
Incumbent North Chicago mayor faces two challengers who think the city needs a change
North Chicago Mayor Leon Rockingham, Jr., is seeking his sixth term leading the city, while two challengers _ Ald. Anthony Coleman, 2nd Ward, and David Hood _ believe it is time for a change.
With 20 years in the mayor's office and three terms as an alderman before that, Rockingham, 70, is immersed in city government. He said the North Chicago is at a precipice of progress and he wants to lead the city through it. Some things take time, and he has had a hand in much of it.
'My vision has never changed,' Rockingham said. 'You always have to concentrate on three things for the people—safety, economic development and infrastructure. If you have those three things, people and businesses will come to North Chicago.'
Coleman, 50, ousted an incumbent City Council member two years ago to start his career in elective office. Since then, he said he has helped push for redoing Foss Park Avenue from downtown North Chicago to the beach.
'It's time to pass the torch,' Coleman said. 'It's time to move the city forward. Sitting in the mayor's seat allows you to help move ahead the entire operation.'
Hood, 57, a longtime community activist who has worked as a security guard at both campuses of Waukegan High School, said he helped develop the Citizen's Advisory Committee while working with the police department in 2012. His candidacy was not his decision.
'It's a calling,' Hood said. 'The Lord called on me to better my city.'
Voters will decide whether Rockingham, a Democrat, Coleman, or Hood, both independents, will be elected mayor of North Chicago on Tuesday to lead the city for the next four years.
Believing the young people are the city's future, Hood said he wants programs to keep them positively engaged and out of trouble, but he also wants those programs to help them develop skills for a good career. For him, the age range is between 18 and 35.
'We need things for youth to stay out of trouble,' Hood said. 'I will work with organizations which can get them apprenticeships. We need to train people for these jobs. The school system can prepare them for good jobs so they stay in the community.'
With the downtown area in his ward, Coleman said he understands it well. He has a vision for improving the area on Sheridan Road from just south of 16th Street and north to Audrey Nixon Blvd. to make it a gathering place for residents and visitors.
'I'd like to see it be like a small Lake Bluff where people can walk around, sit down, or do a little shopping,' Coleman said. 'They should be able to have a cup of coffee or have lunch outside.
Enhancing the downtown area is part of the city's strategic plan, which Rockingham helped shepherd through the City Council on its way to winning the Daniel Burham award in September.
Among its elements, the plan will use the development of the 40-acre Sheridan Crossing area south of downtown and north of Buckley Road with mixed-use residential and commercial buildings. The two will connect with each other by foot and other methods to downtown.
'It ties it all together and is part of the downtown revitalization. There will be places for food and other businesses. It's going to help develop the area along Martin Luther King Drive,' Rockingham said. 'I'd like to see a hotel,' he added as a way for people attending weekly recruit graduations at Naval Station Great Lakes to stay in North Chicago instead of elsewhere.
Joining business development as part of his vision for North Chicago, Rockingham said he has made improvements in public safety and will continue to do more. During his current term, the crime rate has dropped 60%.
'We're using technology like license plate readers so we know if a criminal is in the city,' Rockingham said. 'We're using ShotSpotter so police can get to a crime scene faster. We're using community policing so we have more officers on the street.'
Should Coleman become mayor, he said he wants to double the size of the public works department. It will enable more infrastructure projects, like redoing sidewalks and repaving roads. It will include engineering personnel to do the work currently done by outside contractors.
'It will allow us to hire more employees from within the city as well as doing engineering projects in-house,' Coleman said. 'We'll be able to do projects that are long overdue.'
Another thing at the top of Hood's agenda is lowering property taxes. He said they are too high for many of the residents and need to be reduced. He also wants to enhance public safety by improving the relationships between the residents and the police.
'I always wanted to be a police officer,' Hood said. 'I want to have a good police presence and have them be a part of the community. If there are issues, (residents)should be able to go to the Citizens Advisory Board.'
Early voting continues through Monday at North Chicago Public Library, the Lake County Courthouse & Administration Building in Waukegan, and 15 other sites throughout the county. Polls are open election day between 6 a.m. and 7 p.m.
Lake County Clerk Anthony Vega said people can vote either at their preferred polling place or any other site around Lake County which is convenient.

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Politico
35 minutes ago
- Politico
Escalating ICE raids pull California Democrats back into immigration fight
SAN FRANCISCO — The Trump administration's increasingly aggressive moves on immigration are pulling Democrats back into a border security debate they had tried to ignore. For months, Democrats scarred by the politics of the issue sought to sidestep President Donald Trump's immigration wars — focusing instead on the economy, tariffs or, in the case of deportations, due process concerns. But in the span of a week, that calculation was jolted in California, after a series of high-profile raids and arrests, including of a labor union leader and dozens of other people in Los Angeles, and with President Donald Trump on Saturday announcing the deployment of 2,000 National Guard troops to the area. In this citadel of Democratic politics, party officials from the governor's mansion to city halls are suddenly tearing into Trump on immigration again, inflaming a debate that worked to Trump's benefit in 2024 — but where Democrats believe they now have a political opening. 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He also vowed to veto a Democratic-led bill that would have applied such restrictions to state prisons and is now proposing steep cuts to a health care program for undocumented immigrants. Earlier this year, he suggested the legal fight over Kilmar Abrego Garcia, the Maryland resident mistakenly deported by the Trump administration and imprisoned in El Salvador — he is now back in U.S. custody and facing federal human trafficking charges — was a 'distraction' intended to take Democrats' focus away from other parts of Trump's agenda (Newsom's office later said his remarks were misconstrued). But in recent days, the governor has criticized federal deportation efforts, including reports that federal authorities threatened the family of a Bakersfield girl with a rare, life-threatening medical condition with deportation, despite the family earlier being granted humanitarian protection. 'The @GOP are sending a 4 year old off to her death without a care in the world. 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In a social media post, Trump said, 'If Governor Gavin Newscum, of California, and Mayor Karen Bass, of Los Angeles, can't do their jobs, which everyone knows they can't, then the Federal Government will step in and solve the problem, RIOTS & LOOTERS, the way it should be solved!!!' ICE officials have also defended the agency's actions in the San Diego raids, saying agents wear masks due to escalating death threats and online harassment. The agency said it deployed flash-bang grenades when the crowd outside the restaurant 'became unruly' and posed a potential danger. Regarding the arrest of SEIU's leader, federal authorities said Huerta had blocked an ICE vehicle while agents were serving a warrant. Still, the headline-grabbing incidents and images of residents clashing with ICE agents have provided an opening for Democrats to put the Trump administration on the defensive — over raids, accounts of children being separated from their parents during ICE detentions and migrants being arrested in federal courthouses while attending legal proceedings. Recent polling suggests that after making gains with Latino voters in 2024, Trump's support among Latinos is falling off. 'It's one thing when you're talking about illegal aliens in the abstract,' said Mike Madrid, a veteran political consultant and anti-Trump Republican. 'It moved from the abstract to the real. It's cruelty for cruelty's sake, and that's where you're going to lose support.' Chris Newman, legal director with the National Day Laborer Organizing Network, said while Democrats were hurt in the 2024 election by the Biden administration's handling of immigration, the politics are shifting as Trump tries to carry out his promise of mass deportations. 'When you see these types of Gestapo-style tactics playing out in real life, the whole country is recoiling to that,' said Newman, who represents the family of Abrego Garcia. He has criticized Democrats, including Newsom, over their response to the Abrego Garcia case, which captured national headlines due to Trump's defiance of multiple federal court orders. In that case, Democrats focused their messaging not on the humanitarian toll of deportations, but due process and the rule of law. Newman said the latest raids show Democrats hesitant to attack Republicans over their immigration policies have misread the moment: 'The wrong lesson (from the 2024 election) is that immigration is inherently a losing issue for Democrats at the top level. The right lesson is that what … the American public wants is a clear, legible immigration policy.' Among the most outspoken California Democrats in recent days has been San Diego Councilmember Sean Elo-Rivera, who was pilloried by conservative media outlets over his Instagram post that included a photo labeling ICE agents as 'terrorists' in the restaurant raid. The post drew national attention, with White House Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller accusing politicians on the left of 'openly encouraging violence against law enforcement to aid and abet the invasion of America.' Elo-Rivera, who's also a member of the progressive Working Families Party, said while the restaurant incident made headlines, it was indicative of more aggressive ICE actions that have rattled his district near the U.S.-Mexico border — tactics he argues are designed to stoke fear. He said while Democrats did a lot of 'hemming and hawing' post-election over the party's stance on immigration, they now have a chance to make a sharp contrast with the GOP by consistently advocating for the dignity and rights of migrants. 'Immigration is not a distraction for Democrats. We just need to have the conversation on our terms,' Elo-Rivera said. 'Unfortunately, there's folks that think they need to see a poll first before they take a position.'


Hamilton Spectator
an hour ago
- Hamilton Spectator
Trump deploys California National Guard to LA to quell protests despite the governor's objections
PARAMOUNT, Calif. (AP) — President Donald Trump is deploying 2,000 California National Guard troops to Los Angeles over the objections of Gov. Gavin Newsom after a second day of clashes between hundreds of protesters and federal immigration authorities in riot gear. Confrontations broke out on Saturday near a Home Depot in the heavily Latino city of Paramount, south of Los Angeles, where federal agents were staging at a Department of Homeland Security office nearby. Agents unleashed tear gas, flash-bang explosives and pepper balls, and protesters hurled rocks and cement at Border Patrol vehicles. Smoke wafted from small piles of burning refuse in the streets. Tensions were high after a series of sweeps by immigration authorities the previous day, including in LA's fashion district and at a Home Depot, as the weeklong tally of immigrant arrests in the city climbed past 100. A prominent union leader was arrested while protesting and accused of impeding law enforcement. The White House announced that Trump would deploy the Guard to 'address the lawlessness that has been allowed to fester.' It wasn't clear when the troops would arrive. Newsom , a Democrat, said in a post on the social platform X that it was 'purposefully inflammatory and will only escalate tensions.' He later said the federal government wants a spectacle and urged people not to give them one by becoming violent. In a signal of the administration's aggressive approach, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth threatened to deploy the U.S. military. 'If violence continues, active-duty Marines at Camp Pendleton will also be mobilized — they are on high alert,' Hegseth said on X. Trump's order came after clashes in Paramount and neighboring Compton, where a car was set on fire. Protests continued into the evening in Paramount, with several hundred demonstrators gathered near a doughnut shop, and authorities holding up barbed wire to keep the crowd back. Crowds also gathered again outside federal buildings in downtown Los Angeles, including a detention center, where local police declared an unlawful assembly and began to arrest people. Standoff in Paramount Earlier in Paramount, immigration officers faced off with demonstrators at the entrance to a business park, across from the back of a Home Depot. They set off fireworks and pulled shopping carts into the street, broke up cinder blocks and pelted a procession of Border Patrol vans as they departed and careened down a boulevard. U.S. Attorney Bill Essayli said federal agents made more arrests of people with deportation orders on Saturday, but none at the Home Depot. The Department of Homeland Security has a building next door and agents were staging there as they prepared to carry out operations, he said on Fox11 Los Angeles. He didn't say how many people were arrested Saturday or where. Paramount Mayor Peggy Lemons told multiple news outlets that community members showed up in response because people are fearful about activity by immigration agents. 'When you handle things the way that this appears to be handled, it's not a surprise that chaos would follow,' Lemons said. Some demonstrators jeered at officers while recording the events on smartphones. 'ICE out of Paramount. We see you for what you are,' a woman said through a megaphone. 'You are not welcome here.' More than a dozen people were arrested and accused of impeding immigration agents, Essayli posted on X, including the names and mug shots of some of those arrested. He didn't say where they were protesting. Trump calls up the Guard Trump federalized part of California's National Guard under what is known as Title 10 authority , which places him, not the governor, atop the chain of command, according to Newsom's office. White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said in a statement that the work the immigration authorities were doing when met with protests is 'essential to halting and reversing the invasion of illegal criminals into the United States. In the wake of this violence, California's feckless Democrat leaders have completely abdicated their responsibility to protect their citizens.' The president's move came shortly after he issued a threat on his social media network saying that if Newsom and Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass did not 'do their jobs,' then 'the Federal Government will step in and solve the problem, RIOTS & LOOTERS, the way it should be solved!!!' Trump signed the order shortly before he went to attend a UFC fight in New Jersey, where he sat ringside with boxer Mike Tyson. Newsom said in his statement that local authorities 'are able to access law enforcement assistance at a moment's notice,' and 'there is currently no unmet need.' The California Highway Patrol said Newsom directed it to deploy additional officers to 'maintain public safety.' 'Everyone has the right to peacefully protest, but let me be clear: violence and destruction are unacceptable, and those responsible will be held accountable,' Bass said in a statement early Sunday. She said she had spoken with members of the Trump administration and insisted that she and Newsom were in control and there was no need for the National Guard to be deployed. In 2020, Trump asked governors of several states to deploy their National Guard troops to Washington, D.C., to quell protests after George Floyd was killed by Minneapolis police. Many agreed and sent troops. Trump also threatened at the time to invoke the Insurrection Act for those protests — an intervention rarely seen in modern American history. But then-Defense Secretary Mark Esper pushed back, saying the law should be invoked 'only in the most urgent and dire of situations.' George H.W. Bush used the Insurrection Act to respond to riots in Los Angeles in 1992 after the acquittal of white police officers who were videotaped beating Black motorist Rodney King. Trump did not invoke the act during his first term, and he did not do so Saturday, according to Leavitt and Newsom. Arrests in Los Angeles Protests kicked off a day earlier in Los Angeles after federal authorities arrested 44 people for violating immigration law Friday. DHS later said recent ICE operations in Los Angeles resulted in the arrest of 118 immigrants, including five people linked to criminal organizations and people with prior criminal histories. David Huerta, regional president of the Service Employees International Union, was also arrested Friday while protesting. The Justice Department confirmed that he was being held Saturday at the Metropolitan Detention Center in Los Angeles ahead of a scheduled Monday court appearance. Democratic Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer called for his immediate release, warning of a 'disturbing pattern of arresting and detaining American citizens for exercising their right to free speech.' ___ Lee reported from Santa Fe, New Mexico, and Price from Bridgewater, New Jersey. Associated Press writers Zeke Miller and Eric Tucker in Washington; Rebecca Boone in Boise, Idaho, and Sophia Tareen in Chicago contributed. Error! Sorry, there was an error processing your request. There was a problem with the recaptcha. Please try again. You may unsubscribe at any time. By signing up, you agree to our terms of use and privacy policy . This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google privacy policy and terms of service apply. Want more of the latest from us? Sign up for more at our newsletter page .
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Trump Orders 2,000 National Guard Troops to Quell Protests of Los Angeles Immigration Raids
President Trump has ordered 2,000 National Guard troops to Los Angeles to shut down mass protests of federal immigration raids in the area, a move that California Gov. Gavin Newsom condemned, saying it 'will only escalate tensions.' 'The federal federal government is taking over the California National Guard and deploying 2,000 soldiers in Los Angeles — not because there is a shortage of law enforcement, but because they want a spectacle,' Newsom tweeted. 'Don't give them one. Never use violence. Speak out peacefully.' Trump signed a memorandum deploying the guardsmen as demonstrations opposing ICE operations continued to roil the state, White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt said in a statement Saturday evening. 'In the wake of this violence, California's feckless Democrat leaders have completely abdicated their responsibility to protect their citizens,' Leavitt said. 'That is why President Trump has signed a Presidential Memorandum deploying 2,000 National Guardsmen to address the lawlessness that has been allowed to fester.' More to come … The post Trump Orders 2,000 National Guard Troops to Quell Protests of Los Angeles Immigration Raids appeared first on TheWrap.