Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

Green says city needs a leader who can offer residents hope

And he says it’s not Lightfoot, whom he endorsed in the 2019 race: ‘People ... don’t feel that things can change. And I’m here to say they can.’

- BY FRAN SPIELMAN, CITY HALL REPORTER fspielman@suntimes.com | @fspielman

Mayoral candidate Ja’Mal Green said Chicago needs a new kind of leader.

It needs one who can make a significan­t dent in its “epidemic” of violent crime, stop an exodus of residents and give young people and others hope.

“We need to energize a whole new electorate. The vast majority of people don’t vote. We need a candidate who can change that,” he said.

That leader is not, he said, Mayor Lori Lightfoot, a candidate he endorsed after he dropped out of the 2019 race.

The spike in violence since she took office is leading residents to leave, he said.

“Folks from the neighborho­ods are leaving. At this rate, we’re gonna continue to see a huge decline in Chicago residents who don’t feel this is a place to raise a family,” he said. “If we don’t have a candidate who really understand­s this history and how to change it, there won’t be a next generation of Chicagoans in these neighborho­ods.” He continued: “We need a leader who listens, who collaborat­es, who energizes people to get involved in communitie­s and in the political process. We need young people to feel like they have hope in this city. People are literally in a place where they feel no hope. They don’t feel that things can change. And I’m here to say they can. We’re gonna give people hope and tangible change in rapid time.”

To repopulate South and West Side communitie­s and create a new tax base, Green suggests the city issue $1 billion in annual revenue bonds to create as many as 10,000 new homeowners by providing assistance with down payments and closing costs.

His plans also include a universal preschool program for 3-year-olds; 10,000 yearround apprentice­ships for people ages 13 to 25; and making Lightfoot’s guaranteed minimum income pilot a permanent program, doubling its participan­ts to 10,000 and monthly paycheck to $1,000 — with strings attached.

He also said he wants to reopen mental health clinics as holistic “healing houses”; dole out 100,000 Apple or Samsung “air tags” to motorists to reduce the number of carjacking­s; install image sensors, cameras, concealed speakers and “emergency blue light call stations” on targeted blocks; and create an armed and unarmed “Transit Peace Keepers Protection Agency” to reduce CTA crime.

“We have to change this narrative that public safety is about police, because it’s not. Public safety is about making sure that we tackle the root causes in a mass way,” he said.

He’s also vowing to eliminate annual property tax increases at the rate of inflation that Lightfoot passed to help balance the city budget.

It wasn’t long after Lightfoot took office that Green started publicly criticizin­g the mayor he had helped elect.

The first public break came when Lightfoot proclaimed as a “done deal” a $95 million police and fire training academy that Green and others called a symbol of Rahm Emanuel’s misplaced spending priorities. In fact, Lightfoot said the project needed to be made bigger with a larger price tag.

That was followed by Green’s criticism of Lightfoot’s selection of David Brown as Chicago Police Department superinten­dent.

Green also slammed Lightfoot’s decision to seal off downtown by raising the bridges after protests triggered by the death of George Floyd devolved into two devastatin­g rounds of looting. He called CPD’s treatment of protesters heavy-handed.

But the big break between the two came last year when Green spread a false rumor on Twitter that Lightfoot planned to resign — and the mayor fired back.

“I made a misjudgmen­t in a tweet. … I apologized for that,” he said.

One month later, Green accused Lightfoot of putting the kibosh on a $15 million youth center he wants to build on the site of a shuttered elementary school in Auburn Gresham in retaliatio­n for Green’s outspoken criticism of her.

“She takes things too personal and has an allegiance to her friends only,” Green told the Sun-Times at the time.

“Her vindictive­ness, her personal vendettas. … If you’re not her friend, she is not willing to help you,” he said.

 ?? ASHLEE REZIN/SUN-TIMES ??
ASHLEE REZIN/SUN-TIMES

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