Chicago mayor's office facing backlash after staffer allegedly tried to hide meeting video



The Chicago mayor's office is under fire after a staffer allegedly tried to hide video of a contentious city council meeting. The irony is that this hearing was largely about censorship and allegedly, the mayor's office tried to censor what happened in the meeting.

CHICAGO - Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson's office is under fire for allegedly trying to censor video of a contentious City Council meeting.

The mayor's office is facing accusations of trying to censor a meeting about censorship.

This comes after City Clerk Anna Valencia said a video of the meeting was improperly removed from public view.

The video in question shows Tuesday's City Council hearing on controversial artwork at the Cultural Center. The meeting turned chaotic when 25th Ward Ald. Byron Sigcho-Lopez appeared to call 34th Ward Ald. Bill Conway a "white supremacist."

This followed a heated debate over controversial artwork at the Cultural Center, which some aldermen have condemned as anti-Semitic.

Conway and Sigcho-Lopez were arguing over Sigcho-Lopez’s involvement in a protest before the DNC that included a burned American flag.

After a few moments, 41st Ward Ald. Anthony Napolitano and 38th Ward Ald. Nick Sposato called out Sigcho-Lopez for his remarks and removed him from the meeting.

"You gotta go," shouted Sposato. "You can’t call someone a white supremacist. You gotta go."

Videos of all City Council proceedings are posted on the City Clerk’s website. But last night, the video of Tuesday’s hearing was missing.

Valencia said a mayoral staffer improperly contacted her office, asking a staff member to edit the video. The clerk’s office employee declined, instead removing the video entirely.

Valencia stated she did not approve the removal and restored the video on Wednesday.

"I am, always have been, and always will be, committed to building transparency and trust with our residents, and will ensure this does not happen again," Valencia said in a statement. "We are here as public servants to ensure our residents have complete access to their government and as long as I am here, that will remain."

As soon as the meeting recessed, Sigcho-Lopez and Conway went into a private room with top mayoral advisor Jason Lee to clear the air.

Controversial art display



Thirty people spoke about an art exhibit at Chicago’s Special Events committee meeting this week.

The piece is controversial, and 27 council members have already called for its removal.

The protest puppet is in the Chicago Cultural Center. It portrays Uncle Sam and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu as murderers, calling out U-S support of Israel’s involvement in Gaza. The exhibit was titled "U.S.-Israel War Machine."

The alderpersons signed a letter calling on leaders to remove it because it was offensive.

Some members of the public agreed with calls to remove the artwork.

"As a citizen of Chicago, this is dangerous for my community. It is harmful and it is not something that should be displayed in a public building. Bigotry like this actively harms the Jewish community, which has a large presence in Chicago," a representative from the American Jewish Committee said.

Others said that censorship of public art is not something that Chicago’s elected officials should get involved in.

"To hear that there has been such an uproar about this puppet is shocking and honestly, a waste of everyone here’s time," one resident said. "The demand to remove this puppet sets a dangerous precedent that Chicago elected officials can dictate which artwork is allowed to be displayed in our city and which is not, based on whether they agree with the artist’s politics. As a proud member of Chicago’s Jewish community, I urge you to spend your time actually governing our city."

Changes were made to the display. Officials added a warning that the exhibition contains sensitive content.

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