Wednesday, April 17, 2024

Unfortunately, after two in a row, this has become necessary



Petition drive launched to give Chicago voters power to recall mayor
If Daniel Boland’s petition drive collects 56,464 valid signatures by Aug. 5, the question could go on the November ballot. But that would just give Chicago voters the power to remove a mayor via recall, which they don’t now have.
By Fran Spielman
Apr 17, 2024, 1:28pm CDT





Mayor Brandon Johnson delivers his inaugural address on May 15, 2023. Not a year later, a Lake View man has launched a long-shot effort to give voters the option to recall him before his four-year term is up.

Mayor Brandon Johnson has his hands full with the migrant crisis, a persistent robbery surge, negotiations on a new teachers’ contract and an increasingly restive City Council. Now, he faces another potential, but much smaller, headache: a recall.

A former technology salesman who lives in Lake View has formed a political action committee to raise money and at least begin the formidable challenge of putting a binding referendum on the Nov. 5 ballot asking Chicago voters whether they want the power to recall their mayor.

Daniel Boland said the recall effort is about “helping and empowering” the people of Chicago — not about “hurting” Johnson. But he acknowledged he’s disappointed with the mayor’s performance.

“Just the crime. People can’t go out and even go to the grocery store without getting mugged. People can’t sell their tamales out on the street without getting accosted by people who are armed. These armed juvenile thugs. That’s one reason that just put it over the top for me,” Boland, 58, said Wednesday.

“Really, the thing that motivated me more than anything else was when the mayor had a meeting scheduled with your editorial board at the Sun-Times and then canceled it because you wouldn’t go off the record. I thought that just violated every principle of honor and integrity.”

The mountain confronting Boland will not be easy to climb.

To get a recall referendum on the November ballot, he needs at least 56,464 valid signatures by Aug. 5. If it gets on the ballot, and the question is approved in November, Chicagoans would be empowered to recall any present or future mayor.

But Johnson still wouldn’t be removed. Boland would have to launch yet another petition drive, collecting at least 122,503 valid signatures . If he clears that hurdle, Chicago voters would be empowered to recall Johnson in the next regularly scheduled election — March 2026.
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Boland predicted an effort to recall Johnson stands a good chance. He pointed to recent public opinion polls showing Johnson’s approval rating in the 20% range and to the defeat of the mayor’s binding “Bring Chicago Home” referendum that would have authorized the City Council to raise the transfer tax on high-end real estate transactions to combat homelessness.

“People got sold a bad bill of goods. Didn’t Mayor Johnson run on a platform of transparency and accountability? If he’s not doing either one of those things, he’s not doing his job and we’re gonna hold him accountable to that. This is a wake-up call for him,” Boland said.

“It’s apparent that he’s owned by the CTU. We want to make him accountable. We want him to cut the strings and stop being a puppet for the CTU and for [Toni Preckwinkle], the Cook County Board president.”

Johnson’s political director Christian Perry said the mayor is “not concerned” about the recall effort. He’s “laser-focused on delivering for the working-class people of Chicago,” Perry said.

“Mayor Brandon Johnson represents a movement of people who’ve been fighting against the status-quo for some time…This is another attempt from folks who do not want to see working class families and democratic ideals be successful in the city of Chicago,” Perry added.

“I don’t know this gentleman [Boland]. I still have to do my research. I don’t know who is involved in propping this up. We’re still researching that. … [But] we are not concerned.”

In discussing the recall effort, Boland repeatedly used the word “we.”

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Pressed to identify his cohorts, he mentioned Cherie Travis, Chicago’s former commissioner of Animal Care and Control, and Andrea Raila, a former candidate for Cook County assessor.

Boland also said he got pivotal help in “how to do this” from former Illinois Gov. Pat Quinn, who led the drive to empower Illinois voters to recall their governor, a referendum that passed by a 2-to-1 margin.

“I got it done. I was the one. I believe in this. … I believe in the power of recall. I have a lot of credibility on this, having done it for governor and been the governor,” Quinn said.

And though he knows the task Boland faces is “daunting,” he argued, it’s “not insurmountable.”

The former governor advised Johnson to embrace the recall referendum and not be threatened by it.

“Having a recall amendment on the city law books is an accountability device,” Quinn said. “Recall isn’t always used as much as it informs the incumbent that they are accountable to the voters — not just on election day, but 365 days a year.”

10 comments:

  1. Anonymous4/17/2024

    I would like to sign this petition. Enough is enough. How can I sign?

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  2. Anonymous4/17/2024

    I agree and he should be recalled!!

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  3. Anonymous4/17/2024

    Where & how can I sign a petition prepared by Daniel Boland?

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  4. Anonymous4/18/2024

    The crime rate is high in black communities in certain cities because parents are not raising their children properly. Shoplifting is higher than ever because it is controlled by organized crime leaders who sell stolen goods online. Those leaders are hiring youngsters to do the stealing.

    Many schools in black communities are in dire need of qualified STEM teachers and have created a high dropout rate that adds to the high crime. The solution is to hire STEM professionals on a contract basis to train the students because they have a right to receive a high quality education in Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics to prepare them for employment in that field. Accounting majors are also in demand which high schools should continue teaching students.

    Migrants students should be required to learn English by enrolling in night schools, special tutoring programs, self help with the internet, student tutors, and so on because it is unrealistic to expect teachers to rush to college to get trained to speak and teach Spanish and French to migrants who refuse to learn English.

    Our government is allowing migrants to enter this country illegally, therefore the same government should provide funds to support the millions of illegals.

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  5. Anonymous4/18/2024

    Where do I sign

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  6. Anonymous4/18/2024

    Where do we sign the petition ? Our City deserves better!!!

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  7. Anonymous4/18/2024

    This effort must be broadcasted to all the Chicago communities who are tired, fed up, and neglected by work or lack thereof from this Mayor. Chicago was not in this bad of a condition with past Mayors. Everyone who cares should spread the word so that everyone is aware that you shouldn't have to put up with this and that you can have a voice now do turn this around and that you will have a voice in the future if this happens again. And the sooner those 56,000 signatures are collected, the better the awareness will be and will give this Mayor a wake up call that Chicago will no longer put up with this.

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  8. Anonymous4/18/2024

    My entire family would like to sign!! Enough with the non-sense !!

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  9. Anonymous4/18/2024

    https://recallthisfall.com/
    Site to pull down the petition and additional details included.

    ReplyDelete
  10. Anonymous4/20/2024

    The mayor has to serve all people in the city and if recalled, the next mayor will have the same responsibilities.

    Chicago is a major city with over 9 million people, a population of 35.9 percent Whites, Hispanics of 29.8 percent, Blacks of 29.2 percent, Asians of 7 percent, and so on as of 2020. The population of Spanish speaking people is growing each day while the Black numbers are declining.

    People must work together to make Chicago a great city by self education because there is a shortage of highly qualified teachers. There is a shortage of doctors which requires people to self educate how to provide nutrition to prevent illnesses, how to eat to prevent dementia, how to eat to live longer, how to eat to have great memory for learning, and so on. Parents need to learn how to raise their children while trying to devote their time to their careers because children cannot raise themselves.

    The world has changed and people have to learn how to change with the world by educating themselves. Be your own teacher, your own doctor, your own leader.

    ReplyDelete