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Chicago Sun-Times
Chicago Sun-Times
National
Fran Spielman

Lightfoot caught on a hot mic again — this time, using profanity during City Council meeting

After an under-her-breath comment by Mayor Lori Lightfoot as Ald. Rossana Rodriguez Sanchez (left) was concluding her remarks at Wednesday’s City Council meeting, Lightfoot reached out to Sanchez to let her know the remark was not directed at her. | Chicago Sun-Times/Pat Nabong photos

Mayor Lori Lightfoot on Wednesday got caught on a hot mic again at a City Council meeting — this time, using profanity.

As Ald. Rossana Rodriguez Sanchez (33rd) wrapped her remarks on a resolution commemorating Black History Month, Lightfoot can clearly be heard muttering, “You’ve got to be f---king kidding me.”

Shortly after taking office, Patrick Murray, then second-vice-president of the Fraternal Order of Police, rose during the public comment session that precedes every City Council meeting.

Lightfoot was picked up by a live microphone telling her then-corporation counsel Mark Flessner, “Back again. This FOP clown.”

Afterwards, Lightfoot said she was “sorry that I said that out loud.” She did not apologize for what she said.

This time, Lightfoot got caught during a virtual City Council meeting and an audio of the mayor’s profane remark was circulating on social media within minutes of the slip.

Lightfoot wasted no time, texting Sanchez to say the profane remark had nothing to do with what the alderman was saying.

“She sent a text saying that her staff brought something to her attention and that was her expression to what her staff brought to her while she was presiding,” Sanchez told the Sun-Times.

“I’m going to take her words as the truth and I’m gonna move on.”

Asked if Lightfoot had apologized, Sanchez said, “It wasn’t an apology. It was a clarification. … She texted me to clarify that what was said was not said in reference to what I said.”

At the time of Lightfoot’s second hot-mic clip, the City Council was debating a resolution honoring Black History Month.

Sanchez was talking about “embracing Blackness in our cultures” and about the her belief that “the Latino culture struggles a lot with anti-Blackness.”

“In the Puerto Rican culture, there is a feeling of anti-Blackness. And I was talking about the importance of uplifting Blackness in our communities. I talked about sending love and solidarity to Black people in the United States. Feeling the exhaustion of existing while Black in the United States,” Sanchez said.

“I talked about being grateful for the contributions of Black people in the United States and city of Chicago. And I said we had a responsibility to make this city a better place for all. That’s the last thing you can hear in the video being circulated.”

Given historic tensions between Blacks and Hispanics in Chicago, Sanchez was asked whether it’s possible Lightfoot was being dismissive of her remarks.

“Ummm ... I have no idea what the mayor was thinking. But I would not want to believe that was the case. I don’t think that there is any reason for her to talk that way about any comments that I made today,” the alderman said.

“I’m pretty sure she was probably talking about something else and didn’t mute her microphone. I am pretty confident that there was no reason. I didn’t say anything in my speech that would prompt not only the mayor, but anybody, to say something like that.”

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