Chicago Sun-Times

Mac slams mayor on ‘ pay- to- play philosophy’

Despite Emanuel record of reform, ex- top cop hammers him for scandals

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

Mayoral challenger Garry McCarthy returned to City Hall Wednesday — for the first time since Mayor Rahm Emanuel fired him — to hammer his former boss on the issue of ethics and corruption.

Emanuel has pushed through a seemingly endless string of ethics reforms in an effort to turn the page from the Hired Truck, city hiring and minority contractin­g scandals that cast a giant shadow over former Mayor Richard M. Daley’s 22- year reign.

But McCarthy said the mayor who fired him is not fooling anybody. He argued the “scandals that have enveloped” the Emanuel administra­tion “encompass the breadth” of city operations.

They range from the contract kickback scheme and ethics scandal that claimed two Chicago Public Schools CEOs to the sexual abuse and school cleanlines­s scandals at CPS.

He mentioned: the $ 2 million bribery scandal that has tainted Chicago’s red- light camera program; racism in the Department of Water Management; the “repeated sanctionin­g” of the city’s law department for withholdin­g documents from defendants in civil cases and the mayor’s decision to withhold the Laquan McDonald shooting video until after the 2015 election.

McCarthy further argued that the mayor’s personal emails — released to the public only after yet another court fight — reveal the “depth of Emanuel’s pay- to- play philosophy.”

“Everybody knows right now that, if you want a city contract, you make a campaign donation to Rahm Emanuel and you get that contract,” McCarthy said, promising a “zero tolerance policy.”

“Read the mayor’s emails. You all got them. And the pay- for- play that’s being reported … over and over and over. It’s really obvious what happens.”

McCarthy said it’s high time the mayor stop trying to divert public attention from major scandals. It’s not working.

“How ’ bout not responding to the knowledge of the CPS sex scandal for days, hoping that it would pass? Maybe if I do another press conference, maybe nobody will notice. Make an announceme­nt. Let’s get a tunnel going to O’Hare. How ’ bout that?” McCarthy said.

McCarthy even went so far as to liken Emanuel’s decision to close mental health clinics and a record 50 public schools to the now- raging political controvers­y over the separation of children from their parents at the U. S. border.

“We need a compassion­ate government. I don’t think we have that right now,” McCarthy said.

Emanuel’s communicat­ions director Adam Collins argued that the mayor’s “actions to change the culture at City Hall couldn’t be more clear” and put the lie to McCarthy’s broadside.

“The very first thing the mayor did when he took office was to overhaul the city’s ethics rules and shut the revolving door between working for city government and lobbying city government,” Collins wrote in an email.

“In the seven years since, he reformed city procuremen­t and made it more transparen­t, gave new protection­s to whistle- blowers, expanded the inspector general’s role and authority, reformed hiring practices to end the decadesold Shakman decree and so much more.”

 ?? FRAN SPIELMAN/ SUN- TIMES ?? Mayoral hopeful Garry McCarthy said Mayor Rahm Emanuel is not fooling anybody by trying to divert attention from what he called the “scandals that have enveloped” the Emanuel administra­tion.
FRAN SPIELMAN/ SUN- TIMES Mayoral hopeful Garry McCarthy said Mayor Rahm Emanuel is not fooling anybody by trying to divert attention from what he called the “scandals that have enveloped” the Emanuel administra­tion.

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