CHICAGO CITY COUNCIL VOTES TO BAN LOBBYING BY ELECTED LEADERS
Recent corruption scandals prompted Chicago’s City Council on Dec. 18 to put a halt to aldermen or city workers working as lobbyists, and to stop other elected leaders from lobbying them or city departments on behalf of private clients.
Ald. Matt O’Shea, 19th Ward, and Michele Smith, 43rd Ward, sponsored the ordinance in response to ongoing federal probes into city aldermen’s and Illinois lawmakers’ conflicts between their private and public jobs. It follows Mayor Lori Lightfoot’s set of anti-corruption ordinances unanimously passed July 24 to restrict aldermen’s outside employment and give the city’s watchdog greater power.
“We are surrounded by impropriety at the state level, at the county level and in this body,” O’Shea said. “The feds are all around us. We need to send a message that this B.S. is over with.”
Besides multiple current federal probes of politicians, Chicago has seen 30 aldermen convicted of corruption since 1972. The city’s longest-serving alderman, Ed Burke, faces a 14-count federal indictment.
A study by the University of Illinois at Chicago found Illinois is the second-most corrupt state in the nation and Chicago the nation’s most corrupt city.
The new ordinance states “no elected official of the state or a unit of local government in the state may lobby the city, the City Council, or any city agency, department, board or commission unless they’re acting in their elected capacity for constituents, representing a legal client in quasi-judicial, administrative or legislative action, or engaging in political activity.”
It also keeps Chicago’s elected leaders and city employees from lobbying other governments on behalf of clients. It emphasizes lobbying work should only be done in their official capacity on behalf of their constituents.
Moar:
https://www.illinoispolicy.org/chicago-city-council-votes-to-ban-lobbying-by-elected-leaders/