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    HomeAsian NewsHistorical Chinatown hall becomes backdrop for campaign photos

    Historical Chinatown hall becomes backdrop for campaign photos

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    The antique building at 843 Stockton St. looks like it’s got the Qing Dynasty — China’s last imperial dynasty — sealed inside it. For 170 years, the group behind the building served as the protector of the Chinese American community, fighting for civil and local rights, taking care of the starving and the sick, returning seniors’ ashes to China.

    Once recognized as “the representative organization of the overseas Chinese in the United States,” it was the single voice representing the Chinese during the 1882 Chinese Exclusion Act, and famously fought for the landmark 1898 Supreme Court ruling that established U.S. citizenship for American-born children of Chinese immigrants. 

    Nowadays, the Chinese Consolidated Benevolent Association, also known as the Chinese Six Companies, is known mostly as the go-to place for aspiring politicos trying to win the Asian vote. 

    At each event, photo ops are front and center. In one from May 2, Board President Aaron Peskin secured a position near the center of the group photo. City Attorney David Chiu barely managed to squeeze into the frame, and two spots outside of him was District Attorney Brooke Jenkins. Sen. Scott Wiener was relegated to the second row, next to costumed lion dancers. In the center was the new president of the Chinese Six Companies, Roger Louie. Above all of them was a slightly faded photo of Sun Yat-sen, who overthrew the Qing Dynasty in a revolution in 1911.

    Among other mayoral candidates, incumbent London Breed sent her aide, Daniel Lurie attended the ceremony, but instead of appearing in the group photo, Lurie took his photo with Louie, who had an inauguration that day.

    From Stockton Street, the photos go into Chinese-language media and churn through the social media channels of the aspiring candidates. For some, the photo-ops symbolize the rising importance of the Chinese community for City Hall. For others, it means that the community still isn’t really respected.

    What’s clear, however, is that the Asian vote is increasingly important citywide and in many district elections — likely determinative in many. The Chinese vote will represent about 15 percent of November’s electorate in San Francisco, according to political consultant Eric Jaye.

    Longtime observers question the value of the visits, but the politicos keep coming.   

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