Chicago Sun-Times

Gap grows between whites and blacks

- LAURA WASHINGTON Email: LauraSWash­ington@ aol. com

Chris Kennedy steamed up icy Chicago when he convened a sizzling news conference last week to pronounce that African- Americans are victims of a “strategic gentrifica­tion plan.”

“I believe that black people are being pushed out of Chicago intentiona­lly by a strategy that involves disinvestm­ent in communitie­s being implemente­d by the city administra­tion, and I believe Rahm Emanuel is the head of the city administra­tion and therefore needs to be held responsibl­e for those outcomes,” the candidate for governor declared.

“We’re cutting off funding for schools, cutting off funding for police, allowing people to be forced to live in food deserts, closing hospitals, closing access to mental health facilities,” Kennedy added. “What choice do people have but to move, to leave?”

It’s all part of a plan, he said, to make the city “smaller” and “whiter.”

Kennedy’s incendiary rationale sparked hotly dismissive responses from the media and pundit classes. “Bonkers and crazy talk,” said one. “Irresponsi­ble,” said another. “Opportunis­tic.”

A “divisive fantasy,” the Chicago Tribune editorial board derided.

The only strategy, some opine, is Kennedy’s, a cynical, politicall­y expedient ploy to tap into black discontent with Emanuel. The winner of the March 20 Democratic primary for governor must get significan­t support from black voters in Chicago and Cook County. By railing against the city’s white power establishm­ent, Kennedy hopes to corral that vote.

Indeed, more than a few African- American voters will agree with Kennedy. Black folks have a long history of believing in conspiracy theories.

The thing about conspiracy theories: They are often rooted in painful truths. We know our communitie­s have been criminally neglected for decades.

We know Kennedy’s right when he argues that Chicago crime is concentrat­ed in our neighborho­ods. “We have an 80/ 8 rule,” he said, “where 80 percent of the violence occurs in just 8 percent of our city.”

Eighteen public schools have been closed in Bronzevill­e, Kennedy noted. And the Chicago Public Schools plans to close “every high school for an entire year” in Englewood.

And, yes, the mayor has closed half of the city’s mental health clinics. Gov. Bruce Rauner has cut funding for anti- violence programs, along with an array of other, state- funded social services that support low- income families of all races.

Recent investigat­ions show that state, county and city elected officials have profited from what Kennedy rightly calls a “corrupt and discrimina­tory” tax- assessment system.

But black folks don’t need white politician­s to tell us that black Chicago is in deep trouble.

That’s why many of us won’t be around to vote in the March gubernator­ial primary. Chicago has lost more than 177,000 black residents between 2000 and 2010, according to the U. S. Census. Cook County’s black population has fallen by more than 50,000 since 2010.

We have given up on Chicago’s political leadership.

I’ve noticed that none of Kennedy’s six gubernator­ial rivals stepped up to respond. Nor did most of the city’s army of black elected officials. A notable exception: Cook County Commission­er Jesus “Chuy” Garcia, who said Kennedy’s “statement is correct.”

Planned or not, strategic or not, it is unacceptab­le.

It’s emergency time. Those of us left behind have an urgent mission: to address the vast and growing inequities between the white “haves” and the black “have nots.” To force the city’s powers, in all quarters, to respond.

With a real plan.

 ?? | KEVIN TANAKA/ FOR THE SUN TIMES ?? Chris Kennedy at last year’s Columbus Day parade.
| KEVIN TANAKA/ FOR THE SUN TIMES Chris Kennedy at last year’s Columbus Day parade.
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