Willie Wilson (businessman)
Willie L. Wilson is an American businessman and politician from Chicago, Illinois who has run for multiple elected offices, including Mayor of Chicago and President of the United States. In September 2019, he announced a run for United States Senate, seeking to unseat incumbent Senator Dick Durbin in 2020.
He has owned and operated several different McDonald's restaurant franchises and owns Omar Medical Supplies, which imports and distributes latex gloves and other medical and safety supplies and equipment. He also produces the nationally syndicated gospel music television program Singsation, which won a Chicago/Midwest Emmy Award in 2012.
Early life and education
Wilson was born the son of a sharecropper in Louisiana. His grandparents were slaves.Wilson completed a seventh grade education.
Wilson later received a Doctor of Divinity degree from Mt. Carmel Theological Seminary and a Doctor of Humane Letters from Chicago Baptist Institute International.
Wilson left home at age thirteen, and began his working life earning twenty cents per hour working in cotton and sugar cane fields.
Wilson lived for periods of time in Miami and New York City, before settling in Chicago in 1965.
Wilson worked various jobs once he moved to Chicago, before being hired to mop floors and flip burgers at a McDonald's. He worked his way up, being eventually promoted to manager, and later receiving a loan to become a McDonald's franchisee, thus starting his business career.
Business career
In his career as a businessman, Wilson owned five McDonald's franchises and started a medical-supply company. He also produced the nationally syndicated gospel music television program SingsationHe has served as the founder and Chairman of the Board of Omar Medical Supplies, Inc.
Philanthropic and nonprofit career
Wilson is noted as a philanthropist.Wilson served on the Board of Chicago Baptist Institute.
Political career
Wilson served as the Chairman of the Governor's Task Force on Fair Practices in Contracting. In 2014, Illinois Governor-elect Bruce Rauner appointed Wilson to his transition team.2015 Chicago mayoral campaign
Wilson ran for Mayor of Chicago in 2015, being one of several challengers to incumbent mayor Rahm Emanuel.Wilson collected 43,000 signatures for his candidature petition within five days. Emanuel issued a challenge to the validity of signatures collected. Emanuel ultimately dropped his challenge to Wilson's petition.
Wilson staked out a number of positions, including advocating for bringing a casino to Chicago and restoring Meigs Field as an airport.
Wilson placed third in a five-candidate race with 50,960 votes, equal 10.66% of the votes cast. Wilson was critical of Police Superintendent Garry McCarthy, and pledged to fire him if elected mayor. Wilson was also critical of Chicago Public Schools school closures which had taken place under Emanuel.
Wilson's endorsement in the runoff was actively sought by both candidates Rahm Emanuel and Jesús "Chuy" García. Wilson endorsed García.
2016 United States presidential campaign
After setting-up an exploratory committee on May 11, 2015, Wilson officially announced on June 1, 2015, that he would be running as a candidate for President of the United States in the 2016 election. He ran as a Democrat.Wilson was on the ballot in several states during the 2016 Democratic primaries. He was the only minor candidate to appear on the ballot in South Carolina's "First in the South" primaries, perhaps due to the comparatively higher cost of the state's ballot entry fee.
The Wilson campaign was the first presidential campaign, Democratic or Republican, to buy advertisements in the state of Iowa.
He dropped-out on April 12, 2016.
In the general election, Wilson personally voted for Republican nominee Donald Trump.
Below is a table of the results of primary competitions he competed in during the Democratic primaries.
Campaign finances
Detailed below are the FEC-filed finances of Willie Wilson 2016 as of 5/6/2016Financial Source | Amount |
Federal Funds | 0 |
Itemized Individual Contributions | 28,685 |
Unitemized Individual Contributions | 6,705 |
Party Committees Contributions | 0 |
Other Committees Contributions | 0 |
Total Contributions | 35,390 |
Transfers from Authorized Committees | 0 |
Candidate Loans | 1,055,100 |
Other Loans | 0 |
Total Loans | 1,055,100 |
Offsets to Operating Expenditures | 9,931 |
Fundraising Offsets | 0 |
Legal and Accounting Offsets | 0 |
Total Offsets | 9,857 |
Other Receipts | 0 |
Total Receipts | 1,100,421 |
Disbursements | Amount |
Operating Expenditures | 1,055,444 |
Transfers To Authorized Committees | 0 |
Fundraising | 0 |
Exempt Legal and Accounting | 0 |
Candidate Loan Repayments | 11,627 |
Other Loan Repayments | 0 |
Total Loan Repayments | 11,627 |
Individual Contribution Refunds | 0 |
Political Party Contribution Refunds | 0 |
Other Committee Contribution Refunds | 0 |
Total Contribution Refunds | 0 |
Other Disbursements | 33,350 |
Total Disbursements | 1,100,421 |
Category | Amount |
Beginning Cash On Hand | 0 |
Current Cash On Hand | 0 |
Net Contributions | 35,390 |
Net Operating Expenditures | 1,045,512 |
Debts/Loans Owed By Campaign | 1,043,472 |
Debts/Loans Owed To Campaign | 0 |
2019 Chicago mayoral campaign
In March 2018, Wilson formally announced that he would run a second time for Mayor of Chicago in the 2019 mayoral election.During his campaign, Wilson generated controversy for handing out money to churchgoers. This practice of his was challenged before the Illinois State Board of Elections, which found that it did not violate any campaign finance laws since the money came from his non-profit foundation. Wilson defended his actions, declaring that his church appearances were not campaign-related, and that he was not buying votes. He continued this practice after the decision by the Board of Elections.
During the campaign, in late November of 20, Wilson declared that he believed that other black candidates needed, "to get out of the way."
Wilson launched challenges to the candidature petitions of several black candidates, including Roger Washington,, Ja'Mal Green, Neal Sales-Griffin, and Dorothy Brown. At the last minute, Wilson moved to drop his challenge to Sales-Griffin's and Brown's petitions. Brown was still removed from the ballot due to Toni Preckwinkle maintaining her challenge to Brown's petition, but Sales-Griffin was allowed to be included on the ballot. Chicago Electoral Board Chair Marisel Hernandez chastised the Brown campaign for its political maneuver's regarding ballot challenges.
Wilson was endorsed by the Cook County Republican Party.
Wilson failed to make it to the runoff, placing fourth with 59,072 votes, equal 10.61% of vote cast. Wilson performed very well on the West and South sides of the city. Despite placing fourth, Wilson had a plurality of the vote in more wards than any other candidate. The thirteen wards that Wilson carried a plurality of the vote in were all predominately black.
Again, Wilson's endorsement was actively sought by both candidates in the runoff. Wilson endorsed Lori Lightfoot.
2020 U.S. Senate campaign
In August 2019, Wilson expressed his intention to challenge incumbent United States Senator from Illinois Dick Durbin in 2020, running in the general election as an independent challenger to Durbin.Personal life
Wilson's son Omar, who was involved in gangs and drug dealing, was shot and killed at the age of 20.Political stances
Wilson self-identifies as an independent Democrat.In the 2016 United States Presidential general election, Wilson personally voted for Republican nominee Donald Trump. When asked in 2019 about his possible vote in the 2020 election, Wilson declared, "I am not going to vote, nor will I ever vote again for President Trump."
During the COVID-19 pandemic in Illinois, Wilson advocated that churches should be allowed to hold in-person services despite the state's stay-at-home order.
Economic policy
Wilson stated in 2019 that he believes the spending of tax money has "not proportionately benefited all races of citizens," in Illinois.LGBTQ rights
Wilson tweeted in response to the Obergefell v. Hodges decision, “I disagree with what I consider the Supreme Court’s reinterpretation of what constitutes marriage. Marriage has and should always be that sacred union between a man and a woman. Period." However, in 2018, Wilson declared that he had changed his mind on the issue of same-sex marriage, declaring that he now believes that, "everybody is entitled to do whatever they want to do and be with whoever they want to be."In a 2018 interview with the Chicago Sun-Times, Wilson stated that his upbringing in the Deep South had made it difficult for him to understand the LGBTQ community, but that he was "reaching out" and seeking to "learn".