logo
Mayor Brandon Johnson again faces thorny politics of picking Zoning chair, other council appointments

Mayor Brandon Johnson again faces thorny politics of picking Zoning chair, other council appointments

Chicago Tribune18-07-2025
As the departure of Ald. Walter Burnett leaves Mayor Brandon Johnson with the challenge of picking his third Zoning Committee chair, the City Council's Black and Latino caucuses have already begun jockeying for the highly coveted leadership spot.
Burnett, often dubbed the 'dean' of the council as its most tenured member, will step down at the end of July, vacating both his committee chairmanship and role as Johnson's vice mayor. The Zoning appointment has been one of the freshman mayor's biggest political conundrums throughout the first two years of his term, and his next choice is expected to make waves in a council where racial politics remain an undercurrent.
To that end, the heads of both the Black and Latino caucuses are calling for the chairmanship to go to one of their members. And vice chair Ald. Bennett Lawson, who is white, has expressed interest in the permanent role too.
Johnson, for his part, would not say on Wednesday where his inclinations lie.
'Look, the most important thing here is that we have someone who … reflects my values,' he told reporters when asked if the Black Caucus should retain the Zoning chair spot. 'We'll go through a process, like we've always gone through, and the person that best reflects our ability to build the safest, most affordable big city in America … I feel very confident that we'll find the right person.'
Latino Caucus chair Ald. Andre Vasquez confirmed Thursday he is interested in seeking the Zoning appointment, pending consensus among caucus members. The progressive critic of the mayor sought the candidacy a year ago too, but Johnson tapped his close ally Ald. Byron Sigcho-Lopez instead.
That decision created one of the mayor's biggest political problems within the council during that time. For months, Sigcho-Lopez struggled to garner support from aldermen who complained he was too divisive to hold the powerful role. By September — after nine months of Lawson serving as the interim chair — Johnson tapped Burnett instead, a pick that sailed through without controversy.
However, the mayor had promised the spot to the Latino Caucus back when he planned to install Sigcho-Lopez. Vasquez said the time is now for the caucus to seek the Zoning role back.
'We feel like there's been a lack of representation, and actually a loss of representation,' Vasquez said. 'I'm happy to serve in that capacity. … If we're looking at the leadership of the city and it being represented in the committee chairs, there's opportunities for the Latino Caucus to grow rather than feel like it's lost a seat or remained the same.'
Out of City Council's 20 committees, 10 are chaired by members of the Black Caucus while six are headed by Latino Caucus members. The remaining four are led by white aldermen. Though these appointments require council approval, they are traditionally up to the mayor's discretion and play out behind closed doors in a political arena where various factions attempt to curry favor with the administration.
Ald. Stephanie Coleman, head of the Black Caucus, confirmed to the Tribune on Wednesday she 'absolutely' expects the Zoning chair position to go to one of her members.
'Just as our City Council reflects the diversity of our great city, leadership should as well,' Coleman said.
Asked to respond to the Latino Caucus's argument that it used to control that role under Johnson's first Zoning chair, former Ald. Carlos Ramirez-Rosa, Coleman responded, 'Well, the operative word was 'used' to be.'
Ramirez-Rosa stepped down from leading the Zoning Committee in November 2023 amid a furor over bullying accusations from four colleagues including Ald. Emma Mitts, the council's current longest-serving Black woman. He has denied the allegations.
Later that month, Ramirez-Rosa avoided a historic censure thanks to Johnson's tie-breaker vote, but not before the episode cast open bitter divisions within the body along racial lines. Mitts, who ultimately voted against formally punishing Ramirez-Rosa, said on the council floor 'I felt like I was back in the South.'
As for whom the Black Caucus plans to recommend to head Zoning now, Coleman sidestepped a question Wednesday on whether she was interested in the role.
So did Ald. Greg Mitchell, who two sources said was seeking support to be Johnson's next Zoning chair. 'I can neither confirm nor deny that,' he said Wednesday.
Meanwhile Lawson, who has spent over a year trying to shepherd through the council a stalled ordinance that would legalize 'granny flats' and coach houses in Chicago, signaled his interest too. He added he would no longer be willing to serve as interim Zoning chair.
'I think it would be dishonest to say no,' Lawson said when asked if he wants the permanent appointment. 'I think I do a good job. … I understand it's a lot more than that that goes into it, so I'm also realistic.'
Whoever Johnson's next Zoning chair appointment may be, it is likely to trigger a musical chairs of sorts among other committee assignments, too. Vasquez is currently chair of the Immigration Committee, while Mitchell heads the Transportation Committee. Meanwhile, Burnett's exit also leaves open the vice mayor role, which is largely symbolic but does come with a shiny $430,000 budget for additional staff.
Two sources told the Tribune that if Vasquez were to vacate the Immigration Committee chair, Ald. Ruth Cruz would be interested in taking over, while Ald. Mike Rodriguez hopes to be Johnson's pick for the next vice mayor. But if Mitchell were to clinch Zoning, Vasquez would seek the Transportation Committee post, sources said, so that the Latino Caucus would gain a chairmanship seat regardless.
Cruz and Rodriguez declined to comment on Thursday.
Delmarie Cobb, a Chicago-based political strategist, argued that whatever course Johnson takes leaves little room for either the Black or Latino caucus to object compared to previous eras in City Council. But she did suggest the mayor 'spread the wealth' by taking these vacancies as a chance to extend an olive branch to some of his detractors in the council.
'If he reached out to Walter Burnett, who certainly was not a progressive by any means, any stretch of the imagination, he can do the same to some of these other detractors,' Cobb said. 'I don't think the Latino Caucus has a lot to complain about. I don't think the Black Caucus has a lot to complain about. I think he's been very equal for the most part.'
Vasquez, however, noted his caucus has sounded the alarm on Latino representation within Johnson's administration and leadership appointments before and sees the upcoming committee chair reshuffling as a chance to even the playing field.
'I do think it's unfortunate given the history of Chicago, where everything's been so segregated and communities of color and vulnerable communities have felt like they've had to fight for every bit of representation … you see a little bit more of that tension along racial lines,' Vasquez said. 'But if you recognize how the city has been built and an understanding of it, I think it's incumbent upon us to work past those things.'
The Zoning Committee controls critical legislation related to development and other land use issues in Chicago. That makes the mayor's chairmanship selection a weighty one in a City Council where aldermanic prerogative — the de facto practice of deferring to the presiding alderman when it comes to projects within their ward — continues to reign supreme.
It also has landed former chairs in hot water. Former Ald. Danny Solis, Zoning chair for a decade, famously wore a wire on his colleagues after being implicated in taking bribes while controlling that committee.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Adams trashes $14 M NYC Council-approved law to provide free garbage bins: 'Ax to grind'
Adams trashes $14 M NYC Council-approved law to provide free garbage bins: 'Ax to grind'

New York Post

time7 hours ago

  • New York Post

Adams trashes $14 M NYC Council-approved law to provide free garbage bins: 'Ax to grind'

NYC homeowners might not be getting the free garbage cans the City Council promised – as legislators and Mayor Eric Adams literally fight over trash. Adams revealed this week he won't sign off on $14.5 million in taxpayer dough to give away hundreds of thousands of specially secure bins to New Yorkers as part of his war on NYC rats. The bins are supposed to go to owners of one- and two-family homes with the city refunding those who already purchased them, provided they are enrolled in the state's School Tax Relief (STAR) program. The giveaway was supposed to begin Friday under legislation sponsored by Yusef Salaam (D-Manhattan) that the Council unanimously approved in February with a veto-proof majority. 3 Mayor Eric Adams is snubbing a new law that is supposed to provide owners of one- and two-family home with city-issued bins. Instead, Council members this week were told to come up with the $14.5 million on their own — enough to cover about 265,000 one-and two family households, by NYC Independent Budget Office estimates. The City Council has its own taxpayer-funded budget that it uses to pay staff, fund pet projects in their district and for other initiatives. It was the latest salvo fired in an ongoing feud between the city's executive and legislative branches, which also this week included Adams vetoing a City Council measure that would have blocked Bally's from opening a Bronx casino and another that would decriminalize illegal vending. 3 'The mayor has an ax to grind,' said Council Minority Leader Joann Ariola (R-Queens). Ron Sachs – CNP for NY Post A vast majority of NYC property owners will be required to use city-issued bins with secure lids by June 2026. They range in cost from $43.88 for 25-gallon containers to $53.01 to 45-gallon bins — a tab the Council believes should be picked up by the city for many New Yorkers. Reps for the mayor said the Council should have addressed the bill's funding before agreeing last month on a new $115.9 billion budget for this fiscal year – especially since Adams previously complained the trash-bin giveaway plan was fiscally irresponsible. But Adams has an obligation to abide by the new law, and the Council believed the money for the bins was covered by $32 million of permanent new funding he set aside for the Department of Sanitation to keep NYC clean, some members said. 'The mayor has an ax to grind … This was never supposed to be funded by the City Council,' said Council Minority Leader Joann Ariola (R-Queens). '[Adams] is putting up the middle-finger to middle-class taxpayers.' 3 The trash-bin giveaway was supposed to begin Friday under legislation sponsored by Yusef Salaam (D-Manhattan) Matthew McDermott 'Homeowners in the STAR program are predominantly seniors and one of the most vulnerable groups in the city. That's why the … legislation to provide free garbage bins to these residents was so important,' said Councilwoman Lynn Schulman (D-Queens). 'The city must take care of its most precious constituents.' Salaam did not return messages. Liz Garcia, an Adams spokeswoman, said 'it is unfortunate that the City Council irresponsibly passed an unfunded law and then did not prioritize funding for it during our recent budget negotiations.' 'We will continue to work to provide the most affordable options to New Yorkers and send the rats packing out of our city,' Garcia said.

GOP success with new Texas House map could hinge on Latino voters: ANALYSIS

time7 hours ago

GOP success with new Texas House map could hinge on Latino voters: ANALYSIS

With encouragement from President Donald Trump and the White House, Texas Republicans are redrawing their congressional map to create five new districts the GOP could flip next year, in a bid to insulate their House majority. But that outcome could hinge on Latino voters, and whether Trump's reshaping of the Hispanic electorate in 2024 carries into the next election cycle. Last November, Trump carried 48% of Hispanic voters, setting a high-water mark for a Republican presidential ticket that also won the popular vote. Trump's 2024 showing was 12 points better than 2020, when he lost Hispanic voters 61% to 36% to former President Joe Biden, according to polling by the Pew Research Center. Four of the new Texas seats would be majority-Hispanic districts, adding one more to the state's total. Two of those seats are in South Texas, and represented by Democratic Reps. Vicente Gonzalez and Henry Cuellar, who both narrowly won reelection in 2024. Both districts, which Trump carried in 2024, would become more Republican under the redrawn district lines. For conservatives, some experts say the 2024 election represented a paradigm shift, and a fundamental realignment of Latino voters towards the Republican Party, and its positions on the economy, immigration and culture."It's been both an embrace of the alignment of the Republican Party and a rejection of how different they are with what the Democratic Party has been trying to push on them," said Daniel Garza, the president of the Libre Initiative, a group in the Koch family's conservative political network that focuses on Hispanic outreach. Democrats concede that the new map does create challenges for them. But they point to historical trends that show midterm voters traditionally rejecting the party in power -- and an electorate showing frustration with Trump's tariff policies and the state of the economy. Matt Barreto, a Democratic pollster who worked for the Biden and Harris campaigns, has analyzed Texas voting data from every election cycle since 2016, testifying in the federal trial challenging Texas' existing map based on the 2020 census. "There was a Trump-only effect with Hispanics in 2020 and 2024, and it is the case that he improved his standing [in both cycles]," Barreto told ABC News. "It was not transferred to other Republican candidates on the ballot." Barreto said that Republicans did not see the same gains with Latino voters in 2018, when Trump was not on the ballot, and Democratic Senate candidate Beto O'Rourke lost to Sen. Ted Cruz by less than 3 percentage points – the tightest Senate margin in Texas in decades. In fact, one of the new districts proposed by Republicans in Texas this week would have voted for O'Rourke, according to an analysis from the University of Virginia's Center for Politics. "We're already going into a midterm where Republicans will be facing brutal headwinds over inflation, tariffs, Medicaid cuts and ICE raids," Barreto said. "It is extremely risky for Texas Republicans to assume that in a midterm election when Trump is not on ballot and there is an anti-incumbent mood, that they are going to come anywhere close to Trump 2024 numbers." Garza, who lives in South Texas, suggested that Trump's immigration and deportation agenda would not hurt him next November. "Latinos, we feel you can do both. You can do border security and we can expand legal channels. Where's that person, where's that party? Nowhere to be found," he said. "So they're going to stick with Trump because they'd rather have this than what you offered under Biden." Mike Madrid, a Republican political operative who wrote a book on Latino voters and co-founded the anti-Trump Lincoln Project, told ABC News that Latino voters have made a "rightward shift" away from the Democratic Party because of concerns about the economy. "There has been a rightward shift. There's no question about that. But is it a racial realignment?" he said. "This is an emergence of an entirely different vote. Most of these Latinos that are showing these more pro-Republican propensities are under the age of 30. There isn't even a vote history long enough to suggest that something is realigning." "They're not going to vote through a traditional racial and ethnic lens," he added. "First and foremost, they're an economic, aspirational middle-class voter that is voting overwhelmingly on economic concerns." Both parties will still have their work cut out for them, more than a year out from the midterms. And with Texas, and potentially other states, changing their maps to maximize partisan gains, Republicans and Democrats are redoubling efforts to identify candidates that can run competitive localized races in their districts. Trump's approval rating has dropped to 37%, the lowest of his term, according to Gallup, and he's lost ground this month in approval of his handling of a range of domestic issues, but it's too early for operatives and lawmakers to say if the environment will break Democrats' way. "I think a lot of my fellow Democrats think this is going to be a wave year," one member of Congress said this week. "That, to me, has not borne out yet." Whichever way it breaks, if the maps in Texas are approved, Republicans will have a larger bulwark against a potential midterm tide -- as long as they can keep their 2024 coalition engaged.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store