Chicago Sun-Times

Mendoza figures to pivot toward mayoral bid.

Re-elected as comptrolle­r, she figures to quickly pivot to mayoral run

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

Now that Susana Mendoza has breezed to re-election as state comptrolle­r, it’s on to what Chicagoans have long viewed as the main event: the race for mayor.

Assuming Mendoza joins the crowded field — and there’s little doubt, considerin­g the video declaring her candidacy that leaked last week — what is her path to victory and what are the roadblocks?

Is Mendoza’s long-standing political alliance with embattled Illinois House Speaker Michael Madigan, D-Chicago, a liability heavy enough to sink her candidacy?

A Democratic operative not yet aligned with any of the mayoral candidates places Mendoza, 46, in a “top tier” of candidates that includes County Board President Toni Preckwinkl­e, Bill Daley and Gery Chico.

The operative advised Mendoza to use her charismati­c personalit­y, tenacity and generation­al appeal to younger voters to rise above the historic tension between blacks and Hispanic voters that doomed 2015 mayoral challenger Jesus “Chuy” Garcia.

“People are engaged in a way they haven’t been. You have different types of voters, new voters. They’re looking for people who are different. Not the same old, same old. That’s where her strength is. She’s different. She’s worked with and against the establishm­ent,” the operative said.

“The first instinct for everyone is to go into tribal mode and start counting votes in different parts of the city . . . . But her real path is . . . to make this race about what the future of Chicago should be. If she can be the dynamic candidate with the energy, focus and persistenc­e to move this city into the future, she’ll appeal to voters across all spectrums.”

A Mendoza operative, who asked to remain anonymous, agreed there is a “hunger” among Democrats nationally and in Chicago for a “new generation of progressiv­e leaders.”

The operative compared her to African-American gubernator­ial candidates Stacey Abrams in Georgia and Andrew Gillum in Florida. Like them, “Susana is the only candidate in the field . . . who has that potential, because she’s in her 40s. She has that kind of enthusiasm,” the Mendoza operative said.

“She’s shown her executive chops by standing up to Rauner, speaking truth to power and bringing some sanity to the state’s fiscal mess . . . . Having executive experience at the city and state level gives her a leg up. And the potential to make history as the first Latina mayor of Chicago is a big deal.”

Former Hispanic Democratic Organizati­on chieftain Victor Reyes is a political operative who has spoken to several of the top-tier mayoral candidates but is “leaning toward” joining the Preckwinkl­e campaign.

Reyes argued that Mendoza is Preckwinkl­e’s “strongest challenger” — but has weaknesses. Chief among them, Reyes said, is a voting record in Springfiel­d that includes “a lot” of tax increases and hard-line votes on criminal justice issues that earned her the nickname “Electric Suzy.”

“Preckwinkl­e is a criminal justice progressiv­e. The voting record would show that Mendoza voted for harsher penalties and does not have a progressiv­e criminal justice record,” Reyes said.

Mendoza’s political consultant, Eric Adelstein, countered that Mendoza was the “deciding vote in Illinois in getting rid of the death penalty.”

Yet another liability, Reyes said, is that Mendoza has run only two ministeria­l offices — city clerk and state comptrolle­r — and has not proved she has the “gravitas” to tackle the monumental problems the next mayor of Chicago will face, Reyes said.

“Preckwinkl­e can at least say that she’s run a huge organizati­on — whether you like the way she’s run it or not. She has a track record to run on. Susana doesn’t,” Reyes said.

As for Mendoza’s close and longstandi­ng political relationsh­ip with Madigan, Reyes said that liability could be offset by the speaker’s still-formidable political organizati­on and fundraisin­g muscle.

“If he’s all-in, it’s a major asset,” Reyes said.

But Madigan always has been what Reyes called a “reluctant kingmaker” in mayoral races. He’s likely to remain on the sidelines, at least until the runoff.

That means Mendoza’s next best hope to replace the campaign cash and organizati­onal help she has long received from Madigan is Emanuel’s fundraisin­g machine, including the mayor’s chief donor, Michael Sacks.

Sacks could not be reached for comment.

Mendoza’s first hurdle is to gather 12,500 valid signatures — and three times that many to survive any petition challenge — to get on the ballot by the Nov. 26 filing deadline.

The quick turnaround explains why her supporters got a running start by circulatin­g her nominating petitions at the Columbus Day Parade.

After that, she must catch up in fundraisin­g.

Mendoza closed the third quarter with $1.7 million in cash on hand and has raised $265,000 since then, much of it from the same trade unions who bankrolled Emanuel’s campaigns.

But she also spent some of that money on television commercial­s showing her playing soccer and talking about standing up to bullies.

She’ll need to rev it up if she hopes to compete with Daley, the undisputed fundraisin­g leader; he’s already topped the $2 million mark.

If Mendoza ultimately gets more than 60 percent of an energized Hispanic vote and 25 percent of the white vote — including lakefront wards where she got 54 to 78 percent of the vote in her 2016 race for state comptrolle­r against Rauner appointee Leslie Munger — she almost certainly will make the runoff, Reyes said.

But Reyes argued that there is a “lane” for Daley or Chico to win a spot, particular­ly if Chico and Mendoza evenly divide the Hispanic vote.

 ?? SUN-TIMES FILE PHOTO ?? Susana Mendoza
SUN-TIMES FILE PHOTO Susana Mendoza

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