I want to be a mayor who helped, really helped.

I am not interested in splitting the white vote.

Our concern is to heal. Our concern is to bring together.

The third fallacy is that affirmative action doesn't work.

Let's not be overconfident, we still have to count the votes.

Business as usual will not be accepted by any part of this city.

I cannot watch the city of Chicago be destroyed by petty politics and bad government.

Chicago is one city. We shall work as one people for our common good and our common goals.

Chicago has been characterized as the most segregated city in the United States, a city they said could never change.

Affirmative action works but we're going to need to muster all our political resources if we are to keep it in place.

I have been urged by the earnest pleas of thousands of people to enter this race. Therefore, I hereby declare my candidacy for Mayor of Chicago.

I am interested in garnering the white vote, and the black vote, and the Latin vote, and the Asian vote, and the business vote, and the labor vote.

Throughout American history many of our social gains and much of our progress toward democracy were made possible by the active intervention of the federal government.

What is so remarkable about the success of affirmative action is that it has been accomplished despite the Justice Department and the policies of the federal government.

That fallacy flies in the face of studies that show, every day, in every way, things are getting a little worse for America's minorities relative to the progress made by those in the top percentiles of assets and income.

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