Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel on Wednesday fiercely resisted calls to follow his police superintendent in stepping down, even as the city continues to roil over the dashcam video released last week showing 17-year-old Laquan McDonald being shot by police.
Asked at a POLITICO Playbook event whether he planned to resign, the notoriously brazen Emanuel sneered and made light of the question. “No, because I really so much look forward to this interview and I wanted to have it. I just felt so good saying that to you,” Emanuel said, explaining that Chicago voters already put their faith in him.
“We have a process called the election. The voters spoke. I’ll be held accountable for the decisions and actions that I make,” he said.
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Dashcam footage of the night of McDonald’s fatal shooting in October 2014 appears to show the teen walking away from police as an officer opens fire. And though it has been more than 13 months since McDonald’s death, and the city has since reached a $5 million settlement with the family, Emanuel said he had not watched the footage personally until it was eventually made public last week.
Emanuel said he wanted to balance the investigation’s integrity with transparency to the public, and didn’t want to create a double standard. “I didn’t see something until the public saw it,” he said.
Chicago authorities fought hard against the release of the dashcam video. In fact, the police department denied multiple Freedom of Information Act requests to make the footage public. The video was eventually released, only after a state judge ordered the city to act.
On Wednesday, Emanuel refused to answer the hypothetical question of whether he felt he would have been re-elected in April had the dashcam video been released prior to the election.








