If Chicago Police Supt. David Brown doesn’t show to testify before them, the aldermen say they will take a vote of no-confidence in his leadership. But they’ll need a quorum for that — meaning seven more aldermen have to show up.
Nineteen aldermen are calling a special virtual Chicago City Council meeting for 11 a.m. Friday — and threatening to take a vote of no-confidence in Chicago Police Supt. David Brown if he doesn’t show up to testify — about police response to the bloodbath on Chicago streets.
A quorum of 26 aldermen are needed to convene and meet as a committee of the whole to take testimony from Brown or take the vote of no-confidence if he fails to appear. That means that seven aldermen who did not sign the call for a special meeting would have to show up anyway.
Whether or not that will happen is anybody’s guess. Six aldermen have already peeled off in the last 24 hours under pressure from the mayor’s office.
“All we can do is hope for the best. … We’ve got 19 that signed on. There may be a few that show up. And of course, there may be a few that don’t,” said Ald. Anthony Beale (9th), one of Mayor Lori Lightfoot’s most outspoken City Council critics.
“I just don’t understand why we would not have 50 aldermen there seeing that crime is high. Shootings are high. Carjackings are high. We want to know what the strategy is going forward. … The only plan that we ever here is, ‘We’re going to cancel days off. We’re gonna deploy police to a certain area.’ But, police are tired. They’re fatigued. They’re exhausted. We have to have a different approach than the status-quo because the status quo is not working.”
Ald. Ray Lopez (15th) said aldermen had no choice but to call the special meeting after their efforts to try to “work with the administration to have a Public Safety Committee meeting failed.”
Lopez flatly predicted there would be a quorum, even though six aldermen have peeled off. He noted “a number” of aldermen who did not sign the letter “did express support for the meeting and intend to be there.”
“We can no longer sit by and wait for Lightfoot or Brown to get to the eventuality of telling us what they are going to do. Our residents want to see us step up as they see Lightfoot and Brown step back,” Lopez said.
Lopez said he hopes Brown shows up to answer questions and that it doesn’t come to a no-confidence vote that would mirror what the Fraternal Order of Police already has done.
“I would prefer that David Brown man up and do his job. But if this is what it takes to force him to stand up, then so be it. He had a stellar reputation before his arrival. I want the David Brown that I was promised — not the David Brown who was delivered,” Lopez said.
“The David Brown in Dallas was a very aggressive, yet positive law enforcement official. He was someone who did what he had to do to keep Dallas safe. Willing to be collaborative. Willing to be independent. … What we got is the David Brown who is just an overpaid spokesperson for the fifth floor, regurgitating all of the bad policies that come from the mayor’s office.”
Pressed to define those “bad policies,” Lopez accused Brown of “depleting” neighborhood police districts, expanding and duplicating citywide teams and “over-working and exhausting” Chicago police officers by canceling days off and forcing them to work 12-, 15-, and 17-hour tours of duty.
If Brown continues on the current path, Lopez warned the tidal wave of police retirements “will turn into a tsunami.”
Chicago Police Department spokesman Tom Ahern refused to say if Brown would attend the special meeting. The superintendent plans to hold a news conference Thursday afternoon, presumably to unveil his plan to prevent a third straight weekend of mass shootings over the coming holiday weekend.
Last year, Beale and Lopez called a special City Council meeting on their demand that Lightfoot call out the National Guard after civil unrest triggered by the death of George Floyd devolved into two devastating rounds of looting that started in the downtown area and spread to South and West Side commercial strips.
They managed to get a quorum. Even Lightfoot and her City Council allies showed up. But their resolution declaring a state of emergency that would have set the stage for the National Guard to assist overworked Chicago police officers was defeated.
“We lost the vote. However, the strategy that was in place didn’t work. Crime was down in my ward. Since he implemented his new strategy from last year, my crime has skyrocketed. That’s now working. We need to change the approach,” Beale said.
Ald. Matt O’Shea (19th), Lightfoot’s handpicked Aviation Committee chairman, is among the 19 aldermen who joined the call for the special meeting.
Earlier this week, O’Shea told the Sun-Times he signed the letter because he wasn’t willing to risk another holiday weekend bloodbath.
“I want David Brown to sit before the Council and tell us, what’s the plan? What are we gonna do moving forward? As we continue to have these spikes in ugly violence and the mass shootings, we’re concerned about officers being pulled from districts. I want assurances that police officers aren’t gonna be pulled from communities. I want assurances that they’re looking after the well-being of their police officers,” O’Shea told the Sun-Times.
“Almost every day, I’m hearing from law enforcement families in my community. Partners and spouses worried about each other, their well-being. Our police officers are under a tremendous amount of stress. We’re under-manned as a police department right now and they’re over-worked. This is not sustainable.”
O’Shea noted last weekend’s mass shootings occurred despite a tornado warning and violent thunderstorms — and this weekend’s forecast is for clear skies.
“I’m very concerned with the level of violence we’ve seen in our city as we’re approaching a holiday weekend — and you look at the weather forecast — and what we’re expecting. At least, what I’m expecting,” O’Shea said.
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