EDGEWATER — The moderator for the 40th ward candidate forum on Tuesday night called longtime Ald. Pat O’Connor a “racist troll” following the contentious event.



Andre Vasquez, Dianne Daleiden, Maggie O’Keefe, Ugo Okere and incumbent O’Connor were part of a forum moderated by writer Rick Perlstein at Ebenezer Lutheran Church, 1650 W. Foster Ave.

Perlstein wrote on Twitter Wednesday morning: “Now that I’m not moderator, I can immoderately report that Ald. Pat O’Connor of the 40th ward is a racist troll who’s morally unfit for public office for accusing his Nigerian-American opponent of not being for ‘the community,’ but for ‘Nigerians.'”

Now that I'm not moderator, I can immoderately report that Ald. Pat O'Connor of the 40th ward is a racist troll who's morally unfit for public office for accusing his Nigerian-American opponent of not being for "the community," but for "Nigerians." https://t.co/McoibBkOJI — Rick Perlstein (@rickperlstein) October 17, 2018

Perlstein’s comment came after Ald. Pat O’Connor (40th), defended his tenure overseeing the ward. He also brought up race several times during the forum, prompting “boos” from the audience.

While touting his voting record, O’Connor said the day the City Council approved the police department’s controversial new training facility and the Obama Presidential Library was “a historic day in the African-American community.”



The audience audibly gasped at the comment and began to boo.



Challenger Okere responded by saying the last thing the police department needs is a new $95 million training facility, adding that the department already has a facility and the money could be better spent addressing the lead levels in city water.



“The African-American community does not want a police academy,” said Okere, who is of Nigerian descent and the only black candidate in the 40th ward race.

O’Connor tried to respond to Okere but Perlstein said he’d have a chance to respond later at a bar most of the audience intended to go to following the forum.

The crowd continued to boo during this exchange and Perlstein also asked them to quiet down so the forum could continue into closing statements.



At this point, O’Connor decided to push back at Okere, saying he knew very little about how Chicago works while also defending his support of the new police academy as an investment in the city’s West Side.

He then attacked Okere over a fundraising flyer.



“This is your fundraising invitation. It doesn’t talk about community, it talks about building Nigerian power in Chicago,” O’Connor said. “For God’s sake, if you want to talk about being part of a community, and this is how you’re going to raise your money?”

O’Connor was shouted down by the audience while he made this comment and as he tried to defend the city’s current handling of the lead issue.



“I would like you to reread what was on that flyer,” Okere said. “Because what it said on that flyer was Nigerian political power. Guess what? There are different constituencies across the City of Chicago. Every single one deserves political power.”



Okere also chastised O’Connor’s handling of race issues during his long tenure as alderman. Specifically, during the city’s “Council Wars,” which pitted a group of all-white aldermen — nicknamed the “Vrdolyak 29” — against then-Mayor Harold Washington — the city’s first black mayor. O’Connor was part of the all-white group.

“So for you to attack me to when I’m trying to give communities across the city of Chicago political power that they have historically not [had] is disgusting,” Okere said.

Okere: ‘This Is Racism’

On Wednesday afternoon, Okere issued a statement calling the alderman’s comments at the forum “racist.”

“Let me be clear, this is racism,” he wrote. “Last night, O’Connor attempted to cast me as the black boogeyman, someone who only wants to build power for Nigerians and nobody else.”

Calling the alderman “out of touch” and “cruel,” he said O’Connor sneered at a “marginalized group” for cheap political points.

“This is not who we should have representing our Ward,” Okere wrote.

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: Ugo Okere's Statement on Ald. O'Connor's Racist Attacks



Last night, October 16, community members of the 40th Ward gathered at Ebenezer Lutheran Church for a candidate forum. pic.twitter.com/xMdIxdGsB2 — Ugo Okere 🌹 (@UgoOkere40) October 17, 2018

Earlier in the forum, the first question Perlstein asked O’Connor was whether his presence at the event meant he intended to run for office. O’Connor, who has been dodging this question for months, read a prepared statement for a few minutes discussing his more than 30 years in office and said he’s committed to the ward and cares deeply about its neighbors.

Since he didn’t answer the question definitively, Perlstein asked again toward the end of the event.



“Are you running?,” Perlstein asked.



“Am I here?” O’Connor responded with a shrug.



O’Connor’s office did not immediately respond to requests for comment on the moderator’s statement or his plans for the future.

On Tuesday, O’Connor told The Daily Line that he has not yet decided whether to run for another term, but was keeping his options open by attending the debate.

The 40th Ward candidate forum was organized by the Bowmanville Community Organization, West Andersonville Neighbors Together, Lincoln Square North Neighbors and West Edgewater Area Residents.

Questions were submitted online ahead of the event and the five candidates were given two minutes to respond. The questions were designed so candidates would focus their answers at audience instead of debating one another, but candidates still took swipes at each other during the event.



The 40th Ward includes parts of Lincoln Square, Bowmanville, West Ridge, Edgewater and West Andersonville.

Video of the 40th ward candidate forum can be found here.

Below are highlights from Block Club’s live coverage of Tuesday night’s forum. The full tweet thread can be found here.

First question for Ugo Okere: How do you understand the job of alderman and how will you fulfill it?



Okere: Making sure businesses are safe, potholes are filled in ward. But also important to be equitable for things like progressive revenue and affordable housing in city happen. — Alex V Hernandez (@AVHndz) October 17, 2018

Same question about the job for O'Keefe.



O'Keefe: I want to be open, you can come in and air your grievances but also address pension crisis and have progressive measures introduced. — Alex V Hernandez (@AVHndz) October 17, 2018

Vasquez: As a person of color I've been profiled by CPD. But I've also worked with CAPS. He think's Civilian Police Accountability Council is one step, but also better accountability with community buy in and following a set of guidelines for both residents and CPD. — Alex V Hernandez (@AVHndz) October 17, 2018

Okere: We need community solutions for community issues, like crime and violence, by investing in CPS and parts of the city where violence is an issue. This instead of calling cops to solve crime. — Alex V Hernandez (@AVHndz) October 17, 2018

O'Connor: Says streets and sans has nothing to do with sewers. Also says the city spent a whole lot of money on sewer system to create "vortex" so water goes into sewers and not into homes. "The vortex is working." — Alex V Hernandez (@AVHndz) October 17, 2018

Vasquez: Also brings up parking meter deals. Also says a mayor who doesn't close more schools. Says city can't hope things change. Voters have to get a mayor and city council which is progressive. Also says wards can't fight each other for resources. — Alex V Hernandez (@AVHndz) October 17, 2018

O'Connor: Says equitability argument other people making at forum doesn't work because wards are different sizes and have different needs. Says that's not how the city works. Says affordable housing is in ward now. Says ward input more important than city hall input. — Alex V Hernandez (@AVHndz) October 17, 2018

O'Connor: Says no one in his family has never profited from a zoning change.



The crowd raises in boos when he says this.



O'Connor: Says he want to city law department to comply with every detail regarding developments in his ward and was in compliance. — Alex V Hernandez (@AVHndz) October 17, 2018

Vasquez: Says developers needs to agree to 30 percent affordable housing that has to be on site. So neighbors can stay here and grow old here. Also says officials who can even non-illegal benefit from development should always recuse themselves. — Alex V Hernandez (@AVHndz) October 17, 2018

O’Keefe: Says she's seen six luxury units go up in a year near her home in ward and she thinks it's "hideous." She also says she would not veto affordable housing. Says that type of housing does not equal crime. "We need to bring people of all types into our communities." — Alex V Hernandez (@AVHndz) October 17, 2018

Daleiden: Also says needs assessment is in order. Says ma and pa businesses are being hurt by property taxes. So if people will live and shop in neighborhood, do you need coffee shops, dog shops, etc? A need assessment is needed to see what businesses people would shop at. — Alex V Hernandez (@AVHndz) October 17, 2018

Vasquez: Thinks it's a sad state of affairs when people consider sticking their neck out to be demanding clean water. He commends Ald. Rosa on voting against CPD academy. He says he would stick neck out for rule to kick big money out of politics that benefits people like O'Conner — Alex V Hernandez (@AVHndz) October 17, 2018

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