The Council Wars were a racially polarized political conflict in the city of Chicago from 1983 to 1986, centered on the Chicago City Council. The term came from a satirical comedy sketch of the same name written and performed by comedian and journalist Aaron Freeman in 1983, using the good vs. evil plot line of the film Star Wars as a device.[1]

History

In 1983, U.S. Representative Harold Washington was elected Mayor of Chicago. Washington, who became the city's first Black mayor, was backed by reformist "independent" Democrats and dissident Black aldermen. He had won the Democratic primary in a three-way contest against incumbent mayor Jane Byrne and State's Attorney Richard M. Daley, son of the late mayor Richard J. Daley.

Regular Democrats won most of the 50 aldermanic seats in the city council. Washington garnered the support of all 16 Black aldermen, even those who had been organization supporters. He also had the support of four White reformers and one other White alderman, Burton Natarus, who had been a loyal organization man but whose 42nd Ward voted for Washington.

The other 29 aldermen (28 White and 1 Hispanic) formed an opposition group led by Aldermen Ed Vrdolyak and Edward M. Burke, together known as "the Eddies". The "Vrdolyak 29" voted as a solid bloc. In the first session of the 1983-1987 term, the "Vrdolyak 29" voted themselves complete control of every Council committee. Over the next three years, they passed the mayor's budgets, but voted down all of the mayor's proposals. They also voted down all of his appointments, so the appointees could only serve as interim officeholders.

The Vrdolyak 29 had a majority of votes, but not enough to override Washington's veto, thus creating legislative gridlock. Chicago became known as "Beirut by the Lake", a reference to the Lebanese Civil War of the 1980s.

Meanwhile, Washington's allies sued the city in Federal court, claiming that the ward map drawn up after the 1980 Census had unfairly dispersed Black and Hispanic voters. At that time, White voters were about 40% of the city's population, Black voters were also about 40%, and Hispanic voters were about 15%, but there were 33 White aldermen, only 16 Black aldermen, and just 1 Hispanic aldermen.

In 1986, the court ruled in their favor, ordering modifications to the borders of seven wards, and also special elections in the modified wards. Washington's supporters gained three seats in the special elections; six weeks later, the election of Luis Gutiérrez in the 26th Ward gave the mayor 25 supportive aldermen. 25 votes in the city council do not suffice to pass legislation, but allow the mayor to cast a deciding 26th vote. A group of several remaining aldermen from the Vrdolyak 29, including Alderman Richard Mell, went to Washington to promise future cooperation. They claimed that their previous opposition had been forced on them by the Eddies. The majority of the city council now aligned with the mayor, and Council Wars ended.

Washington defeated Vrdolyak in the 1987 mayoral election, and in the same election, several pro-Washington challengers defeated incumbent opposition aldermen. Washington died of a heart attack later that year, with Alderman David Orr becoming interim mayor. The council then selected a permanent replacement to serve until a special election. They chose Alderman Eugene Sawyer, a Regular Democrat who sided with Washington during Council Wars. He was elected by a coalition of former Vrdolyak 29 and original pro-Washington aldermen as well as new aldermen.

Disposition of the Council 1983–86

Below is a list of aldermen from 1983. Pro-Washington aldermen are marked with a W; those in the Vrdolyak 29 are marked with a V.[2]

WardNamePartyRaceAlliance
1Fred RotiDemocraticWhiteV
2Bobby RushDemocraticBlackW
3Tyrone Kenner, Dorothy TillmanDemocraticBlackW
4Timothy C. EvansDemocraticBlackW
5Lawrence BloomDemocraticWhiteW
6Eugene SawyerDemocraticBlackW
7William BeaversDemocraticBlackW
8Marian HumesDemocraticBlackW
9Perry HutchinsonDemocraticBlackW
10Edward VrdolyakDemocraticWhiteV
11Patrick HuelsDemocraticWhiteV
12Aloysius MajerczykDemocraticWhiteV
13John MadrzykDemocraticWhiteV
14Edward M. BurkeDemocraticWhiteV
15Frank BradyDemocraticWhiteV
16Anna LangfordDemocraticBlackW
17Allan StreeterDemocraticBlackW
18Robert KellamDemocraticWhiteV
19Michael F. SheahanDemocraticWhiteV
20Clifford KelleyDemocraticBlackW
21Niles ShermanDemocraticBlackW
22Frank StemberkDemocraticWhiteV
23William KrystyniakDemocraticWhiteV
24William HenryDemocraticBlackW
25Vito MarzulloDemocraticWhiteV
26Michael NardulliDemocraticWhiteV
27Wallace Davis, Jr.DemocraticBlackW
28Ed SmithDemocraticBlackW
29Danny K. DavisDemocraticBlackW
30George HagopianDemocraticWhiteV
31Miguel SantiagoDemocraticHispanicV
32Terry GabinskiDemocraticWhiteV
33Richard MellDemocraticWhiteV
34Wilson FrostDemocraticBlackW
35Joseph Kotlarz, Jr.DemocraticWhiteV
36William BanksDemocraticWhiteV
37Frank DamatoDemocraticWhiteV
38Thomas CullertonDemocraticWhiteV
39Anthony LaurinoDemocraticWhiteV
40Patrick J. O'ConnorDemocraticWhiteV
41Roman PucinskiDemocraticWhiteV
42Burton NatarusDemocraticWhiteW
43Martin J. ObermanDemocraticWhiteW
44Bernard HansenDemocraticWhiteV
45Gerald McLaughlinDemocraticWhiteV
46Jerome M. OrbachDemocraticWhiteV
47Eugene SchulterDemocraticWhiteV
48Marion VoliniDemocraticWhiteW
49David OrrDemocraticWhiteW
50Bernard StoneDemocraticWhiteV

References

  1. Fremon, David K. (October 22, 1988). Chicago Politics Ward by Ward. Bloomington, Indiana: Indiana University Press. ISBN 0-253-31344-9. Retrieved March 13, 2017.
  2. Fremon, David K., "Chicago Politics, Ward by Ward", 1988, pp. 3-4

Further reading

  • Preston, Michael B., "The Election of Harold Washington: Black Voting Patterns in the 1983 Chicago Mayoral Race", Political Science and Politics, Vol. 16, No. 3 (Summer, 1983), pp. 486–488
  • Fremon, David K., "Chicago Politics, Ward by Ward", 1988, pp. 3–4
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