Skip to Content

Protesting Mayor Lurie’s budget cuts outside his office

A group of 250 brought chants and personalized pleas directly to Room 200, but went unanswered by Lurie

An office assistant and security officer handle protestors outside San Francisco Mayor Daniel Lurie’s office. Photo: Joel Rosenblatt / Gazetteer SF

On Tuesday, a protest against Mayor Daniel Lurie’s budget cuts took over the second floor of San Francisco City Hall, with a crowd of about 250 chanting a familiar slogan: “What does democracy look like? This is what democracy looks like!”

Mayor Lurie, who was in his office at Room 200, could surely hear them. Outside his door, an office assistant took notes and collected postcards addressed to the mayor, about 1,700.

Anya Worley-Ziegmann, the coalition coordinator at the San Francisco People’s Budget Coalition, an organization of nonprofits, unions, and community groups, said City Hall had been chosen for the action because the mayor would be in his office for his monthly appearance before the Board of Supervisors later in the afternoon. The plan was to “sing him” into the board meeting.

Worley-Ziegmann said she hopes the mayor’s team reads every single postcard and experiences even “a fraction of the heartbreak” that went into writing them. Lurie’s cuts target the same people as Trump’s cuts, she said: queer communities, immigrants, seniors, and economically precarious youth. Some of the postcards express support for Lurie, she said. “They want to make sure that they can stay in the city to see the good work that he’s been doing, but they might not be able to stay here if he makes these cuts,” Worley-Ziegmann said.

Protests against cuts and layoffs of public health professionals, and the closure of clinics for troubled youth and the elderly are ramping up as a June 1 budget deadline approaches.

Protestors outside San Francisco Mayor Daniel Lurie’s office at City Hall with postcards describing their objections to his budget cuts. Photo: Joel Rosenblatt / Gazetteer SF

The mayor has already announced 127 layoffs of city workers as part of his demand that departments cut $400 million. As many as 300 more layoff announcements are anticipated. Tuesday’s protest was a “last opportunity,” Worley-Ziegmann said, because Lurie will realistically finalize his budget by the end of this week.

The protest died down before Lurie left his office around 2 p.m. for the Board of Supervisors meeting. Worley-Ziegmann had mistimed the mayor’s meeting, thinking it was earlier. Most of the protesters stayed longer than they had anticipated and left. At the meeting afterwards, the mayor said nothing about the budget or the protests outside his office door. Instead, Lurie touted a decline in homelessness, and the recently opened RESET sobriety center.

I asked Worley-Ziegmann if she thought there was any chance the mayor would back down and meet her group’s demands. “He has a chance to join us,” she said, “before things get harder.”

Stay in touch

Sign up for our free newsletter

More from Gazetteer SF

Market Match connects low income Californians with farmers market produce. Gavin Newsom may be about to cut it 

Market operators, food security advocates, and state legislators are scrambling to secure funding for the nutrition program that benefits 674,000 statewide

May 15, 2026

Scott Wiener’s super PAC is a dark-money mess

A 2024 change in campaign finance law is fueling the congressional hopeful’s outreach efforts

May 15, 2026

In the Mood for Food at Chat Room

Some say food is cooked; but we think it still eats

May 14, 2026

Own a piece of Cafe Jacqueline

Fans of the beloved North Beach chef are whipping themselves into a frenzy for her souffle whisks and other items being sold at an estate sale this weekend 

May 14, 2026

The Natural throws San Francisco a curveball

For grown-up punks who love baseball, a Brannan Street batting cage is the ultimate clubhouse

May 14, 2026

Philz Coffee United joins UFCW 5

The workers are now aligned with union members from Verve and Highwire in the largest private-sector union in Northern California

May 13, 2026
See all posts