Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

García touts his strength as a coalition builder: ‘Folks know me’

The congressma­n says Lightfoot has been too combative: ‘People are tired of the conflict and the bickering and the fighting that they think is representa­tive of her style’

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

U.S. Rep. Jesús “Chuy” García was the last candidate to join the race for mayor of Chicago — but believes his skill as a “coalition builder” will help him finish first in the end.

Still, García’s delay in launching his campaign cost him a major endorsemen­t. The Chicago Teachers Union, tired of waiting for him to make up his mind, is backing one of its own: Cook County Commission­er and CTU organizer Brandon Johnson.

García has run for mayor once before, in 2015, when — with the CTU’s help — he forced the incumbent, Rahm Emanuel, into Chicago’s first runoff.

In 2019, García didn’t run and eventually endorsed Lightfoot, which he said he regrets.

“I gave Lori Lightfoot a chance to deliver on promises she made as it relates to reform, and she has not delivered,” García said.

Now, he told the SunTimes, he wants to unite the progressiv­e movement he has championed for a lifetime and carry that movement into City Hall.

He is, however, prepared to go it alone if it’s too late for that in the first round of balloting. He said he’s confident he can force Lightfoot into a runoff and that progressiv­es will reunite behind him then.

“Folks know me. … They know what I’ve done. I know we will eventually get their support . ... No one in Chicago politics today has been involved in fighting the old corrupt and racist and sexist Chicago machine [longer] than myself,” García said.

García, like other candidates, cited Lightfoot’s broken promises to reopen mental health clinics, resurrect the Department of Environmen­t and raise the real estate transfer tax on high-end home sales to create a dedicated source of funding to reduce homelessne­ss and ease Chicago’s affordable housing crisis.

But García’s predominan­t complaint against Lightfoot is her combativen­ess and her inability to get along with people.

Even retiring Ald. Susan Sadlowski Garza (10th), one of the mayor’s closest City Council allies, once said she had “never met anybody who has managed to p--- off every single person they come in contact with — police, fire, teachers, aldermen, business, manufactur­ing.”

Lightfoot’s “style of governing … has been confrontat­ional . ... People are tired of the conflict and the bickering and the fighting that they think is representa­tive of her style of government,” García said. “Instead of that combative, unnecessar­y conflict that she causes, we need someone who is going to be a collaborat­or.”

With violent crime foremost on the minds of Chicago voters, García joined mayoral challenger­s vowing to replace Chicago Police Department Supt. David Brown with an insider who can regain the confidence of a demoralize­d rank-and-file.

García is the only candidate to have served at four levels of government: the City Council, the Illinois Senate, the Cook County Board and now the U.S. House of Representa­tives.

During the 2015 mayoral campaign, his failure to articulate a plan to solve Chicago’s pension crisis may well have cost him the runoff election.

García said he’s changed since then. He has a far better understand­ing of budget and finance after deliberate­ly choosing congressio­nal committees focused on business and finance, he said.

“This isn’t 2015 . ... I’ve grown significan­tly. Most importantl­y, I’ve delivered in Congress. ... I’m coming home to be an effective leader and a good steward of Chicago,” he said.

City spending (up $6 billion) and borrowing (up $3 billion) has ballooned under Lightfoot, García said.

“Almost half of the budget goes to debt and pensions. And when you factor in the $2 billion for police, it’s over 60% of all of the budget. It’s almost two-thirds of that amount. What is her plan for dealing with this?” he asked.

García said he has already talked to several veteran members of a City Council in transition who feel strongly “they should have more say-so” in the next term.

“I’ve told them that, having been a member of the Council, I understand the reality,” he said. “We’re going to have real dialogue. This isn’t about personalit­ies. This isn’t about ego trips. This is about making sure that we take the next important strategic steps for Chicago to build a Chicago that’s good for all.”

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

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