Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

Sawyer hopes he can be part of another mayoral dynasty

The alderperso­n is giving up his City Council seat with an eye on following in the footsteps of his father, Eugene Sawyer, who served as mayor from 1987-89

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

Chicago already has one mayoral dynasty. Ald. Roderick Sawyer is hoping he can be a part of another.

Sawyer, the son of Eugene Sawyer, Chicago’s mayor from 1987-89, is giving up his 6th Ward City Council seat with the goal of turning Lori Lightfoot into a one-term mayor.

“I want to give the people a more collaborat­ive option, where every voice matters. The current administra­tion’s style of governing is a top-down form of government,” he said.

Sawyer, 59, is Lightfoot’s hand-picked chair of the City Council’s Committee on Health and Human Relations and former chair of the Council’s Black caucus. His South Side ward includes parts of Greater Grand Crossing, Englewood, Chatham and Auburn Gresham.

His father was a wellliked alderperso­n who forged relationsh­ips with Ald. Edward Burke (14th) and former Ald. Edward Vrdolyak (10th) to become the choice of the “Vrdolyak 29,” a bloc of 29 aldermen who chose him as acting mayor after Harold Washington’s death in 1987. His popularity among other Council members helped Sawyer deliver much of Washington’s stalled legislativ­e agenda.

Roderick Sawyer is also promising to work with others on the Council to get things done. He called Lightfoot “authoritat­ive” and “mean-spirited” and said she refuses to work with alderperso­ns or even the citizens of Chicago.

With polls showing violent crime foremost on the minds of voters, the younger Sawyer argued Lightfoot’s dictatoria­l style has tied the hands of rank-and-file police officers and “emasculate­d” David Brown, whom the mayor chose to run the Chicago Police Department.

“We know what’s going on in the police force. They want the police to be led by a leader — not by the mayor. … You have to let your officers and let your superinten­dent do their job,” he said.

Like other challenger­s, Sawyer vowed to dump Brown as superinten­dent if elected.

To fill 1,600 police vacancies and reverse a mass exodus of officers, Sawyer said he wants to offer hiring incentives and retention bonuses and free Chicago cops to focus on violent crime.

“We rely upon the police to do too many things, and we stretch them too thin,” he said.

Sawyer also condemned Lightfoot’s decision to strengthen Chicago’s seldom-enforced curfew law in a desperate attempt to stop an outbreak of youth violence.

“The curfew was a red herring hiding a deeper problem — and that’s the disconnect between ourselves and our children,” he said.

Sawyer was equally critical of Lightfoot’s string of freebies before the election — gas cards, Ventra cards, bicycles, surveillan­ce cameras, motion detectors and a pilot program for a guaranteed minimum income, sending $500 a month to 5,000 Chicagoans.

“I don’t approve of giveaways. It demeans our office . ... The role of government is to protect everyone. Once you start doing that, then it becomes a dependency . ... People are gonna look at, what are we gonna give them next?” he said.

Although Lightfoot campaigned as a reformer, Sawyer argued that she has been a big disappoint­ment on that front.

He pointed to her failed campaign to block legislativ­e approval of a 21-member elected school board, her slow walk toward civilian police oversight and her decision to publicly criticize and ultimately force out longtime Inspector General Joe Ferguson.

“I’ve been for an elected school board for the last 11 years I’ve been on this Council . ... I’ve been a part of civilian police reform for the past six or seven years,” he said.

“Her statements as a candidate were different than her actions as mayor. I’m a model of consistenc­y. Whatever I run on — whatever I state — I stay with it and I stay with it ’til the end,” he said.

What would Rod Sawyer’s dad say about his son’s mayoral candidacy?

“My dad would say, ‘You’ve put in the work. You’ve done what you need to do. Run on your record. Run on your platform. Run on your vision. Don’t look back. And don’t be nasty,’” the younger Sawyer said.

“My father was never that kind of guy. He never ran a campaign like that. And I don’t think he would want me to, either.”

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

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