Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

A CHUNK OF CHANGE

With 14 alderperso­ns having either departed, opted to run for mayor or not seeking reelection, the City Council is set to get younger and more progressiv­e. But will it be more independen­t?

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

The Chicago City Council sees its share of turnover in every election cycle. But that doesn’t quite explain the generation­al changing of the guard going on this time.

It’s not just that 14 of its 50 members have either departed, opted to run for mayor or decided not to seek reelection. It’s who is leaving and the decades of institutio­nal knowledge the Council is losing.

Two retiring and indicted alderperso­ns — City Council dean Edward Burke (14th) and deputy dean Carrie Austin (34th) — will be walking out the door with 83 years of seniority between them. The departure of four more longtime members — Leslie Hairston (5th), Howard Brookins (21st), Ariel Reboyras (30th) and Tom Tunney (44th) — will deprive the Council of 84 more years of experience.

Another 46 years of experience will be lost with the exits of George Cardenas (12th), Michele Smith (43rd), James Cappleman (46th) and Harry Osterman (48th).

There’s also the question of how progressiv­e, aggressive and persistent their replacemen­ts will be, or whether the newbies will be moderate, passive and willing to be led by the mayor.

The answers will determine whether Chicago has another rubber-stamp Council or if it ends up with the strong Council, weak mayor form of government outlined in its municipal code.

Considerin­g those stakes, it’s no wonder business leaders have created a big-money PAC to prevent the Council from turning sharply to the left and why United Working Families, a progressiv­e group with close ties to the Chicago Teachers Union, has endorsed 18 Council candidates.

“People are tired of being left behind by the wealthy and political elite in this city. We have a real, generation­al opportunit­y for change … [with] a new City Council responsive to the will of the people that puts the needs of poor, workingcla­ss — Black and immigrant com

munities — first, instead of pushing them to the side like so many Councils and administra­tions have done before them,” said Emma Tai, executive director of United Working Families.

Tai called out Mayor Lori Lightfoot for what she described as a string of broken promises: to reopen mental health clinics closed by her predecesso­r; to tax high-end real estate sales; and to end what Tai called “sacrifice zones” — areas in the city where industry is often located and residents are left “bearing the brunt of asthma, cancer [and] environmen­tal pollution.”

Veteran Council member Nick Sposato (38th) said he fears the departure of more experience­d, collaborat­ive and mainstream colleagues could pave the way for the election of what he calls “lefty loons” who want to defund the police and escalate Lightfoot’s parade of government giveaways, regardless of the cost.

Tunney, owner of Ann Sather Restaurant­s and a former chairman of the Illinois Restaurant Associatio­n, said his concerns are a “little more sophistica­ted” than Sposato’s.

“The Council had been shifting a little bit to the left of center. I’m assuming it’ll be a little bit more. That seems to be the culture of the city at this point. That’s obviously a concern to me as someone who believes in ... economic developmen­t. We’ve got to make sure we’ve got candidates in there that understand the importance of a solid economy and a safe city balancing the needs of companies and workers alike,” Tunney told the Sun-Times.

“I’m gonna take an active role in trying to make sure that the Council and the next administra­tion is respectful of the business community,” he said.

Retiring Ald. Harry Osterman (48th) said he is not concerned about the Council making a sharp left turn.

Public safety is “the No. 1 issue across every neighborho­od” in Chicago, and “that’s not gonna change” — even though United Working Families wants to eliminate hundreds of vacancies in the Chicago Police Department’s $1.94 billion budget, as well as CPD’s newly enlarged advertisin­g budget.

“I don’t think that there will be an effort to defund police. I think there’s gonna be an effort to address issues like mental health,” he said, along with affordable housing and homelessne­ss.

Osterman, who chairs the Council’s housing committee, said all those issues have grown since the pandemic, “but public safety, going into the next summer, is gonna be the No. 1 issue on everybody’s mind, as it is today.”

That means “the Council’s gonna have to work together. I believe that the voters who are gonna elect the new Council are gonna hold their aldermen accountabl­e. The message that I’ve heard across the board is, ‘We want to make sure that CPD continues to reform, but also that we’ve got enough staffing across the city in communitie­s to really reduce the violence.’ ”

Osterman is similarly unfazed by the institutio­nal knowledge being lost — primarily because plenty of know-how remains.

“There’s a lot of aldermen who, I believe, will be reelected who’ve been around [long enough] to know how to work with people,” he added, citing specifical­ly Ald. Pat Dowell, chair of the budget committee. He said she and other key leaders will be able to help the city wean itself from the flood of federal coronaviru­s relief funds.

“It takes you awhile to learn the job, to learn the department­s and learn Council and legislatio­n. It also is important that new aldermen, while they’re focusing on the urgent stuff in their community, are working collaborat­ively on the bigger issues,” Osterman said. “But there are lots of people — both within the Council and outside — to help give support, guidance and advice. They will come together. There’s been change before.”

There’s already been a change — and a bit of a youth movement — thanks to four aldermanic appointmen­ts in rapid succession.

Lightfoot made history by choosing 47-year-old Nicole Lee, the Council’s first Chinese American, to replace convicted 11th Ward Ald. Patrick Daley Thompson, nephew of Chicago’s longest-serving mayor (Richard M. Daley) and grandson of the second-longest serving mayor (Richard M.’s father, Richard J. Daley).

Monique Scott, 50, was appointed to fill the seat vacated by her brother, former Ald. Michael Scott Jr. (24th), who resigned to take a job with Cinespace Studios. Attorney Timmy Knudsen, 32, became the City Council’s youngest member when Lightfoot chose him to fill the opening created by the early resignatio­n of Ethics Committee Chair Michele Smith (43rd).

And attorney Anabel Abarca, 37, was the mayor’s choice to replace her former boss, 12th Ward Ald. George Cardenas, when Cardenas, Lightfoot’s deputy floor leader, was elected to a seat on the Cook County Board of Review.

Even more change is likely with 39 of 50 ward races contested. That could set the stage for the electorate to send even more veterans packing.

Among the contests getting lots of attention is the proxy battle to succeed Burke in the 14th Ward.

That’s where Burke precinct captain Raul Reyes is squaring off against Jeylu Gutierrez, district director for Cook County Commission­er Alma Anaya, who is endorsed by mayoral challenger Jesús “Chuy” García.

Other interestin­g races include the four-way battle in the 1st Ward, where first-term Ald. Daniel La Spata is trying to prevent his predecesso­r, Proco Joe Moreno, from making a political comeback. Moreno lost his seat in 2019 after a string of scandals.

The most crowded races are in the 5th and 6th wards, with 11 candidates each. In both wards, Council members are leaving — Hairston in the 5th and Roderick Sawyer in the 6th. Sawyer is running for mayor.

After that, the 48th Ward has 10 candidates elbowing for position to fill the vacancy created by Osterman’s departure.

In the 21st Ward, seven are running to replace Brookins.

Ten incumbent Council members are running unopposed, including Burnett, Brian Hopkins (2nd), David Moore (17th), Scott Waguespack (32nd) and Matt Martin (47th). Also unopposed is Bennett Lawson, Tunney’s chief of staff, who is running unopposed for that seat.

Tunney considered joining the crowded field of mayoral challenger­s before opting to retire from politics, calling the Council “not a good place to work these days.” He pointed specifical­ly to Lightfoot’s contentiou­s relationsh­ip with the Council from the very start of her term.

“Under mayors — whether they were Daley or Rahm — there was just much more of a respect for each alderman and what their needs are for their community. I don’t think that collaborat­ive relationsh­ip has been there” under Lightfoot, Tunney said.

No matter who wins the mayor’s race, Chicago’s chief executive will likely need to work with a younger, less savvy Council.

Burnett, a 28-year veteran who has been a loyal supporter of every mayor he has ever served under, will be the new City Council dean.

Tai said she hopes the new Council will be far more progressiv­e, paving the way for a legislativ­e agenda filled with keeping promises Lightfoot broke.

“Inequality has only gotten worse. The rich are getting richer. Public goods are paid for by public dollars. Do those public dollars come from 6 mph traffic cameras? Or do they come from taxing the obscene corporate profits that they’ve been making for decades off the labor of poor and working people?” she asked.

Pressed on how many of the races her organizati­on can realistica­lly expect to win, Tai said, “We’re trying to win all of them. … We need majorities, and we need the mayor’s office to pass legislatio­n. We saw how easy it was over the past four years for the mayor to break her promises to us. So we’re shooting for a majority to make these things real for people who have deserved them for a very long time.”

A veteran political operative — who asked to remain anonymous for fear of alienating alderperso­ns whose support he still needs — cautioned Chicago voters not to hold their breath waiting for a change in Chicago’s long-standing power dynamic.

“The City Council is gonna be young. It’s gonna be more progressiv­e ideologica­lly. It’s gonna have a lot less experience and not understand the system. [But] I don’t have any reason to believe the City Council is gonna get this huge independen­t streak. The Council has always been fairly acquiescen­t to the mayor,” the operative said.

 ?? SUN-TIMES FILE ?? The Chicago City Council is shown at the May 16, 2022, meeting, when members approved a new ward map. The results of that redistrict­ing will take effect with this year’s Council elections.
SUN-TIMES FILE The Chicago City Council is shown at the May 16, 2022, meeting, when members approved a new ward map. The results of that redistrict­ing will take effect with this year’s Council elections.
 ?? ?? WBEZ MAP SOURCE: CITY OF CHICAGO
WBEZ MAP SOURCE: CITY OF CHICAGO
 ?? SUN-TIMES FILES ?? With all the City Council turnover, Ald. Walter Burnett Jr. (27th), a 28-year veteran, will be the new City Council dean.
SUN-TIMES FILES With all the City Council turnover, Ald. Walter Burnett Jr. (27th), a 28-year veteran, will be the new City Council dean.

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