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Trayon White (born May 11, 1984) is a member of the District Council of Columbia, representing Ward 8 of the District of Columbia. From January 2012 to March 2014, he is a member of the District of Columbia State Board of Education. He nominated Ward 8 at the District of Columbia Council in a special election in April 2015 and nearly lost the primary Democrats until finally Councilmember LaRuby May. He ran for the same seat again in June 2016, beating May for a Democratic nomination by 688 votes. He won the election to the Council in November 2016.


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Trayon White was born May 11, 1984, in Washington, D.C. She grew up in an environment in the Southeast, raised by her mother after her father left the family. His family is very poor, and he is sometimes hungry or without clean clothes. Violence and drug trafficking are common in the neighborhood, and sometimes he can not get out because of violence. Early in his teenage years, White began to live with his grandmother. He stole the car, and was arrested by the Metropolitan Police. She was not charged, but her grandmother sent her to live with a cousin to raise. He spent the rest of his teenage years living with them in a crowded apartment.

One of White's teachers began to guide him. When the teacher died in a car accident, White turned into a Christian. His values ​​increased radically, and he participated in student government. He attended TechWorld Public Charter School at least one year from high school before moving to Ballou High School, where he graduated in 2002.

White was enrolled at the University of Maryland Eastern Shore in Princess Anne, Maryland, in the fall of 2002. Each week, he returned to the District of Columbia to train sports with Boys & Girls Clubs of America. White graduated magna cum laude with a bachelor's degree in business administration in 2006.

White then enrolled in a master's degree program in public administration at Southeastern University in Washington, D.C., but apparently did not complete his studies. (The school joined Graduate School USA in 2010.)

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Community activism

White became part of the East of the River of Clergy Police Community Partnership (ERCPCP) while in high school. She remained involved as a mentor and sport coach while in college, and joined ERCPCP as a paid community social worker around 2006. Interviewed by The Washington Post in January 2008, White said that a large number of her friends were robbed at DC in 2007, and he knows five people who had been killed that year. "Staying on the street, you're numb to him and learning to overcome it.It's hard for me to cry when I go to the funeral again," he said. White, who lives in the Washington Highlands neighborhood, denounced the shooting by 14-year-old DeOnte Rawlings by a D.C police officer who was not serving as an "injustice."

In November 2007, White founded the Helping Inner City Kids Succeed (HICKS), a non-profit organization dedicated to helping impoverished children east of the Anacostia River in Washington, DC White received the Linowes Leadership Award from the Community Foundation for the National Capital Territory in May 2008 for his work with risky youth. In 2011, an editorial at The Washington Post said White nonprofit organizations "do an interesting job with the inner youth" and that White has a real insight "into the problems faced by students at Ward 8 schools ".

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Education Board

2011 special selection

During his time as a community activist, White was guided by William O. Lockridge, a longtime member of the Board of Education D.C. He is also known as protà © à © gÃÆ' © Marion Barry, Member of Council D.C. representing Ward 8 and former District Mayor of Columbia.

Lockridge died of congestive heart failure on January 12, 2011. White ran to fill Lockridge's unfinished tenure on the Board of Education, winning support from Barry's widow and Lockridge. He won April 26, 2011, a special election with 32.8 percent of the vote in a crowded field. He leads the second candidate where Philip Pannell is 6 percent (though this represents just two hundred votes in low voting elections).

2012 elections

White's first term of office at the D.C. Education Board ended at the end of December 2012, and he ran for re-election in November 2012. Again, he faced Pannell in the general election, although this time there were no other candidates. White easily won with 73.3 percent of votes for Pannell 26.3 percent (margin over 13,500 votes).

Mastery in Education Board

White helped build the ground at the new Ballou High School building in March 2013. He praised the charter school for improving education, but criticized Kaya Henderson, District Chancellor of Columbia Public Schools for failing to make plans to improve education for children. in traditional public school settings.

The Board of Education positions pay a salary (not a salary) of $ 15,000 per year. At the end of February 2014, White took a job as a supervisor in the "Performer Oriented" youth program in a risky youth program in the District of Columbia Department of Parks and Recreation. But city legislation prohibits members of the Board of Education from holding city employment, and White resigns from his post in Council on March 5, 2014.

Conversation with Ward 8 Councilmember Trayon White Sr Peace in ...
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First run for District Council

In April 2014, eight-year-old Relisha Rudd disappeared as her family lived in a city-run homeless shelter. The disappearance of the children created widespread concern throughout the city. White, who had met the girl, worked with several community groups to organize three canvas in the area to try to find the girl (or her body). (The girl remains missing in April 2016.)

On Sunday, November 23, 2014, the 78-year-old Marion Barry died at the United Medical Center, hours after being released from Howard University Hospital. White is one of those people called Barry soon after leaving Howard. On December 16, The Washington Post reported that White was one of many individuals who contemplated running for the 8-seat Ward Ward board. White is one of the first to nominate as a candidate in a special election to fill in Barry's remaining term (ending December 31, 2016), doing so by the end of December 2014. Under the District of Columbia the Electoral Electoral Council allows candidates to walk under the name whatever they want, White asks his name on the ballot to be listed as "Trayon 'WardEight' White". White then explains that friends start calling him the nickname "WardEight" on Facebook, and he intends to use it on the ballot.

By the end of January 2015, White had collected a campaign donation of $ 2,562. In comparison, LaRuby May has raised $ 177,405, and former Vincent C. Gray helper Sheila Bunn has raised $ 51,692. Despite low-level initial fundraising, Washington City Paper , quoting people in the unnamed Ward 8 politics, said White might share the lead in the race with May. By the end of February, White had raised more than $ 10,000 and had $ 12,000 in his campaign coffers.

On April 3, May easily won the Environmental Democrats 8th straw polls, cementing his leadership in the 8 Ward race. May received 177 votes, followed by Trayon White with 79 votes, Natalie Williams with 77 votes, Sheila Bunn with 53 votes, and Eugene Kinlow with 30 votes. (All others received less than 30 votes.) Will Sommer, author of influential political column "Long Lips" for Washington City Paper, observes that May's victory may indicate difficulties for his campaign: May be paid for free barbecue for all arrivals just two blocks from the polls were held, and Mayor Muriel Bowser stood on the nearby road waving a May campaign sign. However, May garnered less than 200 votes. Candidates Stuart Anderson and Jauhar Abraham left the race for the next four days, and urged voters to support Trayon White.

Selection results

The number of voters in the special election 8 Environment on April 28, 2015, is very high, with over 6,200 ballots cast by almost 52,000 voters in the ward. That's almost 75 percent of the total voters in the mayor's primary 2014 - far exceeding expectations. The initial election results released on the afternoon of April 28 showed LaRuby May with 1,711 votes and Trayon White with 1,559 votes, a difference of only 152 votes. Although May surpassed White 16-to-1, election observers say White has jumped at the end of the race as an "anti-forming vote" and that he has consolidated his support by dragging him from other candidates in a busy field. Will Sommer, writing at Washington City Paper, believes that White lost the race because Marion Christopher Barry, the son of the former mayor, stayed in the race despite his floundering campaign and his nomination has been diverted from White.

However, with 1,031 temporary and absent votes not yet counted, the District of Columbia Board of Elections (BOE) said the race results were too close to be called. Under the DC election law, voters involved in the same day's registration, whose address is not currently registered with the BOE, or those who vote in the wrong areas now have 10 days to go forward and show evidence of dominance so that their voices will be counted. The Washington Post says his analysis shows White is needed to win 65 percent of the provisional vote and is absent to win. On May 7, with 823 temporary votes and absenteeism counted, May leads White with 80 votes. There are 217 temporary ballots that remain countless, but the BOE says the deadlines set by election law require voters to show proof of residency at 5 pm on Friday, May 9 to have their votes.

On May 9, the Electoral Council of D.C. announced the latest unofficial vote count in a special 8 Environment selection. After counting 951 of 1,031 temporary and absent votes, the BOE stated that LaRuby May won the election with 1,955 votes to 1,876 - 1.8 votes from Trayon White, or 79% of all votes. May took 244 votes (25.66 per cent of all temporary and absent votes), and White 317 (33.33 per cent of all temporary votes and missed absences). According to D.C. legislation, a win margin of less than 1 percent creates automatic recalculation, a possible outcome avoided.

The BOE said it would authorize the special election of Ward 8 on May 14, 2015, and The Washington Post said May is likely to be sworn in as a member of the D.C. board. at that time. White said he would ask for a recount. But the BOE says that Mei will be able to take his seat as soon as the election is certified and he is sworn in, and that he will be able to immediately start the council's work. The BOE indicates that White's request for a recount must wait until certification is made.

Electoral Council D.C. certifying the election results on May 14, 2015. May won with 1,955 votes for White's 1,877, the difference of 78 votes.

White initially requested a recount on May 22nd. But just hours after the recount began on May 28, he asked the Electoral Board to suspend the recount.

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Second run for District Council

White spent most of the following year maintaining a high profile in Ward 8. She regularly attended demonstrations that supported better public housing and job training, and against gentrification; visiting the areas where the killings occurred; and led a protest against the anti-crime proposal of Mayor Bowser. His work drew strong support among teenagers and young adults in their 20s. On June 18, 2015, White was hired as a temporary employee at Columbia District Attorney General's Office. She works as a Community Development Specialist, focusing on education, engagement, and outreach to organizations and communities. His portfolio focuses on youth at risk, juvenile justice issues, combat the use of designer drugs, and general outreach to the environment east of the Anacostia River. Her work ends on September 30, 2015.

On February 8, 2016, White proposed as a candidate for the 8th District District Council seat in the Democratic primary. Several other candidates are expected to participate in the race, and at the end of the White archiving has the support of Jauhar Abraham, Stuart Anderson, Marion Christopher Barry, and Karl Racine, Attorney General of the District of Columbia. In addition to May, the white-faced candidate, Maurice Dickens, Bonita Goode, and Aaron Holmes.

However, however, it proves to be agile fundraising. At the end of March, May had $ 184,000 in donations compared to White $ 12,000. It may prove to be very popular among health care companies and real estate developers, and donation networks are spreading nationwide.

White, on the other hand, won some key support. By mid-April, 90 percent of the voting members of the progressive group D.C. For Democracy chose to support White. On May 14, White won 8 Democratic Party straw polls. With only 200 party members casting votes, White won 135 votes for 50 votes in May. Holmes came in third with eight votes, Dickens won two votes, and Goode did not win. May refused to appear on the show. By the end of May, White had collected a total of $ 31,000. On May 27, editors of The Washington Post authorized LaRuby May for the council.

A few days before the main election, Vincent C. Gray seems to support White as well. Gray, trying to return to the District Council by challenging government official Yvette Alexander in Ward 7, funded a pro-White robocall effort called White an "independent thinker".

With a major election of just four days off, on June 10, the city's campaign finance offices reported that May had raised a total of $ 245,090 during the entire election season, compared to the White total of only $ 31,059. However, The Washington Post states that the race will be very tight.

During the main campaign, White supported Robert White, who challenged Vincent Orange who was serving for At-Large chairs on the council. White and White appeared together at a time when Robert White campaigned in Ward 8.

Main election results

LaRuby May lost June 14, 2016, Democratic nomination to Trayon White, 51 percent to 43 percent (4,272 votes to 3,584 votes).

General selection

In June 2016, White supported D.C's campaign finance reform proposal. to prohibit anyone or the company from receiving a city contract with $ 100,000 or more if they donate to the District Council election. The proposal is one of the few most stringent proposals to address the corruption and ethical problems facing the council, some of its members have been found guilty of ethics and fraud allegations in recent years.

On November 8, 2016, White was challenged in his bid to win 8 seats of the Ward Council, and won by 25,870 votes (93.29 percent of all votes cast).

Making Anti Semitic Remarks Chairman â€
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The term council

White was sworn into office by noon on January 2, 2017.

In June 2017, White sent a guarantee to friends and commissioners Ward 8 ANC Kendall Simmons who was arrested for attacking his girlfriend at a grocery store. White compares Simmons with Malcolm X and says that his girlfriend's story does not match the facts in the case.

In March 2018, White organized a protest against developments in his Ward. Targeting Bozzuto and Chapman Development developers, White complains that they do not hire enough local workers and contractors.

D.C. City Councilman Trayon White Makes Troubling Remarks at ...
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Controversy

In March 2018, White sparked controversy by stating that Jewish bankers control the weather. Following responses from community members and leaders, White apologized, met with leaders of the Jewish community, and visited the US Holocaust Memorial Museum. During his visit on April 19, White reportedly suddenly left the 90 minute tour half way.

Posts and initial reactions

On March 16, 2018, White posted a video on his official Facebook page showing falling snowfall, referring to conspiracy the Rothschild family conspiracy to manipulate the weather. In his post, he stated, "You better pay attention to this climate control, man, the manipulation of this climate... And it is a model based on the Rothschild that controls the climate to create a natural disaster that they can pay to own cities, Be careful. "The comments are widely reported in Washington and in media around the world in support of anti-Semitic conspiracy theories. The Washington Washington Paper reported on March 19 that this was not the first time White had offended a Jewish conspiracy to control the global weather. White later apologized for making the statement, saying he worked with Jews United for Justice to develop a deeper understanding of anti-Semitism. According to The Washington Post, some Jewish organizations in the area say they believe White's apology is genuine and that his comments seem to be made from a position of ignorance rather than anti-semitism.

Second event

On March 19, 2018, the Board released a recording of the event dated February 27, 2018, in which White claimed that Rothschild controlled the World Bank and the US government. In the video, White says, "There is this whole concept with Rothschild - controlling the World Bank, as we all know - investing dollars into big cities They are really in control of the federal government, and now they have a concept called "Mayor Bowser, councilors, and other city leaders who attended the event showed confusion over White's comments, but did not punish them at the time.

In an apology to a fellow board member, White explains why he became a believer in conspiracy theories: "Somehow, I read and misinterpreted the Rockefeller and Rothchild [sic] theories At that breakfast, I was wrongly speaking, totally wrong information on this issue and ran with false information.I think I heard other similar information beforehand about the theory around the World Bank and put it all together. "

DC lawmaker apologizes for saying Jewish people control the ...
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Selection results

2011

2012

2015

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D.C. City Councilman Trayon White Makes Troubling Remarks at ...
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References

Notes
Quote

DMHHS on Twitter:
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External links

  • The board website
  • Campaign website
  • White Trayon on Facebook

Source of the article : Wikipedia

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