US | Chicago Chicago Ducks Foie Gras Ban Squawking Mayor Daley gets controversial pate back on menu By Peter Fearon Posted May 15, 2008 1:00 PM CDT Copied Todd Stein, executive chef at MK, a trendy downtown Chicago restaurant, slicing a portion of foie gras. The Chicago City Council has repealed its controversial two-year-old ban on the delicacy. (AP Photo/M. Spencer Green, File) A Chicago restaurant ban on foie gras pate that animal lovers love to hate has been lifted by city legislators after two years. The ban caused widespread derision among foodies, fury in the restaurant industry—and plaudits from animal rights advocates who wanted to save the force-fed ducks and geese whose super fatty livers make the pate. Mayor Richard Daley bulldozed the repeal through the City Council, reports the Sun Times. "The city had placed its mark as a city of compassion, a city that was standing up against cruelty and it’s taken a giant step backward," said a councilman who opposed the switch. Read These Next Norwegians are flabbergasted by Machado's Nobel giveaway. ICE arrests casino magnate in a remote US territory. Kyrsten Sinema is being sued under 'homewrecker' law. John Mellencamp's little-known side gig: Indiana football fan. Report an error