Lopez (left) was proved popular with the crowd at last month’s St. Patrick’s Day Parade in Garfield Ridge, as he walked the route with political ally and 23rd Ward Ald. Silvana Tabares. --Supplied photo

Lopez (left) was proved popular with the crowd at last month’s St. Patrick’s Day Parade in Garfield Ridge, as he walked the route with political ally and 23rd Ward Ald. Silvana Tabares. --Supplied photo

Lopez announces mayoral run

Spread the love

Pro-police alderman has been popular locally 

By Tim Hadac

He does not represent Clearing or Garfield Ridge, but Raymond A. Lopez wants to.

The 15th Ward alderman and Democratic committeeman last week announced his candidacy for mayor.

With a simple tweet (“Chicago, I’m in!”), Lopez on April 6 signaled his candidacy. At a brief press conference that day, Lopez said if elected mayor, he will be “100% committed to taking ownership of the lives and safety of the people that call Chicago home, for the people that come here to work every day, and for those who choose to visit us for business or vacation.”

CRRNH LopezTabaresParade 041322

Lopez (left) was proved popular with the crowd at last month’s St. Patrick’s Day Parade in Garfield Ridge, as he walked the route with political ally and 23rd Ward Ald. Silvana Tabares. –Supplied photo

A Southwest Side native, Lopez is an alumnus of St. Laurence High School. As a young man, he worked as a skycap for Southwest Airlines at Midway International Airport.

He currently lives in the Brighton Park neighborhood with his husband, Hugo.

First elected alderman in 2015, Lopez represents a ward cobbled together with pieces of the Brighton Park, Gage Park, Back of the Yards and West Englewood neighborhoods—“precincts no other alderman wanted,” one political insider has said to the Clear-Ridge Reporter & NewsHound.

Soon after taking office, Lopez earned a reputation as possibly the highest profile anti-gang alderman in City Council. He went head to head with various gang factions, especially in Back of the Yards and Brighton Park, and his efforts have seen him live under death threats and his home and ward office firebombed.

As a rookie alderman, Lopez occasionally took criticism from some who saw him as taking direction from 14th Ward Ald. Edward M. Burke; but since Burke’s 2019 indictment on corruption charges, Lopez (like just about everyone else in politics) has put distance between himself and the dean of the City Council.

Since Mayor Lightfoot’s election in 2019, Lopez has emerged as her staunchest and most consistent critic, especially on crime and related issues, like police staffing.

In Clearing and Garfield Ridge, he was routinely been welcomed warmly at parades, meetings and other community events—largely due to his pro-police stance. He is no stranger to men and women approaching him and urging him to run for mayor.

While Lopez is the first person to formally announce a run for mayor in 2023, he may be part of a crowded field that includes other candidates expected to poll well in Clearing and Garfield Ridge. Fraternal Order of Police Lodge 7 President John Catanzara, a Clearing resident, has already signaled his intention to run for mayor. Also, former Chicago Public Schools CEO Paul Vallas has for months been assertively posting his criticisms of Lightfoot in Clearing and Garfield Ridge Facebook groups where he had never posted before.

In the wake of his mayoral announcement, there was relatively little chatter on local social media platforms, with one woman possibly summing up the mood of Clearing and Garfield Ridge by saying, “I like Lopez and I may vote for him, but that’s in 2023—and we’re already getting hit by so many political ads for the governor’s race and the congressional race. I guess I’m just too tired to talk politics.”

Local News

SRP-IMAGE-Logo

Clear-Ridge Reporter and NewsHound February 23, 2022

Spread the love

Spread the love

Chris Petrucelli is the new Red Stars coach. (Photo courtesy of Chicago Red Stars)

New Red Stars coach wants to bring ‘joy and positivity’

Spread the love

Spread the loveBy Jeff Vorva Staff writer The Chicago Red Stars have found their new coach. The team announced February 18 that Chris Petrucelli will replace Rory Dames, who resigned a day after the 2021 NWSL championship game. Dames has since been the subject of national stories regarding his alleged abuse of players both on…

De La Salle senior DaJuan Bates launches a shot against Marian Catholic on Friday. He finished with 33 points in the upset blowout win over the Spartans. Photo by Jeff Vorva

Upset Specials: De La Salle girls crowned regional champs; Meteors boys shock Marian Catholic

Spread the love

Spread the loveBy Jeff Vorva Staff Writer It was quite a 24-hours for De La Salle’s basketball teams. And it started out wrong. So wrong. On a snowy night when some area games were canceled because of a winter storm, the Meteors’ girls squad made the trek to Burbank to take on host St. Laurence…

Lyons swimmers figure to have three high placing relay teams in the state meet, which starts Friday in Westmont. Photo courtesy of Lyons Township High School

Area Sports Roundup: Lyons and Sandburg lead contingent of area swimmers headed to state

Spread the love

Spread the loveBy Jeff Vorva Staff writer Lyons, which won state titles in boys swimming in 2016 and 2017 and took second in 2018, is bringing a huge contingent of athletes to the IHSA state meet this weekend. Lyons is sending three relay teams and individual qualifiers in four events to the event, which will…

SRP-IMAGE-Logo

Clear-Ridge Reporter and NewsHound February 16, 2022

Spread the love

Spread the love

Pritzker urges child vaccination as changes to Health Care Right of Conscience Act emerge

Pritzker, Ezike address plan to lift mask mandate

Spread the love

Spread the loveSchool mandates would remain in place for ‘coming weeks,’ pending court decision By Jerry Nowicki Capitol News Illinois and Tim Hadac If COVID-19 hospitalizations continue to decline for the rest of the month, Gov. JB Pritzker plans to lift his executive order that mandates face coverings indoors by Feb. 28. The plan does…

A now-healed bald eagle takes a few steps out of a carrying crate after being released at Ottawa Trail Woods in Lyons. (Supplied photos)

Eagle healed, released to mate

Spread the love

Spread the loveRescuers thrilled with victory  By Kelly White Wildlife advocates last week released an eagle in the forest preserves several blocks northwest of Garfield Ridge. The eagle was the subject of a story last month in the Clear-Ridge Reporter & NewsHound. The release marked the end of a six-week rehabilitation stint that started when…

City Health Commissioner Allison Arwady, M.D. updates the press and public on the course of the pandemic on Feb. 1. --Screenshot from a City of Chicago Facebook livestream

Ease off vax regs, aldermen ask

Spread the love

Spread the loveQuinn, Burke, Tabares say regs ‘cripple’ businesses  By Tim Hadac With numbers of newly diagnosed COVID-19 cases falling across the city, the three aldermen serving Clearing and Garfield Ridge are among 11 City Council members who last week called on Chicago Department of Public Health Allison Arwady, M.D. to rescind a pandemic regulation…

Mike Del Galdo

Del Galdo named Super Lawyer for 12th straight year

Spread the love

Spread the loveLauded by suburban mayors for skills  From staff reports A national legal magazine is out with its 2022 list of best Illinois lawyers and tapped eight Chicago-area attorneys as the state’s “super” local government lawyers–including Berwyn-based attorney Michael Del Galdo, a recognition that drew praise from several suburban Cook County mayors. “Super Lawyers” magazine,…

Joan Hadac

They had my back when I was stuck

Spread the love

Spread the loveBy Joan Hadac Your correspondent in Clearing and Garfield Ridge (708) 496-0265 • joan.hadac@gmail.com We’ve dug out from snowmagedon, and I want to personally thank the three people on 61st Street who came to my rescue when I got stuck in the snow. I was nervous and I was making all the mistakes a…

Neighbors

House gives OK to new state agency focused on early childhood programs

House gives OK to new state agency focused on early childhood programs

By PETER HANCOCK Capitol News Illinois phancock@capitolnewsillinois.com SPRINGFIELD – The Illinois House gave final passage Thursday to a bill establishing a new cabinet-level state agency whose mission will be to provide a kind of one-stop shop for services focusing on early childhood development and education. By the time it’s fully operational in 2026, the new…

As vacated Centralia funeral home prepares for new tenant, owner makes a startling find

As vacated Centralia funeral home prepares for new tenant, owner makes a startling find

By BETH HUNDSDORFER Capitol News Illinois bhundsdorfer@capitolnewsillinois.com In the basement of a Centralia funeral home in a dark hallway off the embalming room, tucked inside a nook behind two steel plates and a door, a visitor found three disembodied, neatly wrapped human legs, two of them marked with names and dated to the 1960s.  The…

Illinois Supreme Court considers expectation of privacy in hospitals

Illinois Supreme Court considers expectation of privacy in hospitals

By DILPREET RAJU  & ANDREW ADAMS Capitol News Illinois news@capitolnewsillinois.com SPRINGFIELD – While Cortez Turner was in a hospital room being treated for a gunshot wound to his leg in 2016, police took his clothes. Now, the Illinois Supreme Court is weighing whether that action violated Turner’s expectation of privacy under the Fourth Amendment. The…

Capitol Briefs: House OKs program for student teacher stipends – but not the funding for it

Capitol Briefs: House OKs program for student teacher stipends – but not the funding for it

By PETER HANCOCK & ANDREW CAMPBELL Capitol News Illinois news@capitolnewsillinois.com SPRINGFIELD – The Illinois House approved a bill Tuesday to allow student teachers to receive stipends while earning their education degree, even though the money needed to fund those stipends is unlikely to be included in next year’s budget. House Bill 4652, by Rep. Barbara…

As Medicaid redeterminations restart, about 73% of state’s recipients remain enrolled

As Medicaid redeterminations restart, about 73% of state’s recipients remain enrolled

By DILPREET RAJU Capitol News Illinois draju@capitolnewsillinois.com About 73 percent of Illinois’ Medicaid recipients remain on the rolls after the first redetermination cycle following the COVID-19 pandemic, while approximately 660,000 recipients have been disenrolled. Speaking at a news conference in Chicago, Gov. JB Pritzker celebrated the fact that 2.6 million Illinoisans remained on the rolls…

Capitol Briefs: Republicans sue over law banning legislative candidate slating

Capitol Briefs: Republicans sue over law banning legislative candidate slating

By HANNAH MEISEL Capitol News Illinois hmeisel@capitolnewsillinois.com One week after Gov. JB Pritzker signed an elections-related measure that his fellow Democrats quickly muscled through the General Assembly, Republicans sued over the new law, alleging the majority party is blocking ballot access to would-be legislative candidates. The law , passed early this month as the legislature’s…

For Many Illinoisans in Flood-Prone Areas, Buyouts Are the Only Way Out

For Many Illinoisans in Flood-Prone Areas, Buyouts Are the Only Way Out

By Laura Stewart, Illinois Answers Project April 23, 2024 DIETERICH, Ill. – Every day, Berdeena Leturno checks her email for an update on when the state of Illinois will finally pay her $80,000.  It’s been over two months since she signed the paperwork to sell her flood-damaged home as part of a buyout program, and…

Capitol Briefs: Senate advances elections bill, measure targeting ‘predatory’ lending

Capitol Briefs: Senate advances elections bill, measure targeting ‘predatory’ lending

By PETER HANCOCK & HANNAH MEISEL Capitol News Illinois news@capitolnewsillinois.com SPRINGFIELD – A bill that would put more controls on certain kinds of high-cost loans to small businesses cleared the Illinois Senate Thursday. Senate Bill 2234, known as the Small Business Financial Transparency Act, targets a relatively new kind of nontraditional lender in the credit…

Stateville may close as early as September under Pritzker’s prison plan

Stateville may close as early as September under Pritzker’s prison plan

By HANNAH MEISEL Capitol News Illinois hmeisel@capitolnewsillinois.com SPRINGFIELD – Stateville Correctional Center could close as early as September under a plan laid out by Gov. JB Pritzker’s administration on Friday. Top officials with the Illinois Department of Corrections testified in front of a key panel of state lawmakers. The 12 members on the General Assembly’s…

Labor-backed bill banning 'captive audience' meetings awaits House action

Labor-backed bill banning ‘captive audience’ meetings awaits House action

By ALEX ABBEDUTO Capitol News Illinois abbeduto@capitolnewsillinois.com SPRINGFIELD – With two weeks left before the General Assembly’s spring session is set to adjourn, negotiations continue on a labor union-backed initiative that would allow Illinoisans to skip religious and political work meetings without reprimand.  Dubbed the “Worker Freedom of Speech Act,” Senate Bill 3649 advanced out…