Chicago Sun-Times

First daughter tries to keep relationsh­ip with city intact

- LYNN SWEET D.C. DECODER lsweet@suntimes.com | @lynnsweet

WASHINGTON — After Ivanka Trump’s tweets about violence in Chicago sparked an angry response from Mayor Lori Lightfoot on Tuesday, the daughter and top adviser to the president tried to limit the damage, offering an olive branch to keep a new relationsh­ip intact.

A White House official told the Chicago Sun-Times that Ivanka Trump wants to work with City Hall to plan an “event surroundin­g workforce developmen­t and economic opportunit­y in Chicago,” and “we are hopeful that Mayor Lightfoot is a catalyst for change in the city.”

Moreover, after Lightfoot’s scorching comments — and the mayor reaching out to the White House — Ivanka Trump’s chief of staff, Julie Radford, phoned City Hall, “and our office of intergover­nmental affairs spoke with her team yesterday,” the White House official said.

That Ivanka Trump was willing to dial it down and try to mend fences is in stark contrast to her father, President Donald Trump, who favors escalation over mitigation and conciliati­on — and who has picked on Chicago since his 2016 presidenti­al campaign.

The day before President Trump was to visit El Paso and Dayton in the wake of mass shootings, Ivanka Trump posted two tweets about violence in Chicago last weekend.

“With 7 dead and 52 wounded near a playground in the Windy City - and little national outrage or media coverage - we mustn’t become numb to the violence faced by inner city communitie­s every day,” she wrote, misstating facts and leaving her open to Lightfoot’s scathing remarks.

Ivanka Trump conflated several separate shootings, making it seem there was one horrible incident that somehow escaped national attention. According to the Chicago Sun-Times count, there were seven dead and 46 wounded in shootings in various places across Chicago.

But there was more to Lightfoot’s grievances.

Taking some heat on May 7, then Mayorelect Lightfoot used some of her political capital to go to the White House to meet with Ivanka Trump to discuss issues where

they could work together and to establish a line of communicat­ion no matter the disdain Lightfoot has for the president.

If Ivanka Trump thought she was being helpful to Chicago in sending those tweets — and not trying to provide cover for the president — then Lightfoot’s position was that she could have picked up the phone and called.

A White House statement released on Tuesday night acknowledg­ed that to an extent: Ivanka Trump’s quote was “misleading in implying that all of the shooting incidents occurred in one location,” while underscori­ng the larger point that seven were shot to death, even if not a mass killing.

The White House official provided me more of the backstory from their perspectiv­e surroundin­g that statement.

“The mayor’s office asked us not to have Ivanka put out a correction or any further tweets, and we honored their request. They also said we should definitely explain to media the intention. We did ensure media were informed that the tweet was not implying a mass shooting had occurred, but that the violence must not be ignored and we are hopeful that Mayor Lightfoot is a catalyst for change in the city.”

Since Lightfoot’s May meeting at the White House, “our offices have stayed in contact and have been working on an event surroundin­g workforce developmen­t and economic opportunit­y in Chicago.”

What Lightfoot wants is not tweets but help that does something.

Ivanka Trump has not signaled if she is using her considerab­le clout to influence the president to take stronger action on guns.

 ?? WHITE HOUSE PHOTO ?? On May 7, then-Mayor-elect Lori Lightfoot met with Ivanka Trump at the White House.
WHITE HOUSE PHOTO On May 7, then-Mayor-elect Lori Lightfoot met with Ivanka Trump at the White House.
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