Chicago Sun-Times

Lightfoot’s knee-jerk firing of city’s labor negotiator was a needless flex

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Mayor Lori Lightfoot can’t be blamed if she was taken aback when the city’s longtime chief labor negotiator, attorney Jim Franczek, glowingly talked up Paul Vallas to veteran Sun-Times City Hall reporter Fran Spielman.

Sure, publicly calling Vallas a “clear choice” to lead Chicago could be seen as tacky and inappropri­ate since Franczek is still working for Lightfoot — although it’s not like he was praising her opponent, since she was eliminated in the first round of the mayoral race in February.

But no matter how much Franczek’s comments stung, the mayor’s response in giving him the pink slip strikes us as petty, especially given Franczek’s long track record with the city. The knee-jerk directive was also emblematic of why many voters and City Council members didn’t want Lightfoot, viewed as thin-skinned by a good chunk of folks, back at the helm for a second term.

On the night she lost her bid for reelection, veteran political strategist David Axelrod summarized that it was Lightfoot’s “uncompromi­sing nature” that cost her.

“... She favors the clenched fist over the outstretch­ed hand. And when you’re mayor, you need both,” Axelrod told Spielman. “She’s antagonize­d a lot of people, and those chickens are coming home to roost.”

Neither Franczek nor Lightfoot would comment. But a source told Spielman that a vacationin­g Lightfoot fired Franczek on Monday in retaliatio­n for the recent interview he gave on a Sun-Times podcast.

While some might see Franczek’s endorsemen­t as simply bad taste, it could be argued it was also unethical for him to discuss highly sensitive negotiatio­ns with the Fraternal Order of Police when Vallas served as an unpaid adviser for the union.

This week’s podcast wasn’t the first time Franczek showed his support for the former Chicago Public Schools CEO.

Illinois State Board of Election records show that Vallas’ campaign received a $1,000 contributi­on from Franczek on April 10, 2019 — weeks after Vallas was eliminated from the mayor’s race that year and just days after Lightfoot defeated Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkl­e in the runoff election.

Franczek has served under four mayors, and while his experience can be seen as an asset, it could also be time for him to finally hang up it.

But that should have been up to the next mayor to decide.

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Jim Franczek

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