Chicago Sun-Times

POP FLIP- FLOP: JOHN DALEY SWITCHES TO ‘ NO’ VOTE ON SODA TAX

Becomes first county commish to switch sides, says he thinks sweetened drink duty should be repealed

- BY DAN MIHALOPOUL­OS Staff Reporter Contributi­ng: Rachel Hinton Email: dmihalopou­los@ suntimes. com Twitter: @ dmihalopou­los

John Daley on Thursday became the first Cook County commission­er to publicly switch sides on the contentiou­s issue of the county’s tax on sweetened beverages, telling the Chicago Sun- Times he now thinks the penny- per- ounce tax should be repealed.

Daley had been one of eight commission­ers who voted for the tax when the county board approved it last year. The commission­ers deadlocked on the issue, but board President Toni Preckwinkl­e cast the tiebreakin­g vote in favor of the tax.

Daley, a South Side Democrat, said public opinion swayed his vote.

“I heard from my district, and I think we’re elected to represent our district,” he said. “I heard overwhelmi­ng opposition.”

After Daley’s flip- flop on the matter, the board could be poised to repeal the measure. Assuming the other eight opponents of the tax vote the same way again, the tax could be overturned as soon as next week.

But Preckwinkl­e could then veto the repeal measure, forcing opponents of the tax to try to gather more votes to override her veto. Commission­er Richard Boykin, DOak Park, and a supporter of the repeal measure, said last week he thought there would be enough votes to repeal, but perhaps not enough commission­ers willing to override a potential Preckwinkl­e veto. support of the tax, which is expected to generate about $ 200 million a year for the cash- strapped county government.

But Daley said he believes the budget can be balanced without the tax. “If everyone gets together, it can be done,” he said.

Daley said he had never seen such voter opposition to a tax as the criticism that the pop tax has generated.

Facing huge public pressure — including an expensive campaign by soft- drink companies and strong criticism from business interests in the county — the board is set to vote on the proposal to repeal the tax.

Despite the biggest backlash in her seven years as board president, Preckwinkl­e has stood firm in her

“They are being taxed out of the state, out of the county,” he said. “The public is saying, ‘ There are too many taxes and I’m tired of it.’ ”

Daley’s change of position could have outsized influence beyond his single vote. The brother of former Mayor Richard M. Daley and son of former Mayor Richard J. Daley is the longtime chairman of the coun- ty board’s Finance Committee and chairman of the 11th Ward’s Democratic organizati­on.

He’s long been an ally of Preckwinkl­e, and she could see his sudden shift as a betrayal of her attempts to combat what she’s derided as bigmoney, “Big Soda” interests.

In a statement, the Can the Tax Coalition welcomed the new stance, saying “Commission­er Daley has always been a champion of working families and sound fiscal policy.”

Preckwinkl­e spokesman Frank Shuftan declined to comment Thursday afternoon on Daley’s about- face or say whether the president would veto a repeal measure from board members.

Preckwinkl­e has announced plans to run for re- election to a third term, even as polls suggest the pop tax issue has dramatical­ly lowered her once high approval ratings.

“I HEARD FROM MY DISTRICT, AND I THINK WE’RE ELECTED TO REPRESENT OUR DISTRICT. I HEARD OVERWHELMI­NG OPPOSITION.” JOHN DALEY, Cook County commission­er, on his soda tax flip- flop

 ?? SUN- TIMES FILES ?? Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkl­e ( left) and Commission­er John Daley at a 2015 board meeting.
SUN- TIMES FILES Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkl­e ( left) and Commission­er John Daley at a 2015 board meeting.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States