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		 Obama 
		rallies votes for Chicago Mayor Emanuel ahead of election 
		
		 
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		[February 20, 2015] 
		By Julia Edwards 
		  
		 CHICAGO (Reuters) - President Barack Obama 
		appeared side-by-side on Thursday with Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel, his 
		former chief of staff, who has faced declining approval ratings among 
		black voters as he seeks a second term in city elections next week. 
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			 Obama's appearance at the event, which designated part of the 
			South Side's Pullman neighborhood as a national monument, harkened 
			back to his days as a community advocate on Chicago's predominantly 
			African-American South Side. 
			 
			Patriotic ribbons were tied around street poles on Thursday in the 
			historic neighborhood, which was built for factory workers and was 
			home to the first African-American-led union. 
			 
			Emanuel introduced Obama at the event and said it was the migration 
			of African-Americans to Chicago and their civil rights advances in 
			Pullman that would "change the face of our city and the fate of our 
			nation." 
			 
			Speaking at Gwendolyn Brooks College Preparatory Academy, Obama said 
			Emanuel has "fought for new opportunity and new jobs in Pullman and 
			for every Chicagoan in every neighborhood making sure every single 
			person gets the fair shot at success they deserve." 
			
			  Emanuel's main challenger in Tuesday's election, Democrat Cook 
			County Commissioner Jesus "Chuy" Garcia, has tapped into perceptions 
			that Emanuel has governed for the rich. 
			 
			White House spokesman Eric Schultz said the event was not timed to 
			coincide with Emanuel's campaign, though he said Obama has recorded 
			a radio ad for him. 
			 
			Obama used his pull with black voters in Chicago’s South Side to 
			help elect Emanuel as mayor in 2011, a time when he was lesser known 
			after spending years in Washington. 
			 
			Under Emanuel, there have been spikes in shooting deaths across the 
			South Side as well as a strike by the Chicago Teachers Union. 
			 
			
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			The White House hopes Pullman's designation as a national monument 
			will bring tourism and boost the local economy while giving some 
			children their first opportunity to visit a national monument. 
			 
			After speaking in Pullman, Obama stopped at a campaign office in the 
			South Side's Kenwood neighborhood to thank volunteers who are 
			helping Emanuel in his campaign for reelection. 
			 
			Obama also privately discussed the location of his presidential 
			library, which Chicago has been vying to host over Obama's home 
			state of Hawaii. 
			 
			Elections in Chicago for mayor, and for the city council, will be 
			held on Tuesday. A run-off election for mayor, if necessary, will be 
			held on April 7. 
			 
			(Reporting by Julia Edwards; Additional reporting by Roberta 
			Rampton; Editing by Leslie Adler) 
			
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			reserved.] 
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