A rant, Christopher Sweat

Christopher Sweat

Hosted by a highly opinionated interdisciplinary thinker and orchestrator of technology. Discussing high-technology, politics, economics, corporate finance, and business. A rant, Christopher Sweat, is recorded in tandem with my writing at christophersweat.substack.com. christophersweat.substack.com

  1. Neither Camp

    3d ago

    Neither Camp

    We met Vasquez on his own turf, a North Side space he is quick to say is not a taxpayer-funded ward office. He calls it a community hub, a co-op, a place where neighbors come in to work through what they want to get done. He keeps what he jokingly calls movement merch on hand: t-shirts, hats, and the small Chicago Star butterfly pins his team made during last fall’s surge in immigration enforcement. “The public needs to be informed in order to know how to hold government accountable,” he says. The distinction matters to him, and it frames how he describes almost everything else. Power, in his telling, is something you build with other people. From the cypher to the council Vasquez, 46, is the son of Guatemalan immigrants and a former battle rapper who performed under the name Prime. His politics started with hip-hop, long before any party. Listening to NWA, KRS-One, and Public Enemy in the late 1990s, he says, gave language to things he had already lived: poverty, being treated as an outsider, friction with police. “Without thinking about the politics of it, you just know it’s a dope song,” he says. “And next thing you know you’re reciting it, you’re thinking about how it speaks to you and your environment.” When he first heard Bernie Sanders in 2015, the pitch felt familiar. Sanders, he says, “sounded like my rap records.” He knocked doors in Iowa, came back and threw a fundraiser that doubled as a concert, and met an organizer recruiting first-time candidates. In 2019 he unseated Ald. Patrick O’Connor, a 36-year incumbent and a former floor leader for Mayor Rahm Emanuel. He describes his first televised debate in the terms he knew best. It “felt like a battle. Back to back to back bars.” The only socialist to vote yes What has defined his six years in office is a willingness to break with the left that produced him. The clearest example is on the record. In late 2020, Vasquez broke with the city’s other socialists to vote for Mayor Lori Lightfoot’s 2021 budget, which carried a $94 million property tax increase and passed narrowly. He was the only Democratic Socialists of America member on the council to support it, and the Chicago DSA chapter censured him, its first such censure. He has not recanted. He says the vote was the price of a deal to stop city worker layoffs during the pandemic, and he frames the episode as the recurring fight on the left between purity and governing. “We all agree on goals. We don’t all agree on how to get there,” he says. A movement built by people who have felt cast out, in his telling, has a habit of casting out its own. “Yo, you’re not left enough, so now you’re not a progressive. And it’s like, we’re not gaining power that way.” His critics on the left framed it as something else. On the floor of that 2020 debate, Socialist Caucus members rejected the same deal he defended as the responsible vote. “Don’t give me crumbs and tell me it’s cake,” Ald. Jeanette Taylor (20th Ward) said of the budget. “We’re in a global pandemic, and there’s no way in the world that we should be balancing this budget on the backs of taxpayers.” To that wing of the left, Vasquez’s pragmatism reads as capitulation. He calls it the price of keeping people from getting hurt. Asked directly whether he still considers himself a socialist, he does not hedge. “Government is socialist. You’ve made a social agreement that you think you can do better by pulling your resources together to solve for more people.” He adds a qualifier, calling himself a coalitionist, and draws a distinction between two kinds of people who share the label. One comes to it through hardship, and he cites Fred Hampton, Martin Luther King, and Harold Washington. The other, he says, is the person whose “mom and dad paid for college and I read Marx.” People who have lived precarity, he argues, learn to compromise because survival requires it. It is a framing that favors his own position, and he makes no apology for it. He sums up his method in the language of an umpire: he calls “balls and strikes,” he says, no matter “who’s on the fifth floor” at City Hall. At odds with an allied mayor That posture has put him at odds with Brandon Johnson, the closest thing the Chicago left has to one of its own in the mayor’s office. Vasquez voted against the mayor’s 2026 budget. He says he supports taxing corporations and still calls the mayor’s signature corporate head tax a marketing ploy. The measure, a $33-per-employee monthly tax on companies with at least 500 workers, would have raised about $82 million. His objection, he says, is precision. A broad tax also falls on immigrant- and Black-owned businesses trying to scale, and the city would do better to target industries that have thrived while others have struggled. “Am I really doing something, or am I saying that we’re doing the corporate head tax, so that people out here movement-wise go, well, clearly that’s progressive?” Johnson made the opposite case in his own words. Unveiling the budget, the mayor said he would “challenge the ultra-rich,” asking large corporations and the wealthy to carry more so working families would not face higher property, grocery, or garbage taxes. When the council stripped the tax out, he called the result “morally bankrupt,” arguing there was a way to balance the budget without going after working and poor people. His finance team projected the council plan would leave a $163 million hole to be filled mid-year. Johnson ultimately neither signed nor vetoed the $16.6 billion budget, allowing it to take effect. On the left, losing the head tax read as a gift to the wealthy. Ald. Byron Sigcho-Lopez (25th Ward), a fellow socialist who championed it, called the budget that passed without it “the billionaire budget” and said it was unacceptable to put the burden on the poorest people in the city. The opposition reached beyond the left. Gov. JB Pritzker, a fellow Democrat, also opposed the head tax, calling it a “job killer.” Vasquez lands in neither camp. He says he would tax corporations, just not this one. On policing, Vasquez makes a budget argument. He says the department should be audited like any other, noting that it takes up roughly half of the corporate fund’s departmental spending, the discretionary pool the city actually controls. The department’s 2026 budget runs about $2.1 billion, and its overtime line alone grew by roughly $101 million. “You talk to the cops, they don’t feel it, they don’t see that money,” he says. “So my premise is, something’s inefficient here. We’ve got to audit this thing.” Johnson, like most politicians, is unwilling to say that publicly, he argues, so the number keeps climbing. He frames the larger development as a shift in how Chicago governs. By moving the budget cycle up about six weeks, the council was able to draft and pass a spending plan over a mayor’s objection for the first time in the city’s history. Vasquez voted against that plan too, calling both it and the mayor’s version inadequate, yet he counts the council’s new independence as a gain. “The fact that the council is becoming more independent, I think is a good thing for government, because you have a counterbalance.” The ordinance that was never tested Immigration is the fight that has consumed his chairmanship of the City Council’s Committee on Immigrant and Refugee Rights, and here the lines with Johnson are less clean. Chicago’s Welcoming City Ordinance, which says city employees will not help enforce federal immigration law, began as a 1985 executive order under Mayor Harold Washington, became law in 2006, and was expanded in 2012. Vasquez says it had never been seriously tested until the past year. After a mass detention incident in June 2025 and a hearing his committee held that July, it became clear that no rule explicitly empowered the Civilian Office of Police Accountability to investigate whether Chicago officers had violated it. His own attempt to fix that was blocked by colleagues. A similar measure led by Ald. Jessie Fuentes (26th Ward) passed in March 2026, and on this one Johnson was a supporter. Then the issue reached his own staff. His chief of staff, Catherine “Cat” Sharp, was one of the “Broadview Six,” a group of protesters indicted by a federal grand jury in October 2025 over a September protest outside the suburban ICE facility. Prosecutors alleged the group surrounded a federal agent’s vehicle, banged on it, and damaged it. Vasquez characterizes the prosecution as an attempt to frighten people out of dissent. The case then collapsed. Charges against Sharp were dropped in March 2026, and the remaining charges were dismissed with prejudice in May after the U.S. attorney acknowledged the case was tainted and a federal judge said she was shocked by redactions prosecutors had made to grand jury transcripts. Vasquez goes further than the court record, saying the prosecutor “tampered with the grand jury,” and says he wants hearings to put that official under oath. That word is his. What the record establishes is that there was documented prosecutorial misconduct serious enough to end the case. Legislating at teenagers The same instinct shaped his opposition to a proposed snap curfew aimed at large gatherings of teenagers. He grounds it in his own adolescence, getting cleared out of Navy Pier by police for gathering to rap while, as he puts it, “the white kids are chilling.” He was arrested twice before he turned 18, once while sitting near friends who were smoking, and says officers ignored him to arrest the three Black kids beside him, then listed him as gang-affiliated anyway. He never got a record. “That changes the trajectory of your whole life,” he says. He does not dismiss the underlying problem. Large groups gather, he acknowledges, and a few make it dangerous for e

    47 min
  2. “We Put So Much Fear in Bezos He Didn’t Show Up”

    May 26

    “We Put So Much Fear in Bezos He Didn’t Show Up”

    Chris Smalls is sitting across from me in Chicago. For six years, he’s been told he was wrong. For six years, he’s been proven right. He was right that Amazon was an unsafe place to work in the early weeks of the pandemic. He was right that workers at the Staten Island JFK8 warehouse, a million-square-foot facility with ten- to twelve-hour shifts and a thirty-minute lunch break, could win a union election against the second-largest private employer in the country, even when nearly every major labor organization in America believed they couldn’t. Now, at a warehouse where 5,500 workers still don’t have a contract, he says he is right that Amazon will eventually be forced to the bargaining table. The federal government has ruled in his union’s favor on that point twice. Amazon is in court trying to argue that the federal labor board itself shouldn’t exist. And on May 4, three weeks before this conversation, Smalls decided he was right that Jeff Bezos, the lead sponsor of the Met Gala, should not be allowed to walk a red carpet thirty minutes from the warehouse without consequence. “There’s no way I’m going to allow this billionaire to come to New York City and do a fashion red carpet gala thirty minutes away from the warehouse that he refuses to negotiate a contract with,” Smalls says. He jumped a barricade. The NYPD tackled him. He spent twenty-four hours in a Manhattan jail. He is now facing charges for resisting arrest, trespass, and three other counts. They get dismissed if he stays out of trouble for six months. His entire life suggests he has no intention of doing that. “We put so much fear in Jeff Bezos,” he tells me, “that he didn’t show up on the red carpet.” The book In two weeks, on June 1, Crown will publish When the Revolution Comes: A Fight for the Future of the Working Class. The memoir opens with a prologue on what it feels like to walk inside a grocery warehouse, then circles back to his childhood and moves chronologically through to the 2022 union victory at JFK8. It’s not a manifesto, despite the title. Publishers Weekly called it “plainspoken” and noted that it “leans more toward personal history than political rallying cry.” Smalls confirms as much when I ask what he wants readers to take from it. “A lot of people see a piece of themselves inside of me and my story,” he says. “Whether it’s evictions, whether it’s divorce, whether it’s having kids, whether it’s getting fired from a job several times, whether it’s hitting rock bottom — all of that is in the book as well. It’s not just about the success that I had at Amazon. It’s also about the failures I had as well.” That’s the thread he wants readers to follow. The book moves through his father’s stints in prison, an early Amazon firing for two minutes of “time theft” (he was rehired), a Florida community college he didn’t finish, sound-engineering classes he didn’t finish, a basketball dream cut short by a hit-and-run on the job, an ex-wife and twins, and a brief rap career. He did a showcase with Meek Mill in New Jersey, he clarifies, not a tour. Multiple outlets have gotten this wrong. The cumulative effect is a portrait of a working-class American who happened to be standing where the pressure broke first, not a labor icon. His mother was a member of the healthcare workers’ union SEIU 1199 for more than twenty-five years and never once mentioned it at home. “She wasn’t like an organizer. She just was a rank-and-file member.” When I ask if he ever imagined this life, he laughs. The skill sets he draws on now, he says, are the ones he watched his mother use to hold down their household. “The grit and the grind that I saw my mom go through, it carried over into the things that I do and how I fight back now.” The Palestine turn The Chris Smalls who became famous in 2020 was a workplace organizer. The man in front of me in 2026 is something bigger and less easily categorized. He talks about Gaza, Cuba, ICE, surveillance, and the prison industrial complex as if they’re the same fight. Last July, he boarded the Handala, a vessel operated by the Freedom Flotilla Coalition, attempting to break the Israeli blockade of Gaza with humanitarian aid. Israeli forces intercepted the ship in international waters. Smalls, the only Black activist on board, was singled out for particularly aggressive treatment, by his account and the accounts of others on the ship. He spent five days in Israeli custody, hunger-striking the entire time, before being released without charges at the Jordan border. He is now banned from Israel, he says, for 100 years. The flotilla, he tells me, is what ties it all together. “Once again, connecting the dots with Amazon and genocide was something important to me.” Amazon and Google’s joint $1.2 billion Project Nimbus contract provides cloud infrastructure to the Israeli government and military. “It’s the same technology that’s being used to empower ICE over here,” Smalls says, “and the local police departments and the rain cameras and also the government contracts they have with the Pentagon and the military-industrial complex.” His argument: the line between an Amazon warehouse worker in Staten Island and a Palestinian under occupation runs through the same cloud server. He invokes the longshore workers’ creed. “There’s a saying in the labor movement from the ILWU. Injury to one is injury to all. And it doesn’t say injury to one is injury to all except for Palestinians.” That position has put him at odds with the leadership of the AFL-CIO and the International Longshoremen’s Association, both of which he has publicly accused of complicity in the war. Among nationally known U.S. labor figures, he is more or less alone on this. Surveillance and sacrifice I ask him about the cost. He has been arrested in New York, detained in Israel, and most recently stopped by ICE at the U.S. border on his return from a humanitarian aid mission to Cuba. “My phone was taken by ICE,” he says. As we are speaking, he tells me, a comrade of his has just been detained at JFK airport. The agents are asking him questions about Smalls. “I’m being surveilled,” he says. “I’m being targeted, of course. I’m being doxxed. It comes with the sacrifice of the work that I have to do, unfortunately. But I ask myself if I don’t do the work, then who else is going to do it?” He grew up, he tells me, in a context where this was always going to be the cost. “I was in handcuffs by the time I was ten years old. The average Black man has probably been in handcuffs at least once by the time they’re in their thirties. I can sit here and say I’ve been in handcuffs a dozen times, and I probably have a dozen more to go.” He pauses. “Martin Luther King was arrested, I believe, twenty-nine times. So I’m trying to break his record.” You can read that line as bravado, or as something more deliberate: a claim to a tradition, a way of locating himself inside a longer arc of Black American resistance. I think he means it both ways. The institutional reality The harder question, the one I keep circling, is what all this adds up to institutionally. Smalls is no longer the president of the Amazon Labor Union. His successor, Connor Spence, led the union through the recent National Labor Relations Board ruling that ordered Amazon to bargain. It was the most significant legal victory at JFK8 since the original union vote. Smalls’s old union publicly described his Met Gala arrest as a “lone-wolf direct action” that was not coordinated with leadership. The arc that landed him outside that institution is worth naming. The ALU Smalls founded in 2021 was conceived as a rejection of established labor. If the big unions had been capable of organizing Amazon, he argued at the time, they would have done it already. By June 2024, that posture had reversed. ALU members voted 98 percent in favor of affiliating with the 1.3-million-member International Brotherhood of Teamsters. The leadership election a month later was won by Spence, who had founded the dissident ALU Democratic Reform Caucus and sued Smalls in 2023, alleging he had refused to hold officer elections in violation of the union’s own constitution. Smalls did not run. To grasp the distance he has traveled, it helps to remember how high the rise was. In 2022 he was named to the Time 100, fielded statements of solidarity from Bernie Sanders, AOC, and Elizabeth Warren, and watched Amazon’s general counsel hand him a national platform by calling him “not smart or articulate” in a leaked internal memo. His profile from that period is mostly intact. His institutional standing is not. He has no organizational vehicle of his own anymore; The Congress of Essential Workers, the nonprofit he founded in 2020, appears largely dormant. The Teamsters local he now belongs to answers to international president Sean O’Brien, who delivered a primetime address at the 2024 Republican National Convention. Smalls, whose recent advocacy has centered on Palestinian solidarity and a public attack on the AFL-CIO leadership, has not publicly addressed the contradiction. When I ask how he balances direct action with the slower, more institutional work of organizing, he is generous about both. “Everybody has a role to play. I don’t think everybody has to do the same thing. Whatever you can contribute to the movement, you do that. My skill sets are different. My skill sets have always been direct action.” “Coalition building is always going to be hard,” he says. “But one thing people know about me, whether it’s 100 people, 1,000 people, or 10 people, I’m going to go forward. No matter who shows up, no matter how many people we get, we still got to show up and do what we can.” That’s the most honest articulation of where Smalls is in 2026, I think. He’s not trying to run anything.

    24 min
  3. May 18

    The Vanity and the Wayfinder

    Teta Jalila, c. 1920. The photograph Laila Grace uses as the logo of her design practice. A conversation with Laila Grace at SAIC Galleries about her thesis, Jalila's Vanity, Palestinian futurism, and the design lineage that runs through her distant cousin Rajie Cook. Full essay below. If you have ever found a bathroom in an airport, you have used a piece of design produced by a Palestinian Christian from Ramallah. His name was Rajie Cook. The family name was Sulaiman before Ottoman officials nicknamed his grandfather Küçük, Turkish for small, which the British Mandate Anglicized to Cook. He was born in Newark, New Jersey in 1930, the son of Jalila Totah and Najeeb Esa Cook, who had immigrated from Ramallah three years earlier. An elementary school teacher told him his name was too difficult to pronounce. He became Roger. He returned to Rajie in his older years. He designed the world we walk through. The DOT pictograms (the standardized symbols for restrooms, telephones, baggage claim, no smoking, escalators, every wordless icon in every American airport, hospital, highway, and federal building) were produced by his firm Cook and Shanosky Associates for the U.S. Department of Transportation. President Reagan and Elizabeth Dole presented him with the Presidential Award for Design Excellence in 1984. The Symbol Signs are now in the permanent collections of the Smithsonian and the Cooper Hewitt National Design Museum. In his later years, he turned to sculptural assemblage, making small boxes that documented his fact-finding trips through Israel, Jordan, and the West Bank and Gaza as a member of the Presbyterian Church (USA) Task Force for the Middle East. One of those works was exhibited in Made in Palestine in 2003, one of the first major American shows of contemporary Palestinian art. He died in 2021. His distant cousin, Laila Grace, has just completed her Master of Design in Designed Objects at SAIC, following a BFA in Industrial Design at the University of Illinois at Chicago. She describes herself on her website as “a Palestinian Christian industrial and graphic designer based in Chicago,” with roots in Ramallah Tehta, Birzeit, Jerusalem, and Al-Husun, Jordan. She has organized in the Palestinian liberation movement since 2018, and her practice spans industrial design, graphic and visual communication work for movement organizations, and photography. Her thesis is Jalila’s Vanity, named for her great-great grandmother Teta Jalila: a Falahi peasant-class Palestinian woman from Ramallah Tehta, photographed around 1920 in her best clothing and jewelry. Laila uses that photograph as the logo of her practice. Rajie Cook’s mother was also a Jalila from Ramallah — not the same woman as Laila’s Teta Jalila, but a relative on a branch of the family neither side has fully traced. The name recurs across the lineage the way names of matriarchs tend to. Laila Grace is not an emerging Palestinian artist who happens to work in design. She continues a Palestinian American design lineage that ran from Ramallah through twentieth-century New Jersey commercial design through Cold War humanitarian witness, and that runs now through Chicago. “Oppression is also design” I met Laila at SAIC Galleries during the final week of Graduate Exhibition Two 2026, the second of the school’s two institutional graduate shows. Jalila’s Vanity sits in the Loop space at 33 East Washington Street, two floors below ground. She speaks the way people who have been organizing in Chicago for years tend to speak: declarative, direct, unbothered. The first thing she said about her practice was not about art. It was about an undergraduate professor at the University of Illinois at Chicago who, when she asked about industrial design through a multicultural lens, told her that “white people invented design.” She has written about this moment on her own website: “This statement was not only ignorant, but also verified my realization of the need for a more inclusive and diverse approach to design.” She returned for her master’s, she told me, partly out of spite. “Especially when I went to Palestine that summer,” she said, “I really realized how design is not only in objects, but also how we design a society and a community. Palestinians are very communal people because we design our communities effectively. That’s something people in the West actually really struggle with.” Her thesis statement followed, offered without prompting: “Oppression is also design. When we see the occupation, it is not only a political occupation that we see through law and politics, but it’s also architecturally designed: through the wall, through the borders, all sorts of things. So this is also a design issue. It’s design used in a way that’s actually really bad for our society, and we need to use design to create a better future as well.” The separation wall, the checkpoints, the Area A/B/C carve-up of the West Bank, the settlement road infrastructure, the metal turnstiles at Qalandiya: each is a designed object, produced by identifiable designers, built for a function. The conceptual move Laila is making is to take that observation seriously. If oppression is design, so is its refusal. The pivot "Oppression is also design." She has been making work in this register for years, across more media than her thesis suggests. Her portfolio includes graphic design for the Palestinian movement (t-shirts for the U.S. Palestinian Community Network, the Chicago Palestine Film Festival, Students for Justice in Palestine) alongside her industrial design pieces. Her undergraduate thesis at UIC was Tea Time Under Apartheid: a table bisected by a partition standing in for the separation wall, with Palestinian cultural beauty laid out on either side. At SAIC she made Your Bombs, Our Leisure, a hookah whose body is shaped as a nuclear bomb, an object she writes “the FBI might expect to find during a raid on an Arab-American household,” pierced through a tray of Palestinian ceramics. She made Nijma, an Eastern-style ottoman using the Al-Khalil (Hebron) star motif. She designed a chess table inspired by Gaza’s chess clubs for children. She has a sustained body of tatreez work, including Tatreez of the Future and Tatreez After Dark. Jalila’s Vanity is the culmination of that tatreez investigation, not its beginning. She calls this earlier body of work discursive design. The term comes from a real subfield (Bruce and Stephanie Tharp’s writing on objects as arguments) that Laila engages directly. The hookah bomb is discursive in this precise sense: it places the symbols of occupation and the symbols of Arab leisure into a single object and forces the viewer to hold them together. The pivot that makes Jalila’s Vanity different is that Laila has decided to stop making work that engages Israel at all. “I found that when I was making objects that were about Israel or about the occupation, about the genocide, it didn’t make people care on the outside,” she told me. “I wanted my work to make people care. I was kind of realizing people still don’t care. So I was shifting my focus more into designing purely for the Palestinian people instead of preaching to the choir or trying to change people’s minds.” This is not depoliticization. It is a tactical reading of what design can and cannot do in the current information environment. Two years into the genocide in Gaza, she has concluded that further work aimed at convincing outsiders is a misallocation of her practice. Her current work is directed instead to a Palestinian audience. “The wall is not our symbol,” she said. “We have fantastic artists who have made paintings on it, but the wall is not ours. The wall is not ours, but we use that so often.” In her artist statement she calls this mode Palestinian futurism. The term gestures toward a small body of contemporary Palestinian work (the films of Larissa Sansour in particular) that imagines Palestinian existence outside the present political horizon. Laila’s futurism is not science fiction. It is the assertion that Palestinian people existed before Israel and will exist after it. “Being Palestinian actually has nothing to do with Israel whatsoever,” she said. “It actually has to do with our deep rootedness and connection to the land itself.” The vanity The piece is made from olive wood, the tree of Palestine. Some olive trees there are five thousand years old. Tatreez (Palestinian cross-stitch) developed in villages as a way for women to depict where they were from, whether they were married, what they hoped for, who their kin were. It is a writing system as much as a decoration. Each motif on this vanity refers to a specific element of women’s self-care drawn from the land: * Damascus rose, for rose water on the skin. * A sea motif, which Laila designed herself by combining two existing motifs, for the mud of the Dead Sea. * Olive branches, for the oil on skin and hair. * Khol, for the eyeliner traditionally made from crushed nuts or almonds. The decoration names the ritual. The vanity is not an image of self-care; it is an apparatus for it. The title’s double meaning lives here too, and Laila pointed it out herself, slightly amused with herself. Vanity, the piece of furniture, and vanity, the quality. “It’s about us being a little bit vain as well,” she said. “You know, the adjective too matters.” She is claiming the right of Palestinian women to be vain, to take pleasure in their own appearance, to indulge in self-regard. In her artist statement she puts the politics in theoretical terms: the Zionist occupation has reduced Palestinian femininity to “a disingenuous political spectacle,” in which Palestinian women appear only as objects of others’ political gaze, never as subjects of their own. The vanity inverts that. I asked her where the spectacle critique came from. She named a class at

    29 min
  4. Inside Illinois: Where Policy, Activism, and Capital Intersect

    May 4

    Inside Illinois: Where Policy, Activism, and Capital Intersect

    This conversation took place inside the Illinois State Capitol. On its surface, it’s an interview with a policy organizer working on active legislation. More broadly, it offers insight into how some political actors are thinking about the relationship among advocacy, policy, and capital. At the center is Illinois’ anti-boycott framework and the effort to repeal it. As described in the interview, the law allows the state to investigate whether companies are engaging in politically motivated boycotts and, in some cases, remove them from state pension portfolios. That creates a point of overlap between public investment decisions and political criteria—raising questions about what role pension systems are meant to play. The implications are contested. The Ben & Jerry’s and Unilever example raised in the conversation reflects one way participants understand the downstream effects: scrutiny can lead to divestment activity, which can then influence pricing, positioning, and, in some cases, corporate decisions. Whether that chain is consistent or situational is debated, but the perception itself is shaping how people engage with the issue. What stands out is the framing. The approach described links activism, legislation, and economic pressure into a single line of effort. The focus isn’t just on narrative or elections, but on influence that runs through institutions and capital flows. There are limits. The conversation points to coordination problems—overlapping candidates, fragmented coalitions, and misaligned priorities—that make it harder to convert agreement into outcomes. In that sense, the constraint is often internal as much as external. Taken together, this reflects a broader shift. Political actors are testing how state-controlled capital can intersect with policy goals, while working through the coordination challenges that come with it. The boundaries between governance, markets, and political strategy are still being worked out. Most of this is unfolding outside national attention, for now. Get full access to GrayStak Media at christophersweat.substack.com/subscribe

    35 min
  5. "The Seat Belongs to the Movement": Inside Chicago’s Emerging Model of Political Power with Ald. Rosanna Rodriguez Sanchez

    Mar 20

    "The Seat Belongs to the Movement": Inside Chicago’s Emerging Model of Political Power with Ald. Rosanna Rodriguez Sanchez

    Editor’s Note This interview is part of GrayStak’s ongoing coverage of political movements, governance models, and institutional dynamics in major U.S. cities. The views expressed reflect Alderperson Rodriguez-Sanchez’s perspective and are presented to understand better how power is organized and exercised at the local level.As part of our Chicago coverage, we are speaking directly with policymakers, organizers, and institutional actors shaping outcomes on the ground.The Seat Belongs to the Movement: A View from Inside Chicago’s Grassroots Political Model I sat down with Alderperson Rosanna Rodriguez-Sanchez in her office at Chicago City Hall to understand how she thinks about power—where it comes from, how it’s built, and how it operates once you’re inside government. What she laid out is not the dominant framework most people associate with Chicago politics. It is a perspective shaped by multi-generational organizing, community-based mobilization, and a view of governance that differs meaningfully from traditional institutional models. Early in the conversation, she framed it directly: “The seat belongs to the movement.” That idea anchors how she approaches her role. It reflects a view that political authority is not held individually but is temporarily exercised on behalf of a broader base. Her perspective is rooted in early experience. She described her first protest at six years old in Puerto Rico, when her community lacked running water during a drought. In that environment, organizing was not ideological—it was a practical response to the absence of reliable public services. “We protested… and the organizing actually worked, and we were able to get our water back.” From her standpoint, that experience shaped a broader understanding of politics: “Organizing is fundamental to survival.” This framing is an important context for her interpretation of governance. It places collective action at the center of political life, in contrast to the more individualistic framing that often dominates U.S. political discourse. When applied in Chicago, this perspective leads to a different approach to electoral politics. Rodriguez-Sanchez did not come up through traditional party or institutional pathways. Her entry point was through organizing, working with immigrant communities, youth networks, and local movements, before transitioning into elected office. That background informs how she distinguishes her model from what is commonly referred to as Chicago’s political “machine.” “We are not the new machine… we are organizing people around issues that are important to people.” In her view, the difference is structural. Traditional machine politics is associated with patronage and control of resources, jobs, contracts, and institutional leverage. The model she describes is organized around issue alignment and volunteer participation. That distinction also shapes how she describes political accountability: “If the organization decides to run somebody else… I step aside.” Whether or not that model is broadly replicable, it reflects a different conception of incumbency, one where political authority is contingent on continued alignment with an organized base. Beyond framing, the conversation also surfaced how these ideas translate into governance. On immigration, she described the development of coordinated response systems to monitor and respond to enforcement activity at the local level: “We created the Northwest Side Rapid Response System.” These systems include volunteer networks, legal coordination, and communication channels designed to respond quickly to developments on the ground. They illustrate how local actors can shape the experience of federal policy in practice. On public safety, her focus has been on expanding non-police responses, particularly for mental health crises: “We need to center care, not violence.” This includes efforts to build out mobile crisis response teams and strengthen public mental health infrastructure. This approach reflects a broader shift in how some local governments are thinking about safety and service delivery. On economic policy, she pointed to ongoing tensions around taxation and revenue generation: “Rich people never want to pay their fair share.” Here, her comments reflect a broader dynamic visible in many cities where efforts to restructure revenue or shift fiscal priorities encounter resistance from well-resourced stakeholders. From a GrayStak perspective, what stands out is not just the substance of any single position, but the underlying model of how power is organized and exercised. The structure she describes is networked rather than centralized, linking local organizations, elected officials, and, at times, state and federal actors into coordinated systems. Information, resources, and response mechanisms move across those layers in ways that are not always visible from the outside. This matters in a broader context. Major U.S. cities are increasingly serving as primary arenas in which national political tensions are operationalized. Immigration enforcement, public safety, housing policy, and taxation are not just federal debates—they are implemented, adapted, and contested at the local level. In that environment, the composition and orientation of local leadership can materially shape outcomes. As she put it: “It matters who is in these seats.” That statement can be read in multiple ways—politically, operationally, and analytically. From an analytical standpoint, it reinforces a broader point: understanding political and policy risk in the U.S. increasingly requires close attention to local systems, not just national narratives. What this conversation provides is direct access to one such system—from the perspective of a policymaker who operates within institutions while being shaped by organizing traditions outside them. It is not the only model in operation. It exists alongside more traditional structures—capital-backed networks, institutional coalitions, and established political hierarchies. But it is an active one. And in cities like Chicago, where national tensions are translated into local outcomes, it is increasingly part of how power is actually being built and exercised.About GrayStak GrayStak is a media and political risk platform focused on emerging instability, institutional dynamics, and political movements across the United States. Combining on-the-ground reporting with structured analysis, we identify early warning signs and turn real-world events into actionable insights for public, corporate, and institutional decision-makers. Get full access to GrayStak Media at christophersweat.substack.com/subscribe

    1h 1m
  6. The Surprise Candidate in Illinois’ 9th: Inside Kat Abughazaleh’s Unconventional Campaig

    Mar 11

    The Surprise Candidate in Illinois’ 9th: Inside Kat Abughazaleh’s Unconventional Campaig

    National attention around the race for Illinois’ 9th Congressional District has begun to grow. Veteran political strategist David Axelrod recently pointed to Kat Abughazaleh as a candidate drawing unexpected attention — a sign that what began as a relatively unconventional campaign is now entering broader national political conversation. Abughazaleh’s run has broken with many of the traditional norms of congressional campaigning. Rather than focusing primarily on donor networks, formal party infrastructure, and traditional advertising, her campaign has emphasized community events, live performances, concerts, and mutual aid initiatives to embed itself more deeply in the district's daily social life. A major pillar of her strategy is digital organizing. Abughazaleh describes building an online political community through platforms like Discord, where supporters can interact directly with the campaign, coordinate volunteer efforts, and participate in discussions that shape messaging and priorities. The model reflects a broader shift in how younger campaigns are attempting to maintain constant accessibility and build participatory political communities that exist both online and offline. At the same time, the campaign has been accompanied by controversy. In our conversation, Abughazaleh addresses the indictment that has become part of the public narrative surrounding her candidacy and discusses how she believes it has shaped perceptions of the race. She also reflects on the ways traditional polling can struggle to measure candidates who build support through decentralized networks rather than conventional campaign infrastructure. Beyond the mechanics of the campaign itself, the discussion also turns to the broader political landscape. Abughazaleh shares her perspective on the Democratic Party, evolving voter expectations, and how candidates experimenting with new organizing models may influence the future of congressional politics. For observers of political movements, the campaign offers an interesting case study in how modern campaigns are evolving at the intersection of digital infrastructure, community organizing, and political storytelling. Below is the full interview in which Christopher Sweat sits down with Kat Abughazaleh to discuss her campaign, her strategy, and the broader political environment shaping the race. GrayStak conducts independent field reporting and interviews across American political movements, elections, and political conflicts — documenting the people, strategies, and events shaping the country in real time. Get full access to GrayStak Media at christophersweat.substack.com/subscribe

    27 min

About

Hosted by a highly opinionated interdisciplinary thinker and orchestrator of technology. Discussing high-technology, politics, economics, corporate finance, and business. A rant, Christopher Sweat, is recorded in tandem with my writing at christophersweat.substack.com. christophersweat.substack.com