Home California Shirley Weber Sworn in as California’s Secretary of State

Shirley Weber Sworn in as California’s Secretary of State

by ECT

This week, State Assemblymeber Shirly Weber was confirmed as California’s next Secretary of State following a unanimous confirmation from the State Senate and Assembly. She was sworn in on Friday.

She was approved by the Assembly in a 70-0 vote and 29-0 Senate making her the first African American Secretary of State in California History.

“It’s OFFICIAL, my nomination for CA Secretary of State has been confirmed by the CA Legislature and my next step will be swearing in,” Weber said in a Tweet. “I will be the 1st Black woman to serve in this role and only the 5th Black person to serve as constitutional officer ever.”

Gov. Newsom congratulated Weber in a Tweet for making history.

“Dr. Weber is a tireless advocate and change agent with unimpeachable integrity. She will be at the helm of our elections as our next Secretary of State, the first African American to be California’s Chief Elections Officer,” the Governor’s Office said.

Weber was nominated by Governor Newsom after Alex Padilla, who was Secretary of State, was selected by Newsom for the US Senate seat after Kamala Harris was chosen as Joe Biden’s vice president.

Here is what Governor Gavin Nesom released back in December on the appointment:

Governor Newsom to Submit Assemblymember Dr. Shirley Weber’s Nomination for Secretary of State to State Legislature

Chair of the California Legislative Black Caucus, Assemblymember Dr. Shirley Weber will become the first African American Secretary of State in California history

Dr. Weber, who chaired the 2020 California Electoral College proceedings, has represented San Diego in the State Assembly since 2012 and was previously President of the San Diego Board of Education and a professor for 40 years

Dr. Weber has been a champion for civil rights and police reform, authoring a landmark law setting new, higher standards on the use of deadly force by police

SACRAMENTO – Governor Gavin Newsom today announced that he will submit to the State Legislature the nomination of San Diego Assemblymember and Chair of the California Legislative Black Caucus, Dr. Shirley N. Weber, as the next California Secretary of State, filling the seat that will be vacated by Secretary of State Alex Padilla once he assumes office in the United States Senate.

An Assemblymember since 2012, former President of the San Diego Board of Education and a retired Africana Studies Department professor for 40 years at San Diego State University, Dr. Weber will become the first-ever African American to serve as Secretary of State in California. She has been a voice of moral clarity in the Legislature, one who her colleagues have looked to for leadership on issues of social justice, including authoring the California Act to Save Lives, landmark legislation passed and signed by Governor Newsom in 2019 setting new, higher standards on the use of deadly force by police. The nomination is subject to confirmation by the California State Assembly and Senate within 90 days.

“Dr. Weber is a tireless advocate and change agent with unimpeachable integrity,” said Governor Newsom. “The daughter of sharecroppers from Arkansas, Dr. Weber’s father didn’t get to vote until his 30s and her grandfather never got to vote because he died before the Voting Rights Act passed in 1965. When her family moved to South Central Los Angeles, she saw as a child her parents rearrange furniture in their living room to serve as a local polling site for multiple elections. Now, she’ll be at the helm of California’s elections as the next Secretary of State – defending and expanding the right to vote and serving as the first African American to be California’s Chief Elections Officer.”

“I am excited to be nominated for this historic appointment as the Secretary of State of California. I thank Governor Newsom for the confidence he’s placed in me and his belief that I will stand strong for California. Being the first African American woman in this position will be a monumental responsibility, but I know that I am up for the challenge. Expanding voting rights has been one of the causes of my career and will continue to motivate me as I assume my new constitutional duties,” said Dr. Weber.

Dr. Shirley Weber was born on a 100-acre farm in rural Hope, Arkansas where her father, David, was a sharecropper. Though he had a sixth-grade education and, according to Weber, could barely read, he instilled in Weber and her siblings a belief in the power of education. The family fled the farm and moved across the country when Weber was just three because her father refused to back down in a dispute with a white farmer, and a lynch mob threatened his life.

Soon after the family moved to the Pueblo Del Rio housing projects in South Los Angeles in 1951, Weber began school. She is a proud product of California public schools – district schools in Los Angeles through high school, and later at UCLA, where she earned three degrees, including her Ph.D., at only 26 years old.

As one of the few Black women in Southern California navigating academia in the late 1960s and early 1970s, Dr. Weber ascended to become one of the youngest-ever professors at San Diego State University, where she helped found the Africana Studies Department. Prior to being elected to the Assembly, Dr. Weber served as the mayor’s appointee and Chair on the Citizens Equal Opportunity Commission. She has also served on the Board of the NAACP, YWCA, YMCA Scholarship Committee, Battered Women Services, United Way, San Diego Consortium and Private Industry Council and others. She served as a member of the San Diego Board of Education from 1988 to 1996, including a stint as president.

Her commitment to advancing civil rights and equality also compelled her to serve in public office – first on the San Diego Unified School Board, and, since 2012, representing District 79 of the California State Assembly. Dr. Weber has translated her lifelong commitment to service into an ambitious legislative agenda, including bills on education, civil rights, public safety, food insecurity, protections for persons with disabilities and voting rights. Some highlights include:

  • Expanding voting rights. Dr. Weber has served as Chair (and currently as a member) of the Elections and Redistricting Committee, where she has helped to oversee California’s elections and campaign finance law for the last several election cycles. Dr. Weber authored AB 2466 extending voting rights to people on parole – more than 50,000 Californians – and has sponsored legislation to ensure that those on probation and parole are aware of their voting rights and able to cast their ballots.
  • Promoting public safety. Dr. Weber was the author of and chief advocate for the California Act to Save Lives, landmark legislation passed and signed by Governor Newsom in 2019 setting new, higher standards on the use of deadly force by police. She also passed first-in-the-nation legislation to provide transparency and accountability around the harmful and unjust practice of racial and identity profiling, while improving public safety and police-community relations.
  • Ensuring justice is served. A national and state leader on criminal justice issues, Dr. Weber has passed several pieces of progressive reform legislation, including AB 2590 which made California’s sentencing framework more flexible and effective by giving judges discretion to apply restorative justice principles in certain cases.
  • Managing the state budget. In 2015, Dr. Weber became the first African American to chair the Assembly State Budget Committee in California, the 5th largest economy in the world. In her current leadership role, she chairs the Assembly Budget Subcommittee on Public Safety.

Dr. Weber has been fighting for civil rights her entire life – and she knows that ensuring every Californian has the right to vote is the fundamental building block for progress.

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11 comments

Leonard Price Jan 31, 2021 - 1:51 am

Oh My GOD! Not her! I left San Diego because this woman is a total crazy! But, let’s wait! Things might go back what they were like before the November “election.” Keeping my fingers crossed.

Robert C. Jan 31, 2021 - 9:46 am

I see very little in this biographical information that seems relevant to the duties of the secretary of state. Read the PD.

Not Another one Jan 31, 2021 - 10:23 am

Oh good! Another one!
Another step down the toilet.

Renzo Venturo Jan 31, 2021 - 12:24 pm

Has Gavin Newsom lost his mind? I guess by appointing this woman, he has indeed. My San Diego relatives hate her. She doesn’t know which way is up and which way is down! Do we really need another moron to take this state even lower? Haven’t we had enough problems without bringing on another one? Good thing that Padilla is gone and he can screw up things in DC all he wants.

Rose Del Vecchio Jan 31, 2021 - 12:52 pm

This old gal is nothing but A RACIST!

Simonpure Feb 1, 2021 - 9:39 am

Someones been using that Weber too much

LoveableCurmudgeon Feb 2, 2021 - 4:25 am

Ah. Leave it to the usual suspects that ECT gleefully allows to post in this comment section. I venture a guess that hardly anyone knows who this woman is, yet here we see the not-s0-thinly-veiled posts about ” another one” and ” down the toilet” and the old chestnut regarding the election that only an ignoramus would call fraudulent. I say give her a chance to show her capabilities and THEN go after her if she screws up. That other stuff is pure nonsense

Simonpure Feb 2, 2021 - 7:04 am

You know what they say lovable…”if you can’t take a joke”…you know the rest.

Bob McClure Feb 2, 2021 - 5:08 pm

LOVABLE! I know who this woman is and as a former resident of San Diego, I can tell you that she is totally unsuited for any position be it state assemblywoman or state sec of state! She is a total racist and a troublemaker. From my experiences with her, I don’t have to wait for her to screw up even more … she’s had plenty of chances to do things the right way. This is NOT the type of person one votes in for anything. She is fraudulent as is the election.

Rosemary evans Feb 3, 2021 - 12:48 am

If you pay close attention to what the members of our state assemblypeople are doing, you couldn’t miss what this woman has been up to. The problem is that nobody has the balls to tell her to STFU already! This is the last person I’d drag out to become California’s Secretary of State! Has Newsom run out of talented, dedicated people? Why must we be settled with her?

Veronica S. Brown, MPH Feb 4, 2021 - 4:08 pm

This woman has put more laws on the books than any of you miserable want a be’s has ever read in your lifetime. Just like your evil, ignorant parents, you spit, live, and thrive on hate. You all need to take notes when she walks into the room. You all could live two lifetimes and never accomplish half of what she has. Try working on your antiracist agenda or raising children that are better than you are and maybe they won’t kill as many of you in the future as they have in the past.

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