Chicago Democrats bicker about sanctuary status as the city falls apart
Zachary Faria
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Chicago’s choice to endorse illegal immigration as a sanctuary city now has local Democrats warring with each other over whether they should let residents vote on that status.
The Chicago City Council convened a special meeting, with some members pushing to let voters decide the city’s sanctuary status in a referendum during the March 19 elections. Mayor Brandon Johnson was against leaving that up to the voters, and aldermen who backed Johnson fought against the move, even turning out the lights at one point after declaring there weren’t enough members present.
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Alderman Ray Lopez called the opposition to the vote “despicable,” while Alderman Carlos Ramirez-Rosa said that Chicago’s sanctuary status had nothing to do with illegal immigrants flocking to the city, which is a dubious claim, to say the least. Ramirez-Rosa said the council members who wanted a citywide referendum wanted “chaos” and “demagoguery” and “that’s what we got.”
It is important to note here that just about everyone involved here is a Democrat. Johnson, the already failing new mayor, is a Democrat. Of the 50 aldermen in Chicago, 47 are Democrats. The remaining three are independents, just one of whom happens to be a former Republican. The other two are a former Democrat and a member of the Democratic Socialists of America.
Therefore, some Democrats are accusing other Democrats of being despicable as the city crumbles under the weight of its sanctuary status. Those other Democrats are accusing the first group of Democrats of being demagogues and fighting to prevent voters from having their say on the issue. Democrats are fighting Democrats while Chicago goes broke thanks to an illegal immigration crisis it created. Is it any wonder why this city is failing?
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In case you need a reminder, Chicago has been run by Democrats for 92 years. It has a reputation of violence that new Democratic leaders, such as Johnson, refuse to even pretend they care about. Now the city has found a way to fall apart in the face of an immigration crisis when it sits well over 1,000 miles and three states away from the southern border. The petty squabbling over whether to even let voters make their voices heard on the matter is just the icing on the cake.
At some point, voters can make their voices heard by refusing to empower the Democratic machine that has driven their city into the ground. Then again, voting between a Democrat and an even worse Democrat to lead the city is a Chicago tradition, no matter how bad Johnson and his allies continue to make the Windy City.