Kim Foxx high fives a supporter at her election night party at the Holiday Inn Chicago Mart Plaza River North after winning the Democratic nomination for Cook County state’s attorney. Credit: Photo by Stacey Rupolo

In her decisive defeat of Cook County State’s Attorney Anita Alvarez, Kim Foxx drew support across racial and class lines in Chicago and the county.

The former assistant state’s attorney was endorsed by the county’s powerful Democratic Party and also benefitted from a grassroots movement to oust the two-term incumbent. Her victory in the primary virtually guarantees her election in November and puts her on course to becoming the first African-American woman to hold the position of top prosecutor in the county.

Tuesday’s race in a city in the throes of a police scandal was viewed by many as a referendum on police misconduct, particularly officer-involved shootings of low-income and people of color. The contest captured national attention and attracted hundreds of thousands of dollars from out-of-state donors, including billionaire philanthropist George Soros, who contributed $333,000 to a PAC that backed Foxx.

Cook County State's Attorney Anita Alvarez makes her concession speech at the Palmer House hotel after losing the Democratic primary to Kim Foxx on March 15, 2016.
Cook County State’s Attorney Anita Alvarez makes her concession speech at the Palmer House hotel after losing the Democratic primary to Kim Foxx on March 15, 2016.

Alvarez, who oversees the second-largest prosecutor’s office in the country, came under fire for the way she handled high-profile officer-involved shootings, especially two.  She waited almost two years to charge Dante Servin for the fatal shooting of 22-year-old Rekia Boyd in 2012. Servin was the first Chicago cop in 20 years to be prosecuted for killing a civilian. A judge later threw out the case, saying she’d mishandled it. Alvarez was also criticized for waiting 13 months to charge a white police officer for shooting African-American teenager Laquan McDonald 16 times in 2014.

Foxx took in about 58 percent of the county vote; Alvarez had 29 percent of the vote and challenger Donna More had 13 percent. Foxx carried Chicago with about 62 percent of the vote.

She won all 18 of the city’s majority black wards , five of the 13 majority Latino wards and 11 of the 15 majority white wards, including the North Side neighborhoods that are home to the city’s so-called “lakefront liberals.”

“It wasn’t close but a real sweep,” said Dick Simpson, professor of political science at University of Illinois at Chicago.

Foxx, who lives in south suburban Flossmoor, won much larger majorities on the predominantly black South and West sides than she did on the North Side.

At 1.3 million, Cook has the largest black population of any county in the nation, according to the most recent Census data.

“This result can be interpreted as a part of a growing progressive electoral movement here in Chicago, and in other cities, which is focusing on grassroots organizing in low-level races to build momentum and put progressives in winnable offices, and progressive opposition to some of Mayor [Rahm] Emanuel’s policies, which are not responsive to much of Chicago,” said Thomas Ogorzalek, assistant professor of political science and urban studies and co-director of the Chicago Democracy Project at Northwestern University.

laquan-screenshot
The public release of dashcam video showing a Chicago officer shoot Laquan McDonald sixteen times sparked widespread calls for police reform in November.

The big issue was the McDonald fatal shooting, Simpson said.

“It’s not even that everybody knew all the details of the [state’s attorney] race or the particulars of the office but they knew they didn’t want Anita Alvarez,” he said.

The handling of the McDonald case put a spotlight on Alvarez and the importance of her job, a position many people hadn’t given much attention.

Typically, people cast more votes for races at the top of the ballot. The fact that voters went down the ballot to support Foxx shows that the race was important, Ogorzalek said. Roll-off for the race – that is, number of people who didn’t cast votes down ballot – dropped by about half compared to 2008, the last time there was a contested primary for state’s attorney. Ogorzalek said roll-off was low everywhere, but especially on the far South Side where Foxx’s support was extremely high.

The prominence of the #ByeAnita hashtag also showed the power of social media in educating voters about the obscure but important local offices that can affect their lives more directly than national positions, he said.

Although activists fought to oust Alvarez, many did not endorse Foxx.

“The #ByeAnita campaign celebrated last night,” Black Lives Matter activists said in a news release Wednesday. “Not because Kim Foxx won, but because Anita Alvarez lost. Due to her essential role in the cover-up of Laquan McDonald’s murder, young black organizers relentlessly targeted Alvarez’s campaign for reelection in the final weeks. Not because we support Kim Foxx, but because Anita Alvarez is a prosecutor who has demonstrated that she does not believe Black Lives Matter.”

Activists and supporters of police reform say they will continue to advocate for change on multiple fronts:

  • An ordinance to create an elected Civilian Police Accountability Council
Chicagoans rally at Federal Plaza before the March for Community Control of Police on August 29, 2015.
Chicagoans rally at Federal Plaza before the March for Community Control of Police on August 29, 2015.

An elected police accountability council would include neighborhood residents representing every police district in the city. The council would investigate all complaints of police misconduct, among other things. A coalition of 50 groups has gathered over 30,000 signatures to submit to the City Council this summer, said Frank Chapman, ed­ucation director and field organizer for the Chicago Alliance Against Racist and Political Repression, which is leading the campaign. Three aldermen have agreed to sponsor the ordinance.

  • An ordinance to establish a police auditor

A coalition of organizations led by Community Renewal Society, publisher of The Chicago Reporter, has proposed a FAIR COPS ordinance, which would create an office of police auditor to oversee the Chicago Police Department.  The auditor, a civilian position, would monitor the department for compliance with policies on excessive force, pedestrian and traffic stops, frisks and searches. The auditor also would oversee the work of the Independent Police Review Authority and Chicago Police Board, analyze policing patterns and trends and ensure fairness, transparency and consistency.

  • Releasing police dashcam video

Making police dashcam and other videos public has been the focus of efforts at City Hall and in the Illinois General Assembly. SB 2210, sponsored by state Sen. Patricia Van Pelt, a Chicago Democrat, would require that videos and other materials or documents related to officer-involved shootings be subject to the Freedom of Information Act, except when an exemption is approved by a judge.

In February, the city’s new Police Accountability Task Force recommended that evidence in police-involved shootings and other serious incidents, including photos, videos and audio recordings, be released to the public within 60-90 days of an incident. Mayor Rahm Emanuel embraced the recommendations. But some Chicagoans criticized the policy for not going far enough.

  • Police reform legislation

Van Pelt introduced Senate Bill 2233, which requires that all records in cases involving alleged police misconduct be maintained indefinitely in order to identify patterns of abuse. Currently, records are destroyed after so many years based on the nature of the allegations.

She also introduced Senate Bill 2370, which requires that all minors be represented by an attorney whenever they are interrogated by police.  Under the bill, statements made by a minor when legal counsel is not present would be inadmissible in juvenile or adult court proceedings.

Last summer Gov. Bruce Rauner signed a package of reforms, introduced by Chicago Democrats state Sen. Kwame Raoul and State Rep. Elgie Sims, that banned chokeholds, established rules for the use of police body cameras and required independent investigations of officer-involved deaths.   Law enforcement officers also will have to collect more data related to their use of stop-and-frisk tactics.

(Hover on wards or townships for voting breakdown by candidate; click for the racial makeup of each ward or township.)

Data Editor Matt Kiefer contributed to this report.

 

Deborah is the managing editor at The Chicago Reporter. Email her at dshelton@chicagoreporter.com and follow her on Twitter @deborahlshelton.

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