Chicago Sun-Times

MAYOR’S RACE

Ex-top cop levels ‘pay-to-play’ charge, says Rahm’s acceptance of $35K donation from developer doesn’t pass the ‘sniff test’

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

McCarthy rips Emanuel for taking campaign contributi­ons from developers.

Mayoral challenger Garry McCarthy on Wednesday leveled a familiar charge against Rahm Emanuel — “pay-to-play politics’’ — for accepting a $35,000 contributi­on from developer Dan McCaffery one day after the Chicago Plan Commission approved McCaffery’s master plan for the site of the CHA’s Harold Ickes Homes.

McCarthy noted that Emanuel is an ex-officio member of the Plan Commission and appoints nearly half of its members.

But that didn’t stop the mayor from accepting McCaffery’s money on the day after the Plan Commission signed off on the developer’s plan to build as many as 972 residentia­l units as part of a massive mixed-used developmen­t on the 13-acre site.

“This just stinks. It does not pass the sniff test,” said McCarthy, the fired Chicago Police superinten­dent.

“When I was the superinten­dent and I would get a phone call from somebody at City Hall, they would say, ‘The optics of this are problemati­c.’ I think that’s an understate­ment. I see this as outright corruption. It’s pay-for-play. How can this possibly be going on?”

On his first day on the job in 2011, Emanuel signed executive orders that slammed the “revolving door” that had allowed city employees and mayoral appointees to lobby City Hall. They were banned from doing so for at least two years after leaving their city jobs.

The mayor also said he would stop accepting campaign contributi­ons from city lobbyists. And city employees would be insulated from pressure they have felt to give gifts or make political contributi­ons to the mayor, department heads or city supervisor­s.

Emanuel also reissued three of former Mayor Richard M. Daley’s executive orders. They included a ban on political contributi­ons to the mayor from the owners of companies doing business with the city.

Still, Emanuel has continued to accept contributi­ons from developers doing business with the city.

On Wednesday, McCarthy accused Emanuel of “gaming the system.”

“Without city approval, [McCaffery] doesn’t get money . . . . If he’s a developer or a builder or somebody who has contracts with the city or not, he’s making money and it smells like undue influence on the process,” McCarthy said.

McCaffery flatly denied that his $35,000 contributi­on to the mayor was an example of pay-to-play politics. “I don’t have anything to pay for right now . . . . I’ve got all my projects underway,” he said.

“I think this mayor is doing a damned good job in a very tough environmen­t . . . And I don’t expect a thing in return.”

Four years ago, McCaffery contribute­d $66,000 to Emanuel’s re-election campaign months after the mayor and City Council signed off on his controvers­ial plan to redevelop the old Children’s Memorial Hospital site in Lincoln Park.

McCaffery said that contributi­on wasn’t pay-to-play politics and neither is this one.

In fact, he said he didn’t even know that the Plan Commission had approved his master plan for the Ickes site.

“I never look at that stuff. I’m happy to support the mayor. Look, you’re in the city. You want the city to work. You want people working hard to know that you appreciate they’re working hard. That’s all,” he said. “I really take strong exception to any even a hint of that. It’s not me. I don’t do that.”

Emanuel campaign spokespers­on Cara Brookens also rejected McCarthy’s pay-to-play charge and attempted to turn the tables.

“Nearly every dollar in Garry McCarthy’s coffers comes from Republican­s who helped catapult Donald Trump into the White House, and now they want a Republican running City Hall,’’ Brookens wrote in an email to the Chicago SunTimes. ‘‘We have no comment on McCarthy’s judgment when it comes to contributi­ons.”

 ?? COLIN BOYLE/SUN-TIMES ?? Former Police Supt. Garry McCarthy blasted Mayor Rahm Emanuel for accepting a $35,000 contributi­on from a developer, one day after the developer’s plan for the Harold Ickes Homes site was approved by the Chicago Plan Commission.
COLIN BOYLE/SUN-TIMES Former Police Supt. Garry McCarthy blasted Mayor Rahm Emanuel for accepting a $35,000 contributi­on from a developer, one day after the developer’s plan for the Harold Ickes Homes site was approved by the Chicago Plan Commission.

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