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  • Howard Brookins, Jr., 21st, shown in 2018, announced Sept. 7...

    Nancy Stone, Chicago Tribune

    Howard Brookins, Jr., 21st, shown in 2018, announced Sept. 7 he won't run again next year.

  • Ald. Tom Tunney leads a meeting with alderman and casino...

    Antonio Perez / Chicago Tribune

    Ald. Tom Tunney leads a meeting with alderman and casino officials concerning the future casino at the City Council in City Hall on May 23, 2022.

  • Ald. Harry Osterman, 48th, speaks on Nov. 1, 2021 as...

    Brian Cassella / Chicago Tribune

    Ald. Harry Osterman, 48th, speaks on Nov. 1, 2021 as Metra breaks ground for the new Peterson Ridge station in Edgewater.

  • Ald. George Cardenas speaks before a budget vote last year.

    Antonio Perez / Chicago Tribune

    Ald. George Cardenas speaks before a budget vote last year.

  • Ald. Michael Scott reacts to speeches in his honor as...

    Antonio Perez / Chicago Tribune

    Ald. Michael Scott reacts to speeches in his honor as the City Council members join in a chorus of well wishing for the retiring Alderman on May 25, 2022.

  • Ald. Roderick Sawyer, 6th, speaks before the City Council votes...

    Jose M. Osorio / Chicago Tribune

    Ald. Roderick Sawyer, 6th, speaks before the City Council votes on the controversial civilian oversight panel at City Hall on July 21, 2021.

  • Ald. Sophia King, 4th, marches in the Bud Billiken Parade...

    John J. Kim / Chicago Tribune

    Ald. Sophia King, 4th, marches in the Bud Billiken Parade on South King Drive on Aug. 13, 2022.

  • Ald. Michele Smith speaks during a meeting with alderman concerning...

    Antonio Perez / Chicago Tribune

    Ald. Michele Smith speaks during a meeting with alderman concerning the future casino at City Hall, Monday May 23, 2022. The City Council members had yet to vote on issues concerning a casino.

  • Ald. Patrick Daley Thompson leaves the Dirksen US Courthouse during...

    E. Jason Wambsgans / Chicago Tribune

    Ald. Patrick Daley Thompson leaves the Dirksen US Courthouse during a break in his federal tax fraud trial on Feb. 11, 2022.

  • Ald. Susan Sadlowski Garza during City Council meeting last year.

    Antonio Perez / Chicago Tribune

    Ald. Susan Sadlowski Garza during City Council meeting last year.

  • Ald. James Cappleman speaks about the curfew ordinance during a...

    Brian Cassella / Chicago Tribune

    Ald. James Cappleman speaks about the curfew ordinance during a City Council meeting on May 25, 2022, at City Hall.

  • Ald. Carrie Austin speaks about the curfew ordinance during a...

    Brian Cassella / Chicago Tribune

    Ald. Carrie Austin speaks about the curfew ordinance during a City Council meeting Wednesday, May 25, 2022 at City Hall.

  • Ald. Leslie Hairston speaks on March 23, 2022, during a...

    Brian Cassella / Chicago Tribune

    Ald. Leslie Hairston speaks on March 23, 2022, during a City Council meeting at City Hall.

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Chicago Tribune
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The Chicago City Council will see significant turnover next year as a wave of aldermen will not be running for reelection. The reasons vary but here’s a list of aldermen who started 2022 in office but won’t be running to keep those seats when the municipal elections are held in February.

Not running

George Cardenas, 12th

Ald. George Cardenas speaks before a budget vote last year.
Ald. George Cardenas speaks before a budget vote last year.

Chicago Ald. George Cardenas, who ran unopposed in November and was elected to the Cook County Board of Review, didn’t wait for that election before announcing his departure from the City Council. He turned in his resignation letter Nov. 1, effective at the end of the month.

In the primary in June for the property tax appeal board, Cardenas defeated embattled incumbent Tammy Wendt. Cardenas represented the 12th Ward was Mayor Lori Lightfoot’s deputy floor leader.

Lightfoot is reviewing applications for Cardenas’ replacement.

>> Read the full story here

Ariel Reboyras, 30th

Another alderman who has served for 20 years on the council announced in September that he won’t run again.

Ariel Reboyras of the Northwest Side’s 30th Ward was first elected to the City Council in 2003. The alderman said Sept. 13 that he will retire.

Reboyras chaired the public safety committee during a turbulent period for policing under former Mayor Rahm Emanuel. Reboyras said he’s prioritizing his family.

>> Read the full story here.

Howard Brookins, 21st

Howard Brookins, Jr., 21st, shown in 2018, announced Sept. 7 he won't run again next year.
Howard Brookins, Jr., 21st, shown in 2018, announced Sept. 7 he won’t run again next year.

Ald. Howard Brookins told the Tribune on Sept. 7 that after nearly 20 years in office, it was time for a self-imposed term limit.

Brookins has represented the 21st Ward since 2003, currently serves as the chair of the Committee on Transportation and Public Way and said he will serve out the rest of his term, which ends next May. He pledged to stay active in politics but that he wants “to hand the baton over to a new generation of leaders who can make sure the movement for racial justice and economic equity is sustained into the new political era.”

>> Read the full story here.

Susan Sadlowski Garza, 10th

Ald. Susan Sadlowski Garza during City Council meeting last year.
Ald. Susan Sadlowski Garza during City Council meeting last year.

Southeast Side Ald. Susan Sadlowski Garza announced Sept. 5 that she will leave the council next year at the end of her second term.

Garza was a onetime ally of Mayor Lori Lightfoot before the two had a falling out and Garza said she would not support Lightfoot’s reelection bid in February.

In announcing her decision, Garza noted she was the first member of the Chicago Teachers Union elected to the City Council and the first woman to serve the 10th Ward. The daughter of a well-known labor leader, she pushed for a higher minimum wage and fair work week ordinance.

>> Read the full story here.

Tom Tunney, 44th

Ald. Tom Tunney leads a meeting with alderman and casino officials concerning the future casino at the City Council in City Hall on May 23, 2022.
Ald. Tom Tunney leads a meeting with alderman and casino officials concerning the future casino at the City Council in City Hall on May 23, 2022.

North Side Ald. Tom Tunney, Chicago’s first openly gay alderman, announced he will not run for reelection to the Chicago City Council after his term expires next year and endorsed his chief of staff to take over.

The alderman of the 44th Ward since late 2002, Tunney said in a statement that he would step down as alderman of the ward that includes Lakeview and Wrigleyville after nearly two decades of being on the council.

There had been speculation he might run for mayor against incumbent first-term Mayor Lori Lightfoot but Tunney said in November that he had decided against it, adding “while my love of our City is as strong as ever, I will not be running for Mayor.”

>> Read the full story here

Leslie Hairston, 5th

Ald. Leslie Hairston speaks on March 23, 2022, during a City Council meeting at City Hall.
Ald. Leslie Hairston speaks on March 23, 2022, during a City Council meeting at City Hall.

Ald. Leslie Hairston, a longtime member of the Chicago City Council who has represented the Hyde Park and South Shore neighborhoods for nearly a quarter century, said in late August she would join the growing list of aldermen retiring at the end of this term.

The alderman of the 5th Ward since 1999, Hairston has been a member of the council’s progressive caucus and led the neighborhood through the contentious selection and development of the upcoming Obama Presidential Center next door.

>> Read the full story here

Harry Osterman, 48th

Ald. Harry Osterman, 48th, speaks on Nov. 1, 2021 as Metra breaks ground for the new Peterson Ridge station in Edgewater.
Ald. Harry Osterman, 48th, speaks on Nov. 1, 2021 as Metra breaks ground for the new Peterson Ridge station in Edgewater.

Ald. Harry Osterman, who has represented parts of Uptown, Edgewater and Andersonville for more than a decade, said he is retiring from the City Council at the end of his term next year.

The alderman of the 48th Ward since 2011 and son of former Ald. Kathy Osterman, he said in a newsletter notice that he will not run for a fourth term. A former longtime Illinois state representative before being elected alderman, Osterman said “this was not an easy decision,” but felt “that the time is right to make this transition.”

>> Read the full story here

James Cappleman, 46th

Ald. James Cappleman speaks about the curfew ordinance during a City Council meeting on May 25, 2022, at City Hall.
Ald. James Cappleman speaks about the curfew ordinance during a City Council meeting on May 25, 2022, at City Hall.

James Cappleman, alderman since 2011 for the North Side’s 46th Ward encompassing parts of Lakeview and Uptown, announced in early July that he will not seek another term.

“I feel fortunate to be doing work that I enjoy every day, but I also know it feels right for me to move on to another adventure with the assurance that our community is now in a good place to keep moving forward to accomplish more,” he said in a newsletter announcing his decision. His reelection bids in 2015 and 2019 were tight races that highlighted the difficulty of managing a gentrifying ward.

>> Read the full story here

Carrie Austin, 34th

Ald. Carrie Austin speaks about the curfew ordinance during a City Council meeting Wednesday, May 25, 2022 at City Hall.
Ald. Carrie Austin speaks about the curfew ordinance during a City Council meeting Wednesday, May 25, 2022 at City Hall.

Under a cloud for two years since her ward office was raided by federal agents, 34th Ward Ald. Carrie Austin was indicted on federal bribery charges along with her chief of staff, and said she would not be running for reelection. Her decision was deemed a sacrifice by members of City Council’s Black Caucus, who moved her ward up from the Far South Side under the citywide ward remap that will take effect next year.

Austin and her top aide, Chester Wilson, are alleged to have shepherded a new real-estate development through City Hall bureaucracy beginning in 2016 and getting home-improvement perks from a developer seeking to influence them in exchange.

Austin, 72, was charged with one count of conspiring to use interstate facilities to promote bribery and other charges, according to prosecutors. She and Ald. Ed Burke, 14th, are both sitting aldermen under indictment. Burke has not said if he’s running for reelection. A third, Ald. Patrick Daley Thompson, 11th, was convicted in 2023 and resigned.

>> Read the full story here

Not running for alderman — but running for mayor

Sophia King, 4th

Ald. Sophia King, 4th, marches in the Bud Billiken Parade on South King Drive on Aug. 13, 2022.
Ald. Sophia King, 4th, marches in the Bud Billiken Parade on South King Drive on Aug. 13, 2022.

South Side Ald. Sophia King announced she is running for mayor of Chicago, the first woman challenger in the crowded field of those taking on incumbent first-term Mayor Lori Lightfoot.

King, whose 4th ward includes parts of downtown and Hyde Park, is a former school administrator and community volunteer who was appointed alderman by former Mayor Rahm Emanuel in 2016.

In her time on the City Council, King is best known citywide for her efforts to rename a pair of high-profile streets.

She unsuccessfully led a push to re-christen downtown’s Balbo Drive in honor of Ida B. Wells, the African American journalist who worked to expose lynchings and pushed for women’s voting rights. King also worked with Ald. David Moore, 17th, to rename Lake Shore Drive to honor Jean Baptiste Point DuSable, the Black founder of Chicago, in 2021.

>> Read the full story here

Roderick Sawyer, 6th

Ald. Roderick Sawyer, 6th, speaks before the City Council votes on the controversial civilian oversight panel at City Hall on July 21, 2021.
Ald. Roderick Sawyer, 6th, speaks before the City Council votes on the controversial civilian oversight panel at City Hall on July 21, 2021.

South Side Ald. Roderick Sawyer, whose father was mayor in the 1980s, announced in June that he’d run for City Hall’s top job.

Sawyer’s declaration marked an extraordinary break with Mayor Lori Lightfoot, who selected him to be part of her City Council leadership team as chairman of the health and human services committee. Sawyer, who has represented the 6th Ward since 2011, criticized Lightfoot’s combative leadership style and said her contempt for aldermen makes it difficult for the council to get things done. If he runs for mayor, Sawyer would be unable to also run for reelection as alderman.

“I don’t think I would treat my colleagues as nemesis or an opposing party. We’re all partners in this,” Sawyer said. “That’s the approach we need to take.”

>>> Read the full story here

Recently replaced aldermen not running

Michele Smith, 43rd

Ald. Michele Smith speaks during a meeting with alderman concerning the future casino at the City Council in City Hall, Monday May 23, 2022. The City Council members had yet to vote on issues concerning a casino.
Ald. Michele Smith speaks during a meeting with alderman concerning the future casino at the City Council in City Hall, Monday May 23, 2022. The City Council members had yet to vote on issues concerning a casino.

Longtime Chicago alderman Michele Smith, 43rd, stepped down from her seat on City Council on Aug. 12, months before the end of her third term. In her announcement, she cited “deepening responsibilities towards family and friends.”

At the time of her announcement, Smith, whose ward encompasses Lincoln Park and Old Town, became the third North Side lakefront alderman to announce a decision not to run for reelection next year. She was first elected to the seat in 2011.

In September, Mayor Lori Lightfoot named Timmy Knudsen as the new alderman of the ward. Knudsen is running in 2023.

>> Read the full story here

Michael Scott, 24th

Ald. Michael Scott reacts to speeches in his honor as the City Council members join in a chorus of well wishing for the retiring Alderman on May 25, 2022.
Ald. Michael Scott reacts to speeches in his honor as the City Council members join in a chorus of well wishing for the retiring Alderman on May 25, 2022.

West Side Ald. Michael Scott stepped down from the City Council in May to join Cinespace Studios, a movie and television studio company in Chicago. Not long after his announcement, Mayor Lori Lightfoot appointed his sister, Monique Scott, to take his place leading the 24th Ward. The mayor defended the pick by saying she was interested in preserving the momentum from economic development and wasn’t swayed by the family connection.

“It’s not the fact that she is … the alderman’s sister; it’s that she was born and raised in the ward, absolutely knows the crucial issues that are important for that ward, and is committed to making sure we move those forward,” Lightfoot said at the time. “It’s an easy, frankly lazy throwaway to say, ‘Oh, she’s the alderman’s sister.’ Look at who she is. Look at what she’s been able to do with her life. Look at how committed she is to the 24th Ward and residents of North Lawndale and then make your assessment.”

Lightfoot has since tapped Michael Scott to serve as a member the Chicago Board of Education, which also drew criticism.

>> Read the full story here

Patrick Daley Thompson, 11th

Ald. Patrick Daley Thompson leaves the Dirksen US Courthouse during a break in his federal tax fraud trial on Feb. 11, 2022.
Ald. Patrick Daley Thompson leaves the Dirksen US Courthouse during a break in his federal tax fraud trial on Feb. 11, 2022.

In July, former Ald. Patrick Daley Thompson became the latest Chicago politician — and the first ever named Daley — to check in at a federal prison.

Thompson, who was sentenced to 4 months in prison for tax-related offenses following his conviction in February, surrendered at the low security facility in Oxford, Wisconsin, which has housed a lengthy list of crooked Illinois elected officials, mobsters and other high-profile prisoners over the years.

Because his sentence was under one year, Thompson, 53, must serve most or all of it. Barring any behavioral issues he should be out in time for Christmas in 2022.

The 11th Ward alderman and scion of the Daley political dynasty, was later replaced by Nicole Lee, a director at United Airlines and the first Asian American woman and the first Chinese American to serve as a Chicago alderman.

Lee announced Aug. 31 that she will seek election next year to a full term in the 11th Ward seat.

>> Read the full story here