Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

Changing Democratic presidenti­al primary calendar is the right move

- Larry E. Nazimek, Logan Square

The Democratic National Committee met last week in Philadelph­ia and debated long-overdue changes to the Democratic presidenti­al primary calendar. President Joe Biden has proposed a new early schedule ending the Iowa caucus, moving South Carolina to the front of the pack, keeping New Hampshire second alongside Nevada and adding the diverse states of Georgia and Michigan to the lineup.

As a DNC member and general president of an over 125,000 member-strong constructi­on labor union, I was proud to support the change.

Union workers are an important pillar of the Democratic tent, and the new calendar strengthen­s their voices. Moving the union stronghold of Nevada to an earlier spot and adding Michigan to the mix means there will be greater union representa­tion.

Some New Hampshire Democrats argue their state should keep its spot at the top of the primary calendar. They say they are in an unfair position because New Hampshire state law essentiall­y requires them to hold their primary first and the Republican-controlled state government won’t help them change it.

I don’t sympathize too much with that argument. Yes, New Hampshire Dems are in a tight spot with their first-in-the-nation law, and the DNC may penalize their convention delegates if they can’t work out a deal with Republican­s to change it. But this is a situation of their own making — New Hampshire passed the law in the first place.

My departed friend, former AFL-CIO President Richard Trumka, put it best when he led the United Mine Workers during the Peabody strike: “If you strike a match and you put your finger on it, you’re likely to get burned.” He was talking about the mine owners’ confrontat­ional tactics during the strike, but the warning goes for any hardball negotiatin­g tactic.

New Hampshire political insiders have used their first-in-the-nation law as leverage to stop every attempt at primary reform. They passed it into law decades ago, then passed up every opportunit­y since to repeal it. They can’t play the victims if they get burned.

The meeting in Philadelph­ia gave everyone a chance to have their case heard. I hope we enact this fair primary calendar and move on to other important business of the Democratic Party: defending workers, strengthen­ing democracy — and making sure the 2024 Democratic National Convention is in Chicago.

Eric Dean, president, Ironworker­s General

Make restitutio­n to business owners hurt by 2020 civil unrest

In the debate about reparation­s and restitutio­n, some mayoral candidates have made vague statements about providing funds to descendant­s of slaves. This is a valuable goal because history has cheated the descendant­s of all the blessings of prosperity. The issues are who receives compensati­on, how much, what is the historical starting date and what is the budgetary impact?

Here’s another proposal: Restitutio­n should be given to business owners in disinveste­d communitie­s who were victims of the 2020 civil unrest in Chicago. We all remember the horrifying images of small businesses being destroyed in communitie­s that have suffered from years of official neglect. The entreprene­urs who opened businesses defied convention­al wisdom by bringing much-needed services to disinveste­d communitie­s.

Yet when civil unrest unfolded, the city stood back and did not protect disinveste­d communitie­s from the destructiv­e forces that had been unleashed, leaving many businesses in ruin.

Let’s give restitutio­n to those entreprene­urs if they commit to using the money to reopen or restore businesses in disinveste­d communitie­s. The amount of restitutio­n offered by the city should cover losses not covered by insurance.

James D’Archangeli­s, Buena Park

No need for new Police District Councils

I take exception to the Feb. 1 letter about Police District Councils.

We already have CAPS, where citizens in a beat area can meet with police officers and the staff of aldermen, if not the aldermen themselves. Beat facilitato­rs are chosen from the beats, so meeting attendees know them. The beat facilitato­rs and committee chairs meet with district commanders and their staff in their District Advisory Council meetings, and the chairman of the DACs meet with the superinten­dent.

In most districts, voters are being asked to vote for people they do not know, some of whom are anti-police. There would have been more beat facilitato­rs running for these offices, but the word never came down through CAPS.

It this time of rampant crime, we cannot afford to defund the police, although that seems to be the goal of many of these candidates.

 ?? JIM WATSON/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? President Joe Biden has proposed a new presidenti­al primary calendar. Democrats should support it, a union leader writes.
JIM WATSON/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES President Joe Biden has proposed a new presidenti­al primary calendar. Democrats should support it, a union leader writes.

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