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CHICAGO — Mayor Lori Lightfoot is the first to admit her bid for re-election will be far from smooth.
“There’s nine people on the ballot,” Lightfoot said in an interview with NBC News. “It’s impossible not to have a runoff.”
What’s appearing increasingly possible, however, is that Lightfoot will fail to make it even that far.
In Chicago’s municipal election, if a candidate fails to win a majority, then the top two vote-getters face off against each other in a second round of voting in April.
But with less than two weeks to the Feb. 28 election, the firecracker Democratic first-term mayor — who quickly brandished a national hate-hate relationship with conservatives — faces credible threats from at least three opponents in the nine-person race. Her unfavorables have soared with Chicagoans fed up with gun violence. In recent polling, she’s failed to break into the top two.
All that adds up to the stunning prospect that a sitting big-city mayor could be eliminated from re-election contention in the first round of voting.
“It’s looking harder and harder for her,” one of her competitors, Rep. Jesús “Chuy” Garcia, said in an interview. “It’s a hell of a front to be fighting on, from her vantage point.”
One recent poll has Lightfoot in a statistical dead heat with two others — Paul Vallas, a former CEO of Chicago Public Schools who has won the backing of Chicago’s Fraternal Order of Police, and Garcia, who has high name identification and who, in 2015, forced then-Mayor Rahm Emanuel into a runoff. Garcia lost but went on to get elected to Congress.
“I love people thinking of me as the underdog,” Lightfoot said. “I’ve been an underdog my whole life. And I’ve always proven people wrong, so I’m OK in that lane.”
Now Lightfoot is taking the battle to yet another candidate showing signs of surging: Brandon Johnson, a county commissioner who has the endorsement of the politically powerful Chicago Teachers Union, which has long been at odds with Lightfoot.
At a candidate forum last week, Lightfoot focused her attacks on Johnson, who has not led in polling in the way Garcia and Vallas have. It appeared to be an acknowledgment that she was battling with a surging candidate who ultimately could crowd her out from advancing to the next round.
“I take it as a sign of desperation,” Johnson said of Lightfoot’s attacks. Johnson’s support from the Chicago Teachers Union brings with it a strong, on-the-ground organization that can go door to door on his behalf. “She certainly recognizes that our movement is gaining steam, and more and more people are responding to our message.”
Lightfoot, the city’s first Black woman and first openly gay person to serve as mayor, has had a tenure marked by tumult. She’s clashed with the Chicago Teachers Union, which went on strike under her watch, and engaged in testy exchanges with both Gov. J.B. Pritzker and her fellow aldermen.
In 2021, a media organization sued the mayor after she announced she would grant interviews to mark her halfway point in office only with journalists of color. (At the time, the mayor said she was attempting to draw attention to a Chicago press corps that was overwhelmingly white and male.)
More recently, her campaign faced an investigation after it tried to recruit public school students to volunteer for her re-election effort in exchange for school credit.
She has been credited, including recently in a Chicago Tribune editorial, for grappling with the Covid pandemic “far better than most mayors.” The editorial also applauded her for improving Chicago’s financial condition. “Lightfoot has placed equity front and center of her agenda,” the editorial said, “and has worked tirelessly to improve the economic prospects of long-struggling neighborhoods.”
Lightfoot notes she has been counted out before. In her first run for mayor, she had such little support that at times she didn’t qualify for the debate stage. Garcia and Vallas have had their own stumbles of late. Garcia faced questions over donations from FTX’s Sam Bankman-Fried, and Vallas’ support from Chicago’s Fraternal Order of Police has dogged him, particularly amid news that Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis was scheduled to speak before the union on Monday.
Gun violence dominates the race
This time, given all that Lightfoot faces, it’s the inescapable issue of crime that permeates the Chicago mayor’s race and endangers her re-election chances.
Nationally, the Second City is instantaneously evoked after mass shootings, inserted into ideological clashes over gun laws that play out on cable news. City officials for years have pushed back on the notion that gun laws do little to stop crime. They say that despite local restrictions, guns gush over the border from states like Indiana, even from as far away as Mississippi, illegally landing in the hands of young people in and out of gangs. Despite federal and local law enforcement working to step up penalties and bring more aggressive cases, Chicago remains one of the most dangerous big cities in America — even though violence eased somewhat in 2022 compared with the previous year.
Locally, the pain and anger over repeated crime is palpable. At one of the mayor’s own recent events, the conversations breaking out in the preceding hour told tale after tale of neighborhood crimes: an armed robbery, a break-in, a theft, and included reports of shootings closer to their homes — the “safe neighborhoods” — on Chicago’s North Side
“I know for many of you, you’re feeling a touch of violence, maybe for the very first time in your lives in Chicago,” Lightfoot told the crowd, hoping to tamp down the questions she was sure to get about neighborhood safety.
Lightfoot turned her talk to the flow of weapons into the city, including her fight to take to court out-of-state gun shops.
“We warned them, we gave them the data and they kept doing it. So this old litigator?” she said, alluding to her past as a federal prosecutor. “We strapped it on and we sued these f—ers — pardon my language.”
That line roused the group of about 50 people on a Saturday afternoon in late January. But Lightfoot’s signature tough talk did little to allay their fears.
“I feel worse,” said one North Side Chicagoan who listened to the mayor’s remarks but didn’t want his name used. “I still don’t think she gets it.”
Chicagoan Greg O’Neil, who helped host the event at Moe’s Cantina in the Wrigleyville neighborhood on the city’s North Side and hadn’t decided on a mayoral pick, said the number one concern he’s heard is of a recent spike in neighborhood crime, and an overall feeling of unease among friends and neighbors. Some of those with him shared those concerns.
“When you’re paying $20,000 in property taxes and there’s an armed robbery at 1 o’clock in the afternoon in your neighborhood, people feel that 20 grand isn’t getting your money’s worth,” said one.
“It’s moving into the affluent areas, we’ve become a target,” said another.
“People who are streetwise, from my point of view, are absolutely petrified. And they are moving,” said yet another.
One recent poll showed 63% of Chicagoans didn’t feel safe.
And one of those was Eddie Pulliam, who traveled from the city’s South Side to listen to Lightfoot that afternoon, and spoke of the deterioration of his neighborhood over time.
“I just wish that she would make more of an emphasis to see what’s happening in well-established neighborhoods on the South Side of Chicago,” said Pulliam. “I’m very upset with the crime in the city of Chicago. The thing that frustrates me is now crime started happening on the North Side, and now it’s a big deal.”
In an interview, Lightfoot said Chicago’s persistent crime is different from that of other cities. The generational poverty in parts of Chicago combines with fractured gangs, she explained, and all of that is exacerbated by the steady flow of illegal weapons.
“The biggest issue and the existential threat for us in the city is a proliferation of illegal guns,” she said. She then hit Vallas, her opponent, saying he’s oversimplifying the problem to believe that hiring more police officers will fix the issue.
Vallas, also a previous city of Chicago budget director, built his campaigns around the crime issue, like many of Lightfoot’s opponents.
‘Pressure packed job’
While Garcia has held onto a polling lead, Vallas, too has gained momentum in the closing weeks, including winning the endorsement of the Chicago Tribune, which said Lightfoot was “reluctant to see this moment as time for any kind of leadership reboot.”
After an event for seniors near Chicago’s South Side this week, Vallas said his plan to attack crime includes investing in the city’s South and West Sides — where some of the worst crime traditionally occurs — and adding occupational training. But he believes that officer shortages in some of the most dangerous precincts is the most pressing concern.
“There’s absolutely no substitution for providing the police department with the resources and the support they need so that they can protect communities and what you see is the significant degrading of the police department,” he said in an interview.
In a lighter moment, Vallas recalled backing Lightfoot in her first bid for mayor and watching her transformation.
“It’s an extraordinarily pressure-packed job,” Vallas said. “It will take its toll on anyone. I can tell, I can hear the stress in her voice. So I keep telling people, let’s run positive. Let’s talk about issues and try not to talk about anyone else.”
This article was originally published on NBCNews.com
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