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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Aspiring Chicago mayor has shot at winning

Community activist challenges Emanuel

Chicago mayoral candidate Jesus “Chuy” Garcia gives the victory sign Saturday while walking during the St. Patrick’s Day parade in Chicago. (Associated Press)
Sophia Tareen Associated Press

CHICAGO – Before he decided he wanted to become Chicago’s mayor, Jesus Garcia was best known as a mild-mannered activist and legislator who dropped by businesses in his Mexican-American neighborhood to talk to people about their problems and how he could help.

To neighbors and other pols, he was “Chuy,” a nickname that captured his informal style.

Now Garcia, 58, surprisingly has a shot at defeating incumbent Rahm Emanuel in a runoff election next month. And he’s under pressure to show that he’s more than a nice guy, and that his community-level resume translates into running a city with roughly 2.7 million people, serious financial problems and tensions over what sacrifices to make.

Garcia, who won 34 percent of the vote to finish second to Emanuel in the five-candidate first-round vote, presents a sharp contrast to his famous opponent. The hard-edged Emanuel, the former White House chief of staff and Democratic fundraiser, is backed by President Barack Obama and many of the city’s business leaders and has raised roughly $15 million in campaign funds.

Garcia, a county commissioner and former alderman and state senator, is a product of his neighborhood and his progressive activist past. He’s raised less than $2 million overall.

“I understand how the city functions. I relate to the daily realities that people experience in Chicago,” said Garcia, who has lived in the same brick house for decades in the densely populated Little Village neighborhood. “When he came to Chicago, Mayor Emanuel only had the experience of being a prolific money shoveler for a political party.”

This week, Emanuel turned up the heat on Garcia’s neighborhood ties, accusing him in television ads of making lavish promises and of having no solid plan for managing the city’s finances.

Garcia took up the issue Friday, unveiling a plan that was short on specifics but called for experts to review city agencies and for consolidating more services with county government. He wouldn’t address possible tax increases.

“After four months of studying for the final exam, Chuy Garcia is telling Chicago voters he will hand in his homework after graduation,” said Emanuel spokesman Steve Mayberry.

A poll published in Friday’s Chicago Tribune showed Emanuel with the support of 51 percent of registered voters to Garcia’s 37 percent. The margin of error was 3.7 percent.

The son of a farm laborer and factory worker, Garcia moved with his parents from the Mexican state of Durango as a boy. He was an activist at the University of Illinois at Chicago, organizing sit-ins for establishing a Latino cultural center. He later helped found community groups and served as a water commissioner.

In the state legislature, he was known for getting services for his Latino constituents and for making political alliances with black senators. He worked for better language assistance for non-English speakers at hospitals and nursing homes.

Garcia has picked up endorsements from the teachers union, the Rev. Jesse Jackson and African-American businessman Willie Wilson, the third-place finisher in February’s first-round election.

Garcia and his backers argue that he has budget expertise from his four years on the county board.

“It’s the cumulative that we’re talking about – his many years of service,” said Miguel del Valle, a former city clerk. “Chuy has more knowledge of the city and is more sensitive of issues affecting the entire city.”

Garcia’s candidacy has been lifted by the backlash over Emanuel’s budget tightening to close a roughly $300 million operating deficit.

Garcia has pledged to hire 1,000 more police officers, eliminate a widely criticized red-light camera system that has brought millions of dollars in revenue, and to “repurpose” some of the closed schools.

Emanuel’s business supporters say that would only worsen the fiscal problems.

The city faces pension payments that could balloon next year by half a billion dollars. Also looming is another round of contract negotiations with a teachers union that went on strike in 2012.