Chicago Sun-Times

BLUE STATE BONAFIDES, PROXIMITY WILL BE THE FOCUS OF CHICAGO’S BID FOR 2024 DEM CONVENTION

- BY LYNN SWEET AND TINA SFONDELES Staff Reporters

The Sun-Times has learned the bid for Chicago to host the 2024 Democratic National Convention — due May 27 — will tout the proximity of hotels to convention venues, restaurant­s and tourist spots — the multiple spaces for events in addition to the United Center — and how Illinois, a blue state surrounded by red states, is the living embodiment of Democratic policies and programs.

The convention will be sometime during the 2024 summer, with the date not set. Sen. Tammy Duckworth, a DNC vice chair; Gov. J.B. Pritzker and Mayor Lori Lightfoot have been working on the city’s bid for months.

The entity created to fundraise for the convention, Developmen­t Now Chicago, was incorporat­ed with the Illinois secretary of state on Dec. 2, 2021.

Pritzker, a billionair­e, made a substantia­l contributi­on to the host committee. On May 10, another major Democratic donor, chairman and CEO of GCM Grosvenor Michael Sacks and his wife, Cari, are hosting an event with Pritzker and Lightfoot for potential donors and labor and business leaders.

The Request for Proposal the Democratic National Committee sent to Chicago said the city would need to accommodat­e 50,000 participan­ts — with the DNC alone needing a block of 15,000 hotel rooms for delegates, party officials, high-end donors and President Joe Biden, Vice President Kamala Harris, Cabinet members, Secret Service and White House staff.

Pritzker told the Sun-Times, “You want to have your convention in a place where our Democratic values are on full display. And this is a state that’s protected voting rights, that’s pro-choice, that’s pro-workers rights, and I think that gives us a leg up against any other responder to the RFP and any other city.”

Lightfoot said, “We are very well positioned, given the number of options that we have here in the city. So ultimately, we’re going to give them a menu of options and proposals that they can pick from them.”

The bid will also stress how accessible Chicago — in the center of the nation — is by car, plane and train. A very strong selling point of Chicago — with 50,000 hotel rooms within the city — is unlike other convention cities — where participan­ts may face horrendous commutes from hotels to convention events — the event venues, restaurant­s, tourist attraction­s, even the Cubs and Sox stadiums are all close to downtown.

Duckworth said in other Democratic convention cities, “Philadelph­ia, or Charlotte, or Denver, you were schlepping between places, or it’s hard to get between places. And I think it’ll be really important to show how easy it is to move people around the city and how accessible everything is. That’ll be one of the things that I want to highlight.”

Pritzker, Lightfoot and Duckworth in separate interviews on Monday told the SunTimes:

The bid will provide the DNC with menus of multiple options for using not only the United Center but — and this is not the complete list — McCormick Place, the Wintrust Arena, Navy Pier, Soldier Field and the Museum Campus.

Because of COVID, the 2020 Democratic convention in Milwaukee was mostly virtual. Pritzker said the bid will include proposals for staging the convention as a virtual as well as an in-person event.

In the end, Biden’s team will choose the host city. Duckworth said she intends to personally pitch Biden and first lady Jill. Lightfoot spoke to DNC chair Jamie Harrison last Friday, when she was in D.C. Pritzker said he talked Chicago up with Biden during a White House visit last year. Democratic Party of Illinois Chair Rep. Robin Kelly said she promoted Chicago as the host city with Harrison.

Lightfoot, Duckworth and Pritzker have been involved in raising seed money for the host committee. Pritzker said he made a donation, not revealing the amount.

The city and state will be expected to cover some costs for police and troopers and firefighte­r overtime.

Pritzker, asked about taxpayer expenses, said, “We have a lot of convention­s as you know that come to the city of Chicago. We’ve had major gatherings, internatio­nal and national, in the city of Chicago, and I wouldn’t expect that the expenditur­e by the city would be any more than any of those.”

Lightfoot, asked about the use of taxpayer money said, there will be “some city investment­s. It’s too early for us to specify what those are. But, you know, like any events that we have here of any size, whether it’s Lollapaloo­za, whether it’s sporting events, this is a team sport, no pun intended. So we’ve got to make sure that we step up and we do our part as well.”

Jason O’Malley, the lead fundraiser for the Philadelph­ia 2016 Host Committee, is raising money for the Chicago 2024 Host Committee, hired by Magnify Strategies, the top consultant for Chicago’s DNC bid. Pritzker chief of staff Anne Caprara met with DNC Executive Director Sam Cornale and Finance Director Michael Pratt in Chicago on Thursday.

 ?? AP FILE ?? Then-Vice President Al Gore and wife Tipper wave from the stage of the Democratic National Convention at the United Center on Aug. 28, 1996.
AP FILE Then-Vice President Al Gore and wife Tipper wave from the stage of the Democratic National Convention at the United Center on Aug. 28, 1996.

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