Chicago News

  • Fraternal Order of Police President Kevin Graham welcomed the news that the Trump administration planned to intervene in the city’s effort to impose a consent decree to reform the police department, even though Mayor Rahm Emanuel dismissed the action as not “on the level.” Mayoral candidate Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkle bristled when asked Wednesday if she had been the source who leaked a confidential Cook County inspector general report that found Democrat JB Pritzker had engaged in a “scheme to defraud” taxpayers when his Gold Coast mansion was reassessed sans toilets in 2015.

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  • Heralding this year’s starting budget as closing the lowest gap in eight years, Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkle unveiled a $5.9 billion budget proposal Wednesday that she says confronts “the county's financial challenges while avoiding new taxes, fines and fees.”

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  • As the push to move the Chicago City Council left in the wake of Mayor Rahm Emanuel’s decision not to run for a third term takes shape, the Chicago chapter of the Democratic Socialists of America endorsed three candidates in February’s election.

    From left, Byron Sigcho-Lopez, Rossana Rodriguez-Sanchez and Ald. Carlos Ramirez-Rosa (35.) [Submitted photos]
    In addition to 35th Ward Ald. Carlos Ramirez-Rosa — the only member of the DSA on the City Council — the group endorsed two challengers trying to unseat aldermen who have allied themselves with Emanuel.

    The group endorsed Pilsen Alliance founder Byron Sigcho-Lopez in the 25th Ward race against Ald. Danny Solis, the chairman of the powerful Zoning Committee and a 22-year veteran of the City Council. Three other candidates have also filed to challenge Solis.

    Related: The TDL aldermanic spreadsheet

    Tom Bowen, a spokesman for Solis’ campaign, declined to comment on the DSA’s endorsement of Sigcho-Lopez.

    In the 33rd Ward, the Chicago DSA endorsed Rossana Rodriguez-Sanchez, who is attempting to unseat Ald. Deb Mell and end her family’s dynastic hold on the Northwest Side council seat that stretches back to 1975, when her father Ald. Dick Mell was elected to City Council.

    Mell declined to comment on DSA’s endorsement of Rodriguez-Sanchez.

    Rodriguez-Sanchez is a youth educator and community activist who helped build the 33rd Ward Working Families organization, which has focused on immigrants’ rights.

    The Chicago chapter of the DSA is made up of three branches covering the North Side, South Side and West Cook suburban area, and has approximately 1,700 members, said Steve Weishampel, co-chairman of Chicago DSA’s Electoral Working Group.

    “We’re thrilled to offer endorsements to three brilliant and committed fighters for the working

    people of Chicago,” Weishampel said in a statement. “The DSA group of candidates offers the only real, coherent alternative to the pro-corporate, anti-worker city government we have now. This group believes in the power of working people, and we in turn believe in them and are ready to fight for them.”

    Chicago DSA will canvass, phone bank and fundraise for its endorsed candidates before the municipal election Feb. 26. Chicago DSA aims to turn out 1,000 of its members to support

    its endorsed candidates, who won the nod after submitting their answers to Chicago DSA’s

    candidate questionnaire and answered questions directly from members at in-person interviews, Weishampel said. Candidates who were endorsed won more than two-thirds of the vote of the membership at the meeting, he added.

    The working group submitted five candidates for endorsement, Weishampel said and the endorsement meeting featured a “robust debate” about how many candidates DSA had the capacity to support in a meaningful way, Weishampel said in an interview with The Daily Line.

    “We are not a rubber stamp,” Weishampel said. “We don’t want to stretch ourselves too far. We want to be a disruptive force in next year’s election.”

    Ugo Okere, who is running in the 40th Ward against Ald. Pat O’Connor, Emanuel’s floor leader, won 62 percent of the vote at Sunday’s meeting, falling just short of the threshold necessary to win the group’s endorsement. Both Okere and Andre Vasquez, another 40th Ward candidate, are DSA members, Weishampel said.

    Daniel La Spata — who is running against 1st Ward Ald. Proco Joe Moreno — won more than 50 percent of the group’s vote, but not enough for an endorsement, Weishampel said.

    The DSA may consider endorsing additional City Council candidates at its next general membership meeting in December, Weishampel said.

    In addition, Chicago DSA may consider endorsing in the mayoral election, with candidates Troy LaRaviere and Amara Enyia expressing interest in the group’s support, Weishampel said.

    The upset victory of DSA member Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez in the Democratic primary for Congress representing New York City put the socialist group in the nation’s political spotlight and caused its membership to surge.

    In an opinion piece published two weeks ago, Ramirez-Rosa and Rodriguez-Sanchez laid out a 10-point progressive platform for candidates that included a tax hike on large corporations, an end to tax-increment financing districts, an elected school board and the end to the Chicago Police Department’s database that is used to track those affiliated with gangs. The group is also organizing around efforts to lift the statewide ban on rent control.

    Several other candidates for City Council have made common cause with the DSA, including Pete DeMay, who is running in the 12th Ward.

    “We need more members of the DSA on the City Council,” said chapter co-chairwoman Lucie Macias. “For too long aldermen have not listened to their constituents.”

    Macias said the endorsement process was “democratic” and conducted in the “right way.”

    Even though the municipal election is 140 days away, the endorsements from the DSA are the second from a progressive group determined to reshape the City Council, which often served a rubber stamp for Emanuel and Mayor Richard M. Daley.

    United Working Families, a political organization formed by progressive labor and community organizations, claimed credit for pushing Emanuel out of the mayor’s race.

    “Now, we’re building a City Hall that will fight back against those who have profited from skyrocketing violence, displacement, and unemployment,” said executive director Emma Tai. “Black and Latinx working families bore the brunt of Emanuel’s racist, pro-corporate economic agenda. Now is the time to win a different future and a city for the many, not the wealthy few.”

    UWF endorsed Ramirez-Rosa and Rodriguez-Sanchez in the group’s “early wave” of endorsements as well as:

    • 10th Ward — Ald. Susan Sadlowski Garza

    • 15th Ward — Rafael Yañez

    • 20th Ward — Jeanette Taylor

    • 22nd Ward — Michael Rodriguez

    • 46th Ward — Erika Wozniak

    • 49th Ward — Maria Hadden


    The UWF said it planned to build on its undefeated record during the March Democratic primary, when it helped Cook County Board candidates Brandon Johnson and Alma Anaya to victory along with Illinois House candidates Delia Ramirez and Aaron Ortiz.
  • The Women’s March Chicago is set to return to Columbus Drive and Jackson Boulevard Saturday — this time in an effort to get first-time voters to turn out for next month’s midterm elections. Three progressive aldermen agreed to lead an exploratory committee for Peter Gariepy, and Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkle named a permanent chief of staff, and prepared to unveil her 2019 budget proposal.

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  • A chapter that has defined Chicago politics for three years came to a close Friday, as a jury found Jason Van Dyke guilty of second degree murder and 16 counts of aggravated battery for the shooting death of 17-year-old Laquan McDonald in October 2014.

    Van Dyke still faces sentencing, and three officers accused of covering conspiring to exaggerate the threat McDonald possed from the night of the shooting still face prosecution, but for protestors and politicians, Friday was a milestone.

    See how political Chicago reacted in real time on Twitter @TheDailyLineChi.

    The crowd outside City Hall at the time the verdict in the Van Dyke case was read. [A.D. Quig/The Daily Line]
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  • More Chicagoans will get a chance to get break on fixing their cracked and dangerous sidewalks thanks to a cool $1 million Mayor Rahm Emanuel said he would add to his budget proposal that he is set to unveil next week. The ACLU of Illinois fired back at President Donald Trump Monday after the president announced he was sending Attorney General Jeff Sessions to Chicago to reimpose “stop and frisk.”

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  • Mayor Rahm Emanuel announced he had reached a new five-year deal with the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees Local 31, which represents 3,500 city workers, who will get an average annual raise of 2.1 percent — but have to pay a health insurance premium for the first time.

    Mayor Rahm Emanuel has repeatedly claimed credit for holding the line on health care costs. [Heather Cherone/The Daily Line]
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  • Chicago-area women made “moderate progress” towards gender parity in the workplace, but race-based disparities emain, according to the Chicago Foundation for Women’s 2018 report on the status of Chicago's women and girls.

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  • Ald. Brendan Reilly (42) said Wednesday he will renew effort to broadcast City Council committee hearings, a six-year long quest last rejected by aldermen in 2015.

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  • Even as Mayor Rahm Emanuel announced he would not seek a third term as mayor, he pledged to help his City Council allies who are running for re-election and stay active in the political fray.

    Progress Chicago, the not-for-profit, “tax-exempt social welfare organization” has been dark since Sept. 12. [Website]
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  • The 26th Ward race is now wide open, with state contribution limits lifted after a massive contribution by one of Ald. Roberto Maldonado challengers. New candidates filed in the 12th and 23rd ward races, and the official number of mayoral candidates stands at an even 20.

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  • Cook County Comm. Jesus “Chuy” Garcia announced Monday he will not run for mayor, despite an all out campaign to draft him to run. Mayoral candidate Lori Lightfoot vowed to take a new approach to violence, while two North Side aldermanic candidates Monday reported huge hauls of campaign cash in some of the most hotly contested races for the City Council. In the 9th Ward, Ald. Anthony Beale has drawn another challenger.

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  • A former aide to Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkle detailed how she suffered from repeated incidents of sexism during her career in Chicago and Washington DC politics that had a damaging cumulative effect on her career in an opinion piece published Monday by Think Progress.

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  • Aldermen should triple the number of affordable homes earmarked for Chicago’s poorest residents to combat rising inequality and instability, a nonprofit coalition told aldermen Monday.

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  • The City Council’s Committee on Housing and Real Estate is set to review the report detailing efforts made in April, May and June to meet the goals laid out in the city’s five-year housing plan at its meeting set to start at 10 a.m. Monday.

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