Chicago Sun-Times

Lightfoot struggling to find votes for property tax hike — and has herself to blame

Political newcomer has failed to cultivate relationsh­ips with aldermen but now is asking them to walk property tax plank

- ANALYSIS BY FRAN SPIELMAN, PAGES 8-9

Mayor Rahm Emanuel persuaded 35 aldermen to approve a $588 million property tax increase — the largest in Chicago history — for police and fire pensions and school constructi­on.

Why, then, is Mayor Lori Lightfoot struggling so mightily to find 26 votes for a property tax increase one-sixth that size followed by annual increases tied to the cost of living?

Partly, the coronaviru­s pandemic and the incredible financial hardship it has caused.

Chicagoans who still have jobs have seen hours and paychecks shrink. They’re struggling to pay their property taxes and bracing for the double whammy of an upcoming reassessme­nt of city property.

That is hardly the time to saddle them with an even greater burden.

But part of it is the chickens coming home to roost for Lightfoot.

The bank of good will is running on empty for a mayor who used her inaugural address to portray the City Council as corrupt, raced back to City Hall to issue an executive order stripping aldermen of control over licensing and permitting and used her first Council meeting to humiliate indicted Ald. Edward Burke (14th).

“She has not developed the kind of relationsh­ips that a mayor needs to develop . . . to see a budget through in difficult times,” said former Ald. Joe Moore (49th), who turned out to be one of Emanuel’s closest Council allies.

“When you’re asking legislator­s to make politicall­y tough decisions, it’s always helpful to have built relationsh­ips of mutual respect and trust. One of the things that made Rahm so effective . . . is that most of the aldermen felt he had their backs.”

Ald. Jason Ervin (28th), chairman of the Council’s Black Caucus, attributed Lightfoot’s current troubles to her being “new to the political arena.” She’s a former federal prosecutor who has never before held public office.

“The previous mayor had relationsh­ips built up over years. She’s honestly been the only person that has come into this situation without having really any relationsh­ips with anyone. It takes time to get there to build that type of relationsh­ip,” Ervin said.

Ald. Roderick Sawyer (6th), son of former Mayor Eugene Sawyer, agreed politics and government is a “relationsh­ip business.”

“She’s picking that up and understand­ing that more and more every day. Once she gets hold of that, she will probably be in a much better space,” Sawyer said. “She’s making adjustment­s, adding more of a personal touch to her appeal.”

The budget confrontat­ion has been building since that infamous inaugurati­on day confrontat­ion at

“WHEN YOU’RE ASKING LEGISLATOR­S TO MAKE POLITICALL­Y TOUGH DECISIONS, IT’S ALWAYS HELPFUL TO HAVE BUILT RELATIONSH­IPS OF MUTUAL RESPECT AND TRUST. ONE OF THE THINGS THAT MADE RAHM SO EFFECTIVE … IS THAT MOST OF THE ALDERMEN FELT HE HAD THEIR BACKS.” FORMER ALD. JOE MOORE

Wintrust Arena. It wasn’t just a bad start for a newcomer to a business built on trust. The pattern continued.

Council members who pushed back against Lightfoot’s request for expanded spending and contractin­g authority for the duration of the pandemic were denounced as “shameful,” “selfish” grandstand­ers willing to put politics over public health.

Lightfoot got her way after a 29to-21 vote not seen since the 1980s power struggle known as “Council Wars,” when 29 aldermen, most of them white, thwarted Mayor Harold Washington’s every move.

But the close vote signaled the trouble she is now in.

Just last week, Lightfoot warned members of the Black Caucus who do not support her 2021 budget, “Don’t ask me for s--t for the next three years,” referring to choosing projects for her five-year, $3.7 billion capital plan.

Already, Lightfoot has been forced to make concession­s. She canceled the 350 layoffs, added another $10 million for violence prevention, beefed up an alternate response pilot program for emergency calls related to mental health and nixed plans to link eliminatin­g “carve-outs” in the city’s Welcoming City ordinance to the budget.

The 20-member Black Caucus is holding out for even more money for violence prevention and mental health and for specifics on South and West side capital projects.

The uphill battle Lightfoot faces was on display Tuesday at a hearing that was a prelude to Wednesday’s Finance Committee vote on the mayor’s revenue package, which includes the $94 million property tax increase and annual inflationa­ry hike.

It was a coming-out party of sorts for Burke, who has been largely silent since his indictment.

Burke led the charge in interrogat­ing Chief Financial Officer Jennie Huang Bennett and Budget Director Susie Park on alternativ­es to the property tax increase, including eliminatin­g funding for all vacant positions or increasing the city’s 7-cent bag tax.

“The property tax in Chicago has historical­ly been toxic. And I’m sure that the other members are hearing what I’m hearing when I go to church and people walk up to me and voice their concern,” said Burke, a 51-year veteran who knows the city budget like the back of his hand.

“We know there’s gonna be some federal money coming. Why not anticipate that, make some adjustment­s here and refrain from this increase in the levy?”

Ald. Tom Tunney (44th), Lightfoot’s handpicked Zoning Committee chairman, questioned why the mayor chose to freeze property taxes in her first budget instead of confrontin­g the city’s $30 billion pension crisis.

“We all clapped our hands last year, saying there was no property tax increase. And yet, you knew these ramp-ups were coming. So now, you’re doing the CPI where we should have been doing it before and making the tough vote in our first year of the administra­tion, rather than this fear-mongering about the tax bill will come when the voters are trying to decide who their next alderman is. I find it a little disingenuo­us,” Tunney said.

Ald. Susan Sadlowski-Garza (10th), chairwoman of the Committee on Workforce Developmen­t, pushed for the $16-a-month employee head tax on Amazon and other “logistics operators” with more than 50 employees.

The tax was introduced this week and promptly referred to the Rules Committee, where legislatio­n opposed by the mayor goes to die.

“As far as I’m concerned, $1.25 on a package coming to my door that I’m paying — I don’t think the consumer is gonna see it,” Garza said.

Moore likened Lightfoot to Bruce Rauner, a my-way-or-the-highway outsider who became a one-term governor in part because he was at constant war with the Legislatur­e.

Moore said Lightfoot “might be able to cobble together” the 26 votes she needs to pass the budget. But he wouldn’t bet on it.

“When you’re a week away from a budget vote and you’re 11 solid votes behind, that’s not a good sign,” Moore said.

Ald. Gilbert Villegas (36th), Lightfoot’s floor leader, said Tuesday he’s “feeling good” about the final Council vote, but even he acknowledg­ed: “In politics you have to form relationsh­ips. This is Politics 101. You want to build relationsh­ips with people before you have to ask them for anything.”

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 ?? SUN-TIMES FILES ?? Mayor Lori Lightfoot’s contentiou­s relationsh­ip with aldermen started during her inaugural address in May 2019 at Wintrust Arena.
SUN-TIMES FILES Mayor Lori Lightfoot’s contentiou­s relationsh­ip with aldermen started during her inaugural address in May 2019 at Wintrust Arena.

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