Chicago Sun-Times

MENDOZA RIPS DALEY ON METERS, TAKES JOB RETORT

- BY RACHEL HINTON, STAFF REPORTER rhinton@suntimes.com | @rrhinton

Susana Mendoza lit into rival mayoral hopeful Bill Daley on Monday for the city’s leasing of parking meters, accusing him of lying about his role in the unpopular privatizat­ion deal.

“It was good business for your family, but it was terrible business for Chicagoans,” Mendoza said, criticizin­g Daley for writing an oped defending the deal a year ago. “That’s about as big of a lie as you telling Chicagoans right now that you were not a key adviser to your brother during his key caretaker years as mayor. Of course you were.”

Daley fired back: “I obviously helped my brother get elected, I was his political adviser . . . . I had my own life, I went off and did a lot of things that had nothing to do with my brother and this administra­tion.”

Daley took his own dig at Mendoza, criticizin­g the state comptrolle­r for double-dipping, hold a city job in former Mayor Richard M. Daley’s administra­tion while serving in the Legislatur­e.

“So [for] Susana to say this, who worked for Rich while she was also a state rep . . . I never heard her complain,” Bill Daley said.

The fireworks came during a debate featuring five of the mayoral candidates on WTTW-Ch. 11.

The forum also included Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkl­e, businessma­n Willie Wilson and former CPS CEO Paul Vallas.

The candidates fielded questions on public safety, transporta­tion, infrastruc­ture and education in the second of three mayoral forums hosted by “Chicago Tonight.”

After Wilson answered no on all questions relating to implementi­ng taxes, moderator Phil Ponce asked if the businessma­n, who supported President Donald Trump and Gov. Bruce Rauner, was a Republican. Preckwinkl­e chimed in “yes.” “Let me tell you this here, if Republican­s are for lowering taxes on the citizens, I’m Republican, if Democrats are for lowering prices on the citizens, I’m a Democrat,” Wilson said. “Republican­s have good ideas, Democrats have good ideas, all must be included.”

But the most spirited exchanges were between Mendoza and Daley.

Daley has denied accusation­s from Mendoza and Vallas that he made money off the parking meter deal. Vallas held a news conference last week, arguing Daley was heavily involved in the 2008 deal as Midwest chairman of JP Morgan Chase.

Despite writing an op-ed piece last year arguing that the parking meter deal made good business sense, Daley said he didn’t advise his brother to go for the deal.

Mendoza also took a dig at Daley for questions surroundin­g a state exam to sell insurance that the former Commerce secretary took nearly half a century ago. Daley flunked on his first try and passed in 1973, facing accusation­s that friends of his father pulled strings.

Bill Daley denied any allegation­s of cheating.

“He said he didn’t cheat on his test, he let someone else cheat for his test,” Mendoza said. “This is how it works when you have the privilege and the name of a Daley, you don’t have to do things yourself, other people can do them for you.”

Ponce asked a series of rapidfire, yes-no questions.

All agreed on banning outside employment and giving the city’s inspector general subpoena powers, but Preckwinkl­e differed from the group, saying she didn’t agree with term limits for the city’s top office or others. She said the real issue, in indicted 14th Ward Ald. Ed Burke’s case and others, was dual employment.

“I think the first thing to know is I served with Ald. Ed Burke for almost 20 years, he was neither a friend nor an ally,” Preckwinkl­e said. “We were on divided votes, we were on opposite sides, I think the critical issue about Ed Burke is the dual employment issue.”

When asked if their voices could have appeared on recordings with Ald. Danny Solis, all answered no, though Mendoza said if she was recorded “it would be nothing that I would need to worry about.”

The state comptrolle­r also had to defend why she got married at Burke’s home in a small civil service officiated by Anne Burke, who she called a “role model of mine for many, many, many years.”

 ?? RACHEL HINTON/SUN-TIMES ?? Mayoral candidates (from left) Paul Vallas, Willie Wilson, Toni Preckwinkl­e, Bill Daley and Susana Mendoza prepare for a debate at WTTW-Ch. 11 on Monday.
RACHEL HINTON/SUN-TIMES Mayoral candidates (from left) Paul Vallas, Willie Wilson, Toni Preckwinkl­e, Bill Daley and Susana Mendoza prepare for a debate at WTTW-Ch. 11 on Monday.

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