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Chicago Sun-Times
Chicago Sun-Times
National
Fran Spielman

‘Paul and Gery Show’ reunited for mayoral runoff as Chio endorses Vallas

Chicago mayoral candidate Paul Vallas listens while Gery Chico speaks during a news conference Friday at Vallas’ campaign headquarters. (Pat Nabong/Sun-Times)

In 1995, then-Mayor Richard M. Daley seized control over the Chicago Public Schools and asked his budget director and chief of staff to take charge at CPS.

On Friday, the “dream team” of Paul Vallas and Gery Chico reunited — this time to boost Vallas’ mayoral campaign and reclaim the narrative about their six-year partnership at the Chicago Public Schools.

Chico endorsed his former partner in the April 4 runoff against Cook County Commissioner and Chicago Teachers Union organizer Brandon Johnson.

“We desperately need to steer this city back in the right direction. There is one person who can take that wheel. He is, perhaps, the most prepared, the most qualified, the most dedicated person I have ever met to lead this city,” said Chico, who ran for mayor against Vallas and a dozen other candidates in a 2019 race won by Lori Lightfoot.  

“There’s no one who knows more about how to run this city and what it takes to make every neighborhood better and to make every neighborhood safer than Paul Vallas. He has been preparing for this job, literally his entire life. And that’s exactly what Chicago needs in times like these. This is not the time for on-the-job training. This is not the time for untested people with unproven plans and no records. This city does not have that luxury.”

After singing Vallas’ praises, Chico took aim at a Chicago Teachers Union that is the driving force behind Johnson’s mayoral candidacy and contributed $1 million and hundreds of foot soldiers to his campaign to help get out the vote on Tuesday.

Chico branded as “terribly unfortunate” the turn that CTU leadership has taken over the last decade. He compared that leadership — under Karen Lewis, Jesse Sharkey and Stacy Davis Gates — to the more tranquil reign of Tom Reece.

“We enjoyed two labor contracts where the parents in this city didn’t have to worry about whether or not schools would be open. And that’s why you had enrollment of 435,000 students. Today, you’re at barely above 300,000. People are voting with their feet. They’re upset,” Chico said.

Chico did not waiver when asked about the growth of charter schools under his CPS partnership with Vallas.

Nearly 60,000 students are enrolled in publicly funded charters “because their parents chose to go there,” Chico said, calling charters a small part of what he and Vallas did together at CPS.

“We invested across the board — mostly in neighborhood schools. That’s where the vast majority of the money went,” Chico said.

The CTU said Chico’s endorsement of Vallas was “no surprise” considering they are “cut from the same cloth — one that starved South and West Side schools and terminated Black female teachers with impunity.”

“Chico and Vallas adopted policies that banished veteran Black educators from the neighborhood schools and set the stage for charter expansion that continued unabated until we finally organized the workers at those schools,” the CTU statement said.

“This practice had a ‘disparate impact’ on Black educators, resulting in a steep decline of Black teachers. ... The instability these two wrought on Black students, Black teachers and Black neighborhood schools was unprecedented and went largely unchecked. Many of our neighborhood schools were ultimately closed because of their gross negligence and intentional underfunding.”

Vallas has infuriated the CTU by proposing that scores of schools now operating more than half-empty forge partnerships with charters and parochial schools. He also wants to lengthen the school day and school year and use tax increment-financing surplus money to create a school voucher program. He prefers to call it a “scholarship” program.

Nevertheless, Vallas plans to personally negotiate the next teachers contract if he’s elected mayor. 

“This union leadership barely won reelection. That means there is a huge number of rank-and-file teachers who oppose the current leadership,” he said.

“I communicate to the rank-and-file. When you’re communicating to the rank-and-file directly, your message doesn’t get misinterpreted.”

Contributing: Pat Nabong

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