Chicago, Suburbs React To President-elect Donald Trump

Trump Rally
Thousands gather outside Trump International Hotel & Tower for an anti-Donald Trump rally Nov. 9, 2016 in Chicago. Miles Bryan / WBEZ
Trump Rally
Thousands gather outside Trump International Hotel & Tower for an anti-Donald Trump rally Nov. 9, 2016 in Chicago. Miles Bryan / WBEZ

Chicago, Suburbs React To President-elect Donald Trump

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Thousands of protesters upset that Donald Trump was elected the next president of the United States gathered for a rally outside the Trump International Hotel & Tower in downtown Chicago Wednesday evening.

More than 9,000 Facebook users said they were going to the “Say No To Trump!” rally at 5 p.m. at 401 N. Wabash Ave. Hundreds of people arrived early with anti-Trump signs.

By 6:00 p.m., a mass of protesters was marching down State Street to chants of “Not my president!” and”Hey hey, ho ho, Donald Trump has got to go!”

Protestors gathered outside of Trump Tower before marching down State Street. (Justin Bull/WBEZ)

Earlier in the day, politicians, civic leaders and residents throughout the Chicago area reacted to Tuesday night’s election.

Rep. Danny Davis, D-Chicago, and U.S. Sen. Dick Durbin, D-Chicago, met near Millennium Station to congratulate U.S. Senator-elect Tammy Duckworth, but the discussion quickly turned to Trump.

“Obviously (African American) people like myself are afraid that there will be some going back to … where we will have to fight the same fights that we have been fighting for the last 20, 30 years … So I’m not a happy camper,” Davis said.

Durbin said he will accept the results of the election because “that’s what I accepted when I took this office, to work with the president whoever it might be, for the good of Illinois and the good of this nation. I just hope the office will build the man and help him understand the awesome responsibility the people have given him.” 

Durbin attempted to reassure the public, especially Muslims and Mexicans scared after Trump’s campaign rhetoric.

“Just remember there are people out in Washington who are willing to fight for you, and are not going to walk away from you because of this election,” Durbin said. “I think our responsibility grew with the results of the election last night.” 

Duckworth said she was “quite surprised” Hillary Clinton’s lost.

“Especially since here in Illinois the people so overwhelmingly voted for her,” Duckworth said. “There’ll be a lot of folks looking back and trying to figure things out. I’m going to be focused on what do I need to do to serve the people of Illinois, and what agendas we need to move forward: jobs, the economy and making sure we make college affordable.” 

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Local politicians weren’t the only ones who had strong opinions the day after the election.

Shari Runner, president and CEO of the Chicago Urban League, said many white Trump supporters fear changing racial demographics.

“They can say that black people or Hispanic people or Jewish people or LGBTQI people are less than worthy of the benefits of living in the United States … (But) I’m not going anywhere. I’m not going anywhere and I’m going to fight for the rights that my ancestors fought for.”

Ahmed Rehab, Executive Director of the Council on American-Islamic Relations Chicago chapter, said he is very concerned about Muslims in America.

“I’m concerned about a candidate who is now going to be president, who said on the campaign trail that he wants to ban all Muslims, en masse, just because they’re Muslim,” Rehab said. “I’m concerned about a candidate who has said that he wants Muslims to wear IDs in this country, reminiscent of Nazi Germany. I’m concerned about a candidate who said that he wants to put extreme vetting measures - without defining what that means, this ominous phrase — again for no other reason than being Muslim.”

In Hyde Park, Lucus Wehrwein watched election results on a television at Valois Restaurant Wednesday.

Wehrwein, a 24-year-old sociology graduate student at the University of Chicago, said he is scared about the future.

“I was with all my friends last night watching the election, and they all began to speculate what would happen,” he said. “The reality is we have no idea what is going to happen, and that is frightening. Who knows what will happen? … It could turn out the emperor has no clothes. It could turn out Donald Trump could sink the American republic.”

Another University of Chicago student, Andrew Konstan said Trump’s election shows how different Chicago is compared to the rest of the country.

“It means there are two very different worlds living within (the) country, none of whom are interacting,” said Konstan, of South Africa. “It seems as though one half of this country didn’t even know the other half existed.”

Walid Haddadian, an immigrant who came to the U.S. in 1974 from Jordan and now manages Dukan International Food Market in Albany Park, said he was too busy to vote, but isn’t concerned about Trump.

“Because I have my (citizenship) for over 35 years. And the politicians they always, they say they want to do this — nobody do nothing. They just talk. I don’t believe what he’s saying,” Haddadian said.

Walid Haddadian in the Dukan International Food Market in Albany Park Nov. 9, 2016. (Odette Yousef/WBEZ)

George Kourieh, a Syrian who has lived in Chicago for 38 years, said this was the first time he didn’t vote because he didn’t agree with either candidate.

“It’s scary. I don’t know what’s going to happen next,” said Kourieh, a deacon at a Syriac Orthodox Church. “We have enough war so far, and (Trump) doesn’t look like he has any plan to stop the war. Actually, he wants to expand — maybe make more war. And I think we have had enough. We need someone who believes in peace and makes peace.”

Residents in McHenry County, which voted for Trump, had mixed reactions to the election. Stephanie Drougas said Trump will bring secure borders a stronger military and a better economy. However, Darrin Fllyn said he believes people will say more hateful things out loud and was scared of the policies Trump might make.

Back in Hyde Park, Anthony “Tex” Andrews, an economics professor at Governors State University, doesn’t have much hope that Trump will be able to bring together the country.

“I look at it like this,” he said. “If you take a country and divide it before the election, what possibility do we have bringing it back together after the election?” 

WBEZ reporters Miles Bryan, Monica Eng, Natalie Moore, Sarah Karp, Odette Yousef and Shannon Heffernan contributed to this story.