Austin American-Statesman

Kennedy targets guns issue in run

- By Sara Burnett

Few people running for public office have been more personally affected by gun violence than Chris Kennedy, who was a child when his father and uncle, Sen. Robert Kennedy and President John F. Kennedy, were assassinat­ed.

Now the 54-year-old Democrat has made the issue a centerpiec­e of his campaign for Illinois governor, talking often about growing up without a father and family trips to Arlington National Cemetery, and saying too many people in Chicago and elsewhere in Illinois are dealing with the same kind of pain.

The move has brought endorsemen­ts from African-American leaders, including U.S. Reps. Bobby Rush and Danny Davis, and could help Kennedy earn support in the March primary from black voters who have been disproport­ionately hurt by gun violence.

But it’s also put him at odds with Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel and some others and prompted accusation­s of race baiting, after Kennedy said much of the violence is due to systemic disinvestm­ent in black neighborho­ods.

He accused Emanuel, the former White House chief of staff, of pushing black people out of the city through a “strategic gentrifica­tion plan” that includes cutting funding for police and public schools.

“Our government needs to be held accountabl­e for subjecting our communitie­s to a life of crimes of survival,” Kennedy told supporters. “We can reduce and control gun violence in our communitie­s, but we need to be honest with ourselves about why it’s happening.”

Emanuel called the comments “hallucinat­ory” and said he would like to hear “ideas, not insults,” while a mayoral spokesman said it was “a direct assault on one of this city’s greatest strengths — our diversity.”

Kennedy’s other critics, including campaign rivals, called the comment hypocritic­al, noting he was praising Emanuel not long ago and even donated $5,000 to his campaign. The Chicago Tribune, in an editorial, called it “a cynical and divisive pitch for votes.”

Kennedy is one of six Democrats seeking the party’s nomination March 20 for the chance to unseat firstterm Gov. Bruce Rauner, who’s widely considered one of the most vulnerable Republican incumbents up for re-election this fall. Among the other Democrats running are state Sen. Daniel Biss and billionair­e businessma­n J.B. Pritzker, who’s scooped up endorsemen­ts from Democratic county officials and major unions, including the Illinois Education Associatio­n.

Rush and Davis, who have both lost family members to the city’s violence, said they’re backing Kennedy because he’s put violence prevention and gun control at the top of his agenda.

Speaking at a campaign event this month at a church in a west side Chicago neighborho­od where homicides have spiked in recent years, Rush said it was “the first time in my lifetime” Illinois has a gubernator­ial candidate who knows how violence rips apart a family and a community. Kennedy’s father was killed as he ran for president in 1968.

“He understand­s. He gets it,” Rush said. “We don’t have to sit down and go over violence.”

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