Daniel Lurie addresses reporters during a press conference at the State of the City at Rossi Field on Jan. 15, 2026. Photo by Mariana Garcia.

San Francisco Mayor Daniel Lurie stood alongside city officials and more than a dozen construction workers in hard hats Wednesday afternoon minutes after announcing a proposed new tax cut for multi-million-dollar real estate deals. That’s when the woman started shouting.

“Tax the Israel! Tax the Israel!” shouted the woman, a passer-by who had wandered into a democratic socialist-lead protest against the tax cut and modified the group’s “Tax the rich!” chant. 

She then started bellowing: “Tax the Jews! Tax the Jews!”

Her chants were clearly audible to officials at the press conference, according to video taken at the event, which was held inside a construction site at 1111 Sutter St. in Lower Nob Hill on the cusp of the Tenderloin.

The press conference, held by Lurie and District 5 Supervisor Bilal Mahmood, was fenced off from the protesters, and the site’s chain-link fence was obscured by an orange scrim. Protesters said they could not see the presser’s attendees, and vice-versa.

It is unclear if Lurie reacted in the moment but, about three hours later, his team put out a statement: “At an event this afternoon, a group of individuals that were chanting ‘tax the rich’ began to shout ‘tax the Jews,’” Lurie wrote.

“Suggesting that Jews are wealthy is a tired trope, and targeting our community at an event focused on creating economic opportunity for San Franciscans is decidedly antisemitic.”

It escaped containment. Gov. Gavin Newsom, San Jose Mayor Matt Mahan, Rep. Eric Swalwell, Sen. Scott Wiener, and dozens of others issued their own condemnations of antisemitism.

The New York Post headline blared “Vile antisemitic chant breaks out at San Francisco press conference.” A CNN reporter, like many others, repeated Lurie’s line that “a group of people” participated in the chants.

Lurie’s spokesperson said he had “never experienced something like this until today.” Even David Axelrod, Barack Obama’s former advisor, weighed in about the “echoes of another, very dark time.”

By early Thursday morning, a little after noon in Israel, the Jerusalem Post’s homepage carried the piece, “‘Tax the Jews’ replaces ‘tax the rich’ chants at San Francisco event, mayor says.” The Times of Israel followed with its own article.

Thousands of real and imaginary people on social media denounced San Francisco as a hotbed of antisemitism, which was portrayed as the natural course for left-wing politics. 

But the account from Lurie was inaccurate, four participants of the protest said — and their version of events is corroborated by the on-site video.

It was not a group chant. It was a lone woman, allegedly known to the construction workers in the area as abrasive and apparently mentally ill, who ambled up and chanted on her own. 

The protesters, who are with the Democratic Socialists of America, told her to stop, they said.

“At some point, some woman comes over, I think she lives across the street, and started talking to me about, ‘Hey what’s this about?’” said Matthew Pancia, the treasurer for DSA San Francisco.

Pancia, who is Jewish, said he gave her his spiel and she joined in. “Then two minutes in, she starts saying weird shit,” he said. “She started saying ‘Tax Israel,’ ‘Tax the Jews,’ and immediately I was like ‘No, no, no, not that one, don’t say that — I’m a Jew, I don’t think you should say that.’”

Pancia said she paused, and then “she started saying it again.”

“There were multiple attempts to speak with her, and then there was an attempt by us to drown her out by repeating the ‘Tax the Rich’ chant,” said Christin Evans, another participant. At one point, Evans said she told the woman: “That’s not why we’re here.”

Video posted by the account StopAntisemitism shows the woman wandering about, alone, outside the press conference, shouting “Cancel Israel!” and “Shame on Jews!” The DSA members confirmed it was the same woman.

“We didn’t really have a way to stop her, so we just started chanting over her, and eventually she just rambled on,” added Marc Dantona, another protester. Jennifer Bolen, co-chair of DSA San Francisco, said that when she walked up to the woman to tell her to leave, “she blew up at me, threw her hands up, I stepped back, and then she left.”

The episode lasted perhaps five to 10 minutes, the participants said. 

The mayor’s office did not reply to questions asking whether Lurie would retract or modify his version of events.

The San Francisco Building and Construction Trades Council, which was also at the press conference, has done so. It issued its own initial statement in line with Lurie’s but, six and a half hours later, acknowledged it was incorrect.

At 3 p.m. on Wednesday, Building Trades claimed that “individuals identifying themselves with the Democratic Socialists of America disrupted the event with antisemitic chants.”

In a 9:30 p.m. “update,” it clarified that “We have been in touch with members of DSA San Francisco, who have reiterated their condemnation of the antisemitic remarks made by an individual who was not part of their protest nor a member of their organization.”

As of today, the union’s admittedly erroneous statement is still posted online

Woman was purportedly known to construction workers

Pancia and Dantona spoke to construction workers outside the fence, who recognized the woman.

“They were like, ‘We know her, this lady comes out and just yells shit at us,’” Pancia said. A worker told Dantona: “Oh yeah, that lady, she’s around — she’s a crazy person.”  

For seasoned protesters in a city with its share of troubled people on the street, the unhinged comments were not as surprising as the mayor’s response and the resultant international amplification of the shoutings of a random passer-by. 

“We get it, we’re in the TL, people are out,” said Pancia.

“As an organizer, I mean, it’s almost at every community rally or protest … there’s going to be someone coming to say something,” added Bolen. “Everyone does the same thing: You de-escalate, they lose steam, and they walk away. That’s what we did here.”

But, Bolen said, it was “a little reckless” of Lurie to issue the statement he did. “It makes the city less safe to create this story that a group of people were engaging in an antisemitic protest when it was a single woman who did not seem to have all her facilities.”

Lurie’s team did not reach out to DSA, she said, and DSA in fact had issued a statement two hours before the mayor’s saying that a lone “non-member joined the crowd and spouted disgusting antisemitic remarks.”

Pancia called the reaction a “very cynical, obnoxious weaponization of a random person” and said that, “as a Jew,” he found the “boy-who-cried-wolf antisemitism” from Lurie to be “offensive” and “gross.”

“Think of Frank Chu; it’s the same thing,” added Dantona, referencing San Francisco’s famed former eccentric who was, for years, a ubiquitous presence at demonstrations and large events, carrying signs warning against the “12 galaxies” and alien mind control.

Associating the many hundreds of demonstrations that Chu crashed over the years with the views of the paranoid conspiracy theorist would be as unfair as what happened Wednesday, he said.

“If somebody thinks about it and takes a picture of Frank Chu and says, ‘These are the crazy leftists in San Francisco,’ that’s what this is,” he said. “It’s like if we rewind 25 years, and Frank Chu is there with his sign and Fox News says ‘look at these liberals.’ It’s an opportunity, and they’re on top of it.” 

As of Wednesday evening, DSA organizers said no one from Lurie’s team had reached out to check on the veracity of the mayor’s broadly distributed claims. 

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Joe is senior editor at Mission Local. He is an award-winning journalist whose coverage focuses on politics, campaign finance, Silicon Valley, and criminal justice. He received a B.A. at Stanford University for political science in 2014. He was born in Sweden, grew up in Chile, and moved to Oakland when he was eight. You can reach him on Signal @jrivanob.99.

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21 Comments

  1. I’m Jewish, generally like Lurie and, considering what he inherited, think he’s doing a pretty good job. But I’ve noticed he has a tendency to make ill-advised hasty decisions (District 4 Supervisor appointee comes immediately to mind) which have given me pause and made me reevaluate some of the qualities I like about him. A bit of advice that I’m sure he doesn’t want: take enough time to do some thorough research before announcing anything that is subject to scrutiny or speculation. Retract your statement and issue a heartfelt apology. A little egg on your face is much better than a lot of shit on your doorstep.

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  2. Ugh. They’re all so quick to jump on the bandwagon and condemn the entire left when one unstable woman not associated with the group is antisemitic. Yet they don’t want to say if there’s a genocide in Gaza and they happily throw trans people under the bus. It’s hard to take their moral condemnation seriously when they’re so selective.

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      1. “They” = the bad faith trolls jumping on the bandwagon to bash SF based on the rantings of one mad woman, obviously. Do you have difficulty with pronouns or something??

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  3. Lurie has seemingly taken pains not to enter the fray on Israel or antisemitism, and immediately steps into a pile of shit when he does. Shoulda stuck with the program.

    And ya gotta love it when Lurie declares “suggesting that Jews are wealthy is a tired trope.” Maybe not the right person for the message.

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  4. Crazy or not, what she said is despicable. It is, as the Mayor said, a tired trope, but it is still hurtful. Hearing about it last night hurt.
    And it is NOT the same as Frank Chu – he wasn’t directing his ire at real people (unless aliens walk among us and are impeachable in other galaxies).

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  5. Thank God Lurie wants to lower the “cost burden” on the way over wealthy who buy a few multimillion dollar houses in SF (eg, Steve Job’s widow who spent 120 million on two houses less than a mile apart, but actually lives in Palo Alto and owns a bunch of hoses in Malibu). Those are the types of people who need tax breaks.

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    1. The ill-conceived local “mansion tax” is actually hurting apartment house construction. I have no problem with a hefty transfer tax on actual mansions, but it’s bad policy to have that same tax inhibiting the creation of multifamily housing.

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  6. Why defame Frank Chu, who never attacked anyone because of their race, religion, or other immutable characteristics?

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  7. Given all the vandalism businesses like Manny’s and Smitten have faced in the past few years, you can’t claim this is fully isolated or not a problem with activists on the left.

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  8. Sadly the problem is credibility and reputation for DSA. Even if they were not actually involved in this particular incident, everyone automatically assumes they were given their historical stances.

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  9. These people are PATHETIC to try to blame DSA for this. There are crazy people yelling things all over the city.

    While Lurie might be Ashkenazic and his father a rabbi, he has NO ethics, and does NOT practice the ethics traditionally espoused by Jews.

    His persecution of the unhoused, for example, is unconscionable.

    His office offers a superb example of institutionalized corruption.

    And it is totally sickening that construction workers are gullible enough to turn out for an event which celebrates ” a new tax cut for multi-million dollar real estate deals.”

    Message to Lurie and Wiener: Stop using your Ashkenazic backgrounds as an excuse for serving elite interests to the detriment of the rest of us!

    And how about if you re-register as Republicans?
    Truth in advertising!

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    1. Building and construction trades have long been right wing unions comprised of people who live nowhere near San Francisco yet have outsized influence over public policy on land use here.

      Another example of residents coming in dead fucking last.

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  10. “Suggesting that Jews are wealthy is a tired trope, and targeting our community at an event focused on creating economic opportunity for San Franciscans is decidedly antisemitic.”

    Far right Jewish Zionist billionaires like the Adelsons, Ackman, Epstein and allegedly some of the Rothschilds as revealed in Epstein files and others, who spend lavishly on politics to put Israel first, make themselves into antisemitic tropes.

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    1. This is absolutely vile. Would you say something similar about any other minority community? Please think about that.

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      1. I am an Ashkenazi Jew and can comment on how rich Ashkenazi Jews make themselves into anti-semitic tropes as I please.

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  11. DSA may have had nothing to do with this woman who, it would appear, was a lone wolf in expressing her opinions.

    But the DSA is of course very left-wing by US standards. And it is typically the left that hates Israel almost as much as they hate “the rich”. So one can reasonably argue that, although this was not an official DSA talking point, groups like DSA bring out these kinds of sentiments in others.

    If you look at the way former UK Labour party leader Jeremy Corbyn was expelled from his party for anti-semitism, it would be incumbent upon DSA to distance itself from any such tarnishing rhetoric.

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    1. Like, it’s almost as though the left right dichotomy that originated as a shorthand during the French Revolution centuries ago frequently causes pointless confusion when applied to 21st century geopolitics or like something, you know?

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