During her mayoral campaign, Lightfoot cited several reasons for entering public service, including a desire to represent the African-American community, a sense of injustice based on the murder of a family member by a Ku Klux Klan member in the 1920s, and struggles with the law encountered by her older brother, who was charged with possession of crack cocaine with intent to distribute.
While working as a federal prosecutor, Lightfoot helped to prosecute those accused of federal crimes, including drug crimes.
She assisted with Operation Silver Shovel, an FBI investigation into Chicago corruption.
She helped to convict alderman Virgil Jones.
1962
Lori Elaine Lightfoot (born August 4, 1962) is an American politician and attorney who was the 56th mayor of Chicago from 2019 until 2023.
She is a member of the Democratic Party.
Before becoming mayor, Lightfoot worked in private legal practice as a partner at Mayer Brown and held various government positions in Chicago.
She served as president of the Chicago Police Board and chair of the Chicago Police Accountability Task Force.
1984
Lightfoot received her Bachelor of Arts in political science from the University of Michigan in 1984, graduating with honors.
She pursued seven different types of employment to pay for her education, including working as a resident assistant and as a cook for the school's football team.
She also held factory jobs at home during summers to help pay for her education.
While Lightfoot was an undergraduate, her older brother, Brian Lightfoot, was arrested in connection with a bank robbery and the shooting of a security guard.
Lightfoot held positions working for Congress members Ralph Regula and Barbara Mikulski before deciding to attend law school.
She has said she chose to attend law school not because of her brother's legal troubles, but because she wanted a job that offered financial independence.
She matriculated at the University of Chicago Law School, where she was awarded a full scholarship.
As president of the University of Chicago Law School's student body, she led a successful movement to ban a law firm from campus after the firm sent a recruiter who made racist and sexist remarks towards a student.
Lightfoot quarterbacked an intramural flag football team while at Chicago Law School.
Lightfoot also served as a clerk for Justice Charles Levin of the Michigan Supreme Court.
1989
She graduated from the University of Chicago with her Juris Doctor degree in 1989.
After law school, Lightfoot became a practicing attorney at the Mayer Brown law firm, serving a wide cross-section of clients.
Lightfoot first entered the public sector as Assistant United States Attorney for the Northern District of Illinois.
1999
In 1999, Lightfoot was issued a warning for misconduct by judge Richard Posner in a case in which she was found by the United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit to have misled a United States Circuit Judge regarding a suspect's whereabouts, making it impossible for the judge to stay the suspect's extradition to Norway.
Lightfoot and the Justice Department disputed this characterization of her actions.
2002
In 2002, Lightfoot was appointed chief administrator of the Chicago Police Department Office of Professional Standards, a now-defunct governmental police oversight group, by Police Superintendent Terry Hillard.
She held the position for two years.
In the position, she was in charge of investigating possible cases of police misconduct, including police shootings of civilians.
2013
Her high school alumni association named her a "Distinguished Citizen" in 2013.
While in high school, Lightfoot helped organize a boycott of her school's lunch program over the quality of its pizza.
Her boycott was a success as the school provided more flavorful pizza.
Her punishment for the boycott was detention.
2019
In 2019, Lightfoot defeated Toni Preckwinkle in a runoff election for Chicago mayor.
She ran again in 2023 but failed to qualify for the runoff, becoming the city's first incumbent mayor to not be reelected since Jane Byrne in 1983.
Lightfoot is the first openly lesbian black woman to serve as mayor of a major city in the United States, and the second openly lesbian woman (after Annise Parker) to serve as mayor of one of the ten most populous cities in the United States.
She is also the first black woman, the second woman (after Byrne), and the third black person (after Harold Washington and Eugene Sawyer) to serve as mayor of Chicago.
Lightfoot was born in Massillon, Ohio, the youngest of four children.
Her mother, Ann Lightfoot, was a nighttime healthcare aide and school board member, and her father, Elijah Lightfoot, was a local factory worker and janitor.
She grew up in a primarily white neighborhood on the west side of the city.
Lightfoot is a graduate of Washington High School in Massillon, where she was a trumpet player in the school band; sang alto in the choir; played basketball, volleyball, and softball player; edited the yearbook; and was a member of the Pep Club.
She was elected high school class president three times.
When she ran for high school class president, Lightfoot's campaign slogan was "Get on the right foot with Lightfoot".