City issues permit for groups to march ahead of Democratic National Convention
City officials Wednesday announced that following weeks of litigation they would issue a permit for a coalition of feminist and LGBTQ+ groups to march down Michigan Avenue on the eve of the Democratic National Convention.
They city has agreed to a one-mile route starting at the Chicago River and ending at the John Logan monument at the south end of Grant Park on Sunday, Aug. 18.
The Democratic National Convention will run from Aug. 19 to Aug. 22.
Bodies Outside of Unjust Laws: Coalition for Reproductive Justice & LGBTQ+ Liberation, filed an application in January to march along a route that was nearly twice as long, starting farther north at Water Tower Place, and sued with the help of the American Civil Liberties Union of Illinois after the city denied their permit.
The city committed to allowing a permit along the shorter route at a court hearing on Wednesday, but the lawsuit still has not resolved complaints about the “security footprint” for the DNC, which would bar people and certain objects from as-yet-undetermined areas within the city during the convention, said Ed Yohnka, spokesman for the ACLU-Illinois.
“The route is shorter, but in the end, it is what these groups wanted, which was to march before the convention started, in view of iconic locations like The Bean and the hotels [where] delegates will be able to see them,” Yohnka said.
A spokeswoman for the city Law Department declined comment, citing the ongoing litigation.
At least two other groups also have sued the city for rejecting permits to march during the convention, along routes near the United Center and the McCormick Place convention center, where most DNC events will take place.
The groups hosting the Bodies Outside march are organized around issues related to reproductive and LGBTQ+ rights, they have also issued a statement calling for an immediate cease-fire in the Israel-Hamas war, and Yohnka was certain groups representing many causes were likely to join the march.
In the lawsuit, Bodies Outside noted that city officials had cited the need for increased police staffing and traffic disruptions caused by the proposed route of the march, but were unable to explain how a city-proposed alternate route farther south of the iconic Magnificent Mile would have been less intrusive.
During hearings over the original permit, Chicago police officials said the department was refusing time off during the convention week, and that the full complement of some 11,000 CPD officers, along with Illinois State Police and Cook County Sheriff’s officers would be available.
Michigan Avenue and Grant Park saw some of the worst outbreaks of violence during the 1968 DNC in Chicago, with demonstrators opposing the Vietnam War clashing with police over several days in late August that year.
In a statement, Andy Thayer, an organizer of this year's march, said groups were happy to have their march approved, but they remained concerned about planning for other demonstrations.
"But we must be clear. It should not have been necessary for the intervention of a federal court to have this route approved," he said. "And the city continues to delay in creating a real, public plan for welcoming free expression activity around the convention."