INDICTED ALD. AUSTIN RESIGNS AS LEADER OF CONTRACTS COMMITTEE
One day after Mayor Lori Lightfoot demanded it, indicted Ald. Carrie Austin (34th) resigned Tuesday as chairman of the City Council’s Committee on Contracting Oversight and Equity.
“I have always attempted to be loyal to the mayors whom I served, as well as work to achieve resources for my community over the last 28 years,” Austin was quoted as saying in a statement issued just minutes before she was scheduled to chair a subject matter hearing on the mayor’s plan to extend Chicago’s construction set-aside program until December 2027 and dramatically alter its eligibility requirements.
“I remain committed to work hard on behalf of my community and citizens across this city.”
Austin will remain as alderman but is widely expected not to seek re-election in 2023. She might even resign before then to give her replacement a leg up in that election — if she can persuade the mayor to name her choice as her replacement.
Earlier this week, Lightfoot left no doubt she wanted Austin to step down as chairwoman before the newly created committee holds a pivotal vote on the set-aside program.
“I’ve been very clear from the beginning of my time as mayor. I think it’s virtually impossible for an alderman to be able to fulfill their responsibilities to their ward and residents who are in need, particularly now, when they have the sword of Damocles hanging over their head. And that is a federal indictment,” the mayor said
Lightfoot created the Committee on Contracting and Oversight — and chose Austin to chair it — to line up the 26 votes she needed for her City Council reorganization.
It happened after the mayor dumped Austin as chairman of the City Council’s powerful Budget Committee and replaced Chicago’s second most senior alderman with Ald. Pat Dowell (3rd), one of Lightfoot’s closest City Council allies.
The always-outspoken Austin initially said she wasn’t interested in a “consolation prize” before accepting it and becoming one of Lightfoot’s most reliable City Council votes.
Austin has pleaded not guilty to charges that she took home-improvement bribes — including new kitchen cabinets and granite countertops — from a developer seeking her help in navigating a project through the City Hall bureaucracy. She is also accused of lying to FBI agents who sought to question her about the perks.
It’s not clear who will replace Austin as chairman when the committee finally gets around to voting on the six-year extension. The vice chair is Ald. David Moore (17th), a political maverick who fought the mayor tooth-and-nail on the plan to rename Lake Shore Drive in honor of Jean Baptiste Point DuSable.