What is RPA?

The RPA is an independent progressive organization that seeks to unite Richmond’s diverse communities and form alliances with other community-based organizations to actively promote social justice, economic equality, health, environmental protection, and democracy. We work to elect government officials who share these progressive values, and who do not accept corporate donations.

Our Steering CommitteeThe History of RPA

LEADERSHIP

Our Steering Committee

Learn about the democratically elected leaders of Richmond Progressive Alliance.

Marisol Cantú

Co-Chair

Shiva Mishek

Co-Chair

BK Williams

Treasurer

Luna Angulo

Position/Title

Karen "Foxy" Duran

Position/Title

Martha Gruelle

Position/Title

Claudia Jimenez

Position/Title

Alyssa Kang

Position/Title

Carmen Martinez

Position/Title

Francisco Ortiz

Position/Title

Pedro Ruiz

Position/Title

Nicole Valentino

Position/Title

Kathleen Wimer

Position/Title

OUR TIMELINE

The History of RPA

Learn how we built working-class power in the city of Richmond.

2003 - 2004

Birth of a Progressive Coalition and First Electoral Breakthrough

RPA formed to challenge corporate power, oppose the Iraq War, and fight for fair housing and rent control. Early campaigns against the Point Molate mega-casino, major anti-war actions, and the March4Education pilgrimage established RPA’s bold organizing style. Gayle McLaughlin’s 2004 council win became RPA’s first major electoral victory.

2005 - 2007

Rising Environmental Leadership and the First Progressive Mayor

RPA expanded its environmental justice work, defended the wetlands, and helped end discriminatory driver’s license checkpoints. Gayle McLaughlin won the mayoral race, making Richmond one of the few U.S. cities led by a Green progressive. Richmond soon declared itself a sanctuary city and invested in the Office of Neighborhood Safety, helping drive a dramatic drop in homicides.

2008 - 2010

Taking on Chevron and Transforming Richmond’s Political Landscape

RPA fought Chevron’s refinery expansion, passed Measure T to raise Chevron’s taxes, and won council races despite massive corporate spending. Community pressure and ballot initiatives forced Chevron into a $114 million settlement. RPA also expanded cultural and justice-oriented community programming, anchoring itself as a movement hub.

2011–2014

Building Movement Infrastructure and the Landmark 2014 Sweep

RPA opened the Bobby Bowens Progressive Center, fought jail expansion, and pushed key re-entry initiatives. Policy wins like “Ban the Box” and joining Marin Clean Energy strengthened Richmond’s equity and climate agenda. In 2014, Bernie Sanders endorsed Team Richmond, and RPA swept the elections against Chevron’s $3 million offensive.

2015 - 2016

Winning Rent Control and Deepening Grassroots Power

RPA helped raise Richmond’s minimum wage, mobilized a massive coalition for rent control, and restructured internally to become more participatory. After landlords invalidated the council’s initial vote, RPA gathered signatures for the ballot initiative. Voters passed Measure L, restoring rent control and just-cause eviction protections for the first time in decades in California.

2017 - 2018

Consolidating Tenant Protections and Navigating New Political Terrain

Richmond’s Rent Board and Rent Program were established, creating one of the strongest tenant-protection systems in the state. Eduardo Martinez was re-elected while other races shifted the political landscape, including Melvin Willis’s high-profile mayoral challenge. The Point Molate legal settlement emerged as the next major development fight.

2019 - 2020

Expanding the Movement and Sweeping District Elections

RPA supported the launch of the California Progressive Alliance and helped win the city’s ban on coal and petroleum coke storage. In Richmond’s first district elections, RPA candidates Claudia Jimenez, Melvin Willis, and Gayle McLaughlin all won, alongside Jovanka Beckles for AC Transit and a full sweep of endorsed school board candidates. Voters also approved a steeply progressive business license tax overhaul championed by RPA.

2021

Reimagining Public Safety and Deepening Community Engagement

RPA helped secure a pandemic eviction moratorium and moved $6.3 million from policing into community programs, including a non-police crisis response team. The organization launched its first internship cohort and began the Listening Project to strengthen long-term community relationships.