ENDORSEMENT: Bridget Gainer for Cook Co. board in 10th Dist. Democratic primary

SHARE ENDORSEMENT: Bridget Gainer for Cook Co. board in 10th Dist. Democratic primary
Cook County Commissioner Bridget Gainer, who created the Cook County Land Bank Authority.

Cook County Board member Bridget Gainer | Rich Hein/Sun-Times file photo

Rich Hein / Sun-Times file

The Sun-Times reported earlier this year Bridget Gainer missed nearly a third of the official meetings she was supposed to attend in the past five years. She needs to improve on that record. But her thoughtful involvement in an array of issues merits an endorsement.

She is a leader in planning how the county can continue to provide broad-based health care as Congress and the Trump administration work to undermine the Affordable Care Act. She played a top role in creating the Cook County Land Bank Authority, which finds ways to put vacant land to productive use. She also favors criminal justice reform and worker-friendly policies at businesses.

Also running in this North Side district is lawyer Mary Ann Kosiak.


When the Democrats running in the Cook County District 10 Democratic primary visited the Chicago Sun-Times Editorial Board on Feb. 21, we asked each to introduce themselves to voters. Watch response:Bridget Gainer’s response:


Send letters to: letters@suntimes.com

The Latest
On the locally made Apple TV+ series, skyscrapers can crumble, Lake Michigan can freeze and a power plant in Robbins can house an alternate reality machine.
One in five adolescents experiences a major depressive episode each year. Adults must understand how to get kids help, according to the CDC.
Bitter son has been insulting his mother for years and now seems determined to wreck her relationship.
Barbara Glusak, who was Washington Federal Bank for Savings’ chief financial officer, kept sounding the alarm about falsified loan records, court records show. But no one heeded the warning, allowing an embezzlement scheme at the bank to continue for six more years.
Robert Ellis convinced a Cook County judge to drop charges from his 2018 arrest on the South Side. But he still faces prosecution in separate cases charging him with impersonating an officer. Here’s the latest on this wild tale.