Car protest targets wealthy

Local demonstration one of several in different California cities to bring attention to income inequality in state

By Gary Warth & Jeff McDonald

SAN DIEGO

A caravan of about 60 cars drove through upscale San Diego neighborhoods and passed some of the city’s most affluent residents Wednesday as part of a statewide protest aimed at raising awareness of wealth disparity and inequality.

Organized by renters, workers and labor leaders, the local protest had planned to target UC San Diego Chancellor Pradeep Khosla, developer Douglas Manchester and MC Properties owner Michael Contreras. The protest was one of several throughout California on Wednesday, chosen because the first of the month traditionally is a day when rent is due.

“We’re visiting some of the richest people in San Diego to talk about how during this pandemic many of us are struggling to make ends meet and have a roof over our heads while these super wealthy people have made money off the backs of our community workers and renters,” said Jose Lopez, a local organizer with Alliance of Californians for Community Empowerment

Motorists honked horns throughout the protest, which began at 11 a.m. with a news conference in the Revelle College parking lot at UC San Diego. They soon left for the home of Khosla, targeted because of layoffs at the university, but their plan was thwarted when UC San Diego police would not allow them access to the La Jolla Farms neighborhood.

They then slowly drove past the La Jolla home of Contreras before ending the protest around 1 p.m. in front of Manchester’s home, also in La Jolla.

As with similar protests in other California cities that day, participants stayed in their vehicles as a safety measure during the COVID-19 outbreak.

“We want to do it as safe as possible,” Lopez said, adding that the drive took many participants into wealthy neighborhoods they had never seen before.

“The front yard of the chancellor’s house is bigger than the park in my neighborhood,” he said.

A press release announcing the statewide protests said they were in response to “decades of rising inequality and a pandemic that has disproportionately impacted communities of color, threatened vital public services and left millions out of work.”

“We want to raise this message of divesting from the rich and making sure they pay their fair share,” said Lopez, who drove a Toyota RAV4 during the event. “Many of them have gotten tax breaks.”

Many of the cars were decorated with signs with slogans such as “Divest from the Rich and Invest in our Communities” and “Make them Pay.”

Similar protests were held in Los Angeles, San Francisco and Sacramento, with participants planning to drive past the homes of Elon Musk of Tesla, Bruce Karsh of Oaktree Capital, Angelo K. Tsakopoulos of AKT Development, Mark Friedman of Fulcrum Property and Phil Tagami of California Commercial Investment Group.

In San Diego, protest participants included labor leaders from AFSCME 3299, SEIU, USWW, UAW 2865 and the San Diego Tenants Union.

Lopez said more protests are planned for today when the homes of state lawmakers will be targeted to drum up support for new tax laws focused on the wealthy.

According to the press release, the actions are part of the nationwide #CancelRent movement and call for an end to “the looting by corporate billionaires” and a demand they pay their fair share in taxes and invest in programs that create affordable housing, better access to healthcare, quality education and safe workplaces.

“While more than 40 million Americans have filed for unemployment since the COVID-19 pandemic began, California billionaires have increased their wealth by $181 billion since March and have been buoyed by the billions more in public subsidies they’ve amassed in recent years,” the press release read.

gary.warth@sduniontribune.com

jeff.mcdonald@sduniontribune.com