Dispute over equipment in Union Park ends

US

Mayor Brandon Johnson personally intervened in a dispute between his own administration and a coalition of activist groups set for a massive protest at the Democratic National Convention in Chicago next week, helping reverse the city’s denial of a permit to set up stages and sound systems for rallies in a park near the United Center, the coalition’s leader said Friday.

The agreement, which was reached after hours of back-room negotiations between the parties, nullified an emergency motion filed in U.S. District Court earlier this week alleging the city had violated protestors’ First Amendment rights by restricting how the rallies could be staged.

“We talked directly to the mayor,” Hatem Abudayyeh, executive director of the Arab American Action Network, said during a news conference in Federal Plaza after the deal was struck. “We knew that he supported us, our coalition and these protests and it’s proof positive that he called one of the top leaders of the coalition directly on his cellphone and said ‘We’re gonna make this happen. I’m gonna make sure that everybody’s rights are protected.’”

Pressed on whom specifically the mayor called, Abudayyeh said it was Frank Chapman, of the National Alliance Against Racism and Political Repression.

“The mayor has said from the very beginning that he supports the protest movement,” Abudayyeh said. “The protest movement is what brought him to City Hall. … He said, ‘I understand that struggle. Because I am part of a national liberation struggle as well.’”

A spokesperson for the mayor was not immediately available for comment.

Johnson said at a news conference earlier Friday that his staff was “working out the details” with protesters.

“I’m going to make sure that these individuals have everything that they need to make sure that their voices are heard,” he said.

In addition to allowing a stage and sound system for two rallies in Union Park, the agreement with the city also allows for the setup of seven portable toilets on the far east side of Union Park, away from parade assembly and disbanding areas, according to the coalition.

Abudayyeh said the deal was proof that “organizing works.”

“The city pulled another move in bad faith by saying we can’t have any sound and we can’t have a stage in Union Park, and then we did what we do best,” he said. “We did the grassroots organizing that we know how to do, and we won what we needed to win.”

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