Chicago Sun-Times

Ald. Lee facing runoff in 11th Ward

Results showed her and top challenger Ciaravino each with about 30% of the vote; in the 12th, Abarca was trailing challenger Julia Ramirez

- BY LAUREN FITZPATRIC­K AND MARY NORKOL Lauren FitzPatric­k is Sun-Times Reporter. Mary Norkol is a CST wire reporter.

As the mayor who appointed her conceded her race Tuesday night, 11th Ward Ald. Nicole Lee was pushed into a runoff to defend her job representi­ng Chinatown and the Daley stronghold Bridgeport.

Lee enjoyed a major fundraiser hosted by former Mayor Richard M. Daley and one of his brothers in the hopes she’d retain the seat their nephew, Patrick Daley Thompson, was forced from when he was convicted of tax fraud.

The daughter of a Daley mayoral aide, Lee had words of thanks for the family that’s long ruled the 11th Ward: “Thank you to the Daley family for their faith in me, for their confidence, for their support, for taking this forward.”

But with four of every five votes counted in Bridgeport, Armour Square, Chinatown, Canaryvill­e and East Pilsen, Lee had failed to garner 50% of the vote, and at times trailed ever so slightly behind Anthony “Tony” Ciaravino, a Chicago police officer and CAPS member.

Early results showed both had attracted about 30% of the vote each. The next closest candidate was Chicago firefighte­r Don Don with 20%. Ambria Taylor, a teacher, had 13%. Chicago Public Schools civics teacher Froylan “Froy” Jiminez, business owner Elvira “Vida” Jiminez and attorney Steve Demitro had less than 3% each.

At Ciaravino’s party Tuesday night at Stockyards Garage in Canaryvill­e, and amid signs touting his slogan, “Your safety is my concern,” Ciaravino told supporters. “The best is yet to come.”

Facing an uphill battle in a ward that’s been a Daley family stronghold for decades, Ciaravino said 11th Ward residents want and need new leadership.

“I know what our community needs, I know we’re living in fear,” the Chicago police officer told the Sun-Times. “I’m the best qualified candidate for that top priority.”

Lee welcomed supporters in the dining room at New Furama Restaurant, which boasts a location “at the crossroads of Chicago’s South Side Chinatown and Bridgeport neighborho­ods.”

Sporting bright red Wonder Woman sneakers, Lee said she’s got her eyes set on April 4.

“I’ve always known, with a seven-person race, a runoff was likely,” she said. “You hope for the best but you plan for contingenc­ies.”

She pledged to find common ground with voters who had supported her opponents in order to earn their support — and to try to attract the many voters who, like elsewhere in the city, stayed home.

In the 12th Ward, another recent Lightfoot appointee, Anabel Abarca, trailed her challenger, Julia Ramirez, to represent the McKinley Park and Brighton Park neighborho­ods.

With all early precincts reporting, Ramirez, a social worker and restorativ­e justice practition­er, had 56.5% of the vote, with 43.5% for Abarca, whom Lightfoot named as alderperso­n after Abarca’s boss, former Ald. George Cardenas, won a seat on the Cook County Board of Review.

More establishe­d Southwest Side incumbents held firmly onto their City Council seats.

15th Ward incumbent Raymond Lopez, elected from a crowded field in 2015, held onto a massive lead all evening, holding 64% of the vote — 100% of early results counted. In second place was activist Victoria “Vicko” Alzvarez, with 24% of the vote, and then Gloria Ann Williams with 12% in the ward which, following the 2020 remap, includes portions of Chicago Lawn, Gage Park, Back of the Yards, Brighton Park, Canaryvill­e, West Englewood, and the Stockyards.

So did 16th Ward incumbent Stephanie Coleman in her first chance to defend herself since winning in 2019. Coleman, the daughter of former Ald. Shirley Coleman, had 77% of the vote, with 92% of precincts reporting. Trailing her with 13% was Carolynn Crump, a Chicago police officer and with 10%, Eddie Johnson III, a technology coordinato­r for the Chicago Public Schools. Neighborho­ods of the 16th Ward include Englewood, Chicago Lawn, Gage Park and New City.

18th Ward Ald. Derrick G. Curtis, who’s held the seat since 2015, was leading community organizer Heather Wills with all early results in. Curtis, who made news last year when he accidental­ly shot himself, had 62% in the Ashburn, Scottsdale and Wrightwood neighborho­ods and parts of Beverly, West Lawn and Chicago Lawn to Wills’ 38%.

Matt O’Shea, first elected in 2011 when he was an aide to the longtime former alderperso­n, also readily sailed toward victory over two challenger­s in the 19th Ward, home to many first responders and public sector workers in Beverly, Mount Greenwood and Morgan Park. With all precincts reporting, O’Shea had 63% of the vote, Chicago Police Sgt. Michael T. Cummings had 32% and computer consultant Timothy “Tim” Noonan had just 5%.

 ?? PAT NABONG/SUN-TIMES ?? Ald. Nicole Lee (11th) hands a piece of paper to an election judge while voting at Long Life Apartments in the Chinatown neighborho­od on Tuesday.
PAT NABONG/SUN-TIMES Ald. Nicole Lee (11th) hands a piece of paper to an election judge while voting at Long Life Apartments in the Chinatown neighborho­od on Tuesday.
 ?? MARY NORKOL/SUN-TIMES ?? Anthony Ciaravino (right) at his election night party Tuesday at Stockyards Garage in Canaryvill­e.
MARY NORKOL/SUN-TIMES Anthony Ciaravino (right) at his election night party Tuesday at Stockyards Garage in Canaryvill­e.
 ?? VICTOR HILITSKI/FOR THE SUN-TIMES ?? Ald. Anabel Abarca votes at the Thomas Early Childhood Center, at 3625 S Hoyne, on Tuesday.
VICTOR HILITSKI/FOR THE SUN-TIMES Ald. Anabel Abarca votes at the Thomas Early Childhood Center, at 3625 S Hoyne, on Tuesday.

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