Lightfoot pledges to stay in Chicago after being ousted from office amid spiraling crime wave

Former Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot says she has no plans on leaving the Windy City in the wake of her departure from public office.

“I have no intention to leave Chicago. My daughter is a rising sophomore in high school and I want to make sure that I am here and present for her in these most critical years. I think I owe it to my wife to be physically present and take on a greater share of the parenting and household responsibility,” Lightfoot told WGN-TV’s Paul Lisnek Sunday when asked if she would leave the city for a political appointment. 

“Plus, I love the city. I’m not going anywhere.”

Lightfoot lost her re-election bid back in February, setting the stage for a run-off between two other candidates, with Brandon Johnson ultimately clinching the victory and assuming office in May. Voters cited public safety and crime issues as their top concerns leading up to the election, followed by other issues such as the economy, education and homeless issues. 

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Under Lightfoot’s tenure, Chicago was rocked by crime – similar to other cities across the nation in 2020 following the murder of George Floyd and when pandemic restrictions upended day-to-day life. In 2021, Chicago recorded more than 800 homicides, the most the city had on the books since 1996, while simultaneously dealing with other crimes such as smash-and-grab robberies, carjackings and illegal street racing. 

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Chicago recorded 2,784 homicides and a total of 14,681 shooting incidents, according to police data from under Lightfoot’s tenure from May 2019 to May 2023. The number of homicides and shooting incidents during Lightfoot’s administration notched a 9% increase from the 2,546 homicides and 13,421 shootings that took place during her predecessor, Mayor Rahm Emanuel’s, final term in office. 

Lightfoot said during the interview that “voters were choosing between two polar opposites” and lamented that “a lot of the gains that we had made are starting to disappear.”

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“On crime, you live in a city, I live in a city. People are still very concerned and very fearful. And unfortunately, a lot of the gains that we had made are starting to disappear over the course of time. I think fundamentally, we still have to focus on a couple of things. You’ve got to deal with the immediate problem of, in my view, still too many violent, dangerous habitual offenders walking the street,” Lightfoot said when asked about Johnson’s initiatives to open more mental health facilities and work programs in a bid to combat crime. 

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“That really lies squarely in my view, at the feet of the court, that the courts have to take into consideration, community safety in making pretrial release decisions. I was a broken record on that. I will always be a broken record on that,” Lightfoot continued. 

The former mayor will serve as a senior leadership fellow at Harvard’s T.H. Chan School of Public Health during the fall semester, where she will teach a course tentatively titled, “Health Policy and Leadership.”

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