Cook County Board: Dems Choose Community Activist

(CHICAGO) — Community activist and Chicago Teachers Union employee Tara Stamps beat out five other candidates Tuesday night vying to succeed Mayor Brandon Johnson on the Cook County Board.

Ten members of the Cook County Democratic Party held a series of votes behind closed doors at the Carleton of Oak Park Hotel, before settling on Stamps, said state Senate President Don Harmon, who chaired the meeting as Democratic committeeperson of Oak Park.

All six candidates got to plead their case to fill Johnson’s old role as a Cook County commissioner, representing parts of the West Side of Chicago and the near western suburbs.

“Anyone who knows me, knows that I have a philosophy, and that philosophy is that there is enough for everyone to get some of what they need and some of what they want,” Stamps said when it was her turn to make her case. “I believe by working together we can make that a reality for so many people who have been disillusioned and lost hope in our community.”

Harmon said five of the six hopefuls received significant support in the first round of voting.

“All six candidates had support in deliberations. It went several rounds before we reached a consensus,” Harmon said, adding that the final vote was unanimous.

Stamps is an administrator of new teacher development for the CTU. She held teaching positions for nearly two decades before that. She is the daughter of the late civil rights activist Marion Stamps.

Stamps will serve in Johnson’s vacated Cook County Board seat effective immediately until December 2024. But she will have to run for reelection in the March 2024 primary to keep her seat past the year.

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