Lightfoot Sued For Limiting Interviews To Reporters Of Color
Lightfoot Sued For Limiting Interviews To Reporters Of Color
A white reporter for a conservative media outlet is suing Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot over her decision to grant interviews at the midpoint of her first term only to journalists of color, saying she discriminated against him because of his race.

CHICAGO: A white reporter for a conservative media outlet is suing Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot over her decision to grant interviews at the midpoint of her first term only to journalists of color, saying she discriminated against him because of his race.

Thomas Catenacci and his employer, the Daily Caller News Foundation, argue in the lawsuit that Lightfoot violated their First Amendment rights and Catenacci’s right to equal protection by not responding to an interview request on the day of her second anniversary in office or in the days that followed. The suit was filed Thursday in federal court in Chicago by the conservative organization Judicial Watch.

Lightfoot, who is Chicagos first Black female and first openly gay mayor, said May 19 that she was granting interviews marking the second anniversary of her inauguration on May 20 exclusively to journalists of color. She said it was intended to draw attention to the fact that the City Hall press corps is overwhelmingly white and male in a city where white people make up only about one-third of the population.

Critics of the decision included Fox News host Tucker Carlson, who founded The Daily Caller, and who called Lightfoot a monster and racist.

Lightfoot reiterated her position at a May 20 event marking the anniversary, where she also called on media organizations to diversify their staffs.

The fact that the City Hall press corps is overwhelmingly white, has very little in the way of diversity, is an embarrassment, Lightfoot said. One day out of 365, I say that Im going to mark the anniversary of my two years in office by giving exclusive one-on-ones to journalists of color, and the world loses its mind.

University of Chicago law professor Geoffrey Stone told the Chicago Tribune he expects the court to throw out the lawsuit. He noted public officials commonly pick and choose which media outlets to favor, and that Lightfoot said the decision applied to one date and wasn’t a blanket policy.

Given that shes talking only about one day, it seems to be blown out of proportion, to make a fuss over it, Stone said.

Catenaccis lawsuit says he emailed requests for a one-on-one interview with Lightfoot on May 20, 21 and 24. It says he had not received a response from her office as of the filing of the lawsuit on Thursday.

On information and belief, Defendant is aware that Plaintiff Catenacci is not a journalist of color, and Defendant has denied Plaintiffs interview request pursuant to her announcement that she will only grant interview requests from journalists of color, the lawsuit states.

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