Daily Southtown

Mayor accuses Vallas of using ‘dog whistle’

- By Gregory Pratt and Alice Yin

Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot voted for herself Monday afternoon for a second term, then criticized rival Paul Vallas for telling crowds that his campaign for mayor is about “taking our city back,” which she called “the ultimate dog whistle.”

“He’s saying in certain audiences that we have to take our city back,” Lightfoot said. “What does that mean?”

The mayor referenced white Republican Bernie Epton’s 1983 campaign against Black Democrat Harold Washington, where Epton’s slogan was, “Before it’s too late.”

“We don’t need that in our city,” Lightfoot said. “And ‘take our city back,’ meaning what? To what time? And take our city back from whom?”

The Tribune first reported Vallas’s comments last week, where he said at a campaign appearance in Garfield Ridge, “This whole campaign is about taking back our city, pure and simple.”

Vallas invoked that refrain throughout his remarks as the crowd soaked it in and cheered. In addition to campaignin­g against Lightfoot, Vallas repeatedly criticized State’s Attorney Kim Foxx.

At one point at the rally Vallas told the audience, “My favorite quote is help me help you. Help me help you. Because that is what it is about.

“It’s us together taking back this city, and not doing it in five years or 10 years or 15 years (but) doing it now.”

Later, Vallas returned to the line to note Foxx has been elected twice and urge residents not to do the same with Lightfoot.

“Taking back our city begins at the ballot box,” Vallas said. “Help me help you do that.”

His campaign has denied any racial motivation for his comments and released a statement Monday evening: “Four years of failure are catching up to Mayor Lightfoot and she’s desperatel­y lashing out in every direction to cling to a spot in the runoff, even going as far as to suppress the vote if it helps her politicall­y.

“Paul Vallas is a lifelong, pro-choice Democrat and champion for LGBT rights running to put crime reduction and public safety first. He’s not going to let Mayor Lightfoot or anyone else distract him from that message.”

Lightfoot’s comments Monday follow rallies over the weekend where the mayor made her own controvers­ial comments about race and voting as she rallied Black voters against the white and Latino candidates in the race.

“Any vote coming from the South Side for somebody not named Lightfoot is a vote for ‘Chuy’ Garcia or Paul Vallas,” Lightfoot said, naming the only Latino and white challenger­s in the race.

“If you want them controllin­g your destiny, then stay home. Then don’t vote. But we’ve got to do better.”

Those remarks came at a rally that frequently tapped into the historic disinvestm­ent that South Side neighborho­ods have suffered, with the mayor once again saying the “destiny” of Black Chicago is on the ballot.

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