Lori Lightfoot’s Coronavirus Response in Chicago Has Been Anything But Progressive – Jacobin magazine
Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot has recently cultivated an image as a stern administrator who implores people to stay home and save lives. Memes and mainstream media outlets have portrayed her as a tough leader willing to make the difficult but necessary decision of stamping the fun out of urban life in order to blunt the spread of coronavirus.
But there is much more to Lightfoots pandemic response than memeable administrator. For example, as the outbreak began to spread across the city, a February 26 Chicago Sun-Times headline announced, Lightfoot accuses CDC of spreading panic about the coronavirus, quoting the mayor as saying I dont want to get ahead of ourselves and suggest to the public that theres a reason for them to be fearful we need people to continue to go about their daily lives. At the time, many mayors and elected leaders across the country were not taking the virus as seriously as they should have. Yet Lightfoot went further, refusing to close public schools despite pleas from the Chicago Teachers Union (CTU) and other groups concerned about the safety of students and teachers.
As the Sun-Times recently reported, Lightfoot had to be pressured by Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker to cancel the citys massive St. Patricks Day parade on March 14, and only gave in on shuttering schools after the governor ordered them closed in mid March. (Pritzker did, however, go forward with the states in-person election on March 17, which undoubtedly increased the spread of the virus.)
On April 11, Lightfoot also approved the demolition of a coal plant in the citys Little Village community on the Southwest Side that blanketed the largely Latino neighborhood in dust and particulates a stark hazard for an area already facing alarming rates of asthma and hit hard by COVID19. On May 14, her administration gave the go-ahead for yet another demolition on the site, calling it off only after activists protested outside of her Northwest Side home.
Lightfoots response to the pandemic has also included an astounding emergency power grab, cutting against the calls for more transparency and democracy in government that animated her campaign for mayor last year. And she has refused to embrace redistributive policies such as a corporate head tax or a financial transaction tax while attacking left-wing city council members, including its six socialists who are pushing for them.
Lightfoots actions suggest shes far from the progressive mayor sternly facing down coronavirus, the image shes carefully cultivated. In reality, shes been more open to embracing an unabashedly pro-corporate response to the pandemic.
Chicago has been battered by COVID19. Cook County, which includes the city, recently overtook Queens, New York as the epicenter of the outbreak in the United States. The county has seen over 63,000 active cases and more than 2,800 deaths.
Among Chicago tenants, rent collection has been down nearly 75 percent over the course of the pandemic a reflection of the fact that, even before the crisis, half of Chicago renters were rent burdened, meaning they were paying over 30 percent of their income on rent. As job losses have spiked, that income has plummeted, and without serious help from the government beyond a single $1,200 stimulus check, residents have been left out to dry.
As a solution, Lightfoots administration announced a housing assistance grant program to help those impacted. The program, funded by real estate developers, required applicants to show proof that they were facing acute financial hardship due to the pandemic. While 83,000 city residents who lost jobs or pay as a result of the crisis applied within the first five days of the program, only two thousand grants of $1,000 each were ultimately handed out meaning just 2.5 percent of applicants (who themselves represented a drop in the bucket of total need throughout the city) received funding through the lottery-based system.
Lightfoots other signature policy to manage Chicagos rapidly growing housing crisis was the creation of a Housing Solidarity Pledge, an unenforceable compact made by a group of bankers, landlords, and developers to provide flexibility on rent payments for tenants during the crisis. Following the announcement, which featured no tenants rights organizations, housing rights groups in the city argued the pledge was essentially a public relations stunt. As Keeanga-Yamahtta Taylor writes at the New Yorker, one of the signatories to Lightfoots pledge, TLC Property Management, has fileddozens of evictioncases in Chicago and its suburbs since March 20th, when Illinoiss governor, J.B. Pritzker, declared a statewide moratorium on evictions.
Rather than marshaling the power of the state to expand social-welfare systems, the mayor has instead turned to the private sector for market-based solutions that wont upset companies bottom lines.
It hasnt just been housing. In April, Mayor Lightfoot formed a COVID19 Economic Recovery Task Force, packed with representatives of big business and co-chaired by former White House Chief of Staff Sam Skinner, who served under President George H.W. Bush. Her administrations other recent initiatives include the Microbusiness Recovery Grant Program and Chicago Community COVID-19 Response Fund both privately funded, means-tested programs.
But the response thats received the most coverage in recent weeks has been Mayor Lightfoots emergency powers ordinance, giving her office full control over how to distribute federal funding allocated as part of the CARES Act approved by Congress in late March. Instead of allowing democratic decision making over the tens of millions of public dollars flowing to the city, Lightfoot consolidated her power over the funds distribution.
In response, a group of nineteen city council members, including members of the democratic socialist caucus, sent a letter to Lightfoot laying out their concerns with the ordinance. They demanded the spending of federal funds in working-class communities, particularly African-American neighborhoods that have been hard hit; help for renters and the homeless; and more oversight over the program, referring to the move as a power grab. Lightfoot then proceeded to call the objecting city councilors selfish and shameful grandstanders, accusing them of acting against the interest of public safety.
The mayor saved her harshest words for Ald. Carlos Ramirez-Rosa, the two-term democratic socialist who represents the thirty-fifth ward, in which Lightfoot lives. Ramirez-Rosa was an outspoken critic of the mayors gambit, arguing that the decision on how to distribute federal funds should be made through an equity lens, while helping lead the charge against the ordinance. In response, Lightfoot said she was embarrassed to be represented by him.
This dismissive attitude toward her critics on the Left and her opposition to progressive solutions have come to define Lightfoots tenure as mayor a blunt about-face from her proclamation that Im not Rahm, an effort to distinguish herself from her neoliberal predecessor Rahm Emanuel who gained a reputation as Mayor 1%.
Lightfoot has railed against the efforts of left-wing city council members, who have pushed a suite of policy demands to support the citys working class. The Right to Recovery coalition, which includes forty-nine grassroots groups across the city including United Working Families (UWF) and the CTU is calling for drastic changes to Chicagos political and economic status quo in the midst of the global pandemic.
Chief among the coalitions demands are rent and mortgage moratoriums for the duration of the crisis, universal healthcare including COVID19 testing and treatment, an end to ICE raids and deportations, twenty days of emergency paid sick leave, the release of individuals incarcerated due to unaffordable money bonds, weekly direct payments of $750 to families facing job losses, and the delivery of groceries and other support for seniors.
On the city level, the Right to Recovery has been championed by five members of the councils democratic socialist caucus: Alds. Rossana Rodriguez, Jeanette Taylor, Byron Sigcho-Lopez, Daniel La Spata, and Carlos Ramirez-Rosa. In a Sun Times op-ed, the group urged the city to embrace this set of demands, saying If we want everyone to stay home, we need universal social benefits that leave no one out. As democratic socialists, solidarity is one of our bedrock principles.
In early May, hundreds of cars lined the streets of downtown Chicago as part of a socially distant demonstration calling for the Right to Recovery to be implemented immediatelyand they were joined by members of the democratic socialist caucus.
Efforts to institute the Right to Recovery have largely been stalled in city council, and havent been supported by Mayor Lightfoot. But progressives on the city council have continued to organize in their own communities to protect vulnerable residents from both the pandemic and the economic havoc its wrought.
In the 40th Ward on the citys Northwest Side, the office of Ald. Andre Vasquez, another member of the democratic socialist caucus, helped to establish a sewing guard to make masks for frontline workers in jobs deemed to be essential. Using donated fabric and thread, hundreds of volunteers have helped produce masks in a program that has now been expanded to neighborhoods throughout the city.
In the 33rd Ward, Ald. Rossana Rodriguezs office helped to start up the Albany Park Mutual Aid Network, which now operates independently. The network, alongside Irving Park Mutual Aid Network, has helped raise upwards of $30,000 and handed it out to residents in need. These efforts have aided hundreds of families through delivering food, tenant organizing, providing senior assistance, helping residents apply for unemployment, and connecting those facing hunger to food pantries.
Ramirez-Rosas thirty-fifth ward office has been distributing masks and groceries to residents, coordinating food dropoffs from pantries to seniors, and publishing and distributing COVID19 recovery newsletters that have reached over seven thousand households in the ward, leading to calls from residents who were later helped with unemployment applications and housing assistance.
Though Mayor Lightfoot has so far resisted calls for city government to step in and protect vulnerable residents by providing such support, socialists and other progressives on the council are working to fill in these gaps.
But with the virus still rapidly spreading, and without proper safety protections for workers or an adequate testing and contact tracing regime, any reopening in the immediate future will result in more death. The Right to Recovery would shield the public from this grim future.
By guaranteeing healthcare and income along with safeguarding housing and access to food, the policy package would help sustain working people through the pandemic. While the citys business class and political leadership may be opposed to these policies, a number of gains have already been won in Chicago, from a temporary eviction moratorium to suspending utility shut offs.
Other cities have gone further, suspending mortgage payments, halting new admissions to prisons, postponing debt collection, providing free public transit, and expanding bike lanes and pedestrianized streets. Outside the US, governments have taken more expansive action, guaranteeing workers lost income, converting past paid taxes into interest-free loans, increasing paid sick leave, and providing regular cash payments to residents. These types of state interventions, previously politically unthinkable, are now becoming commonplace.
Though Mayor Lightfoot was able to secure enough votes to pass her emergency powers ordinance, she did so over the objection of twenty-one city council members, including the full democratic socialist caucus. That level of opposition was unheard of under the administrations of past mayors Rahm Emanuel and Richard M. Daley, and likely spells trouble for future attempts by Lightfoot to take action without democratic buy-in.
Following the split vote, Dick Simpson, a former alderman who teaches political science at the University of Illinois at Chicago and has been studying city council votes since the 1990s, now says that Lightfoot has only a fragile hold on a majority, adding that Chicago politics are undergoing a major transformation as the machine era ends.
The councils socialists are poised to use that opening. Seeing the devastation that COVID19 has caused in Chicago, in April, Ald. Rodriguez penned a letter in support of federal legislation, sponsored by fellow democratic socialists Reps. Rashida Tlaib and Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez to mint the coin in order to fully fund state and local governments dealing with the crisis.
I saw the bills that Congresswoman Tlaib proposed, for the Treasury to mint trillion-dollar coins and to provide aid to cities and states, and I thought, we need that, we cant do this alone, Rodriguez told Politico. The letter was also signed by the rest of the democratic socialist caucus, along with over 100 other legislators from across the country.
So while Mayor Lightfoot would prefer the publics perception of her approach to the COVID19 crisis to simply be enjoinders to stay at home, Chicagos socialists and other progressives are helping lay a path toward a different pandemic response that enshrines economic rights as human rights.
Read more from the original source:
Lori Lightfoot's Coronavirus Response in Chicago Has Been Anything But Progressive - Jacobin magazine
- Progressives say theyll vote against warrantless spy power renewal - The Hill - March 20th, 2026 [March 20th, 2026]
- Big spenders have mixed night in Illinois as progressives mostly come up short - Roll Call - March 20th, 2026 [March 20th, 2026]
- Bernie Sanders, progressives to force new votes on blocking arms sales to Israel - Jewish Insider - March 20th, 2026 [March 20th, 2026]
- Both Trump and progressives are foggy on Iran - The Hill - March 20th, 2026 [March 20th, 2026]
- Advertisers shift to conservative creators over progressives under Trump - AOL.com - March 20th, 2026 [March 20th, 2026]
- Jeffries hasn't lost a single Democratic vote in 20 speaker ballots, but a new wave of progressives may be about to end that streak - Attack of the... - March 20th, 2026 [March 20th, 2026]
- Trump-enabling Democrats lost their elections to progressives in North Carolina last night - LGBTQ Nation - March 7th, 2026 [March 7th, 2026]
- Nida Allam Concedes to Valerie Foushee With Razor-Thin Loss for Progressives in Key Midterm Primary - The Intercept - March 7th, 2026 [March 7th, 2026]
- Progressives Are Getting Bad Advice on Iran - National Review - March 4th, 2026 [March 4th, 2026]
- Connecticut Must Reject Progressives Tax-the-Rich Agenda - Americans for Tax Reform - March 4th, 2026 [March 4th, 2026]
- Progressives threaten primaries over Iran vote - breakingthenews.net - March 4th, 2026 [March 4th, 2026]
- Texas Progressives Say Democratic Establishment Is Blowing It In the Rio Grande Valley - The Intercept - March 2nd, 2026 [March 2nd, 2026]
- Washington state progressives strike big business tax break from 'millionaires tax' - KUOW - March 2nd, 2026 [March 2nd, 2026]
- Labour must stop channelling Reform and unite with progressives. Thats the lesson from Gorton and Denton - The Guardian - March 2nd, 2026 [March 2nd, 2026]
- Progressives bet big on anti-Israel sentiment to oust Valerie Foushee in North Carolina - Washington Examiner - March 2nd, 2026 [March 2nd, 2026]
- Why Is the Democratic Party So Afraid of Progressives? - Zeteo | Substack - March 2nd, 2026 [March 2nd, 2026]
- Conservatives, Progressives, LGBTQ+ People, and Jars of Jam - New Ways Ministry - March 2nd, 2026 [March 2nd, 2026]
- Pandering to progressives on Iran will doom Starmer - The Telegraph - March 2nd, 2026 [March 2nd, 2026]
- Article | Most NYC Council progressives call on Hochul to tax the rich - POLITICO Pro - February 27th, 2026 [February 27th, 2026]
- Matt Walshs real history is a flawed challenge to progressives - UnHerd - February 27th, 2026 [February 27th, 2026]
- Reform's Matt Goodwin said the Gorton and Denton by-election saw a coalition of Islamist and woke progressives. Labour came third in the election,... - February 27th, 2026 [February 27th, 2026]
- How Jesse Jackson set the stage for Bernie Sanders and todays progressives - The Conversation - February 24th, 2026 [February 24th, 2026]
- Pauline Hansons populism is a front. But there are lessons for progressives in One Nations surging popularity - The Guardian - February 24th, 2026 [February 24th, 2026]
- Ten Commandments Ruling Underscores That Progressives Need School Choice - Cato Institute - February 24th, 2026 [February 24th, 2026]
- Frank Floor Talk: The progress of progressives - CDC Gaming - February 24th, 2026 [February 24th, 2026]
- Democrats, progressives stage counterprogram to Trump State of the Union - Scripps News - February 24th, 2026 [February 24th, 2026]
- The subspecies of progressives and how theyre mutually reinforcing - Why Evolution Is True - February 24th, 2026 [February 24th, 2026]
- Lessons from the Maharashtra Civic Polls: Why Progressives Need to Urgently Focus on the Booth - The Wire India - February 24th, 2026 [February 24th, 2026]
- Right-Wing Think Tanks Are Building a New Hegemony Europe's Progressives Must Fight Back - Social Europe - February 24th, 2026 [February 24th, 2026]
- Can Vancouver Progressives Unite to Win the Next Election? - The Tyee - February 24th, 2026 [February 24th, 2026]
- For Thailand's popular progressives, winning the vote is only the first hurdle - BBC - February 7th, 2026 [February 7th, 2026]
- Trying to influence progressives in New Jersey, AIPAC may actually help one get elected - The Forward - February 7th, 2026 [February 7th, 2026]
- Here is a political lesson progressives need to learn, and fast: British pubs are crucial | Simon Jenkins - The Guardian - February 7th, 2026 [February 7th, 2026]
- White progressives criticizing Jasmine Crockett's Senate bid need to 'sit their a-- down,' says liberal host - AOL.com - February 7th, 2026 [February 7th, 2026]
- Abolish ICE is the new defund the police for progressives: Charlie Hurt - Fox News - February 7th, 2026 [February 7th, 2026]
- Roland Martin says White progressives criticizing Jasmine Crockett's Senate bid need to 'sit their a-- down' - Yahoo - February 7th, 2026 [February 7th, 2026]
- Ahead Of DHS Funding Battle, Progressives Demand Congress 'Melt ICE' - HuffPost - February 7th, 2026 [February 7th, 2026]
- Abbreviated Pundit Roundup: Progressives are ascendent as Trump sinks in the muck - Daily Kos - February 7th, 2026 [February 7th, 2026]
- Why a T-shirt in a hit movie is trending with Brazilian progressives: Almost every day they sell out - The Guardian - January 30th, 2026 [January 30th, 2026]
- House Progressives Unveil 'Defund the Oligarchs, Fund the People' Resolution - Common Dreams - January 30th, 2026 [January 30th, 2026]
- Elmhurst Progressives Rally For Man Killed By Ice In Minnesota - Patch - January 26th, 2026 [January 26th, 2026]
- Progressives Advance Radical Measure That Could Outlaw Hunting and Fishing in Oregon - thatoregonlife.com - January 26th, 2026 [January 26th, 2026]
- McKee finally endorsed a millionaires tax. Progressives and business groups arent happy. - rhodeislandcurrent.com - January 24th, 2026 [January 24th, 2026]
- Regressive attitude of the Progressives - The Guardian Nigeria News - January 24th, 2026 [January 24th, 2026]
- Trump Likes Some Populist Ideas. Progressives Are Split on Working With Him. - NOTUS News of the United States - January 24th, 2026 [January 24th, 2026]
- Progressives could use the 'power of the purse' to block ICE funding - Fox News - January 22nd, 2026 [January 22nd, 2026]
- Chris Rabb is trying to be the lefts standard-bearer as he runs for Congress. Will progressives rally around him? - inquirer.com - January 22nd, 2026 [January 22nd, 2026]
- Progressives could use the 'power of the purse' to block ICE funding - Yahoo - January 22nd, 2026 [January 22nd, 2026]
- Trump threats and Bukele model on crime back Latin American progressives into corner - tdtnews.com - January 22nd, 2026 [January 22nd, 2026]
- National Progressives Side With Mamdani in House Race Splitting NYC Left - The Intercept - January 16th, 2026 [January 16th, 2026]
- Decosimo wants school board to regress, progressives and data centers and more rants - Chattanooga Times Free Press - January 16th, 2026 [January 16th, 2026]
- Silence of the Sheep: Why Progressives Are Ignoring the Massacre of Iranians - Jewish Journal - January 16th, 2026 [January 16th, 2026]
- As birthrates tumble, some progressives say the left needs to offer ideas and solutions - NPR - January 14th, 2026 [January 14th, 2026]
- Watch live: House progressives rail against Trump immigration agenda, call for DHS reform - The Hill - January 14th, 2026 [January 14th, 2026]
- How progressives can win the battle of ideas - New Statesman - January 14th, 2026 [January 14th, 2026]
- Congressional progressives vow to block DHS funding without reforms - The Guardian - January 14th, 2026 [January 14th, 2026]
- Newsom breaks with progressives over proposed California billionaire tax - Yahoo - January 14th, 2026 [January 14th, 2026]
- Newsom breaks with progressives over proposed California billionaire tax - Straight Arrow News - January 14th, 2026 [January 14th, 2026]
- House Progressives To Oppose Any New DHS Funding Without Reforms - HuffPost - January 14th, 2026 [January 14th, 2026]
- MCGUIRK: Progressives misdiagnose their X problem - Gript - January 14th, 2026 [January 14th, 2026]
- Auroras new progressives rewrite reality | Michael A. Hancock - Denver Gazette - January 11th, 2026 [January 11th, 2026]
- Op-ed: The 2025 federal budget is charting a new course for progressives - thevarsity.ca - January 11th, 2026 [January 11th, 2026]
- Reporter's Notebook: Progressives eye shutdown leverage to rein in ICE, Venezuela operations - Fox News - January 11th, 2026 [January 11th, 2026]
- Quinn Que: To save liberalism, progressives must apologize and abandon their air of moral certainty - Why Evolution Is True - January 11th, 2026 [January 11th, 2026]
- Chile:Leftists and progressives orgs ready for the Festival - plenglish.com - January 11th, 2026 [January 11th, 2026]
- Left abandons Scandinavian model: why progressives are turning away - valleyvanguardonline.com - January 11th, 2026 [January 11th, 2026]
- Gavin Newsom Slammed by Progressives Over Homophobic Grindr Remark Aimed at MAGA Influencer - Inquisitr News - January 8th, 2026 [January 8th, 2026]
- Double Take -- Giese: Trump has flipped script on progressives - TelegraphHerald.com - January 6th, 2026 [January 6th, 2026]
- Diversion from prison is another way progressives keep getting people killed - New York Post - January 6th, 2026 [January 6th, 2026]
- Wisconsin progressives angry with US raid in Venezuela - The Center Square - January 6th, 2026 [January 6th, 2026]
- For more than half a century, the progressives in SF have been rightand the developers wrong - 48 Hills - December 31st, 2025 [December 31st, 2025]
- Houston progressives knocked Whitmire. Were coming back for more. | Opinion - Houston Chronicle - December 31st, 2025 [December 31st, 2025]
- Progressives Urge Passage of Bills to Stop Trump From Launching 'Forever War' in Venezuela - Common Dreams - December 16th, 2025 [December 16th, 2025]
- Burlington Progressives Aim to Retain, Not Gain, Seats in March - Seven Days Vermont - December 16th, 2025 [December 16th, 2025]
- What Should Progressives Do Once We Have a Solid Majority? - Daily Kos - December 16th, 2025 [December 16th, 2025]
- Progressives Forum marks 10 years of APC governance on January 27 - Peoples Gazette Nigeria - December 16th, 2025 [December 16th, 2025]
- Platner courts progressives as Maine Senate race with Mills and Collins tightens - Washington Examiner - December 16th, 2025 [December 16th, 2025]
- Progressives Forum Marks 10 Years Of APC Governance Jan. 27 - News Agency of Nigeria - December 16th, 2025 [December 16th, 2025]
- Christopher Dummitt: Dec. 11 is the day Canada gained autonomy. Progressives want us to forget - National Post - December 12th, 2025 [December 12th, 2025]
- Progressives launch another primary challenge to a House Democrat - Politico - December 12th, 2025 [December 12th, 2025]