Chicago Sun-Times

Lightfoot accused of strongarm tactics on budget passage

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

Mayor Lori Lightfoot was accused Monday of using strongarm tactics to round up City Council votes for her $12.8 billion pandemic budget.

On the eve of a final budget vote that is not in doubt, representa­tives from the DefundCPD Campaign, Black Lives Matter, the Grassroots Collaborat­ive and United Working Families put the mayor on blast and aldermen who “cave” to mayoral pressure on notice.

Emma Tai, executive director of United Working Families, said she is “disgusted” by the “conditions under which this budget was negotiated.”

Tai was referring to the mayor’s threat to members of the Black Caucus who dare vote against the budget. Lightfoot warned: “Don’t ask me for s--- for the next three years” when it comes to projects for her five-year, $3.7 billion capital plan.

“To threaten the aldermen who represent the most disinveste­d communitie­s in the city of Chicago

— the people who are suffering the most, who are dying the most this year — that they will not get anything from the mayor if they dare to vote against a budget that includes $11 million for vacant positions in the cop budget? That is not good-faith negotiatio­ns. That is not how this should have gone down,” Tai said.

Damon Williams from the #LetUsBreat­he Collective and the DefundCPD Campaign said he’s not fooled by Lightfoot’s signature “Invest South/ West” plan to rebuild 10 long-neglected communitie­s.

“Once there was political pressure on Lori Lightfoot, she specifical­ly went to the representa­tives of Black communitie­s and said, ‘ You will get nothing if you go against me,’” Williams said.

“That was a threat to the vulnerable Black people of Chicago. That is saying that, ‘I am going to do exactly what has been happening for generation­s. I’m gonna divest from your communitie­s unless you get in line with my political agenda.’”

The mayor’s office responded by pointing to the “unpreceden­ted, $1.2 billion budget gap” Lightfoot had to close, in collaborat­ion with the City Council and organized labor after extensive community engagement.

“This budget avoids hundreds of layoffs, maintains the level of service our residents deserve, ensures predictabi­lity and transparen­cy around property taxes, and increases funding towards community-based violence prevention initiative­s, affordable housing and mental health response,” the mayor’s statement said.

Lightfoot has told the Sun-Times the threat to members of the Black Caucus was “taken out of context” and she is “not going to get in the mud with people who leak clearly private conversati­ons.”

“What I’ve been very clear about saying to members who tell methey can’t and won’t vote for the revenue sources, is that your ward cannot be prioritize­d over other wards who do vote for and support the budget. It’s not right and it’s not fair.”

There is no doubt Lightfoot has the votes to approve both the budget and the $195.7 million revenue package that includes a $94 million property tax increase, followed by annual increases tied to the consumer price index. The only question is how many aldermen will vote against the budget. It’s likely to be 20 or 21, making it the largest vote against a mayoral budget since the 1980s power struggle known as Council Wars that saw 29 mostly white aldermen thwart thenMayor Harold Washington’s every move.

Amika Tendaji of Black Lives Matter Chicago predicted “never-before-seen numbers” of aldermen voting against the mayor’s budget.

As part of the “DefundCPD Campaign,” Tai said she was part of a broader effort that flooded aldermanic in-boxes with 3,000 emails urging them “vote no on any budget that does not include treatment — not trauma, that does not tax the rich, that does not cut the police and does not protect essential workers.”

Tai told aldermen taking what she called a “courageous and principled” position against the budget: “We will remember this vote.”

But the same goes, she said, for aldermen who “cave to pressure from the mayor and big business.”

 ??  ?? Mayor Lori Lightfoot
Mayor Lori Lightfoot

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