Chicago Sun-Times

PROGRESSIV­ES PATCH THINGS UP

Garcia, who finished fourth in first round, gives Johnson an endorsemen­t that was coveted by both candidates

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

Vanquished mayoral challenger Jesus “Chuy” Garcia on Friday endorsed Brandon Johnson in the April 4 mayoral runoff, reuniting Chicago’s fractured family of progressiv­es.

“The choice is clear: Chicago is a city of strong public schools, thriving neighborho­ods and progressiv­e values. It is through this lens that I see Brandon Johnson as the right choice,” Garcia said.

“We need a leader that is committed to equity, to inclusion and coalition-building, and that’s Brandon. It is time to renew and expand our coalition.”

Garcia noted a poll conducted last month showed more than 70% of Black and Latino residents “believe we can do more for our communitie­s when we work together” and put aside past political tensions.

“Our communitie­s get it: United, we rise. Divided, we fall. Our next generation of youth leaders gets it. There is power and strength in our unity. That’s why I’m proud to endorse Brandon Johnson today,” Garcia said.

A triumphant Johnson said he was “humbled and honored” to receive the endorsemen­t of his former rival.

“Every time this city needed a leader and champion, Chuy Garcia was there. He has stepped up in some of the most extreme circumstan­ces. And he has never wavered,” Johnson told a news conference at La Villita Community Church, 2300 S. Millard Ave.

“That type of economic despair that many of our communitie­s have endured has made us all less safe and feeling a little less hope. But, thank God that we are not going to allow this moment to separate us, divide us. Our communitie­s being pitted against one another — we ain’t gonna tolerate it, Chicago, because we don’t have to.”

Johnson was also endorsed Friday by the Rev. Jesse Jackson Sr., whose son, newly elected U.S. Rep. Jonathan Jackson, already was in Johnson’s camp.

Garcia finished fourth with 13.8% of the vote on Feb. 28. Neverthele­ss, Garcia’s endorsemen­t was coveted by both Johnson and Paul Vallas.

If Garcia campaigns enthusiast­ically for Johnson and helps boost Hispanic turnout that was anemic in round one, it could help carry Johnson over the finish line.

Vallas did well among Hispanics on Feb. 28 and managed to win several Hispanic-majority wards, including the 10th Ward on the Far Southeast Side and the 30th Ward on the Northwest Side.

Political strategist­s have said Vallas needs about half the Hispanic vote to win the April 4 runoff. Garcia’s support for Johnson could make that more difficult for Vallas.

On the day after the Feb. 28 election, veteran political consultant Joe Trippi, who continues to advise the Vallas campaign, minimized the impact of a Garcia endorsemen­t.

“What’s he got? 14%? We did very well in the Hispanic community,” Trippi said. “I’m not sure that coalitions forged in the past are aligning in the same way.”

Johnson’s campaign manager Jason Lee begs to differ. He called Garcia’s support of Johnson the “most significan­t endorsemen­t you can get among the round one challenger­s.”

“We know his strength among Latino voters. That group is largely undecided. His validation, his support — not only him but also other elected officials from the Southwest Side — goes a long way to helping validate Brandon among those voters. And that could be significan­t in convincing those voters that Brandon is the right choice, the better choice for Chicago,” Lee said.

During the round one campaign, Johnson had called it “unfortunat­e” that Garcia had “abandoned the progressiv­e movement” by “copying and pasting” Mayor Lori Lightfoot’s failed plan to deliver Chicago from violent crime.

“He is proposing an agenda that is being moved by the Fraternal Order of Police. Progressiv­es understand … that safe communitie­s require investment­s,” Johnson said.

Lee hedged when asked whether Johnson has apologized for those remarks.

“Campaigns are emotional. They’re very heated. Things happen. In the heat of battle, things are said that you wouldn’t say otherwise. You might not necessaril­y even believe in the exact way that you said it,” Lee said.

“We’ve had some really good conversati­ons with Congressma­n Garcia and also his supporters to contextual­ize those comments and make clear that those don’t reflect our respect and admiration for both the congressma­n and also the political organizati­on that he’s built over 40 years that’s been on the leading edge of social justice in this city, beginning with [Little Village activist] Rudy Lozano, who the congressma­n worked with,” said Lee.

 ?? ASHLEE REZIN/SUN-TIMES ?? Mayoral candidate Brandon Johnson clasps hands with U.S. Rep. Jesus “Chuy” Garcia on Friday at La Villita Community Church on the Southwest Side.
ASHLEE REZIN/SUN-TIMES Mayoral candidate Brandon Johnson clasps hands with U.S. Rep. Jesus “Chuy” Garcia on Friday at La Villita Community Church on the Southwest Side.
 ?? TYLER PASCIAK LARIVIERE/SUN-TIMES ?? Brandon Johnson shakes hands with the Rev. Jesse Jackson Sr. on Friday after receiving his endorsemen­t.
TYLER PASCIAK LARIVIERE/SUN-TIMES Brandon Johnson shakes hands with the Rev. Jesse Jackson Sr. on Friday after receiving his endorsemen­t.

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