Council Member Janeese Lewis-George

Issue Area                     Rank    

Worker’s Rights Champion

Economic Justice Champion

Environmental Justice Champion

Electoral Justice: DC4D Ranks Lewis George a Champion

 DC4D works in coalition to dismantle barriers to voter participation. We believe small, grassroots donors should have more power in our elections than corporate interests, and no one should win office with a minority of the vote.

Janeese Lewis George’s votes on issues of electoral justice:

Housing Justice:  Housing is a human right. Too many DC residents, especially Black and brown residents, live in substandard conditions and yet pay more than half their income for rent. DC should ensure all residents have access to decent affordable housing. Ending long-term homelessness is an important first step in ending all forms of homelessness and housing injustice.

Janeese Lewis George’s votes on issue of housing justice: 

Community Safety: The safest communities are ones where everyone’s needs are met. Only by broadening our understanding of safety will allow us to make sustainable progress toward a District in which fewer people experience and then perpetrate harm. This work should center on meeting the needs of people most at risk of violence.

Janeese Lewis George’s votes on community safety:

Education: Educational success shouldn't be defined by the ward we live in. Neighborhood public schools are the foundation of a strong school system and should be protected against privatization. Learning and equity begin at birth, and we should follow student leadership when it comes to school safety and priorities.

Janeese Lewis George’s votes on education:

  • Voted for an income tax increase to provide a pay increase to child care teachers 

  • Signed on to legislation to make the State Superintendent of Education report to State Board of Education, instead of the Mayor

  • Signed on to legislation to make school meals free to all students

  • Did not sign on to legislation to make the Office of the State Superintendent of Education an independent agency.

  • Signed on to legislation to make out-of-school time programs available to all students who want it

Workers’ Rights: Workers’ rights are civil rights. Living wages, economic justice, and accountability from businesses are part of how we create a fair and just future for everyone in DC. Every worker should be protected by human rights, health and safety laws.

Janeese Lewis George’s votes on worker’s rights:

  • Voted to ensure domestic workers are covered by DC labor laws for wages and safety

  • Voted against amendment to to reduce base wages for tipped workers to $8/hour

  • Voted against amendment to cap the minimum wage for tipped workers at 75% of the full minimum wage, which reversed the Initiative 82 requirement to raise the tipped minimum wage to the full minimum wage 

  • Did not sign on to legislation to raise wages for participants in the Summer Youth Employment Program

Economic Justice:  This category addresses whether the Councilmember fought for policies to reduce income and racial inequality, and whether they supported tax increases on high-income residents

Janeese Lewis George’s votes on economic justice:

Environmental Justice:  Climate change, global warming, and an endangered environment have impacts in every system of existence. Government and corporate greed have systematically and adversely infringed on the sanctity of our planet and our neighbors in vulnerable communities. Mitigating the climate disaster with stringent advocacy is how we care for our communities.

Janeese Lewis George’s votes on environmental justice:

Issue Area                     Rank    

Electoral Justice Champion

Housing Champion

Community Safety Champion

Education Champion

Ward 4 Scorecard

Party: Democrat
First Elected: 2020
Used Public Financing in last election: Yes
Endorsements by DC4D in the last race? Yes, 2024

Overview:  The DC4D scorecard assesses a DC Councilmember’s commitment to economic, racial, and social justice. The scorecard is broken into issue areas, and within each issue area, members are ranked based on their support for bills that would advance justice, as well as their opposition to bills that would widen racial or economic inequity.