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Chicago mayor’s race 2023 lineup: Who is in, who is out, who is undecided

As Chicago emerges from a pandemic, copes with fallout from civil unrest and addresses crime, the race for Chicago mayor in 2023 is shaping up to be hotly contested.

The Chicago Tribune is breaking down the list of those who say they will run, those still thinking about it and those who say they won’t. We will be updating this list as candidates make up their minds. You also can follow our coverage from our team of political reporters.

Election Day for the mayor’s race is Feb. 28, 2023. If no candidate receives a majority of votes in February, a runoff election will be held on April 4, 2023.

Jump to candidates who are:

Running

Brandon Johnson, Cook County commissioner for the 1st District

A former teacher and onetime Chicago Teachers Union organizer, Johnson has long been a CTU favorite who received the union’s endorsement even before he formally declared his candidacy Oct. 27. Johnson won election to the Cook County Board in 2018 after defeating Cook County Commissioner Richard Boykin in the Democratic Party primary. On the County Board, Johnson pushed a measure making it illegal to refuse to show or rent property to people with certain criminal records and also drafted a symbolic resolution that supported diverting money from policing in the wake of nationwide protests demanding police budgets be defunded.

Lori Lightfoot, 56th mayor of Chicago

Lightfoot formally announced via video message on Twitter June 7 what has long been anticipated, that she will seek a second term in office.

Originally from Ohio, Lightfoot attended the University of Chicago Law School before working as a federal prosecutor and for the firm Mayer Brown. She was tapped by then-Mayor Rahm Emanuel to head the Police Accountability Task Force following the police killing of Laquan McDonald. In her first-ever run for public office in 2019, Lightfoot ran for mayor as a political progressive and emerged from a 14-candidate field. During her first term, she has led Chicago through the COVID-19 pandemic and two rounds of civil unrest but also been criticized for not living up to her campaign promises, including pushing for an elected school board and making City Hall more transparent to the public.

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Sophia King, alderman for the 4th Ward

Ald. Sophia King, a friend of former president Barack Obama, announced her run on Aug. 10.

King is a former school administrator and community volunteer who was appointed 4th Ward alderman by Mayor Rahm Emanuel after her predecessor resigned to take a job with Airbnb. In her time on the City Council, King is best known citywide for the renaming of a pair of high-profile streets. She unsuccessfully led a push to rechristen downtown’s Balbo Drive in honor of Ida B. Wells, the African-American journalist who worked to expose lynchings and pushed for women’s voting rights. Italian-Americans objected to renaming Balbo, a pilot who flew from Rome to Chicago in 1933 for the Century of Progress Exposition and who was an ally of Italian fascist leader Benito Mussolini. As a compromise, aldermen renamed Congress Parkway downtown for Wells.