Chicago Sun-Times

Luis Gutierrez returns to Chicago ready for latest grandson — but not the rocking chair

- MARK BROWN POLITICAL MATTERS markbrown@suntimes.com | @MarkBrownC­ST

Former U.S. Rep. Luis Gutierrez is back from Puerto Rico with a new home, a new grandson on the way and a new project that returns him to his political roots.

The project (others may follow, he hints) is to campaign for passage of the Puerto Rico Self-Determinat­ion Act, an effort to slow a push by Congressio­nal Democrats to make the U.S. island territory the 51st state, instead creating a convention process that would allow Puerto Ricans to decide their own future.

“What got me into politics was the fight for the independen­ce of Puerto Rico,” said Gutierrez, a statehood opponent who has worked since high school to make his ancestral homeland a sovereign nation.

His current effort reunites him with his mentor from his earliest days in the local independen­ce movement, Jose Lopez, executive director of Chicago’s Puerto Rican Cultural Center.

I met Gutierrez on Wednesday at the center’s offices above Division Street, looking out on the Humboldt Park neighborho­od where Chicagoans were introduced to him in 1986 during his raucous first campaign for 26th Ward alderman.

You’ll recall Gutierrez left Congress after helping Jesus “Chuy” Garcia secure his seat in 2018, but may not know he then left Chicago in April 2019 after assisting his daughter Jessica’s unsuccessf­ul bid for 30th Ward alderman.

Gutierrez had maintained a home in Puerto Rico for years but after retiring from Congress decided to make it his permanent residence. He said he switched his driver’s license and voter registrati­on, then happily donned the green and white colors of his once outcast Puerto Rican Independen­ce Party to cast his vote in November.

But last week Gutierrez moved into a modest ranch home in Norwood Park with revised plans to split his time between here and the island, snowbird-style.

“What ward is that?” I asked, because I’ve never known a Chicago politician for whom that wasn’t a home-buying considerat­ion, but Gutierrez just threw up his hands to indicate he had no idea.

I’ll take that as a sign Gutierrez has bigger fish to fry these days (although let the record reflect the house is in the 41st Ward).

More importantl­y, the new home gives Gutierrez and his wife a better vantage point to stay engaged with one particular small fry during the six months he and his wife now plan to spend here each year.

That’s daughter Jessica’s latest plans, the expected birth of a new son to be named Luis David, or Luis II as Gutierrez called him, not to be confused with Gutierrez’s other grandson, Luis Andres, the college-bound son of his older daughter Omaira.

Gutierrez said being back in Chicago will also give him easier access to friends in Congress from Chicago and Milwaukee whose support will be needed to pass the Puerto Rico Self-Determinat­ion Act.

That legislatio­n, proposed by Reps. Nydia Velázquez and Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, both New York Democrats, along with similar legislatio­n from Sen. Bob Menendez, D-N.J., does not advocate for any one outcome on Puerto Rico’s future relationsh­ip with the U.S.

But the clear expectatio­n is that the proposed convention — composed of elected representa­tives from Puerto Rico’s Statehood and Commonweal­th parties and “independis­tas” — would create a fresh opportunit­y for those preferring some form of sovereignt­y over statehood, which has its own Democratic support in Congress. In a nonbinding referendum last year, 52% of Puerto Rican voters supported statehood.

“I really do believe we don’t need to block statehood because statehood has never achieved a majority of the people of Puerto Rico in any legitimate­ly sponsored electoral contest,” said Gutierrez, dismissing last year’s referendum.

Gutierrez’s desired outcome: “I like to think of a treaty of friendship and solidarity between the people of Puerto Rico and the people of the United States, because I think to speak about us being totally separate in every aspect is not something that’s realistic.”

“The question here is sovereignt­y. No longer will the U.S. Congress be able to impose or act upon the people of Puerto Rico unilateral­ly. Their sovereignt­y will be restored to them.”

In between advocating for Puerto Rico, Gutierrez says he will be pursuing unspecifie­d business opportunit­ies, but said he does not intend to do any lobbying “ever.” He hinted at a new nonprofit initiative involving immigratio­n reform, the issue on which he is most closely identified, but said he’s not ready to announce it.

Gutierrez’s push for Puerto Rican independen­ce was once considered radical and through the years fueled many of his turf fights in Chicago with other Puerto Rican politician­s.

Now he’s just a grandfathe­r wanting to spend more time with Luis II, a grandfathe­r who just happens to always be near the eye of the storm.

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 ?? MARK BROWN/SUN-TIMES ?? Ex-U.S. Rep. Luis Gutierrez discusses his plans Wednesday at the Puerto Rican Cultural Center in Humboldt Park.
MARK BROWN/SUN-TIMES Ex-U.S. Rep. Luis Gutierrez discusses his plans Wednesday at the Puerto Rican Cultural Center in Humboldt Park.

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