Daily Southtown

5 candidates for mayor face challenges

Problems that may knock some off February ballot don’t affect incumbent Lightfoot

- By Alice Yin and Gregory Pratt

Several candidates for Chicago mayor will have to defend the validity of their petitions to appear on the ballot as the race for City Hall’s top job intensifie­s.

In all, 11 candidates filed to run for mayor last month and five had their petitions challenged on Monday, the deadline for objections to be submitted to the Chicago Board of Elections.

Ald. Roderick Sawyer, 6th, and activist Ja’Mal Green both had their nominating paperwork challenged by former state Sen. Rickey Hendon, an ally of fellow candidate Willie Wilson. Wilson, in turn, also is facing a signature challenge that, if successful, could knock him off the Feb. 28 ballot.

But incumbent Mayor Lori Lightfoot, though facing a large field seeking to unseat her, is not among those who will have to defend petitions. She boasted of having upward of 40,000 signatures, more than three times the required number.

Sawyer released a statement in response, saying in part: “Willie Wilson talks about being denied access to voting in his life, but now that he’s a wealthy man, he’s doing the exact same thing — denying people their choice of candidate by means of his wealth. That’s the height of hypocrisy.” Sawyer called it a “real insult” to the thousands who signed his petitions and to his volunteers.

Just minutes before the 5 p.m. petition challenge deadline Monday, Green strolled into the Chicago Board of Elections and hit back at the Wilson campaign, alleging that almost 50,000 of the business owner’s 61,000-plus signatures constitute­d a “complete fraud.” Green claimed most pages of the petitions only had one or two “different handwritin­gs” and the pages were also allegedly not numbered correctly, missing or duplicatin­g pages at certain points.

Then Green revealed he is accusing Wilson of violating the residency requiremen­ts to run for Chicago mayor, claiming Wilson has a home in south suburban Hazel Crest that he uses as his main residence. Green said he had documents proving this but did not immediatel­y share them with reporters present. Green said the downtown address Wilson listed in his nominating petitions is merely used as a campaign headquarte­rs.

In a phone call, Wilson denied Green’s allegation­s — as well as his own involvemen­t in the challenge of Green’s signatures, saying: “If I did have something to do with it, I would admit to it.”

Wilson alluded to Green and Hendon having had a confrontat­ion four years ago over a similar petition dispute. But Wilson said Monday he had “nothing to do with that and nor would I get involved in that. … That’s something that they got to work out.”

However, Hendon is a paid consultant for Wilson, and he is listed in Board of Elections records as the objector against the petitions of both Green and Sawyer.

Wilson added that he “absolutely” stands by the integrity of his 61,000-plus signatures and brushed off the accusation that he doesn’t use his downtown Chicago address as his main residence.

People are “entitled to own more than one home,” Wilson said. “I have two homes. I live in downtown Chicago.”

Green shrugged off the challenge to his own signatures as the byproduct of a “petty dispute.”

As for his own challenge to Wilson, Green said: “This is not a personal dispute; it’s more of the fact to show the city of Chicago that we have a candidate that is willing to commit fraud. So what would he do as mayor of the city of Chicago? We won’t know because it won’t happen. We’re gonna get him off the ballot.”

Green and Hendon have a history dating to the 2019 election, when Hendon challenged Green’s petitions, which sparked what at times became a heated war of words. Green verbally sparred with Hendon, a flamboyant former state senator who goes by the nickname “Hollywood,” and after one argument, Hendon posted on Facebook that they’d exchanged threats about fighting one another.

“I told him he needs to change his Pamper,” Hendon wrote.

Objections have also been filed against two lesser-known mayoral candidates, Johnny Logalbo and Frederick Collins.

Chicago’s nominating petition process is one of the most prominent holdovers of the old-school political machine. To run for mayor, a candidate must submit 12,500 signatures from voters, which can be disqualifi­ed on narrow technical grounds.

In the 2019 mayoral election, Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkl­e — who ultimately lost to Lightfoot in a runoff — succeeded in getting former Cook County Circuit Court Clerk Dorothy Brown kicked off the ballot. That year, Green also withdrew while facing a stiff challenge from Wilson.

Election lawyers often encourage candidates to collect roughly three times the minimum number of signatures because challenger­s can use charges of forgery, fraud and more minor technicali­ties to invalidate signatures and knock opponents out of the race. It may take several weeks to resolve the objections against mayoral candidates.

Dozens of aldermanic candidates are also facing challenges to their nominating petitions.

Beleaguere­d former Ald. Proco “Joe” Moreno, who is aiming to make a political comeback in the 1st Ward after legal woes, is also facing a challenge to his signatures. Moreno filed to run against Ald. Daniel La Spata, who beat Moreno four years ago to win the seat. Also running are Sam Royko and Stephen “Andy” Schneider.

Most of the candidates whose petitions have received objections are challenger­s. But incumbents including Michelle Harris, 8th, and Roberto Maldonado, 26th, also saw their signatures challenged Monday.

Meanwhile, opponents of indicted and outgoing Ald. Edward Burke sought to show a strong front against one of his allies seeking to succeed him in the 14th Ward. State Rep. Aaron Ortiz announced a challenge against the signatures of Raul Reyes, a longtime Burke lieutenant whose sole challenger is Jeylu Gutierrez, a staffer of Cook County Commission­er Alma Anaya.

Asked why he filed the objections, Ortiz said it’s time the residents of the 14th Ward have an alderman who is the “most ethical.” Reyes, Ortiz alleged, did not collect enough valid signatures.

After his team filed the challenge, Ortiz took a parting shot at Burke: “The sitting alderman is too busy avoiding jail. … I believe the opportunit­y has increased 100%” for “integrity” to return to the ward currently represente­d by Chicago’s longest-serving alderman, who is not seeking reelection amid wide-ranging corruption charges.

In 2020, Ortiz ousted Burke to become the 14th Ward Democratic committeem­an. This came a year after the 2019 municipal elections saw Burke win reelection despite the recent federal corruption charges hanging over him.

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