Daley’s spot on ballot secured after Joyce drops petition challenge
Mayoral candidate Jerry Joyce on Wednesday ditched his petition challenge against Bill Daley, claiming although his team found a “widespread pattern of forgery and fraud” the campaign’s manpower and resources must be spent elsewhere.
The withdrawal of the challenge means Daley — the former U.S. commerce secretary — will be on the Feb. 26 ballot, since no one else challenged his petitions.
Joyce’s campaign said the challenge was complicated because Daley’s petition circulators disappeared.
“It’s so hard to find them,” Joyce spokesman Graeme Zielinski said. “Volunteers are driving, spending the day chasing down these guys who, you know, were instructed or they knew to go to ground. They’re not there.”
Joyce’s campaign in a statement threw in some digs about Daley’s signatures, claiming three people collected more than 11,000 signatures, all using the same notary. The Joyce campaign claims Daley’s petitions included “thousands of examples” of incorrect addresses, unregistered voters, forged names and duplicate signers.
“In the end, we’re withdrawing our challenge,” Zielinski said in a statement. “We can’t spend the next months scouring the earth for purported circulators who, in many cases, are gone with the wind or who don’t live at the addresses that were provided.”
Daley’s campaign aides declined to respond until they receive official word of Joyce’s withdrawal from the Chicago Board of Election Commissioners.
Other petition challenges include former Chicago Public Schools CEO Paul Vallas challenging former Chicago Police Dept. Supt. Garry McCarthy’s signatures; Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkle challenging Illinois Comptroller Susana Mendoza’s petitions, as well as those of philanthropist and businessman Willie Wilson and former Chicago Police Board president Lori Lightfoot; and other mayoral candidates challenging the signatures provided by Cook County Circuit Court Clerk Dorothy Brown and activist Catherine Brown D’Tycoon. Wilson is also challenging the petitions of activist Ja’Mal Green.
Hearings on the objections began Monday and are open to the public.