Chicago Sun-Times

Rush turns page to new chapter

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U.S. Rep Bobby Rush (D-Ill.) formally announced Tuesday he won’t seek re-election this year, putting a cap on his congressio­nal career after 30 years in office.

Rush’s retirement ends one of the more remarkable careers in Chicago politics — one that saw the South Side Chicago Democrat rise from an Illinois Black Panther Party leader to Chicago alderman to U.S. congressma­n.

But along the way, Rush, 75, managed to bring with him some of the core principles of the Black Panther Party — and put those principles to work for the greater good.

For instance, Rush’s current co-sponsorshi­p of a bill to allow the federal Supplement­al Nutrition Assistance Program to cover hot meals and prepared foods to help better feed the poor is not a far throw from the pioneering Free Breakfast for School Children program operated by the Panthers in the late 1960s and early 1970s.

And Rush’s stances on equity in criminal justice have clear echoes to his activist days, such as the legislatio­n he introduced in 2021 aimed at forcing the FBI to release its secret files relating to COINTELPRO, a federal domestic spying and disinforma­tion campaign aimed at disrupting the 1960s Black civil rights movement — and particular­ly the work of the Black Panthers.

“We must pull back the curtain on the FBI’s racially and politicall­y motivated espionage on its own citizens,” Rush said in a statement last year.

Rush is leaving office, but that legislatio­n still deserves to become law.

As congressma­n, Rush has also been a critical voice backing climate change and energy legislatio­n, having a hand in bills aimed at reducing carbon emissions and creating a net-zero economy by 2050 that removes as many greenhouse gases from the atmosphere as are produced.

Rush’s 30 years in office did have some blemishes. Rush, who is also a minister, teamed up with a group of other individual­s to buy a vacant church at 6430 S. Harvard Ave., in 2005, promising the new congregati­on would work to turn around the long-disinveste­d Englewood community. But the church stopped making payments on the mortgage in 2011 and a judge ultimately placed a $2,100-amonth wage assessment on Rush’s $174,000 annual federal salary.

Rush says he now plans to focus on his faith and said he is “returning home, returning to my church, returning to my family and grandchild­ren. But my calling to a life of service is stronger than ever.”

We wish Rush well — and we expect Chicago will continue to hear his voice in his next chapter.

RUSH MANAGED TO BRING WITH HIM SOME OF THE CORE PRINCIPLES OF THE BLACK PANTHER PARTY — AND PUT THOSE PRINCIPLES TO WORK FOR THE GREATER GOOD.

 ?? ASHLEE REZIN/SUN-TIMES ??
ASHLEE REZIN/SUN-TIMES

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