Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

Chicago mayoral aide apologizes for mocking police, denies heckling lone Jewish City Council member

“I’m not forgiving that fast,” Debra Silverstein told the “Chicago Sun-Times.”

Brandon Johnson, Chicago
Brandon Johnson in Chicago during his mayoral rally in March 2023. Credit: Wikipedia/Creative Commons.

A top aide to Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson apologized for referring to police as “f***ing pigs” but denies charges that she heckled the only Jewish member of the Chicago City Council, WTTW News reported.

While Kennedy Bartley, 29, the mayor’s managing deputy for external relations, “apologized for her anti-police remarks, she declined to express regret for posting ‘From the river to the sea. Palestine will be free. Amen!’ on her private account on X, the social media platform formerly known as Twitter, on Oct. 9—just two days after the Hamas attacks on Israel,” per WTTW.

“Bartley said she does not agree with some Jewish American groups that the phrase is antisemitic,” the news organization reported. “Bartley said it is a call for freedom for Palestinians and the establishment of a Palestinian state, not a call for the destruction of Israel.”

“Bartley said she did not understand when she made that post that the phrase ‘from the river to the sea’ had been ‘weaponized’ by those who want Israel to cease to exist. That is the stated goal of Hamas, considered a terrorist organization by the U.S. government,” WTTW added. “While Bartley said she would be more ‘mindful’ of that context in the future, she declined to say she would never use the phrase again.”

Debra Silverstein, an alderman and the Chicago City Council’s lone Jewish member, said of Bartley’s post that “to me and, I’m sure, to the majority of the mainstream Jewish community, it was similar to a congratulations to Hamas, an internationally known terrorist organization,” per the Chicago Sun-Times.

Scott Waguespack, another city alderman, told the Sun-Times that he heard Bartley and others “snapping and whistling and jeering” while Silverstein spoke before the City Council, before the mayor cast the tie-breaking vote to call for a ceasefire in Gaza.

“That’s why I yelled. That was the first time I’ve sort of been like, ‘Hey, be quiet and don’t be disrespectful,’” Waguespack told the Sun-Times. “I thought it was extremely disrespectful and trying to shout her down.”

“I’m not Jewish, but I don’t understand this. I would think that the community would see that behavior as deep behavior that’s not gonna go away with an apology,” Waguespack told the paper.

Silverstein told the Sun-Times that Bartley tried to call her but that “I’m not forgiving that fast.”

The unusual sight can occur during heatwaves when light interacts with clouds at very high altitudes.
“The CMCC will continue to be mission critical to our efforts,” the international body led by President Trump said.
The U.S. Defense Department estimates that Tehran has lost almost $5 billion due to the blockade.
The director of the Jewish school said that the speed with which his staff guided the children to the bomb shelter saved their lives.
The attack on the only active shul in the country was reportedly the first such incident since WWII.
The Iranian-backed proxy undermines the interests of the Lebanese people, the ministry stressed.