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Chicago Tribune
Chicago Tribune
Politics
Lizzie Kane, Sarah Freishtat and William Lee

Voters head to the polls to select Chicago's next mayor

CHICAGO — Cloudy skies Tuesday alluded to the severe weather expected during the runoff election, as voters head to the polls to select the next mayor of Chicago.

As of noon Central time Tuesday, the Chicago Board of Elections reported 22.9% total citywide turnout.

Top voter turnout was reported in the 19th, 41st, 11th, 13th and 47th wards, according to Board of Elections spokesperson Max Bever. Fourteen polling places delayed opening Tuesday morning, with three being in the 6th Ward.

In a 12:30 p.m. news conference Tuesday, Bever said he expected vote totals to slightly exceed the Feb. 28 election at somewhere between 36% to 38% of all registered voters.

“Looks like we are having another smooth and orderly Election Day so far in Chicago,” Bever said. “While early voting is definitely strong and swift, we are heading back into a somewhat slow and sleepy Election Day.”

Tuesday marks the end of a bitterly contested race between Paul Vallas and Brandon Johnson, who defeated first-term Mayor Lori Lightfoot and emerged from a field of nine candidates to advance to the runoff. Race, crime, education and city finances became key issues, as the two candidates offered starkly differing visions on how they would lead the nation’s third-largest city.

Voters will also select aldermen in 14 wards where races advanced to runoffs after the first round of voting Feb. 28, and choose elected officials in several suburbs.

Among the votes received before Election Day, the number of mail-in ballots was up compared with previous years, and voters continued to cast ballots in significant numbers at early voting sites. On Monday alone, residents cast a record-high 30,044 early votes, according to the Chicago Board of Elections.

This mirrored a trend seen in the Feb. 28 election, which made city history for being the most popular for early voting. Day-of voting for the Feb. 28 election was described as “sluggish” by officials, with the percentage of registered Chicago voters who turned out to vote being slightly less than recent elections at about 36%.

In the runoff, 292,591 ballots were cast before Election Day, including early votes and ballots received by mail by the Board of Elections, Bever said, which was more early ballots than during the first round of voting in February.

Another 91,838 mail-in ballots have yet to be returned, though the Board of Elections didn’t expect all of them to be mailed back on time or properly postmarked.

Like the Feb. 28 election, voters ages 55 and older are leading the way in voter turnout, according to Bever. Voters ages 55-64 and 65-74 are just about tied for the lead in turnout so far, with both having cast more than 67,000 votes, or almost 19% of total ballots cast each.

Voters ages 18-24 have voted the least, with 10,796 ballots or around 3% of the total ballots cast.

As of Monday night, early-vote turnout was highest in wards typically known for high voter turnout: the 19th Ward on the Far Southwest Side, the 41st Ward on the Northwest Side and the 47th Ward on the North Side.

But among the most active voting precincts is the Cook County Jail. The sprawling facility at 2700 S. California Ave. in the Little Village neighborhood became the first jail in the country to operate as a precinct with in-person voting in March 2020, according to the Cook County sheriff’s office. Inmate voting soared following the addition.

One issue that has already come up in the runoff election: Some Chicago voters have not received their mail-in ballots on time due to the quick turnaround from the Feb. 28 election and delays in the U.S. Postal Service, according to Clifford Helm, an attorney with the Chicago Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights. He added that these voters can still vote in person and can call his organization at (866) 687-8683 if they run into any problems voting.

Many polling places also still fail to fully comply with the Americans with Disabilities Act. At the Feb. 28 election, just over a third of locations were fully accessible by ADA standards, according to an analysis by the Chicago Tribune.

Bever told the Tribune on Tuesday morning that staffing numbers are 29 under the 6,450 poll workers needed. He does not anticipate this shortage to cause challenges because the Board of Elections is expecting a lower turnout from voters Tuesday due to the weather and the fact that many families with children are on spring break for school.

Voters can locate their polling place on the Chicago Board of Elections website or by calling the board at (312) 269-7900.

In addition to voters’ assigned polling locations, individuals can vote at any of the 51 early-voting locations that remain open until 7 p.m. on April 4. Mail-in ballots can also be counted as long as they are postmarked by Tuesday and received by April 18.

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(Chicago Tribune’s Stacey Wescott, Claire Malon, Shanzeh Ahmad, Jake Sheridan, John Chase, Kinsey Crowley, A.D. Quig, Kori Rumore, Gregory Pratt and Alice Yin contributed to this story.)

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