Chicago Sun-Times

Abortion rights PAC backs Johnson; 3 Council supporters of police union endorse Vallas

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

Endorsemen­t wars continued Tuesday in the race for mayor of Chicago, with Paul Vallas lining up support from three more pro-police members of the City Council and Brandon Johnson getting help from women supporting abortion rights and an organizati­on that champions reproducti­ve rights.

Throughout the mayoral campaign, rival candidates have attempted to paint Vallas as an anti-abortion Republican who is a threat to women’s rights.

Vallas insists he is a “lifelong Democrat.” He ran for governor and lieutenant governor as a Democrat. He tied his personal opposition to abortion to his Greek Orthodox faith while affirming his public support for a woman’s right to choose.

“Personal religious conviction is unrelated to my public position supporting women’s reproducti­ve rights. It’s like asking Joe Biden as a Catholic, ‘Are you for abortion?’ Or [asking] Rich Daley or John Kennedy,” Vallas told the SunTimes last month.

Sarah Garza Resnick, CEO of Personal PAC, doesn’t buy that explanatio­n.

“In a post-Roe world, this race is too important. After meeting with both Mr. Vallas and Commission­er Johnson, it is clear to us that Brandon Johnson is the only candidate who will protect and champion reproducti­ve rights in Chicago,” Resnick was quoted as saying in a news release.

Mayor Lori Lightfoot’s 2023 budget includes $3 million for “reproducti­ve services” tied to the influx of women coming to Chicago for abortions outlawed in their home states.

Johnson has vowed to maintain that level of funding and increase it if needed. He also promised to “use city resources to ensure the security of abortion clinics” in Chicago.

Tuesday, he also was endorsed by former U.S. Sen. Carol Moseley Braun and state Sen. Mattie Hunter. A “Women’s Rally for Brandon” is scheduled for 3 p.m. Saturday at the Johnny Miller Center, 2622 W. Jackson.

“Abortion is health care. Reproducti­ve health must be an integral part of any health program, and my administra­tion will ensure a full range of reproducti­ve health services are available and accessible to all,” Johnson was quoted.

Vallas picked up endorsemen­ts from three Hispanic alderperso­ns who are among the police union’s biggest City Council supporters: 23rd Ward Ald. Silvana Tabares; retiring 30th Ward Ald. Ariel Reboyras, a former Public Safety Committee chair; and 31st Ward Ald. Felix Cardona Jr.

Tabares pointed to Vallas’ law-and-order platform, which includes filling 1,700 police vacancies and replacing departing Supt. David Brown with an insider and sweeping out Brown’s entire leadership team.

“Here in Latino communitie­s, we’re tired of the carjacking­s. We’re tired of catalytic converter thefts. We’re tired of the gangs taking control of our streets. Paul Vallas is gonna put crime reduction and public safety first. That’s what I believe,” Tabares told the Sun-Times.

Tabares recalled that, about a year ago, Johnson issued a statement demanding that the City Council “defund Chicago Police Department resources like ShotSpotte­r.”

“When a gunshot victim is suffering and bleeding, seconds matter,” Tabares said. “And ShotSpotte­r alerts the police to respond to those rapid gunshots. That’s what I’m afraid of. I don’t want to see ShotSpotte­r taken out of our communitie­s. ShotSpotte­r is working.”

When it’s all said and done, Vallas is likely to have lined up support from roughly 19 veteran alderperso­ns, most of them old guard members with the closest ties to the Regular Democratic Organizati­on. Johnson is supported by eight progressiv­e and independen­t alderperso­ns, including members of the Socialist Caucus.

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