This is a joke right? Our City council taking time to debate this sheet while Chicago...err...sorry I've resolved not to be so negative.
How am I doing?
Chicago calls for ceasefire
Protesters march in downtown Chicago, with a
Ceasefire supporters celebrated in Daley Plaza after the vote Wednesday. Photo: Monica Eng/Axios
After weeks of delays and debates, Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson cast the tie-breaking vote for a deadlocked City Council on Wednesday to pass a resolution calling for a ceasefire in Gaza.
Why it matters: Chicago is now the largest U.S. city to urge President Biden to support a ceasefire, putting the Democratic National Convention's host city at odds with the administration's stance on the conflict and signaling growing discontent in the country.
Between the lines: The resolution, which also called for the unconditional release of all hostages and the allowance of humanitarian aid into Gaza, has stoked deep division within the City Council.
Some have questioned the time spent on a largely symbolic measure, while others have emphasized how the violence in the region affects many in the Chicago area, home to the largest Palestinian American and third-largest Jewish populations in the nation.
What they're saying: "We as elected officials have the power to save lives by uplifting a demand that is now shared by many and to be on the right side of history, " Ald. Rossana Rodriguez-Sanchez (33rd), the resolution's sponsor, said in the emotional meeting.
The other side: "I am disappointed in the mayor," Ald. Debra Silverstein (50th), the council's only Jewish member, said after Wednesday's vote. "He had an opportunity to be a unifier. And he could have sat down with us and come up with a solution that could have potentially gotten all of us a unanimous vote."
Silverstein and other alders have criticized the decision to model the measure on a United Nations resolution that the U.S. vetoed in December.
The 23 opposing alders signed a letter, stating that "passing a resolution that is counter to U.S. international policy and norms sends a dangerous message. It undermines the interest of the United States and hence the authority, power and influence of President Biden."
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