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Chicago Tribune: Melissa Conyears-Ervin: Chicago will not help fund Donald Trump’s terror

Chicago City Treasurer Melissa Conyears-Ervin attends a Women’s History Month event honoring Dr. Margaret T. Burroughs with a street naming and dedication ceremony at DuSable Black History Museum in Chicago on March 22, 2025. (Audrey Richardson/Chicago Tribune)
Chicago City Treasurer Melissa Conyears-Ervin attends a Women’s History Month event honoring Dr. Margaret T. Burroughs with a street naming and dedication ceremony at DuSable Black History Museum in Chicago on March 22, 2025. (Audrey Richardson/Chicago Tribune)

Others expressed reasonable concerns with the plan that we can address. I have managed more than $9 billion of our public funds on an annual basis over the past six years across two administrations. I am intimately familiar with our portfolio, my responsibility to taxpayers and the risks embedded in my decisions. I am eager to collaborate further and look forward to modernizing outdated restrictions that actually limit our ability to earn more for Chicagoans.

But let’s be clear: This is a safe move that poses no financial risk to the taxpayer, it will earn an appropriate return, it is consistent with our liquidity obligations and, most importantly, it is consistent with our values.

That’s why I was elected and what I’ve done for the past six years. We’ve outperformed previous treasurers, we’ve divested from fossil fuels, and we’ve still maintained competitive returns and strong liquidity.

Ald. Raymond Lopez, 15th, called this move “reckless,” and others reminded me that Treasurys are “the most liquid and secure debt instrument in the history of the world.” I’m well aware, but any financial expert also knows that Treasurys are not the only high-quality, secure and liquid option available.

We can and do invest in agency securities. We can and do invest in investment-grade corporate bonds. We can and do invest in municipal bonds, mortgage-backed securities and fully secured cash vehicles. These instruments are all permitted under our existing policy, widely used by large institutional investors and compatible with our fiduciary duty to keep the city’s money safe and accessible. 

This is not gambling with taxpayer dollars. It’s a choice not to write a blank check to an administration that is violating our rights.

It’s also wholly transparent. The municipal code gives me authority to adopt and amend our investment policy, including the ability to direct no new purchases of Treasurys, but the next phase of this plan requires council approval. I’ve already begun those conversations, and changes will be reported publicly, fully consistent with our collateral and liquidity requirements, and voted on after an open debate.

Some suggest that by taking this stand, I’m somehow turning my back on America or violating my oath. Let me tell you what I believe as a Black woman, as a daughter of Englewood and Austin, and as a proud American: The most patriotic thing you can do in this country is to use your voice, your vote and, yes, your public office to protest your government when it is wrong.

The idea that we must silently underwrite policies we believe are unconstitutional and immoral is what’s un-American. 

Finally, to those that question the impact of this decision, I say every major act of divestment, from apartheid South Africa to fossil fuels, has started with “just” one institution. I believe Chicago is in a unique position to lead.

To every resident, whether you agree with this plan or not, I want you to know I am not making this decision lightly. I know what it means to be responsible for billions of dollars. I know what it means when payroll has to be met, when pension checks have to clear, when a city has to ride out a crisis. My first obligation is to keep your money safe and accessible.

But I will not separate that obligation from our moral responsibility to ensure that our own dollars are not weaponized against us.

Content courtesy of The Chicago Tribune
Melissa Conyears-Ervin is the Chicago city treasurer and running for Illinois’ 7th Congressional District. 

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