Derek Marshall

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Derek Marshall
Image of Derek Marshall
Elections and appointments
Last election

November 5, 2024

Education

Bachelor's

American University, 2005

Graduate

American University, 2006

Personal
Birthplace
Boston, Mass.
Religion
United Church of Christ
Profession
Organizer
Contact

Derek Marshall (Democratic Party) ran for election to the U.S. House to represent California's 23rd Congressional District. He lost in the general election on November 5, 2024.

Biography

Derek Marshall was born in Boston, Massachusetts. Marshall earned bachelor's and graduate degrees from American University in 2005 and 2006, respectively. His career experience includes working as a community organizer with the Bernie Sanders 2020 presidential campaign, as a director of internationalization for web-based travel company Kayak, and in international relations.[1]

Elections

2024

See also: California's 23rd Congressional District election, 2024

California's 23rd Congressional District election, 2024 (March 5 top-two primary)

General election

General election for U.S. House California District 23

Incumbent Jay Obernolte defeated Derek Marshall in the general election for U.S. House California District 23 on November 5, 2024.

Candidate
%
Votes
Image of Jay Obernolte
Jay Obernolte (R)
 
60.1
 
159,286
Image of Derek Marshall
Derek Marshall (D)
 
39.9
 
105,563

Total votes: 264,849
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Nonpartisan primary election

Nonpartisan primary for U.S. House California District 23

Incumbent Jay Obernolte and Derek Marshall advanced from the primary for U.S. House California District 23 on March 5, 2024.

Candidate
%
Votes
Image of Jay Obernolte
Jay Obernolte (R)
 
63.4
 
70,208
Image of Derek Marshall
Derek Marshall (D)
 
36.6
 
40,477

Total votes: 110,685
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Withdrawn or disqualified candidates

Endorsements

Ballotpedia did not identify endorsements for Marshall in this election.

2022

See also: California's 23rd Congressional District election, 2022

General election

General election for U.S. House California District 23

Incumbent Jay Obernolte defeated Derek Marshall in the general election for U.S. House California District 23 on November 8, 2022.

Candidate
%
Votes
Image of Jay Obernolte
Jay Obernolte (R)
 
61.0
 
103,197
Image of Derek Marshall
Derek Marshall (D) Candidate Connection
 
39.0
 
65,908

Total votes: 169,105
Candidate Connection = candidate completed the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection survey.
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Nonpartisan primary election

Nonpartisan primary for U.S. House California District 23

Incumbent Jay Obernolte and Derek Marshall defeated Blanca Azucena Gomez in the primary for U.S. House California District 23 on June 7, 2022.

Candidate
%
Votes
Image of Jay Obernolte
Jay Obernolte (R)
 
60.9
 
57,988
Image of Derek Marshall
Derek Marshall (D) Candidate Connection
 
21.8
 
20,776
Image of Blanca Azucena Gomez
Blanca Azucena Gomez (D)
 
17.3
 
16,516

Total votes: 95,280
Candidate Connection = candidate completed the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection survey.
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Withdrawn or disqualified candidates

Campaign themes

2024

Ballotpedia survey responses

See also: Ballotpedia's Candidate Connection

Derek Marshall did not complete Ballotpedia's 2024 Candidate Connection survey.

Campaign website

Marshall’s campaign website stated the following:

Progressive values mean answering to your community, not to wealthy donors and corporations. This a people-powered and people-funded campaign, with 100% of funding coming from small-dollar donations from everyday folks.

A MARSHALL PLAN FOR THE DESERT
Climate Justice
The High Desert Climate presents many unique challenges in this era of rapid climate change. We have a unique biodiversity of animals and plants that have adapted to living at the threshold of survival with extreme heat and limited water resources. We also have the same challenges for human populations living in the Desert Southwest, as we are likely to experience less snowfall in our mountains leading to less opportunity to replenish our natural aquifers. One of the greatest challenges is to ensure that we do not use more water than is safe to ensure replenishment, something that has happened in many areas of the southwest, with disastrous consequences for natural water resources. Furthermore any infrastructure investments must maximize protections for our native species.

I am enthused that our local area has taken steps to build out water reclamation projects such as the Santa Ana River Enhanced Recharge Phase 1B, a project decades in the making and requiring compromise from business interests and environmental and habitat concerns. Any future plans to address water management must put habitat preservation for our local endangered desert species as the highest priority.

Given that our area will become hotter and drier, we will need to contend with not only potential water shortages but also increased wildfires and increased energy use as growing human populations will rely more heavily on air conditioning.

To address such energy needs, I am proposing that we consider designing and constructing an “energy corridor” that would run from approximately Victorville through Barstow and out to Las Vegas (an area that is essentially part of our own high desert community.)

This energy corridor would first and foremost construct a solar panel highway along I-15. This has already been proposed by State Senator Josh Becker and I believe this district would benefit greatly from using the existing interstate pathway. This will require investment in green energy jobs at a living wage for our local residents. Solar panel technology has made remarkable strides in efficiency and affordability over the last decade and we should be jumping at the opportunity.

Along with the production of energy in this highway corridor, we must also invest in battery storage options. Current battery storage technology is improving, but is still not ideal and we must increase investment as a nation in research and development for energy storage systems. While private investment is doing some of this research, we also have some of the best minds at work on the US Department of Energy’s Energy Storage Grand Challenge, particularly at the Pacific Northwest National Laboratories. I will fully support the investments needed to find the breakthrough science and technology to meet our vital energy storage needs that will be critical to our area.

One of the best ways to reduce energy consumption (particularly fossil fuels) is through an efficient and effective mass transportation system. This means investments in local electric bus infrastructure, and commuter rail options for longer distances. While many tout high speed rail investments as critical - and they are - fairly little attention is given to local commuter rail. High speed rail is typically focused on very long (continental) distances, and while important, will not solve our local needs. Furthermore, due to price fixing on cargo rail, it is also underused for local goods transportation. We can implement cost controls on cargo rail to ensure that we can reduce the impacts of trucking pollution, and we can build commuter rail options that will efficiently transport passengers from San Bernardino to Victorville and Barstow and on to Las Vegas. Commuter rail absolutely must be bolstered by effective local mass transit. The goal should be to provide residents with cheaper options for transportation than personal vehicles. If it’s not cheaper and it’s not efficient for them, they won’t be interested. This will also bring substantial benefits to economically disadvantaged communities who currently suffer the high cost of personal transportation that limits their opportunities for upward mobility. Mass transit benefits everyone.

All of these projects will bring many sustainable high paying union jobs and address our part in the climate change equation. I will work with businesses, unions, conservationists, and Tribal leadership to build renewable energy projects and fast commuter rail along the I-15 corridor

While in Congress, I will work to:

  • Expand investments to reach 100 percent renewable energy and dramatically reduce CO2 (carbon) emissions by 2035 or earlier.
  • Reinstate and expand energy and mileage efficiency investments.
  • Transition away from fossil fuel energy and halt all new fossil fuel projects. We must eliminate all fossil fuel subsidies and transfer those funds into climate investments by the federal government, and invest in wind,solar, geothermal, tidal, and other sustainable, renewable energy.
  • Restart the Clean Power Plan to protect our health and clean air, while rapidly phasing out coal and support a commission tasked with expediting timelines for shutting down all coal plants.
  • Decarbonize all existing buildings by 2045.
  • Decarbonize all federally-owned buildings by 2030.
  • Require each industrial corporation to commit to a series of Greenhouse Gas Emissions Targets phasing down in half by 2030 and to 0% emissions by 2045.
  • Ban all fracking operations (oil and gas), while ensuring “just transition” principles.
  • Stop the spread of Liquified Natural Gas (LNG) by banning new LNG permits and infrastructure and end the use of long-term LNG projects for diplomatic support.
  • End all new oil and gas leases in federal lands and waters. Plan the phaseout of existing oil and gas leases on federal lands.
  • Secure further investment in Nuclear Fusion technology as a potentially clean and safe alternative to meet nuclear energy.
  • Ban concentrated animal feeding operations (CAFOs) and address emotions and other pollution caused by huge agribusinesses.
  • Ensure that workers currently working in the fossil fuel industries be accepted first in new job training programs for renewable energy industries and the building renovation industry.
  • Work with universities, community colleges, and trade schools to develop education programs to help bring in people for the new industries and
  • Phase out the sales of new fossil-fuel vehicles by 2035 and accelerate the production of Electric Vehicles, including charging infrastructure.
  • Set standards so that heavy-duty trucks either use electricity or more sustainable bio-fuels by 2035.
  • Require electrification of all railways by 2040, both passenger and freight.
  • Establish a federal high speed rail program at the FTA.
  • Increase the budget of the Federal Transit Administration to expand investments in electric bus rapid transit and light rail transit systems.
  • Deploy federal transportation funds to fully empower our cities’ public mass transit systems and walkable and bikeable communities.
  • Ensure railroad safety to prevent environmental disasters.
  • Make carbon fees-mandatory, which will help achieve further reductions in emissions AND protect lower income communities and those who have the least protection against climate impacts.
  • Restore our forests and oceans and promote sustainable agricultural and ranching practices.
  • Ensure that the Environmental Protection Agency is fully funded, staffed and protected from any corporate assault through the courts or Congress
  • Integrate climate preparedness into the nation’s emergency preparedness, and into our health plans, infrastructure plans, and homeland security plans.
  • Ensure Free, Prior, and Informed Consent (FPIC) for Indigenous peoples in
  • End the loopholes in the Paris and COP agreements that allow the U.S. government to not report military emissions.
  • Ensure that the U.S. military meets the same emission’s reduction standards as any other section, which is to cut emissions in half by 2030, and fully by 2045.
  • End our reliance on oil, because it perpetuates our dependence on energy supplies from other countries, particularly in the Middle East.

DEREK MARSHALL BELIEVES IN
Universal Healthcare
Today, the plight of over 30 million Americans without health insurance and the struggles of countless more who are underinsured ignite a passionate call for change.
Even among the insured, the soaring costs are a harsh reality, cruelly pushing medical bills to the forefront as the leading cause of bankruptcy in our nation. Astonishingly, our nation's GDP pours into a healthcare system that remains inadequate, vastly outspending other major countries per capita. Yet, despite these colossal expenditures, our health outcomes pale in comparison, and our infant mortality rate stubbornly remains high—a stark contrast to nations spending far less on healthcare. This injustice compels us to demand a brighter future.

Our focus should be on investing in the true heroes: the doctors, nurses, mental health specialists, dentists, and dedicated professionals who breathe life into our communities. Let's channel our resources into pioneering drugs, groundbreaking technologies that conquer diseases and alleviate suffering. Let's redirect our funds away from the pockets of profiteers, from the staggering executive paychecks, and from the nonsensical administrative expenditures that drain hundreds of billions annually. Our people, the heart and soul of this nation, deserve nothing short of a transformative and compassionate healthcare system that stands as a testament to our commitment to their well-being.

When I am in Congress, I will:

  • Align with global norms by establishing healthcare as a fundamental right of U.S. residents through a Medicare-for-all, single-payer initiative, aligning the U.S. with leading nations.
  • The Medicare for All Act of 2021 (HR 1976) comprehensive medical coverage, including dental, vision, pharmaceuticals, mental health care, and long-term care, while ending unaffordable co-pays, premiums, and deductibles.
  • Enforce the Disability Integration Act for community-based care and affordable, integrated housing, to avoid institutionalization.
  • Direct government action to establish clinics, centers, and hospitals in underserved regions, bridging healthcare gaps.
  • Work to cancel all medical debts, addressing a pervasive healthcare issue.

In the absence of a Medicare For All bill that will address these issues, I will:

  • Defend the right to abortion care.
  • Streamline healthcare by eliminating complexities like networks, premiums, deductibles, co-pays, and unexpected bills.
  • Support collaborative efforts to address the pharmaceutical and health insurance industries' profit prioritization over well-being.
  • Mitigate prescription drug costs through the following strategies:
  • Enable Medicare to negotiate prices via the Medicare Drug Price Negotiation Act.
  • Cap insulin price at $20 per vial.
  • Facilitate importation of cost-effective drugs through the Affordable and Safe Prescription Drug Importation Act.
  • Reduce drug costs by 50% with the Prescription Drug Price Relief Act based on benchmark rates from Canada, UK, France, Germany, and Japan.
  • Address rural medical personnel shortage by funding Community Health Centers.
  • Ensure debt-free education for doctors with tuition-free colleges and universities.
  • Expand Telehealth accessibility to counter geographic isolation and enable remote primary care access.
  • Utilize Telehealth to treat opioid use disorder, enhancing access to addiction specialists.

DEREK MARSHALL BELIEVES IN
Education for All
It's time for a transformative change in our education system.
Every child, regardless of their background, deserves a top-notch education without exceptions.

Let's break down the barriers imposed by race or zip code. But it doesn't stop there. As adults, the pursuit of knowledge shouldn't come with the weight of student loan debt hanging over our heads. It's time to ensure that education remains a pathway, not a burden, for all.

When I am in Congress, I will champion:

  • Advocating for the comprehensive Thurgood Marshall Plan to safeguard public education.
  • Equitable funding for all students to ensure fair and robust funding for students from Pre-K through post-secondary education. We must provide every child with an exceptional learning experience.
  • Securing a minimum annual salary of $60,000 for all teachers.
  • Empowering minority institutions by elevating support for Native schools and Historically Black Colleges & Universities (HBCUs).
  • Higher education accessibility, by enabling tuition-free access to public colleges, universities, and trade schools, while also offering stipends for adult students.
  • Debt relief by eliminating existing student debt burdens.
  • Enhancing Learning Environment: Establishing a per-student baseline for education spending to ensure adequate resources for quality education.
  • Providing free nutritious school meals and erasing lunch debt.
  • Removing all public school fees to create a more accessible learning environment.
  • Advocating for full funding of arts education to nurture creativity.
  • Incorporating essential self-care education into the curriculum.
  • Securing funding for extracurricular transportation to support participation in athletics and clubs for all families.
  • Pushing for the introduction of universal public childcare.
  • Bolstering the budget for community schools.
  • Advocating for revamping school infrastructure nationwide to meet Green New Deal standards.
  • Aiming to triple Title I education funding to bridge disparities and ensure equal opportunities for all students.
  • Dedicating efforts to eradicating racial discrepancies in student discipline to dismantle the school-to-prison
  • Working towards banning for-profit charter schools and reining in non-profit charters under school board oversight and union negotiation.
  • Eliminating standardized testing and embracing more holistic methods of evaluation.
  • Drawing inspiration from leading global systems, eliminating homework from the public school curriculum.

DEREK MARSHALL BELIEVES IN
Reproductive Justice
To ensure a just and equal future, we must focus on women's reproductive rights and comprehensive gender justice.
We will fortify the foundation of reproductive rights, including turning Roe v. Wade into a federal law. Our commitment extends to access – enhancing healthcare options, promoting contraception resources, and removing funding restrictions.

We stand against targeted restrictions and push for transparent funding allocation. Prioritizing reproductive justice, we'll address disparities like the Black Maternal Mortality Crisis. We'll secure clinic access, confidentiality, and safety, countering violence against providers and patients. Additionally, we'll promote education, combat misinformation, and strive for gender equality. Furthermore, broader gender justice calls for pay equity, stronger protections against violence, and rights for survivors.

Universal childcare, paid family leave, and education equity are vital. It's time for comprehensive change that leaves no one behind.

When I am in Congress, I will:

  • Champion Medicare For All, which will codify Reproductive Rights
  • indicates will be resolved through Medicare For All
  • Uphold Reproductive Rights
  • Transform Roe v. Wade into a federal law, and solidifying its safeguards and accessibility.*
  • Repeal the Hyde and Helms Amendments to ensure unimpeded access to comprehensive reproductive health services.*
  • Expand and restore funding for Planned Parenthood and local healthcare clinics, to ensure that essential reproductive services are accessible.
  • Establish a federal program to provide contraception resources, with a focus on low-income communities to enhance accessibility.
  • Ban Targeted Restrictions on Abortion Providers (TRAP) Laws to secure unobstructed access to abortion services.*
  • Redirect Title X funding from "crisis pregnancy centers" to ensure proper and transparent distribution.
  • Prioritize reproductive justice by addressing disparities such as the Black Maternal Mortality Crisis.
  • Advocate for the Nurse Staffing Standards for Hospital Patient Safety and Quality Care Act (SB. 1567) to bolster patient care.
  • Work with colleagues in Congress to augment funding for the Maternal, Infant, and Early Childhood Home Visiting Program.
  • Expanding nutrition assistance. Broaden the Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children (WIC) to support families.
  • Enforce a Freedom of Access to Clinic Entrances (FACE) law to protect unimpeded access to reproductive health clinics.
  • Safeguard the home addresses of abortion providers, inspired by California's "Safe at Home" law.
  • Establish protected zones around reproductive health clinics to ensure patient and staff safety, following examples from select states and cities.
  • Develop a civil law framework to hold individuals accountable for violence and harassment against abortion providers.
  • Treat offenses targeting clinics, workers, and patients as hate crimes if rooted in opposition to abortion.
  • Ensure comprehensive care and guidance for women's reproductive choices.
  • Expand funding for sexual education in K-12 and Higher Education to promote informed decisions.
  • Address and dispel myths such as the "Post-Birth Abortion" falsehood.
  • Advocate for the Pink Tax Repeal Act (H.R. 3853) to eliminate gender-based pricing disparities.
  • Vigorously oppose federal and state bills aimed at restricting women's constitutional right to choose.
  • Enact the Paycheck Fairness Act (HR 7) to eradicate pay discrimination.
  • Support the 2021 Violence Against Women Act for stronger protections.
  • Prohibit gun ownership for domestic abusers to safeguard survivors.
  • Expedite rape kit testing to expedite justice for survivors.
  • Guarantee universal and affordable childcare for working families.
  • Ensure paid family leave for work-life balance.
  • Protect and enforce Title IX for gender equality in education.
  • Prosecute sexual harassment and violence in the military for a safe environment.

DEREK MARSHALL BELIEVES IN
Union Power
It's time to stand shoulder to shoulder with our Union siblings, resolute in our commitment to ensure that every worker lives a life of dignity.
We must champion the right to unionize without fear of penalty, and unequivocally affirm that every individual deserves a wage that reflects their worth and working conditions that uphold their humanity.

The battle for fair treatment, just compensation, and dignified workplaces is not just a fight for workers' rights – it's a fight for justice, equality, and the very essence of our collective progress.

Let our unity be the driving force that dismantles inequality, paves the way for solidarity, and reshapes the future of work into a beacon of dignity and justice for all.

When I am in Congress, I will champion:

  • Passing the Protecting the Right to Organize Act (PRO Act) (HR 842).
  • Expanding the right to form a union to include domestic, agricultural, and so-called “gig” workers.
  • Strengthening Social Security by removing the artificial cap on the Social Security tax and having the wealthy pay the same rate as everyone else, lowering the full retirement age to 62, and significantly expanding benefits.
  • Creating a National Solidarity Fund, funded by a 1 cent ($0.01) per worker-hour tax, paying stipends to workers who are striking or locked out.
  • Worker representation on corporate boards (co-determination).
  • Passing the RUN Act, providing training and administrative resources for new unionization efforts, subsidizing union dues 100%, extending federal unemployment benefits to striking workers, guaranteeing the right for all public employees to collectively bargain, requiring all businesses above 20 employees a quarterly vote on unionization, and requiring all businesses below 20 employees to pay them no less than 2/3rds of total profits in bonuses and dividends.
  • Repealing the Taft-Hartley Act and ending the "right to work for less".
  • A jobs guarantee to end unemployment.
  • Increase federal support for establishing worker co-ops.
  • A $20 minimum wage, indexed to cost inflation and productivity growth, whichever is higher.
  • Utilizing civil asset forfeiture against all companies guilty of violating worker's right to unionize and other workplace protections, and transferring full ownership of the offending company to the workers of that company.
  • Allowing 3 weeks of paid sick leave, and 8 weeks of paid vacation per year, and 1-year parental leave for all new parents.
  • The end of “at-will“ employment by requiring just cause to terminate employment.
  • Guaranteeing necessities of life and basic human rights for all including food, water, healthcare, housing, education, and a livable environment.

Additionally to assist the working and middle classes, I will seek to:

  • Create a tax system where the super-rich and corporations pay their fair share and working-class people see relief from our regressive tax system.
  • Implement public postal banking.
  • Cap interest rates on all loans and credit cards at 10 percent.

DEREK MARSHALL BELIEVES IN
LGBTQIA+ EQUALITY
In a time when our LGBTQIA+ community is facing unprecedented challenges, we must rise as fierce advocates of love, equality, and acceptance.

It's abhorrent that over 400 bills and legislations against LGBTQIA+ rights have been introduced by politicians. But let’s remember that adversity has never stopped us from forging progress. Each hateful bill only ignites our passion to protect, uplift, and celebrate our disenfranchised communities. Let's stand united against discrimination, rewriting this narrative with the ink of unity and strength.

Together, we'll not just weather this storm, but we'll emerge as a radiant rainbow of resilience, proving that love will always conquer hate.

When I’m in Congress, in my unwavering commitment to equality and justice, I will support:

  • The Equality Act, the PRIDE Act, the Every Child Deserves a Family Act, and other bills that forbid discrimination by the United States (including the military), any state or local government, and private industry.
  • Legislation to develop and implement LGBTQIA+ inclusive public education, combating bullying and promoting acceptance, recognizing that anti-LGBTQIA+ bullying in school can quadruple the likelihood of suicide.
  • LGBTQIA+ history integration into school curricula to counter the deliberate erasure of the community's rich heritage.
  • Legislation to prohibit “conversion therapy”, a harmful practice attempting to change orientation and identity.
  • De-gendering public documents, federally, and all school dress codes, while guaranteeing protection from gender-normative discrimination in workplaces.
  • Legislation mandating fairer interactions between law enforcement and transgender individuals, particularly transgender women of color, who are often unjustly targeted.
  • The PrEP Access and Coverage Act, ensuring that all private and public insurance covers HIV prevention medication and related services with no out-of-pocket costs.
  • Community Training to ensure that all school community members foster an environment that welcomes every student.
  • Providing community spaces, GSA's, and LGBTQIA+-specific school counseling to support LGBTQIA+ students.
  • Homelessness relief programs specifically tailored to LGBTQIA+ youth, addressing their disproportionate representation in unsheltered populations.
  • Removing punitive requirements for legal name changes and establishing fee waivers for ID replacement due to a legal name change.
  • Declaring trans murder and suicide rates a national emergency.
  • Both the original Equal Rights Amendment and the Amendment for Constitutional Equality, reinforcing protections for marginalized groups in the U.S. Constitution.
  • Prohibiting insurance companies from labeling trans affirming procedures as “not medically necessary” or “cosmetic” until a trans-inclusive Medicare for All program is established.
  • Removing “transmedicalist” language from all education materials relating to trans individuals.
  • Legislation specifically prohibiting mutilative surgeries on intersex infants.
  • Legislation ensuring fair interactions between police and transgender individuals and ending “gay panic” and “trans panic” defenses in violent crimes.
  • Ending misgendered imprisonment, recognizing it as cruel and unusual punishment that must cease nationwide.
  • Preventing and repealing any legislation or policy that claims to “protect” religious liberty at the expense of the rights of others.[2]
—Derek Marshall's campaign website (2024)[3]

2022

Candidate Connection

Derek Marshall completed Ballotpedia's Candidate Connection survey in 2021. The survey questions appear in bold and are followed by Marshall's responses. Candidates are asked three required questions for this survey, but they may answer additional optional questions as well.

Expand all | Collapse all

Derek Marshall is an openly gay progressive Democrat, community organizer, and longtime LGBTQ+ rights activist. Marshall is the co-founder of a global research initiative supporting the United Nations, Making Commitments Matter, which developed a framework to hold countries accountable to the various UN conventions and resolutions to which they had committed. From there, he joined the online travel agency KAYAK as Director of Internationalization. Marshall has since leveraged his skills and experience in order to focus on community building and electing progressive candidates to public office. He has organized for many campaigns, most notably those of Rep. Ocasio-Cortez and Alex Morse. Marshall spent much of the 2020 cycle in Nevada as a staffer for Bernie Sanders’ 2020 presidential bid. He currently resides in Victorville, CA, where his 2022 campaign is based.
-Green New Deal

-Medicare For All
-Jobs Guarantee
-Racial Justice
-Housing Justice
-Ending Homelessness
-Ending the War on Drugs

-Taxing the Rich
I don’t think there’s any one approach or characteristic that makes a person a strong elected official—again, diversity is a good thing. Having some folks in the mix who are great at giving speeches and some who are great at the nitty-gritty of writing policy and some who are good at coalition-building: all these are necessary and more! As for what I think will make me successful in office? I’m good at finding nerdy policy solutions for problems that disproportionately affect less-resourced folks. The non-profit I founded to work with the UN basically worked to make United Nations planning and information resources more broadly accessible in order to help smaller countries (and their tiny diplomatic corps) participate fully in the UN’s global goals. Are well-translated, well-indexed databases the coolest solution to the highest-profile problem? Of course not, but it changed millions of lives. I believe that we can work together on domestic policy solutions, too.
I love talking to people, I love trying to find creative ways to solve problems of all sizes, but most of all, I am great at bringing people together and building coalitions so that all voices are heard. I don’t need the glamorous committee appointments or the hotshot talking head interviews; I just want to roll up my sleeves and get into the nitty-gritty of policy, planning, and administration, because those processes hold a lot of power to improve people’s lives in very real ways.
I would like to see society be more equitable, more just, more liberated, and more sustainable and I’d like to be remembered as having a part in that. I wouldn’t mind being remembered as a guy who helped make bullet trains happen on the West Coast, either!
Coming out as gay was incredibly difficult. Even 20 years ago, when I was in high school, the world was very different than it is today, and coming out in my 20s was something that was a real struggle for me. I was done hiding who I was, and I didn’t want to do that any longer. Being gay doesn’t define me on its own any more than having blue eyes does, but it is a big part of my own history, and my experience does inform some of the ways I approach people who are struggling and the ways I look to fix systems that keep people from living healthy, happy lives.
Diversity of all kinds is incredibly important in the House of Representatives. This includes both identity diversity and diversity of lived experience. It’s great to have some folks in the mix with deep experience doing specific legislative work, but it’s also great to have nurses and teachers and firefighters and farmers and bartenders. Multiple perspectives create good policy.
It’s becoming clear to everyone—even CEOs of big energy companies—that a transition away from fossil fuels is necessary and imminent. The question is really how we make that transition. Do we invest in the working class and create good new union jobs? Do we prioritize the communities that have been the most harmed by climate disaster and industrial waste products? Do we put our folks to work by building out infrastructure that will make our daily lives better and our entire economy more productive and resilient? Or do we let big corporations take the lead and put themselves and their profits first yet again? Now is the time for bold leadership that puts people first.
It would be my honor to serve where I’m needed most, but my specific skills, interests, education, and expertise would be useful on Foreign Affairs; Natural Resources; and Science, Space, and Technology; and my background working in a policy capacity alongside the UN would be useful on any of the administrative/internal structure-type committees, like Oversight and Reform, House Administration, or Ways and Means.
Franklin Delano Roosevelt wasn’t a representative, of course, so I can’t say FDR, but Bernie Sanders certainly was and Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and her fellow members of the Squad are, as are Katie Porter, Lauren Underwood, and Mondaire Jones. There are some brilliant, brave lawmakers in the House of Representatives today, and a lot of potential for great work.
It’s not the out-of-the-ordinary stories that tend to get me, it’s the fact that so many people’s regular stories are so similar and that we’re seeing so many of the same struggles over and over again, all of which are things that can and should be fixed by good policy. Why do our kids have crumbling school buildings and overworked teachers? Why are people having to drive an hour in each direction to find a job with benefits? Why are hospital bills bankrupting previously-stable families? There are systemic solutions to all of these things and so much more, but we have to fight for them together.
The wealth gap in this country is obscene and the pandemic kicked it into overdrive. It’s time for a serious increase of marginal tax rates on the wealthiest Americans, and if we do that, our options open wide up. We saw how powerful a handful of stimulus checks were in stimulating the economy and keeping folks in their homes. Why don’t we put more money into the hands of working people and less into tax breaks for billion-dollar companies?

Note: Ballotpedia reserves the right to edit Candidate Connection survey responses. Any edits made by Ballotpedia will be clearly marked with [brackets] for the public. If the candidate disagrees with an edit, he or she may request the full removal of the survey response from Ballotpedia.org. Ballotpedia does not edit or correct typographical errors unless the candidate's campaign requests it.

Campaign website

Marshall's campaign website stated the following:

ECONOMIC RELIEF

Across the Inland Empire families are hurting. The prices of gas and food are through the roof, wages are stagnant, the pandemic continues but utility and rent moratoriums are over – people are working hard and are barely getting by.

Whether it’s enacting an emergency healthcare program for all, adding robust protections against evictions and utility shutoffs, or forgiving student debt, there is so much more than we can and must be doing to give working people relief.

Medicare for All

If we learned one thing from COVID-19, it’s that everyone needs and deserves healthcare and too many do not have access to it. Folks need to be able to seek medical care as soon as they’re sick, without worrying about whether it will bankrupt them, and they need good preventative healthcare to help avoid expensive emergencies in the first place. Medicare for All is a moral and economic imperative, for the COVID era and beyond. Derek supports Bernie Sanders’ Medicare for All plan, which includes a guarantee of no premiums or deductibles, prescription costs capped at $100, funding for rural hospitals and clinics, and provides relief to both individuals, who no longer have to pay insurance costs, as well as small businesses, for whom providing health insurance is an unnecessary financial burden. Enacting Medicare for all would provide the care we need and expand funding for regional care and trauma centers our community desperately needs.

Medicare for All…

  • Guarantees Healthcare as a Human Right – including dental, vision, hearing and elder/assisted living care. Everyone will be able to see a doctor and get the healthcare they need when they need it without having to worry about a bill.
  • Prescription drugs are capped at 100 dollars so no one has to decide between paying rent or getting life saving medication.
  • Even the most conservative think tank studies show Medicare for All would save us 2 trillion dollars compared to our current system.
  • Help small businesses by taking the cost of employee healthcare off their books.

Debt Forgiveness

Americans are facing more and more debt every year. Much of this debt is from things that other countries have figured out how to guarantee for their citizens. Medical debt and student loan debt have become two of the largest financial burdens people are facing. When we eliminate all medical debt and pass Medicare for All to guarantee healthcare for everybody, no one will ever again have to decide between insulin or paying their rent. Derek supports complete federal student loan debt forgiveness, which will allow millions of working people to escape from under a mountain of insurmountable debt, lower economic inequality, and provide an economic stimulus which will benefit everyone.

  • The Medicare for All plan calls for the elimination of medical debt.
  • Cancel all student loan debt with a 0.5% tax on all Wall Street speculation (this tax would raise $2.4 trillion over the next decade; student debt is $1.75 trillion).
  • Create small business and federal loans through the USPS.

Affordable Housing

“A Public Option for Housing”

Southern California sits at the epicenter of the country’s housing crisis. Housing rentals and property prices are increasingly unaffordable and nowhere in the country can someone making minimum wage afford a two bedroom apartment.

In the richest nation on the planet this is a national embarrassment and another sign that working people are being left off the agenda in Washington.

Derek Marshall believes everyone deserves housing as a human right.

We need to invest in the construction of more affordable housing…

  • With skyrocketing property prices, we need more affordable homes built.
  • We need to ensure these properties are being sold to those using FHA Loans only and reduce down payment requirements.
  • We need to prohibit these properties from becoming short-term rentals and make it mandatory that these properties be your first/only mortgage to cut out mass property buying by developers and landlords.
  • We need to create a Public Option for Housing: 34,000 publicly-owned units in the district, available to anyone, with rent tied to their income.

A Real Recovery

Like most of America, working people in the communities around California’s 23rd District have still not recovered from the 2008 financial crisis. While both sides of the aisle have been focused on filling the pockets of wealthy corporations, communities were left to pick up the pieces. In the richest country in the world, we can guarantee everyone a good quality of life. That is why Derek believes that crucial steps to a real recovery include Medicare for All, a Green New Deal, and a Jobs Guarantee. Everyone should be able to go to a doctor, breathe clean air, and work a local/non-commuter job that pays a living wage. These ideas are not radical, they are human rights.

  • A Jobs Guarantee that ensures high paying local jobs with benefits.
  • Building the first 4-year public college in our community so our kids can stay here and build here.
  • Building regional hospital trauma centers that our district desperately needs.


GREEN NEW DEAL

Coming out of the Great Depression, we enacted a New Deal to put regular people back to work rebuilding our nation, ushering in an unprecedented era of American prosperity, freedom, and even creativity. But slowly, over the course of decades, the provisions of that program were chipped away and privatized, the effects of which were particularly acute in small-city and rural America.

It’s time for another New Deal to transform our economy, combat climate change, and establish meaningful and lasting economic, social, educational, and healthcare justice. We can do all that in a way that lifts all boats and leaves no one behind.

Reviving Our Economy & Environment

It feels like every week, another big report from an international scientific body drops and the alarm is sounded: climate change is real, it’s devastating, and we’re running out of time to act, they all say.

Here in California, we already knew this. We’re on the front lines of the climate crisis. Wildfires and droughts have become more and more frequent, with very little hope in sight. We have to get serious about climate change. We can guarantee a better, cleaner, safer future (and present) by passing a Green New Deal. Bringing sustainable industry and public solar and wind projects will not only help protect our communities from further environmental damage, but will bring good high-paying union jobs to every corner of our district and our country.

Investing in National Parks & Forests

Our National Parks and Forests and other public lands are the pride of California’s 23rd District, anchoring us with a sense of place while also providing a major tourism draw that brings major tourism dollars. It is imperative that these natural wonders be maintained for our children and all future generations. The 2020 Great American Outdoors Act is a good start, but we know all too well that the maintenance backlog in our federally-administered areas is much too big. The good news: hiring folks to deal with this backlog provides good Civilian Conservation Corps-style STEM, administrative, and infrastructure jobs for local folks, as well as preserving our unique ecology.

Mass Transit

Over-investment in cars and under-investment in mass transit has led to increased reliance on fossil fuels and planned inefficiency. Improved mass transit systems are a net benefit to people, the environment, and the economy. Building infrastructure—from new buses and train cars to tracks and stations—will bring back the sorts of jobs that have been disappearing for years, and the resulting mass transit networks will allow for more affordable and eco-friendly travel for both business and leisure.

Building Upgrades

Our construction industry struggles with the downturn of homebuyers and small businesses and families struggle with the cost of heating and cooling inefficient buildings, but the Green New Deal provides a solution to both: expanding federal funds and grant opportunities for individuals and businesses to upgrade their existing buildings to be eco-friendly. This may include simple fixes like better windows and insulation or bigger upgrades like rooftop solar panels and HVAC replacements. This win-win plan provides jobs for the construction industry and massive long-term financial savings for building owners, as well as an overall reduction in fossil fuel use.


JOBS

As we go about combating the many overlapping crises that we face, we have to ensure that good jobs for regular, everyday people are at the core of everything we do. By enacting a community jobs guarantee and work programs like a Green New Deal, we can bring thousands of good-paying jobs with full benefits to our district.

This means that where there aren’t jobs, we’ll create them–there’s certainly plenty of work that needs doing. And every single job will be a good job, with living wages and full benefits. But it doesn’t stop there. We’re going to protect these gains by strengthening workers rights across the board, including the right to be part of a union, because strong organized labor is at the heart of economic prosperity for working folks.

$15 Federal Minimum Wage

We’ve all seen the cost of living rise while paychecks stagnate. Any person working a full-time job should be able to put food on the table every single day. We’re on our way to a living wage here in California already, but we still need to implement it nationwide. As California Democrats, we should be leading that fight and highlighting the example we’ve set for the rest of the country. The Federal Minimum Wage not only needs to be raised to $15, but it also must be tied to cost-of-living increases so as to keep the wealth gap from widening even further.

Jobs Guarantee

There is so much work to be done and so many people who are ready to do it, but the jobs themselves just aren’t there. With comprehensive programs to update infrastructure, revitalize rural communities, prioritize natural areas, upgrade older buildings for a greener future, educate another generation, and provide healthcare to all, every single person can have a job guaranteed to them via a federal jobs guarantee, just like in FDR’s original New Deal, which employed everyone from construction workers to scientists to artists, revitalizing the economy at the same time. We’ve done it before, we can do it again.

Right to Unionize

California has a long and proud history of labor organizing, but that hasn’t prevented industry bigwigs from constantly finding new ways to bust our unions and scatter our organized workplaces. Strong unions mean a strong working class. Strong unions mean decreased economic inequality. Strong unions mean strong communities. We need to pass the PRO Act to guarantee that workers across the country have the right to labor protections and we need to keep fighting for organized labor here at home in California.


EDUCATION

Schools are at the heart of our communities, providing not only the educational opportunities that allow our children to thrive in a changing world, but community touchpoints that bring us all together. Our schools should receive robust funding, our teachers should be supported and nurtured, and our children should receive the very best education we can offer. This includes everything from free pre-K for all children, to give them a jump-start, all the way up to free public college, which should be even more accessible when we build CA-23’s first 4-year public university.

Free Universal Pre-K

Providing free universal pre-k provides a win-win for kids and their working parents. Children get an early investment in their education and begin grade school with some preliminary experience in social learning. Adults get relief from the high costs of childcare and the challenge of finding good, safe, reliable preschool programs right near home, a burden that tends to disproportionately fall on women, and thus is a contributor to the pay gap. This program will also create thousands of new jobs for childcare workers and facility support staff.

K-12 Education Investments

Low teacher pay, inadequate resources, crumbling buildings and infrastructure: these problems have plagued our K-12 school systems for years—yet another deficit further exacerbated by the pandemic. This lack of investment has been shown to have the starkest effects on communities of color, which is leading to a widening achievement gap. We need to re-invest in our kids and in our future. This includes instituting minimum teacher salaries to attract the best talent to the profession, revitalizing infrastructure and building new construction where necessary, and investing in rural schools.

Higher Education for All

A changing world means a changing job market. Innovative new industries require new types of training and education, which is why we will make free public education (trade school, two-year, and four-year) a priority for all people, so everyone can do work that they enjoy and excel at. We need to make getting a quality education attainable for our children and grandchildren, and we need to invest more in rural schools including finally getting the first 4-year public college built right here at home.


JUSTICE

Seeking justice means seeking a fairer, freer, safer world in which everyone enjoys the same liberties; where we recognize that none of us are truly free until all of us are free. We are not there yet. But we can get there.

We need transformative solutions that enact and protect social, racial, gender, economic, climate, and healthcare justice for all, and we cannot rest until we get them.

Racial Justice

Black Lives Matter is non-negotiable, and it’s just the beginning. The movement for racial justice for Black and brown and indigenous people does not end with words. It must reach into every corner of our society, from policing, courts, and prisons to education to food access to healthcare justice. Until we live in a society free of racial prejudice, we must examine all legislation and policy to ensure that the solutions offered are not simply equal but truly equitable.

Roe v. Wade

Bodily autonomy and medical privacy are fundamental rights, and the growing fundamentalist attack on abortion lays the groundwork for many new types of attacks on our bodily freedom and on gender-driven attacks against women and non-binary/trans folks. Over 70% of the US public supports keeping Roe v. Wade in place as-is; Congress needs to act now to codify abortion protections into federal law, including proper funding of reproductive health clinics in both urban and rural areas, and providing contraceptives, reproductive services, and abortion care as part of robust Medicare For All coverage. Age-appropriate sexual health education in schools is a public health necessity and should be both protected and supported.

Housing Justice

For far too long, stable housing has been seen as a privilege, not a right, and pandemic made the problem so much worse. It’s time for guaranteed housing for everyone, which includes universal rent control and a fierce fight against all forms of housing discrimination. We also need to repeal the Faircloth Amendment and expand the growth of government-owned housing, the creation of which includes both new high-quality ground-up construction of housing units but also purchases and upgrades of existing buildings to provide new, affordable planet-friendly housing across our district.

Ending Homelessness

The existence of homelessness is a policy choice and it’s one that we don’t have to make: countries from Japan to Switzerland have all but eradicated homelessness and we can, too, right here in CA-23 and across the USA. In coalition with advocates for the homeless and with people experiencing homelessness themselves, we can build housing-first programs, transitional and bridge housing options, and permanent supportive housing options for those folks who will always need just a little bit of extra help. We’ll also keep digging out the root causes of homelessness, both social and economic, including everything from rent control to ending the war on drugs to including mental healthcare in Medicare For All.

Ending the War on Drugs

Californians have already seen the benefits of early efforts to decriminalize and legalize marijuana, but we still see far too many people entering the prison system or the cycle of homelessness because of drugs, and so many families have been devastated by the loss of loved ones to the opioid crisis. We need comprehensive and free or affordable treatment programs, supportive transitional housing, and restorative justice programs—not more jails or prisons.

Make the Ultra-Wealthy Pay Their Fair Share

Inflation has prices skyrocketing while wages stay flat, and the simplest solution to this problem is to tax the ultra-wealthy. A progressive wealth tax of 1-8% starting at $32 million is essential; this is a monetary policy tool that will have near-immediate effects on making your gallon of milk or gallon of gas more affordable. Overseas tax havens need to stop being an option for the ultra-wealthy, and international trade agreements can be used to prevent these offshore wealth hoards. These can also be tracked better by the IRS, who, due to underfunding, over-focus their auditing activities on lower and middle income people (it’s cheaper to audit a poor person with a simpler tax bill and no lawyer than it is to audit a billionaire). Funding the IRS and making sure they have the resources they need will allow them to ensure fair auditing of the people most likely to cheat: the very rich.

Comprehensive Immigration Reform

  • Close the Adalento ICE processing center: This private prison has repeatedly and egregiously violated the human rights of detained people and has no business being funded with our taxpayer dollars.
  • Provide a simple pathway to citizenship for immigrants, including agricultural workers who may have overstayed their visas. These community members make our cities and towns stronger and deserve the rights and responsibilities of citizenship.
  • Fully fund our immigration system so people are afforded due process in court (including having good representation) and clearing the backlogs of citizenship applications. The wait time for citizenship hearings is too long and the process is too difficult; simplifying and streamlining it will allow more people to avoid living under an expired visa.


LGBTQ+ RIGHTS

LGBTQ+ rights are human rights, and as a gay man, Derek is extremely concerned to see a new wave of anti-queer, anti-trans legislation sweeping the country in a coordinated fashion. Meanwhile, inequality is growing despite the fact that social acceptance is also growing.

We can—and must—put a stop to this spread of state-sanctioned discrimination with solid federal protections that mandate equality for LGBTQ+ folks of all ages, codifying protections and pulling an intersectional understanding of queer and trans issues into legislation across the board.

Pass the Equality Act

Currently, LGBTQ+ people are not federally protected against discrimination in the workplace, in housing, within public spaces and federally-funded programs, and even in jury service. We must expand public spaces protections to ensure that queer folks are safe in banks, within legal offices, and in retail spaces. The Equality Act has already passed the House of Representatives (though current CA-23 Representative Obernolte voted against it), but it’s stalled out on the wrong side of the filibuster in the Senate. We cannot wait any longer.

Pass the Every Child Deserves a Family Act

Federally-funded child welfare programs are still allowed to discriminate against foster and adoptive parents due to religion, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, and marital status. Kids need families and there are many queer families and single folks who are ready to provide safe and loving homes, but are discriminated against under religious or cultural pretexts. Further, a full ⅓ of children currently in foster care identify as LGBTQ+ and have been forced into the foster program because of rejection by their birth families. The Every Child Deserves a Family Act purposefully places kids with families that accept and celebrate their identities.

Ban “Conversion Therapy”

So-called “conversion therapy” is discredited by every major medical and mental health body and has shown to cause increased rates of death by suicide. It is fraudulent and it causes harm; allowing quack practitioners to continue with the practice is incredibly dangerous, particularly for LGBTQ+ youth.

End Healthcare Discrimination Against LGBTQ+ People

By passing Medicare for All, we will ensure every single person is guaranteed the healthcare they deserve, which includes queer and trans folks, who currently face a disproportionate lack of healthcare access. Medicare for All will also ensure that no one is discriminated against for treatment based on their race, religion, sex, sexual orientation, or gender indentity, as well as ensuring that queer folks will stop accumulating disproportionate medical debt. Medicare for All must cover gender confirmation surgeries, hormone treatments, and voice therapy for trans folks. It also must cover mental healthcare and addiction treatment, and ensure that LGBTQ+ people have full and robust access to these services.

Ensure Student Safety

We must pass the Safe Schools Improvement Act and the Student Non-Discrimination Act to protect LGBTQ+ students in our schools. These acts include provisions that require schools to update their codes to prohibit bullying and harassment on the basis of race, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, and other personal traits, and mandates equal treatment by school staff.

Demand LGBTQ+ Protections in the Justice System

LGBTQ+ people are more likely to be targeted by the police and more likely to be imprisoned than cisgender and heterosexual folks, and are significantly more likely to be the victims of violence within police custody and in prison. SESTA and FOSTA disproportionately affect LGBTQ+ sex workers and are weaponized against them more frequently; they must be repealed. Further, instead of arresting and harassing trans people at much higher rates than cis people, law enforcement agencies should investigate those who seek to harm trans people. This includes investigating all trans murders as hate crimes and federally prohibiting the so-called LGBTQ+ Panic Defense that too often dismisses murders and severe assaults.

Demand LGBTQ+ Protections in the Immigration System

LBGTQ+ people’s identities are criminalized in countries around the world and as such, make up a disproportionate number of asylum-seekers at the US Border. In order to recognize these unique vulnerabilities and uphold the values of freedom and dignity, we must expand our refugee admissions numbers for LGBTQ+ people, end harmful and discriminatory detention policies, and ensure that detention facilities of any kind, even very-short-term, are safe for LGBTQ+ migrants. Further, the US Government must address the unique needs of LGBTQ+ migrants by granting dedicated queer and trans-focused refugee service organizations like Rainbow Railroad recognized referral status.

Bring an LGBTQ+ Center to the High Desert

LGBTQ+ Centers exist in cities across the country but the High Desert doesn’t yet have one. These centers provide meeting spaces for support groups and grassroots organizations, lending libraries, activity programs for LGBTQ+ teens, and so much more. Derek will fight for federal funding to bring one to Victorville.[2]

—Derek Marshall's campaign website (2022)[4]

Campaign finance summary


Note: The finance data shown here comes from the disclosures required of candidates and parties. Depending on the election or state, this may represent only a portion of all the funds spent on their behalf. Satellite spending groups may or may not have expended funds related to the candidate or politician on whose page you are reading this disclaimer. Campaign finance data from elections may be incomplete. For elections to federal offices, complete data can be found at the FEC website. Click here for more on federal campaign finance law and here for more on state campaign finance law.


Derek Marshall campaign contribution history
YearOfficeStatusContributionsExpenditures
2024* U.S. House California District 23Lost general$759,289 $770,326
2022U.S. House California District 23Lost general$956,859 $942,608
Grand total$1,716,147 $1,712,934
Sources: OpenSecretsFederal Elections Commission ***This product uses the openFEC API but is not endorsed or certified by the Federal Election Commission (FEC).
* Data from this year may not be complete

See also


External links

Footnotes

  1. Information submitted to Ballotpedia through the Candidate Connection survey on June 3, 2021
  2. 2.0 2.1 Note: This text is quoted verbatim from the original source. Any inconsistencies are attributable to the original source.
  3. Derek Marshall for US Congress, “Issues,” accessed February 10, 2024
  4. Derek Marshall for Congress, “Issues,” accessed May 7, 2022


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