Chicago Sun-Times

New mayor will need a diverse coalition to move Chicago forward

- MARC H. MORIAL Marc H. Morial is president and CEO of the National Urban League. He served as mayor of New Orleans from 1994 to 2002 and is a graduate of the University of Pennsylvan­ia and the Georgetown University Law Center.

As a former big-city mayor, I’m endlessly intrigued by local politics and the personalit­ies and events that shape them. Having served as president of the U.S. Conference of Mayors, there are some issues that are common to all 1,400+ cities I represente­d, and some that are unique to one city alone.

As Chicago draws nearer to its mayoral runoff on April 4, Paul Vallas and Brandon Johnson are navigating many of the same issues I confronted in New Orleans two decades ago, and many of the same issues facing the hundreds of communitie­s, large and small, that we serve in the Urban League movement.

In meeting these challenges, I turn to the examples of my mentors — chief among them, the legendary Chicago Mayor Harold Washington. In the spring of my third year in law school, Washington had just defied a powerful local party machine to beat incumbent

Jane Byrne in the Democratic primary. The impending general campaign against a popular liberal Republican promised to be historic, and I could not wait to be a part of it.

I had already learned a lot from the historic mayoral campaigns of my father, Ernest “Dutch” Morial. Even though my father had years of grounding in the Black community through his work with the Urban League, the NAACP and other civil rights organizati­ons, my father knew he could not win — and more importantl­y, govern — without a diverse, multicultu­ral coalition of support.

It was this same broad-minded, forward-thinking approach that attracted me to Washington’s campaign, and kept me riveted to his example after I returned to law school and then launched my own career in public service.

Washington’s devotion to what I would later call the “gumbo” method of governance — the fusion of cultures that creates a masterpiec­e — did not endear him to everyone. Some of his Black supporters argued, if white mayors favored white citizens, why shouldn’t Washington favor Blacks?

Instead, as historian Gordon K. Mantler writes in the recently released The Multiracia­l Promise: Harold Washington’s Chicago and the Democratic Struggle in Reagan’s America: ”The Washington moment and movement showed how Black, Latino, and progressiv­e white activists, when working together, could reshape politics and policy in U.S. cities.”

Openness, ethics, transforma­tion As one of his first acts as mayor, Washington issued a Freedom of Informatio­n Act order, setting a tone for openness and transparen­cy for which his tenure still is remembered. He bolstered the rights of renters with the Residentia­l Landlord and Tenant Ordinance. He establishe­d the first “sanctuary city” in the Midwest, barring city department­s from cooperatin­g with federal immigratio­n officials. By executive order, he establishe­d an ethics code for public officials.

Washington’s historic campaigns dramatical­ly transforme­d the electoral equation in Chicago, placing Blacks and Latinos at the very center of political power for the first time. But he went further: He found a new way to govern. His all-too-short time in office dramatical­ly transforme­d the workings of City Hall, shattering the walls of exclusion that kept people of color on the margins. His agenda for reform establishe­d a dynamic vision for the future that has endured even when some of his reforms did not.

It may be hard to see a way forward in an era where politician­s, eager to weaponize racial grievance, stoop to mocking racial diversity and inclusion and twist the word “woke” into a term of derision.

But the politics of division is a recipe for disaster. It is a welltrodde­n road that can only take us backwards.

The convergenc­e of cultures in New Orleans transforme­d a humble fish stew into gumbo and the spirituals of the plantation into jazz. The same cultural alchemy transforme­d a humble Vienna sausage into the world’s greatest hot dog and the music of the Mississipp­i Delta into Chicago blues. Under Washington, it transforme­d a petty patronage machine staffed with cronies and ward heelers into a team of experts and visionarie­s.

The next mayor won’t take Chicago back to the days of Washington. But the next mayor must move forward with that same spirit of innovation and optimism, with faith that the convergenc­e of cultures will produce something new, and better, than we’ve ever seen before.

 ?? TYLER PASCIAK LARIVIERE/SUN-TIMES ?? Mayoral candidates Brandon Johnson (left) and Paul Vallas (right) shake hands before a mayoral debate at WLS-TV ABC Channel 7.
TYLER PASCIAK LARIVIERE/SUN-TIMES Mayoral candidates Brandon Johnson (left) and Paul Vallas (right) shake hands before a mayoral debate at WLS-TV ABC Channel 7.
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