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Palo Alto Mayor Greer Stone at the State of the City event at the Palo Alto Art Center on March 22, 2023. Photo by Magali Gauthier.

Palo Alto’s mayoral elections are typically light and ceremonial affairs filled with exchanged pleasantries, resolutions of appreciation and a snack buffet where City Council members mingle with community members after the festivities.

It didn’t take long, however, for Greer Stone to realize that this year is different. Minutes after he was chosen to serve as mayor, Stone found himself presiding over a community debate focused on a topic that he had never wanted to wade into: a resolution for a cease-fire in the Gaza Strip.

Dozens of residents, some of them Stanford University students, urged council members at the Jan. 8 meeting to adopt a resolution calling for an immediate cease-fire. They cited the growing death toll in Israel’s war against Hamas, which at that time was estimated to have killed about 23,000 Palestinians (since then, the count has risen to more than 27,000, according to the Associated Press).

“Calling the cease-fire is not radical. It’s the bare minimum,” said Jessica Koehler, one of about 20 speakers who advocated for a resolution.

Many others contended that passing such a resolution would be misguided and divisive. They cited the trauma of Oct. 7, when Hamas orchestrated a terrorist attack on Israel that resulted in more than 1,200 deaths and more than 200 hostages, some of whom have been subsequently released after negotiations. Calling for a cease-fire resolution while Hamas still holds hostages would “only embolden bigots and tear apart our community,” one speaker said. Another urged the council to focus on local issues rather than on a war in the Middle East, over which it has no jurisdiction.

A month later, the debate has only grown louder in Palo Alto and other cities across the United States. Every council meeting in Palo Alto over the past month has featured speakers from both sides during the public comment period, with some characterizing a cease-fire resolution as a moral imperative while others viewing it as a divisive and futile gesture.

In early January, pro-cease-fire protesters took over the state Capitol and disrupted a legislative session with chants of “Cease-fire now!” Politico reported. President Joe Biden was greeted with the same chant days later, when he was giving a speech in South Carolina, according to The New York Times.

Locally, a group of pro-Palestinian activists disrupted a forum for Congressional candidates that was organized by Embarcadero Media Foundation (which oversees this publication), prompting organizers (including this reporter) to end the event just before the candidates were scheduled to give their closing statements. Some of the attendees at the debate returned to City Hall this week to restate their case for or against a cease-fire resolution. Sarit Schube, who represented a group of residents, recalled the Hamas atrocities of Oct. 7 and pinned the suffering in Gaza squarely on the group, which has governed Gaza since 2005.

“It’s hard to have a cease-fire with a terrorist group that says they’ll keep breaking it over and over again,” Schube said. “Given all of this, there can be no doubt that Israel must defend herself in this war that was forced upon her.”

Lori Meyers urges the Palo Alto City Council not to pass a cease-fire resolution during public comment at a meeting on Jan. 29, 2024. Photo by Magali Gauthier.

Now a month into his mayoral term, Stone has not wavered from his initial position against pursuing a cease-fire resolution. In an interview, Stone said that while the city condemns the killing of innocent civilians on all sides, he believes a cease-fire resolution is the wrong way to go.

“The city is clearly empathetic toward these issues, but the cease-fire resolution, from what we’re seeing in other cities that are doing this, is not bringing peace to anyone,” Stone said. “It’s not bringing closure. It’s only ripping these communities apart.”

The council has not been completely silent when it comes to the war in Gaza. In the days after Oct. 7, then-Mayor Lydia Kou attended a rally at Mitchell Park in support of Israel and read a resolution that condemned Hamas’ attack. She also expressed her grief for casualties on both sides of the war. The murder of innocent people, she said, “is never an appropriate response to any question.”

Kou also noted at the time the rising threats and growing fear that members of both the Jewish and Muslim communities have reported in the aftermath of Oct. 7. The city’s Human Relations Commission has been trying to address these troubling trends . It held a public forum for Arab and Palestinian community members in December and another for Jewish community members in January. (The commission is scheduled to discuss efforts to combat antisemitism at its Feb. 8 meeting.)

Council member Julie Lythcott-Haims, who serves as liaison to the Human Relations Commission, told the many Jewish speakers who voiced concern about antisemitism during the Jan. 11 meeting that she hopes Palo Alto will find a “way forward in true unity with love.”

“So many people are hurting,” Lythcott-Haims said at the meeting. “I believe in my heart that almost every one of us wants peace.”

Jessica Koehler urges the Palo Alto City Council to pass a cease-fire resolution during public comment at a meeting on Jan. 29, 2024. Photo by Magali Gauthier.

For the council, however, “peace” and “cease-fire” are not interchangeable terms. Even as Bay Area cities such as Oakland, Richmond and San Francisco have all adopted resolutions that call for a cease-fire, neither Stone nor his colleagues on the Palo Alto council have publicly called for such a resolution.

Lythcott-Haims and Council member Greg Tanaka, who are both running for Congress, each expressed personal support for a cease-fire in Gaza during the Jan. 31 Congressional debate. During council meetings, however, neither has advocated for a local resolution to that effect. The council has not scheduled any discussions of a cease-fire resolution. Stone, who as mayor helps set the agenda, told this publication that he does not expect that to change unless two or more colleagues choose to submit a memo calling for such a discussion.

“As mayor, my priority is the health and well-being of our community here in Palo Alto. … We have so many pressing issues to deal with that the council has the authority and ability to accomplish, from affordable housing to youth mental health to climate change mitigation,” Stone said. “I think our residents expect us to work on problems that we are actually able to solve.”

He also argued that, as a matter of process, the council should not get involved in geopolitical conflicts. Doing so, he said, would set a precedent that will “force future councils to weigh in on all foreign conflicts and take time away from actual governing.”

He also cited the tensions that such resolutions have caused in other cities. In San Francisco, Mayor London Breed refused to sign the non-binding resolution that was passed by her city’s Board of Supervisors. She instead issued a statement arguing that since the resolution’s passage, the city has been “angrier, more divided and less safe.” She alluded in her Jan. 19 letter to numerous instances during the meeting when pro-cease-fire protesters intimidated Jewish speakers. In one case, she wrote, protesters surrounded a Jewish city employee in the restroom.

“Sadly, that’s the point,” Breed said in the statement. “Their exercise was never about bringing people together; it was about choosing sides.”

Stone similarly said he is concerned that passing a resolution would worsen local tensions.

“I am concerned about the unintended consequences of only exacerbating the already growing number of antisemitism and Islamophobia incidents in our region,” Stone said. “I won’t do anything that will risk further harm to our city or its residents.”

Palo Alto City Council members listen to Talha Baqar demand they pass a cease-fire resolution during public comment at a meeting on Jan. 29, 2024. Photo by Magali Gauthier.

Gennady Sheyner covers local and regional politics, housing, transportation and other topics for the Palo Alto Weekly, Palo Alto Online and their sister publications. He has won awards for his coverage...

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30 Comments

  1. Surely the Council could publically recognize that here in Palo Alto & SRP and Stanford are stationed the incubators, designers. Yes. The very corporate company contractors our USA military pay, use, create the very life altering products, harming, maiming, killing humans in the Middle East. And many in the line of these weapons are women and children.

  2. Good for Greer. He and the rest of the City Council should clearly and explicitly blame the conduct of the disruptive protestors that deprived US of our democratic rights to hear the candidates debate for his decision.

  3. We didn’t call for a ceasefire with ISIS. During the last year of WWII when Germany was on their knees and mostly civilians were being hit, we didn’t call for a ceasefire with the Nazis, we shouldn’t with Hamas.

    The reason is, unless eradicated, these groups just generate war later causing even more suffering. In fact, this is what already happened with Hamas. The people who cheer on these anti-freedom, anti-enlightenment, anti-Western forces are … just on the wrong side.

    The reason is, these groups bent on evil

  4. Palo Alto does NOT need to have a “foreign policy” or if we do it should be with regards to how we deal with Menlo Park, Mountain View and EPA. Maybe we also appoint an ambassador to San Francisco and San Jose but that’s it.

  5. Good for the Mayor.

    We don’t expect our CC to be experts on foreign affairs. They were not voted to spend their meetings debating foreign issues. This particular issue is complicated and has many facets. They should not be wasting their valuable time on anything that doesn’t directly affect Palo Alto. Anyone who thinks they should be taking time to do this obviously has an agenda one side or the other and not thinking about what is important for Palo Alto.

  6. I would like to thank Mayor Stone and the City Council of Palo Alto for not bringing forward a ceasefire resolution and fracturing our community. So many people are hurting, and we can’t divide our community even more. As a resident, I agree with Mayor Stone’s words “.. our residents expect us to work on problems that we are actually able to solve.”

  7. @Bystander when our local Palo Alto economy is wrapped around the Global US Military contracts here and which design, implement, manufacture weapons that are being used to kill human beings in the Middle East — yes we are involved. Saying this Israel / Palestine is a Foreign Affair is not accurate depiction of our city’s i.e. Silicon Valley and our citizenry’s involvement as one of three super power War machines dominating our consciences and pocket books. These “private” companies stationed right here get plenty of tax breaks while making WMD on Palo Alto/Stanford/SRP soil . Let me spell it this way. For every dollar spent for our Military and its local contracts it’s $2 less for a humane, viable solution. The real reason the council can’t call for a ceasefire is we’d loose a lot a lot of money divesting from these global war contractors from the money pumped into of local economy.

    1. There is no solution possible. Iran’s proxies end badly because Iran doesn’t care about anything but its regional domination. So, Hamas, Hez, Syria, Houthi are all currently being paid to fight for Iran’s interest. We have two viable strategies to make a reasonable settlement: (1) topple the Mullahs from power in Iran (Iran is only 50% Persian, they have colonized many others who don’t like them in their borders), (2) end oil as a dominant fuel (this will happen anyway in about 50 years). #2 will defund those being paid to fight. Until 1 and/or 2, it’s “whack a mole”. We’ve been always making sure the “whack” isn’t too hard and that’s made things progressively worse.

  8. The PA city council should be focused on issues pertaining to our city. The subject of Gaza should not be discussed in their agenda. There are so many local challenges that have been created by previous city councils, forced on us from Sacramento, the Fed government and local cities.

    Israel will decide when there it is safe to have a ceasefire.

  9. Good for Greer Stone realizing this is not a city council issue. Indeed, the candidate forum takeover should have handled with greater enforcement. The ability to share one’s opinion is a civic right, highjacking a community program is not.

  10. Mostly innocent people are being physically and mental torn apart in Palestine and the West Bank. Thousands of innocent men, women, grandparents and children don’t have water, a bed, or food. Communication and deal making is the best solution. The anger in Hamas will never be gone, it will gain momentum with more people around the world due the atrocities civilians are suffering with.

  11. If only these protesters could get as fired up about climate change and fossil fuels. The best thing anyone can do to end war in the middle east is to stop driving a car and start riding a bike. I’d put money on everyone of those protesters at the debate having driven to city hall.

    Very impressed by Stone. Whether you agree with it or not, taking this position takes guts – a rare quality in a politician. Also a sign of the ability to lead.

  12. I agree with Stone. Every time “something happens” in the world, we do not need every university, every city council, every corporation “making a statement” one way or the other about its stance on that issue. The PA City Council was not elected to speak for me in such cases. They were elected to run the city and deal with the issues local to the city. In that regard, however, I do care whether the City Council supports free speech (but not violence) by its citizens about those issues.

  13. These protestors apparently got it wrong. They should go protesting at the Capitol Hills. Here in Palo Alto we have other priorities that need our undivided attention to work on.

  14. “These “private” companies stationed right here get plenty of tax breaks while making WMD on Palo Alto/Stanford/SRP soil

    @NTB2, then not why direct the protests to those companies and Stanford since they presumably have the power to act?

    1. Those “private” companies are the reason we are not slaves to some dictatorial group who “hate freedom more than they hate life.”

      As an aging successful entrepreneur who never contributed to our military, I was trying to find a way, specifically, to bring AI to logistics pre-during-post battle. You think it’s easy to get such a contract. Heck, we have to build our way towards that with enterprise solutions. With luck, we’ll be able to contribute to the defense of the West and I’ll feel I’ve given back something to this country that gave all of us so much.

  15. Unfortunately, with this new website, the only way to keep abreast of a conversation is to keep multiple tabs open and then refresh them.

    Saying that, it is good to see that people are respectfully discussing this issue. The situation in Israel and Gaza is indeed an important issue in the world and of course it is relevant to people, global business and international politics. It is important for any (Palo Alto) resident to be informed and have an opinion, but it is not necessary for our council to either use precious time discussing this or making any type of resolution. They are not speaking for the residents of Palo Alto on internation affairs.

    On a similar note, I hope that people here are watching all the farmer protests in Europe. Our CC should personally be aware of such things, but there is no point in discussing that issue either even if our own farmers join the protest movement. It just doesn’t warrant our CC time.

  16. Mayor Kou’s statement condemning Hamas’ actions on October 7th was a bit like condemning the murders of women and children and the taking of hostages by Nat Turner and his fellow “terrorists” back in 1831 while ignoring the fact that Nat Turner and his fellow “terrorists” were slaves. Gaza is the world’s largest open air prison, walled off and locked in by Israel, containing 2.3 million inmates, 70+% of whom are refugees or descendants of refugees from the ethnic cleansing that created Israel in 1948, denied their legal rights under international law to return to their homes in what is now Israel, watching their fellow Palestinians in the West Bank as Israel steals their lands, builds apartheid walls and roads and moves now 700,000 Israeli colonists onto Occupied Territories in clear violation of international laws, while Israel shoots and kills Palestinian protestors including children and tries Palestinians in military courts with a 99.7% conviction rate and on and on. Now Israel has killed more than 12,000 children in Gaza, with many more broken children’s corpses decomposing under the rubble feeding the rats and rendered close to 2 million Gazans homeless. Israel has also bombed hospitals, cut off water, food, electricity and phone services in Gaza and recently persuaded donor nations to stop funding UNRWA. All this is being funded by the cumulative $300+ BILLION the US has given Israel over the decades. How is it “divisive” to call for a ceasefire? And what does Mayor Stone mean on his website when he says “One of my greatest passions is social justice.”?

  17. Noel,

    It is divisive because you have a congressperson and 2 senators to deal with Federal issues. Why in the world would you waste everybody’s time raising this with a body that is elected to deal exclusively with City of Palo Alto issues?
    What has been accomplished by other cities who have taken on this issue?
    If you pay attention to the news, you know that your ceasefire is a code word just like the phrase from the river to the sea.

    1. And “code word” itself is a code word for “this person’s arguements are true and convincing so let’s try to silence him by falsely accusing him of anti-semitism by claiming that some innocuous word or phrase actually means something the person did not intend in the slightest”

      1. It’s important to recognize the ongoing genocide in Gaza because 1) our tax dollars support Israel and it’s killing of nearly 15,000 children 2) our city’s investments in companies that support Israel’s apartheid in the West Bank and Jerusalem and it’s genocide in Gaza makes us complicit in Israeli crimes, and 3) this conflict has already spilled over into our community with numerous hate crimes against Muslims and Arabs, even right here on Stanford’s campus where an Arab student was run over. I have personally spoken to a parent who’s child had to be pulled out of our schools because of racist Islamophobic bullies.

        Mayor Kou issued a statement in support of the Jewish community in October. It is also time to recognize the devastation of so many of our community members and issue a statement in support of our Palestinian, Arab, and Muslim residents.

        “Our lives begin to end the day we become silent about things that matter.” -Dr MLK Jr.

  18. I was appalled at the disrespectful and disruptive behavior of the pro Hamas/Palestine protestors at the 1/31 PA Council Candidate’s Forum and was dreading more of the same in the comments to this article. I am so relieved and proud to see the maturity and circumspection of the commenters preceding me…I agree with most everything said above and appreciate the tone shown. I am especially proud that our Council and Mayor had gumption to strongly condemn Hamas and to “stay in their lane” by not getting sucked into the vitriol.

  19. Just gained a whole lot of respect for Greer Stone. Nothing the Palo Alto City Council says or does with regard to this issue will change the situation in the middle east. Focus on what you were elected to do for Palo Alto.

  20. Thanks to those who are pushing this issue. It’s uncomfortable I know, but the stakes are high. Already about 30,000 Palestinians have been killed, and many more are in danger. Regional war could easily break out. A blind hatred has taken hold of Israel with dangerous consequences for all of us .

    Palo Alto wields far more influence than other communities its size, so what people do here is important.

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