show.  

He writes columns in Irish newspapers, is a regular contributor to the Financial Times and the co-founder of the world’s only economics festival www.kilkenomics.com. He is recognized as one of the world’s Young Global Leaders by the World Economic Forum, Davos and is a regulator contributor to Google’s Zeitgeist conference.

David has launched his new online economics course – “Economics without Boundaries” and a series of animated economics videos – Punk Economics. He also writes a daily financial markets newsletter, Global Macro 360.

David previously worked as an economist in the Irish Central Bank and later in the financial markets with UBS and Banque Nationale de Paris. He studied economics at Trinity College and the College of Europe.

David McWilliams

Economist, Broadcaster & Journalist; Fellow, The Sanders Institute

Diane Archer
Diane Archer is president of Just Care USA, an independent digital hub covering health and financial issues facing boomers and their families and promoting policy solutions. She is the past board chair of Consumer Reports and serves on the Brown University School of Public Health Advisory Board. Ms. Archer began her career in health advocacy in 1989 as founder and president of the Medicare Rights Center, a national organization dedicated to ensuring that older and disabled Americans get the health care they need. She served as director, Health Care for All Project, Institute for America’s Future, between 2005 and 2010.

Diane Archer

President, Just Care USA

Denny Zane
Denny Zane grew up in the Inland Empire, the son of a steelworker and a nurse. He moved to Los Angeles to attend Occidental College, graduating with the Class of 1969, a philosophy major and a student anti-war organizer. In 1979, Zane’s organizing skills led to voter approval of a rent control measure in Santa Monica, California, followed by three terms on the Santa Monica City Council, including a term as Mayor. He formulated much of Santa Monica’s successful affordable housing policies, the strategy to create the Third Street Promenade and novel zoning policies to enable multifamily housing in mixed-use developments on commercial boulevards before it became popular.

Zane served as the Executive Director of the Coalition for Clean Air in the early 1990’s, authoring the legislation to create the Carl Moyer Program to fund alternatives to diesel-fueled trucks. In 2007 he founded Move LA to convene environmental, labor, and business leaders to champion two sales tax ballot measures to fund the massive transit expansion now going on in LA County. Measures R (2008) and M (2016) each received over two-thirds voter support and will together generate $120 B over 40 years. Shortly thereafter, Zane proposed a measure to Supervisor Ridley-Thomas to raise over $600 M/year to fund services for homeless persons. Measure H was also approved by LA County voters on March 4, 2017, by more than two-thirds vote.

In 2019, Zane convened social justice and tenant advocates and labor leaders in the City of Los Angeles to formulate Measure ULA to raise hundreds of millions of dollars each year to prevent homelessness and build affordable housing. On November 8, 2022, LA voters approved Measure ULA.
Denny is now working on the Justice for Renters Act, a statewide California measure, sponsored by AHF, that will restore local control over rent control laws and developing a Southern California regional climate, clean air and transit ballot measure. He still lives in Santa Monica with his wife, Gabriele Morgan, and his 27-year old son, Alex, nearby.

Denny Zane

Former Executive Director of the Coalition for Clean Air

Darrell Steinberg
Darrell Steinberg is the Mayor of Sacramento and was the Senate President pro Tempore in the California Legislature. He is one of Sacramento’s most accomplished public servants, serving the Sacramento community for over 20 years.
Steinberg represented California’s capital city in the California Legislature from 1998 - 2014 and was the first Sacramentan to serve as President of the Senate in over 125 years. Steinberg earned a reputation for confronting seemingly intractable problems and delivering results for California through consensus-building.
Elected to the Senate in 2006, Steinberg became President pro Tempore in late 2008, at the deep end of the economic downturn when the state faced an unimaginable $42 billion deficit. Two years later, he was honored with the John F. Kennedy Profile in Courage award by the Kennedy Library Foundation in recognition of his leadership in bipartisan negotiations leading to the state’s fiscal recovery.
Throughout his entire career, Steinberg led the Legislature on numerous complex issues, including the 2009 and 2014 state water agreements, criminal justice reform, and reinvesting over a billion dollars in career technical education. He led the common-sense pension reform eliminating flagrant abuses of the system. He authored legislation to expedite the legal process for large-scale environmentally sustainable projects. Steinberg also teamed up with Republican lawmakers to eradicate frivolous lawsuits and improve the Americans with Disabilities Act while motivating businesses to accommodate disabled customers.

Steinberg has been a relentless advocate for mental healthcare, calling it “the under-attended issue in our time and in our society.” Heralded within the mental health community as the “most transformative figure mental health has ever seen,” Steinberg authored Proposition 63, the Mental Health Services Act, creating a one billion-dollar system for dynamic mental healthcare in California. He continued his work by fighting to fund 2,000 new mental health crisis beds in the 2014-2015 state budget. He also passed legislation to mandate insurance companies to cover treatment of children with autism and related disorders.
At the local level, Steinberg played a key role in Sacramento’s downtown revitalization, obtaining state funding for a new courthouse, which is expected to create 1,800 jobs for the city. Steinberg also fought for state monies for career pathways to connect high school students to 21st century jobs, delivering millions of dollars to Sacramento area schools in the first round of funding. Since assuming office in December 2016, Steinberg has made inclusive economic development a key priority for the growing city and brought hundreds of millions of new resources to combat homelessness. His leadership has helped almost 25,000 people move from the streets to permanent housing.
Steinberg graduated from University of California, Los Angeles, where he earned a BA in economics, then earned a Juris Doctorate from UC Davis Law School. He went on to serve as an employee rights attorney for the California State Employees Association for 10 years before his work as an Administrative Law Judge and mediator. Steinberg served on the Sacramento City Council from 1992 to 1998, and as an Assembly member from 1999 to 2004.

Steinberg and his wife, Julie, have two grown children – a daughter, Jordana, and a son, Ari.

Darrell Steinberg

Mayor of Sacramento

Dr. Joseph Bishop
Dr. Bishop is the Executive Director and co-founder of the Center for the Transformation of Schools (CTS) in the School of Education & Information Studies at UCLA. CTS conducts research that supports school systems and policymakers in their efforts to organize schools around the needs, interests, and talents of young people in a number of areas including school discipline and school climate, juvenile justice reform, student homelessness, students in the foster care system, school finance, and ensuring practices and policies take into account the needs of students of color inside and outside of school settings. Dr. Bishop has held a number of state and national educational leadership positions with the Learning Policy Institute, the National Opportunity to Learn Campaign with the Schott Foundation for Public Education, Opportunity Action, the Coalition for Teaching Quality, the Partnership for 21st Century Learning, and the National Association of Latino Elected and Appointed Officials (NALEO) Educational Fund. He was formerly a governor-appointed member of the California Postsecondary Education Commission (CPEC). Dr. Bishop has been featured on a number of digital and print media sources, including National Public Radio, the Los Angeles Times, the Washington Post, and Education Week.

He is the lead author of the State of Crisis: Dismantling Student Homelessness in CA report that received national attention and new book Our Children Can't Wait: The Urgency of Reinventing Education Policy in America from Teachers College Press and podcast of the same name makes a compelling case for how education policy efforts must be reimagined to focus on dismantling historic inequities in health, education, housing, and the environment and the deeply seeded social patterns fueled by systemic racism.

Dr. Bishop earned his Ph.D. in Educational Leadership, Policy and Organizations from the University of California, Santa Barbara.

Dr. Joseph Bishop

Executive Director and co-founder of the Center for the Transformation of Schools (CTS) in the School of Education & Information Studies at UCLA

Dr. Tyrone Howard
Tyrone Howard is a professor of education in the School of Education & Information Studies at UCLA. His research addresses issues tied to race, culture, access and educational opportunity for minoritized student populations.

Professor Howard is the author of several best-selling books, including "Why Race & Culture Matters in Schools" (Teachers College Press) and "All Students Must Thrive" (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt). He is a native of Compton, California, where he also served as a classroom teacher. Professor Howard is a member of the National Academy of Education and is an AERA Fellow.

Dr. Tyrone Howard

Professor of education in the School of Education & Information Studies at UCLA

Dr. Cornel West
Cornel West is a prominent and provocative democratic intellectual.  He is a founding fellow of the Sanders Institute and a Professor of Philosophy and Christian Practice at Union Theological Seminary and Professor Emeritus at Princeton University. 

He has also taught at Yale, Harvard, and the University of Paris. Cornel West graduated Magna Cum Laude from Harvard in three years and obtained his M.A. and Ph.D. in Philosophy at Princeton.  He has written over 20 books and has edited 13. In 1993, Dr. West was the winner of The American Book Award. Dr. West has also made three spoken word albums and made his film debut in the Matrix.

Dr. Cornel West

Professor, Author & Activist
Founding Fellow, The Sanders Institute

Dr. Radhika Balakrishnan
Radhika Balakrishnan is faculty director at the Center for Women’s Global Leadership and professor in Women's and Gender Studies at Rutgers University. She has a Ph.D. in Economics from Rutgers University. She is Commissioner for the Commission for Gender Equity for the City of New York and the Co-Chair of the Civil Society Advisory Committee for the United Nations Development Program, on the Global Advisory Council for the United Nations Population Fund. Her most recent co-authored book of Rethinking Economic Policy for Social Justice: The Radical Potential of Human Rights with James Heintz and Diane Elson. Routledge

Dr. Radhika Balakrishnan

UN Development Program & Global Advisory Council

Dr. Hosnieh Djafari Marbini
Hosnieh Djafari-Marbini is a Labour City Councillor, ethnic minority officer for her Constituency Labour Party, and a trade union branch Political Officer. Hosnieh campaigns on the NHS, inequalities and refugee rights. Hosnieh’s fifteen-year career in the NHS, and low-income countries has been heavily focused on communication, partnership-working and education. This has included initiating and organizing education series for many institutions including University of Oxford and Malawi School of Anaesthesia, and strategic planning with the Oxford University Global Surgery group and Asylum Welcome.
The ward Hosnieh represents is one of the most deprived in her city of Oxford. This together with her own background of having arrived in the UK aged thirteen with almost no English as the daughter of a refugee, have driven her to help deliver social justice and a greater platform for effective change by marginalized groups in UK society.

Dr. Hosnieh Djafari Marbini

Anaesthetist at Oxford University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust

Dr. Stephanie Kelton
Stephanie Kelton is a Professor of Economics and Public Policy at Stony Brook University. Before joining Stony Brook, she chaired the Economics Department at the University of Missouri—Kansas City, where she taught for seventeen years. She served as chief economist on the U.S. Senate Budget Committee (Democratic staff) in 2015 and as an economic adviser to Bernie Sanders’s 2016 presidential campaign. She is a former editor-in-chief of the top-ranked blog New Economic Perspectives and member of the TopWonks network of the nation’s best thinkers. In 2016, POLITICO named her one of the 50 people most influencing the public public debate in America. She is a contributing writer at Bloomberg View and a Founding Fellow of the Sanders’Institute. She is Chair of the Board at Economists for Peace & Security. Her forthcoming book, But How Will We Pay For It? Making Public Money Work For Us will be published by Public Affairs in 2020. Kelton is a regular commentator on national radio and broadcast television, and she is a contributing writer at Bloomberg. She consults with policymakers, investment banks, and portfolio managers across the globe. Her research expertise is in Federal Reserve operations, fiscal policy, social security, international finance, and employment policy. She received her Ph.D. from the New School for Social Research and holds an M.Phil. in economics from Cambridge University.

Dr. Stephanie Kelton

Professor of Public Policy & Economics, Stony Brook University
Founding Fellow, The Sanders Institute

Eugene “Gus” Newport
Gus Newport, the former Mayor of Berkeley, is a social justice activist and independent consultant. Gus was the program director of the Vanguard Foundation, consultant and Sr. Fellow to the Ford Foundation, Annie E. Casey Foundation, Louisiana Disaster Recovery Foundation, Jacobs Family Foundation, and the Mabel Louise Riley Foundation. He served as the Vice-President from the US to the World Peace Council from1980-1986 and served on two United Nations committees. More recently he worked to help the Gulfport, Mississippi, community rebuild in the wake of damage from Hurricane Katrina.

Eugene “Gus” Newport

Social Justice Activist & Former Mayor of Berkeley, CA

Ericka Lesley
Ericka Lesley stands as a tireless equity advocate, dedicating over a decade to amplifying the voices of the unheard and underserved within the community. As the current Chair of the Santa Monica Rent Control Board, she ensures that the concerns of our unhoused neighbors find a prominent place at the decision-making table.
Ms. Lesley’s commitment extends to her role as Chair of the Santa Monica Rent Control Board, and the Santa Monica Black Agenda, where she actively fosters a vision that places the spotlight on dismantling the systemic injustices of racism. With an unwavering dedication, she has served the community in various capacities, including Co-Chair of the Education Committee of the Santa Monica/Venice NAACP, a lifetime member. Her contributions also extend to serving as Chair of the Intercultural Equity & Excellence Committee, Chair of the Parent Connection Group, and valuable membership in the Westside Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Committee, among other impactful roles.
Furthermore, Ericka has worked as a Community Health Specialist, ensuring underrepresented communities receive the resources needed for equitable health care. Her journey is marked by a passion for justice, a commitment to community welfare, and an unyielding belief in the power of collective action. Ericka Lesley's advocacy resonates as a beacon of hope, actively shaping a future where systemic inequalities are addressed, and the voices of every community member are not only heard but elevated to create positive and lasting change.

Ericka Lesley

Chair of the Santa Monica Rent Control Board

Fernando Haddad
Haddad began his career as a professor of contemporary political theory at the University of São Paulo, before becoming undersecretary of finance and economic development for the municipality of São Paulo (2001-2003). In 2005, he became minister of education, serving until 2012. During his tenure as minister of education, Haddad's main initiative was the ProUni, or the "university for all" program, which aimed to increase the number of students from lower socioeconomic backgrounds in higher education. In 2012, Haddad was elected the 51st mayor of São Paulo, a position which he held until 2017. Haddad was named as former President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva's running mate for the 2018 presidential elections. However, he was later named PT's new presidential nominee, when Lula was declared ineligible.

Fernando Haddad

Former Mayor of Sao Paulo & Brazilian Presidential Candidate

Grace Roberts Dyrness
Grace Roberts Dyrness is a private consultant in local, grass roots, community development. She has retired from the Price School of Public Policy at the University of Southern California where she taught in the areas of public service in an urban setting, social context of planning, and sustainable communities. She is currently a senior researcher at the Hub for Urban Initiatives in Pasadena, CA. Grace makes her home in Costa Rica and California, but travels frequently to South East Asia and East Africa. Her approach has been to use advocacy planning and participatory approaches to engage people in communities in order to envision their own future and chart a path towards it. She has a graduate degree in Urban Anthropology from the Ateneo de Manila University and a doctorate in planning and development studies from the University of Southern California.

Grace Roberts Dyrness

Consultant

Gavin Newsom
Gavin Newsom is the Governor of California, former Lieutenant Governor of California, and former Mayor of San Francisco.
Newsom is widely recognized for his willingness to lead – repeatedly developing, advocating, and implementing innovative and groundbreaking solutions to some of our most challenging issues. On a wide range of topics including same sex marriage, gun safety, marijuana, the death penalty, universal health care, access to preschool, technology, criminal justice reform, and the minimum wage, Newsom stuck his neck out and did the right thing, which often led to sweeping changes when his policies were ultimately accepted, embraced, and replicated across the state and nation.
Newsom’s top priorities for his administration are tackling our state’s affordability crisis, creating inclusive economic growth and opportunity for every child, and standing up for California values — from civil rights, to immigration, environmental protection, access to quality schools at all levels, and justice.
Governor Newsom is married to Jennifer Siebel Newsom. They have four children: Montana, Hunter, Brooklynn, and Dutch.

Gavin Newsom

Governor of California

Gunnar Lovelace
Gunnar Lovelace is a 4X serial entrepreneur and investor focused on social enterprise at scale. He is the Founder and CEO of Good Money, a mobile-first banking platform empowering consumers to own the bank and be part of a more equitable and transparent world. Lovelace is also the Founder of Thrive Market – a direct-to-consumer lifestyle brand providing organic groceries at wholesale prices through a membership model. In 2010, he founded Love Heals – a social impact fashion brand that has funded the planting of over 1,500,000 trees and sponsored over 50,000 malnourished children globally. Previously, Gunnar started two technology companies in software education and natural language processing. In addition to his for-profit companies he has started two non-profits in education and environmental sustainability.

Gunnar Lovelace

Founder and CEO of Good Money
Founder of Thrive Market & Co-Founder of Alliance For Good

Hugo Soto-Martinez
Hugo Soto-Martínez was born and raised in Los Angeles. His parents immigrated here and worked as street vendors for most of his life to give Hugo and his five siblings more opportunities than they had in Mexico. After his dad became disabled, Hugo started working at a non-union hotel at the age of 16 to help out his family. Shortly before graduating college, he joined with his coworkers to form a union – earning better working conditions and respect on the job.

Hugo spent the last 16 years at UNITE HERE!, organizing with mostly immigrant women in the hotel industry to win healthcare, higher wages, and anti-harassment protections.

After winning his election in 2022, he became the only renter on Los Angeles City Council and helped pass the strongest package of tenant protections Los Angeles has seen in a generation. He’s currently working on legislation to improve LA’s housing inspection system, and strengthen our rent stabilization ordinance.

Hugo Soto-Martinez

Coming Soon

Iziko
IZIKO is a child welfare advocate working to make local, statewide, and national policy changes. With a commitment to working towards a more equitable child welfare system for all youth and a passion for amplifying the voices of young people in all aspects of their work, IZIKO believes that the voices of those with lived experience are essential for meaningful change. IZIKO specializes in cross-nonprofit organizational work, and uplifting youth voice and expertise in bureaucratic settings to bring valuable perspectives. In their role as a member of the Los Angeles Opportunity Youth Collaborative and the National Foster Youth Institute, and through their employment with California Youth Connection, IZIKO works to develop and implement statewide advocacy campaigns to raise awareness of the needs of youth in not only the foster care system but in intersecting systems. They also work to build relationships with key policymakers, directors, and decision-makers.

They are also a skilled community organizer and leader. They have experience working with diverse groups of people to build coordination and campaigns for change. Dedicated in developing the leadership skills of young people, they have worked with several youth-led organizations to develop and implement important advocacy campaigns.

Iziko

Core Organizer & Community Advocate

James Coleman
James Coleman currently serves as Mayor for the City of South San Francisco, and was elected in 2020 as the city's youngest ever and first openly LGBTQ+ council member in the city's history.

James believes that housing is a basic right, and to meet that vision local government needs to have a direct role in producing the affordable housing we need. On the city council, James led the passage of South San Francisco's Measure AA, authorizing the city of SSF to build or acquire social housing. In the next 15 years, South San Francisco is projected to receive over $125 million in commercial linkage fees to be used for affordable and social housing. Last year, James took part in a Social Housing Delegation to Singapore and Hong Kong to learn about their robust social housing programs. His number one priority as Mayor is to deliver affordable housing for the families who need it most, and help his community achieve a vision of housing for all.

James Coleman also serves on the boards of the San Mateo County Housing Endowment and Regional Trust (HEART), HOPE (Housing Our People Effectively) Interagency Council, and Peninsula Clean Energy.

James Coleman

Mayor for the City of South San Francisco

Jamie Court
Jamie Court is the president of Consumer Watchdog, a nonprofit public interest group that, since 1985, has exposed, confronted, and changed corporate and political injustice -- saving Americans billions of dollars and improving countless lives. www.ConsumerWatchdog.org

Jamie has led dozens of major corporate and political campaigns to reform insurers, banks, technology companies, oil companies, utilities and political practices. Capitol Weekly, naming Jamie to its “Top 100” list of unelected movers and shakers in California politics, wrote, “Court has made a career of battling all comers in the interest of the public, and his take-no-prisoners approach has earned him plenty of enemies.”

Jamie’s most recent battles include fighting to protect affordable homeowners and renters’ insurance in California, enacting and implementing a price gouging penalty on California oil refiners, and protecting California’s ban on oil drilling within a half mile of a community.

Jamie Court

President of Consumer Watchdog

James Zogby
Dr. Zogby co-founded the Arab American Institute in 1985 and continues to serve as its president. He is also Managing Director of Zogby Research Services.
In addition to holding positions in the Jackson '84 and '88, Gore 2000, Obama 2008, and Sanders 2016 campaigns, Zogby has served on the Democratic National Committee since 1992 and was a member of the DNC's Executive Committee for 16 years. He is Chair of the party's Ethnic Council and served on the Unity and Reform Commission.  

Dr. Zogby was appointed by President Obama to the United States Commission on International Religious Freedom in 2013 and 2015 and twice served as the Commission's Vice-Chair. Zogby writes a weekly column published in 12 countries, was the creator and host of an award-winning call-in political television show, is frequently featured on national and international media as an expert on Middle East affairs, and is a highly-acclaimed author.

James Zogby

Founder & President, Arab American Institute; Fellow, The Sanders Institute

Jane Fonda
Jane Fonda has spent the last several decades fighting for Indigenous peoples' rights, economic justice, LGBTQ rights, protesting the War, gender equality and more.

Now, she continues to lead the charge on the climate emergency via Fire Drill Fridays, the national movement to protest government inaction on climate change which she started in October 2019 in partnership with Greenpeace USA, and the Jane Fonda Climate PAC, which is focused on defeating political allies of the fossil fuel industry. She is the author of several books, including the most recent, What Can I Do: My Path from Climate Despair to Activism. Fonda continues to fight for the most vulnerable among us, consistently pointing out the intersection between the myriad of causes.

Jane Fonda

Actress & Activist

Jane Kim
Jane Kim is a member of the San Francisco Board of Supervisors, the legislative body for the City and County of San Francisco, and former President of the San Francisco Board of Education. As Supervisor, she led the successful fight to make San Francisco the only city in the nation to make community college tuition-free, authored the ordinance to raise the minimum wage to $15/hour, negotiated the most affordable housing of any city legislator in the last 8 years, and passed the strongest tenant protections in the nation. This year, she led the single largest investment any US city has made towards childcare: a tax on multimillion-dollar commercial real estate sales to raise $130M+ per year make universal childcare a reality. Her track record of fighting for progressive values earned her the endorsements of Senator Bernie Sanders in 2016, and Our Revolution in 2018. Prior to elected office, Jane served as a Community Organizer and Civil Rights Attorney. She is the first Korean American elected to office in San Francisco.

Jane Kim

Member of the San Francisco Board of Supervisors

Jeff Green
Jeff Green is the associate director of the Inland equity Community Land Trust. Born in Fontana California, Jeff graduated from University of California in Riverside with a degree in History.

Jeff Green served in the U. S. Coast Guard Presidential Ceremonial Honor Guard. Rooted in the Inland Empire, Jeff Green received thank yous in Inlandia: A Literary Journey Through California's Inland Empire for researching and identifying authors to include in the anthology and in No Place for a Puritan: The Literature of California's Deserts. Jeff Green is also co-owner of Particle 64, a tech crew that hosts Amplify so organizations can manage civic engagement and election campaigns.

Jeff started as a community organizer with California Partnership in 2017. One of the original founders of and now serving as the associate director of Inland Equity Community Land Trust, he does policy research, grant writing, accounting, website and communications. Jeff also serves on the board of the LULAC Community Service Foundation and is a board member of LULAC Council 3190.

Jeff Green

Associate Director

Jeffrey Sachs
Jeffrey D. Sachs is a world-renowned professor of economics, leader in sustainable development, senior UN advisor, bestselling author, and syndicated columnist. He is also a founding fellow of the Sanders Institute.
Professor Sachs serves as the Director of the Center for Sustainable Development at Columbia University. He is University Professor at Columbia University, the university’s highest academic rank. Sachs is also currently Special Advisor to United Nations Secretary-General António Guterres on the Sustainable Development Goals and Director of the UN Sustainable Development Solutions Network, and previously advised UN Secretary-Generals on both the Sustainable Development Goals and Millennium Development Goals. He is a Distinguished Fellow of the International Institute of Applied Systems Analysis in Laxenburg, Austria.
Sachs is a Commissioner of the ITU/UNESCO Broadband Commission for Development. He is Chair and Founder of SDG USA. Sachs is also co-founder and Chief Strategist of Millennium Promise Alliance and was director of the Millennium Villages Project (2005-2015).
Prior to joining Columbia, Sachs spent over twenty years as a professor at Harvard University, most recently as the Galen L. Stone Professor of International Trade. A native of Detroit, Michigan, Sachs received his B.A., M.A., and Ph.D. degrees at Harvard.

Jeffrey Sachs

Economist, Public Policy Analyst & Director of the UN Sustainable Development Solutions Network and the Center for Sustainable Development, Columbia University
Founding Fellow, Sanders Institute

Jimmy Gomez
Congressman Jimmy Gomez proudly represents California's 34th Congressional District, one of the country's most diverse and culturally rich districts. In the 118th Congress, Congressman Gomez sits on the Ways and Means Committee. He serves as an Assistant Whip of the Democratic Caucus and Deputy Whip for the Congressional Progressive Caucus (CPC). Congressman Gomez is the Founder and Chair of the Congressional Dads Caucus and Congressional Renters Caucus. He is a member of the Congressional Hispanic Caucus (CHC), Congressional Asian Pacific American Caucus (CAPAC), and Future Forum.

Prior to his election to Congress in June of 2017, Congressman Gomez served four and a half years in the California State Assembly, where he served as Chair of the Assembly Appropriations Committee. In the Assembly, Congressman Gomez distinguished himself as a proven national champion of paid family leave and combatting climate change. He became a key figure in authoring landmark legislation to address public health, environmental justice, water conservation, access to education, civic engagement, campaign finance disclosure, LGBTQ+ rights, and affordable housing.

Congressman Gomez attended Riverside Community College before receiving a B.A. in Political Science from the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) and an M.A. in Public Policy from Harvard University's John F. Kennedy School of Government. He lives in Eagle Rock with his wife Mary and son Hodge. He is a lifelong fan of the Los Angeles Dodgers.

Jimmy Gomez

Congressman

Jo Beardsmore
Jo Beardsmore is a Senior Advisor at the Social Practice, facilitating collaboration between organizers in the U.K. and U.S. that are working to transform society in the interests of the many, and not the few. His work on the campaign for Medicare for All with National Nurses United draws on a decade of experience building people-powered movements in the U.K. Jo is a co-founder of UK Uncut, which used distributed organizing techniques and direct action to disrupt government narratives around austerity. As an advisor to Momentum, he provided support in establishing its organizing model, and helped to plan Momentum’s inaugural conference, ‘Building to Win’.

Jo Beardsmore

Co-Founder, UK Uncut; Senior Advisor at the Social Practice

Joseph Geevarghese
Joseph Geevarghese is the founder and Executive Director of Good Jobs Nation. Since 2013, Good Jobs Nation has utilized mass worker strikes and strategic litigation to win 3 presidential executive orders to raise wages, crack-down on labor law abuses, and extend paid leave for over 20 million workers employed by federal contractors. Good Jobs Nation has also been at the forefront of the federal fight to raise the minimum wage to $15 an hour and to safeguard the freedom of workers to organize alongside US Sen. Bernie Sanders. Joseph is a graduate of Georgetown University Law Center

Joseph Geevarghese

Executive Director, Good Jobs Nation

John Cusack
John Cusack is a writer, filmmaker, producer, and Founding member of the Freedom of the Press Foundation. John is also a co-author of Things that Can and Cannot Be Said with Arundahti Roy. He frequently writes for the Huffington Post on political issues. Cusack’s film credits range from blockbusters to independent films, many of which he has written and produced.

John Cusack

Writer, Filmmaker, Producer, Founding member, Freedom of the Press Foundation

John Davis
John Emmeus Davis is a founding partner of Burlington Associates in Community Development, a consulting cooperative that assists city governments and nonprofit organizations in developing homes that remain permanently affordable. He is co-director of the nonprofit Center for Community Land Trust Innovation at the Global Land Alliance.

Community land trusts have been a prominent part of his practice, teaching, and writing. His publications include The City-CLT Partnership (2008), The Community Land Trust Reader (2010), and Manuel d'antispéculation immobilière (2014). His film credits include Arc of Justice, a documentary about the first CLT, an outgrowth of the southern Civil Rights Movement.

John Davis

Partner, Burlington Associates

Josh Fox
Josh Fox is best known as the Oscar-nominated, Emmy-winning writer/director of GASLAND Parts I and II (HBO). He is internationally recognized as a spokesperson and leader on the issue of fracking and extreme energy development. In 2017, he was awarded his third Environmental Media Association award for Best Documentary for his latest film, HOW TO LET GO OF THE WORLD AND LOVE ALL THE THINGS CLIMATE CAN’T CHANGE (HBO), which premiered at the Sundance Film Festival in 2016, toured the world theatrically and was released on HBO in June 2016. In 2017, he produced, co-directed, and co-wrote AWAKE, A DREAM FROM STANDING ROCK (Netflix) with indigenous filmmakers Doug Good Feather and Myron Dewey, which premiered on Netflix and toured to hundreds of locations around the world.

In 2023, Josh premiered THE EDGE OF NATURE at the Byron Bay Film Festival, winning Best Environmental Film there. The film also won the F. Lammot Belin award at the NEPA Film Festival. The film will have its USA Premiere at La Mama, NYC, as a performance project in June 2024. He also completed THE TROUBLE WITH REBEKAH JONES, about the Florida data scientist who was raided and jailed by Ron DeSantis for exposing the state’s hiding of COVID data after a successful Kickstarter campaign. He is working on FOSSIL, a six-part history of the Fossil Fuel industry for Balcony 9 productions, THE YEAR OF WOLF, the fight to preserve wild wolves in the USA, for the BBC, and THE WELCOME TABLE, a film on people displaced from Climate Change for HBO. These films are slated for release in 2024/2025

In 2018, Fox created THE TRUTH HAS CHANGED, a solo performance, book, and film about misinformation, propaganda, and psycho-graphic targeting aimed at manipulating our current media and political ecosystem. In the performance, he tells of his extensive frontline reporting with an emphasis on the smear campaigns waged against him for nearly a decade by the fossil fuel industry. The project has toured to over 25 cities in the US and Europe, including The Public Theater, The Walker Arts Center, and RADIAL SYSTEM 5 in Berlin, and has been seen by thousands of people in support of dozens of progressive, environmental, and grassroots organizations. THE TRUTH HAS CHANGED is Fox’s first book, published by Seven Stories Press. The feature film version of THE TRUTH HAS CHANGED was released in 2021. In 2018, he co-founded the AWAKE MEDIA FELLOWSHIP for Indigenous youth with leaders Stephanie Cassidy, Doug Good Feather, and others.

Due to Josh’s extensive work in environmental activism and reporting, he was appointed to the Democratic Platform Committee in 2016 by Bernie Sanders. Working with Bill McKibben, Nina Turner, Ben Jealous, Russell Greene, Dr. Cornel West, and others, Josh worked to pass a historic climate amendment to the Democratic Platform, which addressed carbon pricing, the phasing out of natural gas power plants, community involvement, and adopting the Keystone XL climate standard for all federal energy projects. In addition, Josh has worked with many state, local, and federal elected officials to create bills that phase out fossil fuels and set goals towards 100% renewable energy development.

His work raising awareness on climate change, fracking, and renewable energy earned Josh the 2010 Lennon/Ono Grant for Peace, given by Yoko Ono. He co-founded The Solutions Project with Mark Ruffalo, Mark Jacobson, and Marco Krapels, and he was an advisor to Artists Against Fracking, Damascus Citizens, and many other organizations involved in the successful fight to ban fracking in New York State and the Delaware River Basin. Fox’s films have toured to hundreds of cities worldwide, helping to form the global movement against fracking.

Fox is a journalist most recently seen in Rolling Stone, Daily Beast, and online with Now This, AJ+, and Huffington Post. His viral reporting from Standing Rock has been seen by over 40 million people online.

He is also the founder and producing artistic director of the International WOW Company, a film and theater company that he founded in 1996 that has performed across the US, Europe and Asia. Josh has written/directed/produced five feature films, six short films, and over twenty-five full-length works for the stage, which have premiered in New York, Asia, and around Europe. For his theatre work, Josh has received five grants from the National Endowment for the Arts, numerous prestigious MAP Fund Grants, a Drama Desk Nomination, an Asian Cultural Council fellowship, and an Otto Award, among others. The New York Times has hailed him as “one of the most adventurous impresarios of the New York avant-garde,” and Time Out NY called him “one of downtown’s most audacious auteurs,” citing his “brilliantly resourceful mastery of stagecraft.”

As an actor Josh performed frequently in Japan. His credits include Emperor and Kiss, the Yomiuri Shimbun award-winning production by Rinko Gun written by Yoji Sakate in 1999. He also performed with Pappa Tarahumara at the New National Theater and the Setagaya public theater in WD parts 1-4 and The Sound of Future Sync. Josh was also a Hotel Grand Asia collaboration member at the Setagaya Public Theatre in 2004. He was an Asian Cultural Council fellow to Japan from 1999-2000.

Josh’s first narrative feature film, Memorial Day, by Jim McKay and Michael Stipe’s C—Hundred Film Corp and Paul Mezey’s Journeyman Pictures, opened at IFC Cinemas in February 2009 after an explosively controversial premiere at the CineVegas film festival.

GASLAND premiered at the Sundance Film Festival in 2010, where it was awarded the 2010 Special Jury Prize for Documentary. In June 2010, it premiered on HBO to an audience of 3 million homes and was seen by over 250,000 audience members in its 250-city grassroots tour. The film was nominated for the 2011 Academy Award for Best Documentary and won a 2011 Emmy for Best Non-fiction Director, among numerous other awards. For many, this film was their introduction to the extreme energy extraction process known as hydraulic fracturing or “fracking.” Legendary actor Jane Fonda once remarked that GASLAND “woke me up” to the impacts of fracking and the climate crisis overall.

GASLAND Part II premiered on HBO on July 8th, 2013, won the 2013 Environmental Media Association award for Best Documentary, the Best Film at the Wild and Scenic Film Festival, and was given the Hell Yeah Prize from Cinema Eye honors.
www.joshfoxfilm.com

Josh Fox

Writer & Director

Karen Bass
Karen Bass is the 43rd Mayor of Los Angeles and the first woman and second African American to be elected as the city's chief executive. With an agenda focused on bringing urgency, accountability, and a new direction to Los Angeles, she has started her term with a focus on housing people immediately and increasing safety and opportunity in every part of Los Angeles.
A daughter of our city, Mayor Bass was raised with her three brothers in the Venice/Fairfax neighborhood and is a proud graduate of Hamilton High School. After serving as a front-line healthcare provider as a nurse and as a Physician Assistant, Mayor Bass founded the Community Coalition to organize the predominantly Black and Latino residents of South L.A. against substance abuse, poverty and crime, and to pioneer strategies to address the root causes behind the challenges faced by underserved neighborhoods.
She then went on to represent Los Angeles in the State Assembly and was elected by her peers to serve as Speaker, making her the first African American woman to ever lead a state legislative body in the history of the United States. Her time in leadership intersected with the Great Recession, and she was honored with the John F. Kennedy Profile in Courage Award for reaching across party lines and making tough decisions to keep the state from bankruptcy while protecting vital services.
While representing Los Angeles and Culver City in Congress, Mayor Bass helped protect small businesses during the pandemic, created policy to drive local jobs from federal infrastructure funding, and led the passage of what the Los Angeles Times called “the most significant child welfare policy reform in decades.”
Mayor Bass earned her bachelor's degree in health sciences from CSU Dominguez Hills before graduating from the USC Keck School of Medicine Physician Assistant Program and earning her masters degree in social work from USC.
Mayor Bass’s oldest daughter Emilia planned to follow in her mother’s footsteps working for social change. The Mayor continues to be inspired by Emilia and her son-in-law Michael’s passion for life. She has three other children, Scythia, Omar and Yvette, and two grandchildren, Michael and Henry, who live in the Los Angeles area.

Karen Bass

Mayor

Karin Ryan
Ryan works with former U.S. President Jimmy Carter and Mrs. Rosalynn Carter on a range of issues, including assisting their efforts on behalf of victims of human rights violations through personal interventions with heads of state.
She has represented the Center in many international negotiations, including the International Criminal Court, the human rights of women, the U.N. Declaration on Human Rights Defenders, and most recently on the establishment of a U.N. Human Rights Council and has worked closely with the U.N. Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights to organize expert consultations designed to strengthen the role of the OHCHR within the United Nations system.
Ryan earned bachelor's degrees in political science from Emory University in Atlanta, Georgia, and in contemporary writing and production from Berklee College of Music in Boston, Massachusetts.
She has participated in the Center's election observation missions to Haiti, Palestine, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, and Nigeria. She has also coordinated the Human Rights Defenders Policy Forum from 2003-2006, 2007, 2008, 2011, and 2013.

Karin Ryan

Senior Policy Advisor, The Carter Center

Kelly Coogan-Gehr
Kelly is the Assistant Director of Public and Community Advocacy at National Nurses United. She served as an Educator and as Education Director for NNU, as the Director of the Washington State Labor Center, and as a Labor Representative for health care workers. Kelly helps operationalize NNU’s national Medicare for All Campaign.

Kelly Coogan-Gehr

Assistant Director, Public and Community Advocacy, National Nurses United

Larry Gross
Larry Gross is the Executive Director of the Coalition for Economic Survival (CES). He has been with CES for over 50 years, since its inception in 1973. CES is grassroots, multi-racial, multi-ethnic tenants' rights organization serving low and moderate-income renters throughout the greater Los Angeles area.
CES is committed to organizing tenants to fight to ensure tenants' rights and preserve affordable housing.
Under Larry’s leadership:
• CES has led campaigns to win rent control in the cities of Los Angeles and West Hollywood; • CES led efforts to incorporate the City of West Hollywood and elected CES tenant leaders to the City Council; • CES was instrumental in enactment of the City of L.A.'s Rent Escrow Account Program (REAP), Systematic Code Enforcement Program (SCEP) and Primary Renovation Ordinance (PRO), which address slum housing conditions and housing code violations;
• Currently, CES is one of four L.A. City contracted Rent Escrow Account Program (REAP) tenant outreach organizations, and the sole organization contracted by L.A. Housing Department to provide outreach, education and assistance to tenants living in at-risk government assisted housing;
• CES assisted four tenant HUD subsidized associations in purchasing their complexes, which tenants now operate and control as permanent affordable housing.
Larry is currently the President of the Los Angeles Board of Animal Services Commissioners. Former Mayor Eric Garcetti appointed Larry to the Commission in February 2014 and current Mayor Karen Bass has kept him on.
Larry is the elected Regional Director of the California Democratic Party (CDP). In 2013, Larry was appointed by former California Assembly Member Adrin Nazarian as an Assembly District Delegate to the California Democratic Party for the 46th Assembly District. In January 2015 and again in January 2017, Larry was elected and re-elected as a delegate for two year terms. He was re-elected as the CDP Region 12 Director in 2019 and 2021, and, currently as CDP Region 14 Director in 2023.
Larry was a California Public Utilities Commission appointee to its Low-Income Oversight Board (LIOB) 2012 to 2020.
Larry was a member of the L.A. City Housing Crisis Task Force and served as the chair of its State of Existing Affordable Housing Sub-committee in 1999-2000.
Larry was appointed by the Mayor and Chairperson of the L.A. City Council Housing and Community Development Committee to serve on the Advisory Committee for the Study of the Economic Impact of Major Rehabilitation Evictions.
Larry was a member of then L.A. City Council President Eric Garcetti's initiated Slum Housing Task Force in 2001.
Larry was an appointee to the seven-member tenant-landlord Oversight Committee of the “Economic Study of the Rent Stabilization Ordinance and the Los Angeles Housing Market” in 2009.
Larry was a member of the Board of Directors of the ACLU/Southern California, from 2012 to 2015. Larry also serves on the Board of the statewide tenants’ rights organization Tenants Together.

Larry Gross

Executive Director of the Coalition for Economic Survival

Libby Devlin
Libby Devlin is the Southern Region Director of National Nurses Organizing Committee/National Nurses United which has been active in Texas since 2004 and Florida since 2008, building organization among direct care RNs to achieve respect for nurses, safe patient care, justice in the workplace and Medicare for All.

Libby has been an organizer for over 30 years working with nurses and other health care professionals in the unending struggle for social and economic justice. Representing 150,000 Registered Nurses in all 50 states, NNOC/NNU is the largest and fastest growing union of direct care nurses in the nation.

Libby Devlin

Southern Director, NNU

Margot Kushel, MD
Margot Kushel, MD is a Professor of Medicine at University of California San Francisco, and Division Chief and Director of the UCSF Center for Vulnerable Populations, and Director of the UCSF Benioff Homelessness and Housing Initiative. She is a practicing general internist at Zuckerberg San Francisco General Hospital. Margot's research focuses on the causes and consequences of homelessness and housing instability, with the goal of preventing and ending homelessness and ameliorating the effects of homelessness and housing instability on health. She speaks at a local, state, and national level about issues of homelessness, and frequently provides testimony to legislative bodies. She received her AB from Harvard College, her MD from Yale and completed residency, chief residency, and fellowship in internal medicine at UCSF.

Margot Kushel, MD

Professor of Medicine at University of California San Francisco

Maribel Nunez
Maribel Nunez is the Executive Director of the Inland Equity Community Land Trust. Maribel is the 1st generation daughter of an immigrant family. She was born in Bellflower, CA.

She is the 1st member of her family to graduate from high school and the 1st member of her family to graduate from college. Maribel earned a Master’s degree in History from Cal State L.A. While teaching History at Riverside Community College, she became the Inland Empire organizer with California Partnership in 2010. She became the executive director of California Partnership in 2016 and has transitioned California Partnership into the Inland Equity Partnership to focus on the Inland Empire.

The work has further focused on the two main drivers of poverty in California, housing and healthcare costs. The Inland Equity CLT is an initiative to address the costs of housing, and her work for a single-payer health care system is to solve the disparities in health care.

Maribel Nunez

Executive Director of the Inland Equity Community Land Trust

Mark Ghaly
Dr. Mark Ghaly was appointed Secretary of the California Health & Human Services Agency in early 2019 by Governor Gavin Newsom.

In serving California, Dr. Ghaly has the privilege of working with partners across sectors and disciplines to improve the lives and life chances of ALL Californians. This has been especially true during our response to the COVID-19 pandemic.

Dr. Ghaly is a primary care pediatrician who continues to use his clinical and community experiences, working in California’s health care safety net system, to inform a whole person, whole community, approach to integrating services so they are equity-anchored and person-centered for ALL, but especially the most vulnerable Californians.

Dr. Ghaly holds the deep belief that together our collective efforts can not only serve Californians well today but set us on a path where ALL Californians have a brighter and healthier future.

Nothing he does can be done well without the support of his wife, Dr. Christina Ghaly, and his 4 young children.

Mark Ghaly

Secretary of the California Health & Human Services

Mark Dimondstein
Mark Dimondstein is President of the American Postal Workers Union, Dimondstein has transformed the APWU into a fighting, activist organization. He helped establish A Grand Alliance to Save Our Public Postal Service, strengthened the unity among the four postal unions, helped forge the Campaign for Postal Banking, and led the successful fight against a privatization scheme.
Prior to taking office as president, Dimondstein held a variety of positions in the APWU. He was elected to six consecutive terms as President of the Greater Greensboro Area Local. He served as National Lead Field Organizer. He received the AFL-CIO Southern Organizer of the Year Award in 2001.
He was appointed by the Greensboro City Council to serve on the Greensboro Human Relations Commission. He also served as the coordinator of North Carolina Labor Against the War, co-founded the Greensboro Chapter of Jobs with Justice, and helped initiate a local coalition, Postal Customers and Workers United to Save the Public Postal Service.

Mark Dimondstein

President, American Postal Workers Union

Matt Nelson
Matt Nelson is the Colombian-born, Midwestern-raised Executive Director of Presente.org—the nation’s largest digital Latinx organizing group; advancing social justice with technology, media, and culture. Previously, Matt was the Organizing Director at ColorOfChange and also co-founded several worker-owned cooperatives in multiple midwestern cities. He's a seasoned campaign strategist who's won dozens of campaigns and trained thousands of activists. Matt was featured in the first major book on the Ferguson Uprising, "Ferguson is America: Roots of Rebellion", contributed to the book, “Welcome to the Revolution: Universalizing Resistance for Social Justice and Democracy in Perilous Times“, and is co-authoring a book on Latinx power building to be released in the summer of 2019.

Matt Nelson

Executive Director, Presente.org

Michael Weinstein
Michael Weinstein co-founded Aids Healthcare Foundation and serves as its President. Since 1986, Mr. Weinstein has been a leader in the fight against HIV and AIDS. Before becoming involved in HIV/AIDS related issues in the 1980s, he was a Businessman and Graphic Designer. He serves as a Director of bioLytical Laboratories Inc. Mr. Weinstein served as the Co-Ordinator of the Stop the AIDS Quarantine Committee and then as an Executive Director of the Los Angeles AIDS Hospice Committee. In 2001, he was awarded an Honorary Doctorate Degree from Whittier College for his career achievements.

Michael Weinstein

President and Co-founder, Aids Healthcare Foundation

Michael Lighty
Michael Lighty has organized, advocated, and developed healthcare policy nationally and in California for 30 years. He is a founding Fellow of the Sanders Institute. Lighty was the director of public policy at the California Nurses Association/National Nurses United, where he worked for 25 years. He is currently the President of Healthy California Now, the single-payer coalition in the Golden State, representing the National Union of Healthcare Workers. In 2023, he co-wrote and led the campaign to pass SB 770, which establishes a process to achieve a unified healthcare financing system in California. Lighty is a contributor to “America at Risk: Public Policy and Health in the US” in The Lancet as a member of The Lancet Commission on Public Policy and Health in the US. He serves on the boards of People’s Action Institute and the Martin Luther King, Jr Freedom Center.

Michael Lighty

Fellow, The Sanders Institute

Michael Tubbs
Michael Tubbs was elected to serve as the mayor of the City of Stockton, California. Upon taking office in January 2017, Michael Tubbs became both Stockton’s youngest mayor and the city’s first African-American mayor. Michael Tubbs is also the youngest mayor in the history of the country representing a city with a population of over 100,000 residents.

Before becoming mayor, Michael Tubbs served as Stockton's District 6 City Councilmember. Elected at age 22 in 2013, he became one of the youngest City Councilmembers in the country. As a councilmember, Tubbs created the Reinvent South Stockton Coalition, championed the creation of the City’s Office of Violence Prevention and was part of the council that led the city out of bankruptcy as Chair of the Audit and Legislative Committee.

Michael Tubbs

Mayor, Stockton CA

Naomi Klein
Naomi Klein is an award-winning journalist, syndicated columnist and author of the international bestsellers, No Logo, The Shock Doctrine, This Changes Everything, No is Not Enough and The Battle for Paradise. Her books have been translated in over 30 languages. She is Senior Correspondent for The Intercept and a Puffin Foundation Writing Fellow at The Nation Institute. She is on the board of directors for 350.org, and is a force behind Canada’s Leap Manifesto, a blueprint for rapid justice-based transition off fossil fuels. She is the inaugural Gloria Steinem Chair in Media, Culture and Feminist Studies at Rutgers University.

Naomi Klein

Journalist, Author

Niki Ashton
MP Niki Ashton (Churchill—Keewatinook Aski) is one of Canada’s longest serving New Democratic (NDP) Members of Parliament. Niki has been a key member of the NDP Caucus, having served as NDP critic for Aboriginal Affairs, Status of Women, Post-Secondary Education and Youth, and is currently the critic for Jobs, Employment and Workforce Development and the deputy critic for Reconciliation between Canada and Indigenous Peoples.

Niki believes in democratic socialist principles. Throughout her career, she’s brought people together based on a commitment to social, environmental, and economic justice. She's worked with national and community leaders and advocates on key issues including the fight for justice for First Nations, in the struggle against precarious work, and the fight for gender justice and equality.

Most recently, she ran for leader of the NDP where she championed bold ideas like free post-secondary tuition, expanding Canada’s socialized healthcare system to include dental, pharmaceutical and mental healthcare, support for public ownership, opposing environmentally destructive pipelines and a foreign policy rooted in justice and human rights.

Niki lives in Thompson, Manitoba, in northern Canada where she was born and raised.

Niki Ashton

Member of the Canadian House of Commons

Nina Turner
Nina Turner is a founding fellow of the Sanders Institute and the president of Our Revolution, which was founded in August 2016 to perpetuate and organize the political coalition that formed during the Bernie Sanders 2016 presidential campaign. Previously, she served in the Ohio State Senate, where she advocated for progressive causes such as education and healthcare reform, and was the Democratic nominee for Ohio Secretary of State and a strategic leader of the Ohio Democratic Party. Politico included her in their Playbook Power List of 18 people to watch in 2018. Outside of the political arena, Turner has decades of experience as a college professor and motivational speaker.

Nina Turner

President, Our Revolution
Former Ohio State Senator
Founding Fellow, The Sanders Institute

Paul Kumar
Paul Kumar is a public policy and strategic campaign consultant working throughout California and nationally on legislative, electoral, and union organizing efforts at the crossroads of behavioral health and affordable housing advocacy. As a consultant to the National Union of Healthcare Workers, he played a key role in drafting SB 855, California’s nation-leading expansion of behavioral health parity rights, and SB 221, California’s pathbreaking guarantee of timely access to follow-up appointments for individuals in ongoing courses of behavioral healthcare, and devised the regulatory strategy that resulted in the state’s record $200 million settlement with Kaiser Permanente over that HMO’s egregious behavioral healthcare failures. As a consultant to the Non-Profit Housing Association of Northern California, he is playing a leading role in finalizing both ACA-1, a state constitutional amendment to lower the voter approval threshold necessary to pass local affordable housing bonds, and a $10-20 billion Bay Area regional affordable housing bond measure, both headed for the November 2024 ballot. These critical projects come after twenty-five years in staff and elected roles leading the health policy and government affairs programs of major healthcare workers’ unions on both coasts.

Paul Kumar

Strategic Campaign Consultant

Pramila Jayapal
A former Washington State Senator and a lifelong organizer for immigrant, civil, and human rights, Representative Pramila Jayapal was recently re-elected to Congress for a fourth term serving Seattle and surrounding communities. In 2016, she became the first South Asian American woman ever elected to the House. She came to the United States alone at the age of 16, and went on to start the largest immigrant rights organization in Washington state before becoming one of only two dozen naturalized citizens serving in Congress today. As the Chair of the Congressional Progressive Caucus, Representative Jayapal is the lead sponsor of the Medicare for All Act, the College for All Act, the Housing is a Human Right Act, the Ultra-Millionaire Tax Act, and the Roadmap to Freedom immigration resolution. She currently serves on the Judiciary and Education and Workforce Committee. Congresswoman Jayapal lives in Seattle with her husband Steve.

Pramila Jayapal

Representative

Peter Knowlton
Peter Knowlton has been a member of the United Electrical, Radio and Machine Workers of America (UE) for over 30 years. He has served in various capacities as Field Organizer, President of the Northeast Region, and was elected UE General President in 2015. A lifelong political activist and resident of Massachusetts he was active in the anti-war and student movement, anti-nuclear and environmental movement, and the Native American solidarity movement and joined the labor movement beginning in the late 1970’s as a cab driver and organizer. He is a lifelong resident of Massachusetts and lives in New Bedford, MA.

Peter Knowlton

General President, United Electrical, Radio and Machine Workers of America (UE)

Randy Bryce

Randy Bryce

Former Candidate for House of Representatives

Rachel Stein
Rachel is the Directing Attorney of Public Counsel’s Audrey Irmas Gender Justice Project. Prior to her role as Directing Attorney, she was a Senior Supervising Staff Attorney with Public Counsel’s Children’s Rights Project.
Rachel has been with Public Counsel for many years, initially joining the organization in 2012 as a staff attorney with the Adoptions team in the Children’s Rights Project (CRP) and most recently returning in 2020 to lead the Transition Age Youth (TAY) team in CRP. As the TAY team supervisor, Rachel helped expand the team and she supported the team in providing holistic, trauma-informed legal services to system-impacted youth in the areas of housing, family law, public benefits, traffic tickets, and name change and gender marker correction petitions. Rachel also led the TAY team’s housing policy work. In partnership with community-based coalitions and the office of Supervisor Hilda Solis, Rachel helped secure the passage of a Board of Supervisors’ motion that created contingency plans to help house the 1300 youth who were facing “the Extended Foster Care cliff” as they exited foster care from LA County in December 2021. Rachel has particular expertise in the areas of public benefits and housing for system-impacted youth. Prior to transitioning to public interest work, Rachel practiced employment law, first at Munger, Tolles & Olson LLP and then at Fox Group Legal (21st Century Fox).
Rachel is both a lawyer and a social worker, having received her JD from the University of Michigan Law School in 2006 and her MSW from the University of Michigan School of Social Work in 2007. She received her undergraduate degree from Swarthmore College in 2001, and she clerked with the Honorable Cormac J. Carney in the U.S. District Court for the Central District of California after completing graduate school.

Rachel Stein

Directing Attorney

Rep. Tulsi Gabbard
Gabbard serves in the United States House of Representatives, representing Hawaii’s 2nd District. She is one of the first two female combat veterans to serve in the U.S. Congress, and its first Hindu member. She is also a founding fellow of the Sanders Institute.

She was previously elected to the Hawai‘i State Legislature and the Honolulu City Council and worked as a legislative aide to Senator Daniel Akaka (D-HI).

In 2004 Gabbard volunteered to deploy with her fellow soldiers, becoming the first state official to voluntarily step down from public office to serve in a war zone. She served two tours of duty in the Middle East, and continues her service as a Major in the Army National Guard.

Gabbard graduated from the Accelerated Officer Candidate School at the Alabama Military Academy.

Rep. Tulsi Gabbard

US Representative (D) HI,
Founding Fellow, The Sanders Institute

Ro Khanna
Congressman Ro Khanna represents California's 17th Congressional District in the heart of Silicon Valley. He was proud to co-chair Bernie Sanders’ 2020 presidential campaign and is working to uphold progressive values. He fights for an economy that invests in American workers, affordable housing, Medicare for All, a $17 minimum wage, and free public college and vocational school.

Ro has made it his mission to address the rising costs of housing, which are making it impossible for families to buy a home or cover the cost of rent. He introduced the Stop Wall Street Landlords Act to stop corporate investors from buying up single-family homes because ordinary Americans shouldn’t have to compete with Wall Street to buy a home. Ro has also led the charge to build new, affordable housing units and protect manufactured housing communities. He is honored to speak at The Sanders Institute Gathering on this critical issue.

He has written two books on manufacturing and technology: Entrepreneurial Nation: Why Manufacturing is Still Key to America's Future and Dignity in a Digital Age.

Ro Khanna

Congressman

Rob Reynolds
Robert Reynolds grew up in Westfield, Massachusetts, and joined the Army as an Infantryman at 17 years old and served from 2006 to 2010, deploying to Iraq in 2007 when he was 18 with the 10th Mountain Division 4-31 Infantry out of Fort Drum New York. After the Military, Robert moved to California in 2012 and worked as a firefighter with Cal Fire in San Luis Obispo and then Riverside County from 2012 to 2017. In 2018, Robert started experiencing trouble with PTSD symptoms which led him to travel to the West Los Angeles VA to be a part of the PTSD Combat Track program offered at the Domiciliary. Through a series of unfortunate events, Robert was able to experience firsthand some of the many barriers that Veterans face when approaching the VA for much needed services. It was through these events he encountered the unhoused Veterans on San Vicente Blvd, just outside the gates of the VA. The discovery of 40+ Veterans, some of them combat Veterans, sleeping outside of the VA grounds on the street coupled with learning about the history of the VA land and the many years of misuse, Robert became fueled with a drive to help these Veterans gain accessibility and equity within the VA system as well as to ensure that the land that was deeded to the U.S. government in 1888 as a Soldiers Home was restored for that very purpose today. Robert was able to successfully work as a liaison between the unhoused Veterans on San Vicente Blvd., the stakeholders in the community surrounding the VA, law enforcement and the leadership of the West LA VA to get the Veterans inside of the gates and into what is now known as CTRS (Tiny Home Village). Robert continues to dedicate himself to advocating on behalf of the unhoused Veteran population in Los Angeles and will continue until every Veteran is housed and has equal accessibility to their home at the West LA VA campus.

Rob Reynolds

Coming Soon

Roger Wolfson
Roger Wolfson has risen to positions of prominence in the fields of entertainment, politics, news, and law. He is a professional television and film writer who has written for five network TV series. He currently runs a TV series on Crackle about the U.S. Embassy in Rome, and has sold eight original television series of his own, to studios including Sony, ABC, CBS, Universal Cable Productions, and A&E, and to networks including CBS, Bravo, and Lifetime. He has been staff for four U.S. Senators, written speeches for presidential candidates, been Vice President of Channel One News, founded his own strategic consulting firm, and worked as a civil rights attorney.

Roger Wolfson

Screenwriter, Lawyer, Activist

Robert Pollin
Robert Pollin is Distinguished Professor of Economics and Co-Director of the Political Economy Research Institute (PERI) at the University of Massachusetts-Amherst.
He is also the founder and President of PEAR (Pollin Energy and Retrofits), an Amherst, MA-based green energy company operating throughout the United States. 
He has worked recently as a consultant for the U.S. Department of Energy, the International Labour Organization, the United Nations Industrial Development Organization and numerous non-governmental organizations in several countries on building high-employment green economies. 

He has also directed projects on employment creation and poverty reduction in sub-Saharan Africa for the United Nations Development Program, and has worked with many U.S. organizations on creating living wage statutes at both the statewide and municipal levels. He is presently a member of the Scientific Advisory Committee of the European Commission project on Financialization, Economy, Society, and Sustainable Development (FESSUD). 

Robert Pollin

Co-Director, Political Economic Research Institute; Professor of Economics, UMASS Amherst; Fellow, The Sanders Institute

RoseAnn DeMoro
RoseAnn DeMoro is the former executive director of National Nurses United, the largest U.S. organization of nurses, and a national vice president of the AFL-CIO.
DeMoro’s ability to effectively organize and negotiate for workers has garnered her national respect and recognition. She has been profiled in publications such as The New York Times and Business Week and has consistently been named one of the “Top 25 Women in Healthcare” by Modern Health Care Magazine largely for her work on Medicare for All.

RoseAnn DeMoro

Former Executive Director, National Nurses United (AFL-CIO) and California Nurses Association

Sarah Mahin
Sarah Mahin serves as the Director of Housing for Health at the LA County Department of Health Services where she oversees a full continuum that provides housing and services to over 45,000 vulnerable county residents each year. Sarah brings a wealth of experience administering public funding and coordinating policy responses across various levels of government. Her previous roles include the Director of Policy and Systems at the Los Angeles Homeless Services Authority, Regional Coordinator for the U.S. Department of Veteran Affairs’ national program office, and as Presidential Management Fellow at the U.S. Interagency Council on Homelessness. Sarah started her work in homelessness and housing nearly 20 years ago working as a community-based provider and advocate at the Montgomery County Coalition for the Homeless.

Sarah Mahin

Director of Housing for Health at the LA County Department of Health Services

Simon Sinek
Described as “a visionary thinker with a rare intellect,” Simon Sinek teaches leaders and organizations how to inspire people. With a bold goal to help build a world in which the vast majority of people wake up every single day feeling inspired, feel safe at work, and feel fulfilled at the end of the day, he is leading a movement to inspire people to do the things that inspire them. Simon is the author of multiple best-selling books and may be best known for popularizing the concept of Why in his first TED Talk in 2009 which rose to become the third most-watched talk of all time, with over 41 million views and subtitled in 48 languages.

Simon Sinek

Motivational Speaker, Author, and Activist

Saket Soni
Saket Soni is a labor organizer. He is the founder and director of Resilience Force, the voice of the rising workforce rebuilding America after climate disasters. He is also the author of The Great Escape: A True Story of Forced Labor and Immigrant Dreams in America. The book, about America’s first climate resilience workers, was called “a must-read” by the New York Times, and named a Best Book of 2023 by the Times, Amazon, and NPR.

Saket is a recognized national expert on the intersection of climate, workforce, and racial justice issues. He was profiled as an “architect of the next labor movement” in USA Today, chosen as a 2022-23 Aspen Institute Fellow, and was named one of Fast Company’s Most Creative People in Business for 2022. His work was the subject of a major New Yorker feature story in November 2021.

Saket Soni

Founder and Director of Resilience Force

Susan Sarandon
Susan Sarandon, has made a career of choosing diverse and challenging projects in film and
television. From her Oscar-nominated performance in Thelma & Louise to her Academy
Award-winning and SAG® Award-winning role in Dead Man Walking, Susan uses her
talent to shine a light on important issues in a thought-provoking way.
Susan is a UNICEF Goodwill Ambassador, works with multiple homeless organizations,
fiercely opposes the death penalty and is an outspoken LGBT & HIV/AIDS advocate. She
supports Together 1 Heart, formed to eradicate human trafficking, sexual exploitation and
modern-day slavery in Cambodia; Hope North, a school in Uganda that educates and heals
the young victims, orphans and former child soldiers of Uganda’s civil war; and Artists for
Peace and Justice, supporting communities in Haiti through programs in education,
healthcare and the arts.

Susan Sarandon

Actress, Activist

Tara Ford
Tara Ford currently serves as the Interim Directing Attorney for Public Counsel’s Opportunity Under Law project, having previously served as the project’s Senior Counsel. Tara has focused her career on working with children and their families to safeguard their rights to education, special education, health care, and mental health care. She has long worked to protect the rights of children and families when they are involved in the dependency system, with the goal of keeping families together. She has also partnered with Native American children, families, and Tribes – litigating cases focused on education, ICWA, and voting rights.
Tara was the Co-Founder of Pegasus Legal Services for Children, a non-profit law firm serving children and their families in New Mexico. In 2016, Tara authored “Pegasus Legal Services for Children: Taking Stock of a Rebellious Non-Profit Practice in New Mexico,” published by the Clinical Law Review. She is a child welfare law specialist in NM certified by the National Counsel for Children.

Tara Ford

Directing Attorney

Yanis Varoufakis
Yanis Varoufakis served as Minister of Finance of Greece in 2015.
Varoufakis has taught economics at a number of universities around the world including the University of Essex and the University of East Anglia, the University of Sydney and the University of Athens, and the University of Texas at Austin. Varoufakis also spent a year as a Fellow at the University of Cambridge and was the Economist-in-Residence at Valve Corporation.
Varoufakis also served as economic advisor to George Papandreou, then Leader of the Opposition from 2004-06. In January 2015, Yanis Varoufakis was appointed finance minister by Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras. Varoufakis resigned as Finance Minister on 6 July 2015.

Yanis Varoufakis studied economics in the UK, at the University of Essex and mathematical statistics at the University of Birmingham. He has a PhD in economics. Varoufakis has written several books on game theory, microeconomics and macroeconomics.

Yanis Varoufakis

Economist & Former Greek Minister of Finance; Fellow, The Sanders Institute