When it comes to putting a name to Chicago’s annual battle against its infamously inclement weather, it turns out that the practical is also the political.
“Abolish ICE” was the top vote-getter in the city’s “You Name a Snowplow” contest. Choosing the protest slogan with a double meaning proved a potent way for voters to jab at US President Donald Trump after he sent Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officers into the city and its suburbs last fall in a major immigration crackdown.
With a surge of ICE officers beginning in September, “Operation Midway Blitz” resulted in more than 4,000 arrests, a fatal shooting and a sour taste among Chicago’s Democratic leaders and many of its residents, particularly in large immigrant populations.
Photo: Rich Hein / Chicago Sun-Times via AP
Despite mid-winter frigid cold, “ICE Out” protests in recent weeks have continued downtown, near ICE facilities and throughout the suburbs.
The snowplow-naming contest, in its fourth year, also produced winning names ranging from those paying tribute to the new pope, who hails from Chicago, to a homegrown horror purveyor and the popular quarterback of the city’s NFL franchise.
The top six winners will get a snowplow named in their honor.
In a statement, Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson thanked local voters “for their unmatched creativity, sense of humor and civic pride.”
When asked whether he was reticent about the potentially prickly response to the name, a spokesperson said that “Abolish ICE” was the runaway winner, adding: “The people of Chicago clearly have no issue with the name of this snowplow.”
Requests for comment were also e-mailed to ICE and its parent agency, the Department of Homeland Security.
Contests in many cities produce names of snowplows, but they rarely carry the edge of Chicago’s top pick.
In Nashville, “Dolly Plowton” pays homage to Tennessee native and country music legend Dolly Parton, while in Minnesota, pop superstar Taylor Swift is honored on a plow dubbed “Taylor Drift.”
Chicagoans are capable of more anodyne names, too. Other winning contest names this year include “Stephen Coldbert,” for late-night talk show host Stephen Colbert. There’s “Pope Frio XIV,” with the Spanish word for “cold” rhyming with the Chicago-born pontiff’s name, Leo.
Then there’s the “Blizzard of Oz” and “Svencoolie,” a play on the Chicago TV horror host, Svengoolie; and finally, “Caleb Chilliams” for the quarterback whose last name is Williams, and who led the Bears to the playoffs for the first time in 15 years.
Johnson said he and his Department of Streets and Sanitation, which maintains 300 trucks to clear 15,000 kilometers of streets, are “grateful and inspired by the record-breaking participation in the contest this year.”
There were 13,300 plow names submitted and 39,000 final votes were cast.
The contest was conducted the same way as it was in the past three years, Department of Streets and Sanitation spokesman Ryan Gage said.
Submissions are made to the Chicago Shovels Web site. A survey app is used for both initial and final phases of the contest.
A group of streets and sanitation staff members then reviews all the submissions and chooses the finalists, which are then forwarded to the mayor’s office for final approval, Gage said.
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