The Palo Alto History Project
The 1967 Recall Election                                                                  
                          
                                                                                            1313 Newell Road      
The 1967 Recall Election: Palo Alto's Political Rumble

In the late 1960s, America seemed to be coming apart at the seams.  A feeling of malcontent and revolt
seemed to imbibe the nation as authority was challenged everywhere.  In hindsight, the 1960s are often
remembered as a time when injustices were overcome, when movements succeeded.  And certainly it was.  
But what is sometimes forgotten was the utter chaos of those times --- how in those years it was not always
clear if any progress was being made at all.   In the moment, it sometimes just seemed that the whole country
had decided to pick a fight with itself.

And so it was in Palo Alto.  1967 was the year in which long brewing tensions in local politics finally reached
a boiling point.  The mood inside the council chamber mirrored the times, as new progressives challenged the
establishment and chaos reigned supreme.  

For years, “representative businessmen” had governed Palo Alto without much opposition.  But in the
1950s, Palo Alto grew at a dramatic (some said alarming) rate, doubling in size from a population of 25,475
in 1950 to 52,287 in 1960.  Some worried that growth might continue unabated from the foothills to the
bay.  Ironically, those who first challenged the city’s growth largely came from the newly developed regions
outside of downtown.  This group, known as the “Residentialists,” favored slower growth and distrusted
large commercial and government projects.   In 1962, the Residentialists found an issue to rally around ---
opposition to the highly controversial Oregon Expressway.  Although the road was eventually built, Palo
Alto’s first anti-establishment political force solidified in the campaign to oppose it.

And soon the Residentialists began to chip away at the Establishment’s power.  In 1961, NASA physicist
Dr. Robert Debs won election as the first Residentialist council member.  Two years later he and Enid
Pearson led a successful court challenge to the city’s practice of spot zoning and forced the adoption of a
Master Plan.  Residentialists Kirke Comstock and Phillip Flint were elected to the Council in 1963 and then
Pearson, Edward Worthington and Byron Sher won in 1965.  The council was now divided 7-6, with the
Establishment holding a narrow one-seat advantage.  And tensions were flaring.

In 1966 gridlock nearly ground the Council to a halt as both sides traded verbal insults and parliamentary
procedures.  Longtime members Bert Woodward and William Rus regularly referred to the Residentialists as
“kooks.”  Most important votes split 7-6 and the Council fell more than a month behind its schedule, despite
more frequent weekly meetings pushed by Mayor Frances Dias.  Walkouts, filibusters, and delaying tactics
were all commonplace.

In October things got really out of hand when the majority scheduled a meeting for Halloween night.  
Protesting that this was an evening that should be devoted to family, the Residentialists boycotted the
proceedings.  But when Residentialist firebrand Robert Debs showed up to officially lodge his protest, things
got ugly.  A young reporter at the time, Palo Alto Weekly editor Jay Thorwaldson described what happened
next:

“Debs entered the Council chambers through side door…He said he wasn't staying, as I recall, but had
come to object to a Halloween meeting. Councilman Robert "Bob" Cooley…who was about as feisty as
Debs…interrupted.
‘Shove it, Debs!’ he yelled…Debs paused, blinked behind his glasses: ‘What did you say?’

‘I said, 'Shove it!,'’ Cooley repeated slowly.

‘Would you like to step outside and say that?’ Debs challenged, flushing. Cooley sprang from his chair,
circled behind wide-eyed council members toward Debs. They started back through the side door, opening
a door leading to a rear patio.

But City Manager George Morgan, an ex-Marine, raced to interpose himself between the two. Morgan held
them apart as they tried to exit -- causing them to bump their shoulders on the door frame. Assistant City
Manager Cecil Riley pulled Debs away as Morgan held Cooley, and Debs left, shaking his fist.”   
As the tensions rose and the May 1967 election approached, things were looking bleak for the
Establishment.  Because of a previously mandated Council reduction to 11 seats and since more
Establishment candidates were up for reelection, the old guard would have to sweep all 3 seats to hold on to
just a one vote advantage.  Given the Residentialist momentum in previous elections, this appeared unlikely.

But a bold plan was concocted by Establishment supporter and local attorney William Love.  He formed a
12 member recall committee full of Establishment allies.   They would attempt to recall the entire Council ---
including members of both camps --- in hopes of sweeping out most of the Residentialists in one fell swoop.  
Pressing the case that was first articulated in the editorial pages of the Palo Alto Times, Love argued that the
Council’s bickering had brought legislating to a standstill.  It was time to throw the bums out.  By mid-
February of 1967, the Recall Committee had managed to collect over 2,000 signatures, enough to put the
entire Council up for reelection.

Of course, not all Establishment supporters favored such a strategy.  Some Establishment members were
outraged at being recalled and three chose not to run again, including Bert Woodward who said the recall
was “a weak and ill-conceived method” of retaliation.

The campaign itself was hectic, as some 21 candidates were running for 11 seats, divided into three separate
mini elections ( For the 4-year recall seats, the 2-year recall seats, and the seats that would have been up for
reelection without the recall).  Perhaps exhibiting more seasoned political acumen, the Establishment
candidates worked hard to exude a moderate image.  Positioning themselves in favor of a “balanced
community,” former mayors Frances Dias and Ed Arnold focused their campaign literature on maintaining
the “residential character of the city.”  They were also able to effectively cast their opponents as rebellious
agitators who were responsible for the infighting on the Council.  Meanwhile Frances Dias promised to be a
“vote to unify a fragmented city.”  While Establishment candidates were certainly richer and slicker, they also
benefited from their own political shrewdness.

On the other side, the Residentialist candidates made some political mistakes.  Most important were their
continued campaign references to the recall issue itself.  Although they continually lambasted the opposition
for this “Great Recall Robbery,” political observer and future councilman Joe Simitian believes this was
unwise.  “Since most voters saw it as a fait accompli, the Residentialists reinforced their image of a bickering
minority and appeared to be upset only over ‘sour grapes.’”  Outraged by their opponents’ political ploy,
the Residentialists could never get back on message.

On May 10th, the recall effort proved hugely successful.  A record turnout expelled four Residentialist
incumbents --- Robert Debs, Philip Flint, Byron Sher and Edward Worthington.  Five novice Establishment
candidates won council seats --- future mayor Jack Wheatley, Grant Spaeth, John Berwald, Ned Gallagher
and the election’s top vote-getter, Stanford doctor William Clark.  Only the two more conciliatory
Residentialists --- Kirke Comstock and Enid Pearson --- were able to hold on to their seats, leaving the
Establishment with a 7-2 advantage for the coming session.  In the coming decades, the Residentialist
movement would take control of city politics for good, winning the battle against entrenched power.  But in
1967 --- as all hell broke loose in Palo Alto politics --- it would be the establishment that would deliver the
final knock-out blow.
                                                               
                                                                                                                             -Matt Bowling
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Sources:
Palo Alto Historical Association, Palo Alto Weekly, Palo Alto Times
Frances Dias was
mayor during hectic
1966
A Dias
campaign ad
from the
recall
campaign
A map of the Community Center area where the old City Hall stands and where the Council met in
1966 and 1967.  It is now the Palo Alto Art Center.  Zoom in and out with the + and - symbols in the
top left corner of the map...
Palo Alto: Then & Now

1952
2007
The final vote for the often
confusing "three elections in
one" recall race
Palo Alto City Hall in 1952, shortly after it opened.  The previous City Hall was on Ramona Street downtown.  When the
Council moved to the new City Hall on Hamilton Street, the older building became the Palo Alto Art Center.
Phillip Flint went down
to defeat
Byron Sher around
the time of the 1967
recall.
Enid Pearson
survived the recall.
The Palo Alto City Council
chambers in the old City Hall
on Newell Road (PAHA)
The Oregon Expressway
controversy had been a
rallying call for the
Residentialists.
Kirke Comstock used his
more moderate image to his
advantage.
Dr. William Clark won a
Council seat handily.
Edward Worthington
died a few years after
his defeat.
Enid Pearson in
1979 (PAHA)
A doorhanger ad
from the recall
campaign
Frances Dias in 1969
at a Junior Museum
ceremony. (PAHA)
"I got interested in the Council. I was the manager for John Beahres originally.  There was a big
division and that was a very intresting time.  But the two of us almost die when we realized now
days that they put a limit of $30,000 on the election.  We spent $500 at the most, all we did was
make our postcards with his picture on it and send them out and that's all.  He just celebrated
his 95th birthday.  Everybody in Palo Alto was so mad at everybody else.  We hated the
residentialists and they hated us.  My son came up from college to write a paper on it because a
recall was so unusual.  He got an A on it!"
-Dot
Memories added by our readers:
Byron Sher in more
recent times.