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The Windy City buffeted by sleaze | The Windy City buffeted by sleaze |
(2 days later) | |
The Illinois House has voted to impeach Governor Rod Blagojevich A POINT OF VIEW Barack Obama stands for change, but the political arena he's leaving can't seem to escape its corrupt past, says Harold Evans. | The Illinois House has voted to impeach Governor Rod Blagojevich A POINT OF VIEW Barack Obama stands for change, but the political arena he's leaving can't seem to escape its corrupt past, says Harold Evans. |
To say Chicago is corrupt is to demean the city's historic achievements. Chicago knows how to make corruption entertaining. | To say Chicago is corrupt is to demean the city's historic achievements. Chicago knows how to make corruption entertaining. |
The recent juicy revelations about how the city and state are run have been a Godsend for governors and mayors across the country, pretty miserable right now, facing a depressing year of budget cuts. By maintaining its splendid tradition for sleazy political theatre, Chicago has enabled everyone else to feel pretty good about themselves. FBI agents had recordings from wiretaps of the Governor Blagojevich expressing indignation about the "bleeping" President-elect Hear Radio 4's A Point of View | The recent juicy revelations about how the city and state are run have been a Godsend for governors and mayors across the country, pretty miserable right now, facing a depressing year of budget cuts. By maintaining its splendid tradition for sleazy political theatre, Chicago has enabled everyone else to feel pretty good about themselves. FBI agents had recordings from wiretaps of the Governor Blagojevich expressing indignation about the "bleeping" President-elect Hear Radio 4's A Point of View |
The election to the presidency of the junior Senator from Illinois, Barack Obama, created a vacancy. It was the duty of the Governor, Rodney Blagojevich (call him Blago), to nominate a distinguished citizen who could go and sit at Obama's old desk in the Senate without having to endure the indignity of actually first winning the votes of the citizens. | |
Straightforward enough except that Blago saw the seat as a valuable thing and he said - when he didn't know he was being taped - you don't just give away a "bleeping" valuable thing for nothing. | Straightforward enough except that Blago saw the seat as a valuable thing and he said - when he didn't know he was being taped - you don't just give away a "bleeping" valuable thing for nothing. |
So secretly but brazenly he set out to auction it, as he himself puts it, even trying to bargain with the President-elect through Obama's chief of staff about whom he would nominate. And got bleeping nowhere. One of the many extraordinary things indeed about Obama is the cool political skill that enabled him to swim in the Chicago pond for so long without getting wet. | So secretly but brazenly he set out to auction it, as he himself puts it, even trying to bargain with the President-elect through Obama's chief of staff about whom he would nominate. And got bleeping nowhere. One of the many extraordinary things indeed about Obama is the cool political skill that enabled him to swim in the Chicago pond for so long without getting wet. |
The wire | The wire |
The carnival began with FBI agents arriving unannounced at the Governor's home at 6am on the eve of Rodney Blagojevich's 52nd birthday. No birthday gifts, just handcuffs and arrest warrants. | The carnival began with FBI agents arriving unannounced at the Governor's home at 6am on the eve of Rodney Blagojevich's 52nd birthday. No birthday gifts, just handcuffs and arrest warrants. |
They had recordings from wiretaps of the Governor expressing indignation about the "bleeping" President-elect, and also of his First Lady, Patricia Mell, who it turns out has the vocabulary of a fishwife. | They had recordings from wiretaps of the Governor expressing indignation about the "bleeping" President-elect, and also of his First Lady, Patricia Mell, who it turns out has the vocabulary of a fishwife. |
The US Attorney who prepared the 76- page indictment - handsome Patrick Fitzgerald, think Eliot Ness in the Al Capone movie The Untouchables - wrote himself some good lines, too: "A political corruption crime spree that would make Lincoln turn over in his grave." Blagojevich's apointee Roland Burris, out in the rain | The US Attorney who prepared the 76- page indictment - handsome Patrick Fitzgerald, think Eliot Ness in the Al Capone movie The Untouchables - wrote himself some good lines, too: "A political corruption crime spree that would make Lincoln turn over in his grave." Blagojevich's apointee Roland Burris, out in the rain |
As Chicago quickly noted, that was a little over-wrought since Lincoln, no stranger to patronage, appointed his campaign manager to the Supreme Court. | As Chicago quickly noted, that was a little over-wrought since Lincoln, no stranger to patronage, appointed his campaign manager to the Supreme Court. |
Blago was denounced by one and all, and told he had forfeited the right to nominate anyone for Obama's old seat. So, being Blago, he went ahead and named a 71-year-old black buddy, Ronald Burris, a former Attorney General who showed up at the Capitol this week and was sent back out again into the Washington rainfall. | Blago was denounced by one and all, and told he had forfeited the right to nominate anyone for Obama's old seat. So, being Blago, he went ahead and named a 71-year-old black buddy, Ronald Burris, a former Attorney General who showed up at the Capitol this week and was sent back out again into the Washington rainfall. |
He tried to keep his dignity amid the media circus. "We," he declared under his umbrella, "we are the senator." My bet is that, in the end, he, the unexceptional Ronald Burris (or should I say we) will get sworn in after all. | He tried to keep his dignity amid the media circus. "We," he declared under his umbrella, "we are the senator." My bet is that, in the end, he, the unexceptional Ronald Burris (or should I say we) will get sworn in after all. |
Presumed guilty | Presumed guilty |
Of course, everyone has had a bash at Blago, or Hot Rob as he is sometimes called: clown, sociopath, crook, any noun you can think of. Trial by media: Rod Blagojevich near his Chicago home | Of course, everyone has had a bash at Blago, or Hot Rob as he is sometimes called: clown, sociopath, crook, any noun you can think of. Trial by media: Rod Blagojevich near his Chicago home |
He's a gift to the cartoonists with a flopping mop of hair covering his forehead. When the thatch lifts in the breezes of the Windy City, two words, they say, are tattooed underneath: Bribe Me. | He's a gift to the cartoonists with a flopping mop of hair covering his forehead. When the thatch lifts in the breezes of the Windy City, two words, they say, are tattooed underneath: Bribe Me. |
Blago has denied these charges and from time to time in the din of the public excoriation, one faintly hears the chant of sacred words like the murmur of monks in distant cloisters: "Everyone is innocent until proved guilty, everyone is innocent until proved guilty, everyone is innocent..." | Blago has denied these charges and from time to time in the din of the public excoriation, one faintly hears the chant of sacred words like the murmur of monks in distant cloisters: "Everyone is innocent until proved guilty, everyone is innocent until proved guilty, everyone is innocent..." |
But by the time the media and leaky prosecutors have finished with their lurid pre-trial defamations, it'll be hard to find a jury that isn't a lynch mob. This is the Alice in Wonderland way of American justice in high profile cases - sentence first, verdict afterwards. | But by the time the media and leaky prosecutors have finished with their lurid pre-trial defamations, it'll be hard to find a jury that isn't a lynch mob. This is the Alice in Wonderland way of American justice in high profile cases - sentence first, verdict afterwards. |
Mind you, when you see what they are up against in Chicago, you understand the frustrations. Blago came in promising to clean up the mess after his predecessor, Republican Governor George Ryan, had just been sent up the river for six and half years for letting his office sell licenses to unqualified truck drivers - a scandal uncovered during an investigation into a crash that killed six children. | Mind you, when you see what they are up against in Chicago, you understand the frustrations. Blago came in promising to clean up the mess after his predecessor, Republican Governor George Ryan, had just been sent up the river for six and half years for letting his office sell licenses to unqualified truck drivers - a scandal uncovered during an investigation into a crash that killed six children. |
In the past three decades, two other Illinois governors have been convicted, along with one mayor, 27 aldermen, and more than 100 elected officials. | In the past three decades, two other Illinois governors have been convicted, along with one mayor, 27 aldermen, and more than 100 elected officials. |
Fourth estate | Fourth estate |
Newspapers, enjoying the freedom of the First Amendment, are crucial to uncovering much of the wrongdoing. I was in Chicago in 1978 when editor-in-chief Jim Hoge at the Sun-Times invested his company's money in a bar on the Near North Side. Al Capone, after his convicted on tax evasion charges | Newspapers, enjoying the freedom of the First Amendment, are crucial to uncovering much of the wrongdoing. I was in Chicago in 1978 when editor-in-chief Jim Hoge at the Sun-Times invested his company's money in a bar on the Near North Side. Al Capone, after his convicted on tax evasion charges |
Why? It was a sound investment because it enabled his newspaper to expose rackets run by the city's inspectors. For $10 a fire inspector would ignore exposed electrical wiring, a plumbing inspector would overlook the leaky toilet. The inspectors were photographed with hands out by Sun-Times cameramen posing as repair men; barmaids and bartenders were reporters. The sting operation at the tavern - neatly called The Mirage - got more convictions to add to Chicago's long roll of dishonour. | Why? It was a sound investment because it enabled his newspaper to expose rackets run by the city's inspectors. For $10 a fire inspector would ignore exposed electrical wiring, a plumbing inspector would overlook the leaky toilet. The inspectors were photographed with hands out by Sun-Times cameramen posing as repair men; barmaids and bartenders were reporters. The sting operation at the tavern - neatly called The Mirage - got more convictions to add to Chicago's long roll of dishonour. |
In fact, there's a splendid tradition of investigative journalism in the city, going spectacularly back to the Prohibition when Al Capone's dollars and tommy guns helped keep William Hale (Big Bill) Thompson in power as Mayor. | In fact, there's a splendid tradition of investigative journalism in the city, going spectacularly back to the Prohibition when Al Capone's dollars and tommy guns helped keep William Hale (Big Bill) Thompson in power as Mayor. |
Capone carried out the famous St Valentine's Day massacre in Thompson's time in office and Thompson resented the high-minded who thought that as mayor he should do something about all the crime. | Capone carried out the famous St Valentine's Day massacre in Thompson's time in office and Thompson resented the high-minded who thought that as mayor he should do something about all the crime. |
Most of all Big Bill hated the buccaneering owner of the Chicago Tribune, Colonel Robert McCormick, who'd won a famous First Amendment victory that every citizen in the United States had a right to criticise the government. WHAT'S A WARD-HEELER? Also known as "machine politician"US term for one who follows at heels of leader or "boss"; unscrupulous or disreputable follower of a professional politician - Oxford English Dictionary | Most of all Big Bill hated the buccaneering owner of the Chicago Tribune, Colonel Robert McCormick, who'd won a famous First Amendment victory that every citizen in the United States had a right to criticise the government. WHAT'S A WARD-HEELER? Also known as "machine politician"US term for one who follows at heels of leader or "boss"; unscrupulous or disreputable follower of a professional politician - Oxford English Dictionary |
It is a savage irony that the Tribune has been a key player in the unmasking of Blago at a time when its new owner is filing for Chapter 11 bankruptcy. He's a California developer called Sam Zell, as profane in public as any ward-heeler, but he seems to have maintained the Colonel's tradition of not knuckling to the bad guys. | It is a savage irony that the Tribune has been a key player in the unmasking of Blago at a time when its new owner is filing for Chapter 11 bankruptcy. He's a California developer called Sam Zell, as profane in public as any ward-heeler, but he seems to have maintained the Colonel's tradition of not knuckling to the bad guys. |
On one of the wiretaps, First Lady Patricia Mell, daughter of a powerful aldermen, is heard urging her husband to tell Zell he has to fire the Trib's editorial writers, or the state will prevent Zell from selling the city's baseball team, the Cubs and their home stadium, Wrigley Field. | On one of the wiretaps, First Lady Patricia Mell, daughter of a powerful aldermen, is heard urging her husband to tell Zell he has to fire the Trib's editorial writers, or the state will prevent Zell from selling the city's baseball team, the Cubs and their home stadium, Wrigley Field. |
Well, "urging" does not do justice to the force of her conviction. The Governor, she is recorded as saying, must "hold up that (expletive) Cubs (expletive)... and (expletive) them". Chicagoans are a little touchy about their First Lady's gift for vituperation. One columnist wrote: "How do they think Chicago politicians talk in private when they're muscling the other guy for cash. Like Helen Mirren playing the queen?" | Well, "urging" does not do justice to the force of her conviction. The Governor, she is recorded as saying, must "hold up that (expletive) Cubs (expletive)... and (expletive) them". Chicagoans are a little touchy about their First Lady's gift for vituperation. One columnist wrote: "How do they think Chicago politicians talk in private when they're muscling the other guy for cash. Like Helen Mirren playing the queen?" |
Daley politics | Daley politics |
So why are politics in Chicago so corrupt? The politics that breed graft go back to the early years of the 20th Century when more than 12 million bewildered immigrants settled in the big cities. The publisher has sought bankruptcy court protection | So why are politics in Chicago so corrupt? The politics that breed graft go back to the early years of the 20th Century when more than 12 million bewildered immigrants settled in the big cities. The publisher has sought bankruptcy court protection |
The Irish arrivals, speaking English, provided leadership for the mass of Russian and Polish Jews, Germans, Italians and Slavs and developed a system of big city machines - political machines - and bosses. A system based on the politics of personal obligation, not political principle. | The Irish arrivals, speaking English, provided leadership for the mass of Russian and Polish Jews, Germans, Italians and Slavs and developed a system of big city machines - political machines - and bosses. A system based on the politics of personal obligation, not political principle. |
The bosses did little to limit the overweening power of business, or to challenge the slum landlords. This was a neglect that made them vulnerable to the appeal of the reformers. In New York, Governor Franklin Roosevelt and his ally, the incorruptible mayor of the city, Fiorello La Guardia, put the bosses out of business (with help from the press). | The bosses did little to limit the overweening power of business, or to challenge the slum landlords. This was a neglect that made them vulnerable to the appeal of the reformers. In New York, Governor Franklin Roosevelt and his ally, the incorruptible mayor of the city, Fiorello La Guardia, put the bosses out of business (with help from the press). |
But in Chicago, the system survived, in part due to the mastery of machine politics by long-time Mayor Richard J Daley and now his popular son, the 54th mayor. Aides of the Daleys may have been convicted of corruption but neither father nor son has ever been indicted. And thanks to their prowess, Chicago is today in effect a one-party city - out of 50 alderman, 49 are Democrats. | But in Chicago, the system survived, in part due to the mastery of machine politics by long-time Mayor Richard J Daley and now his popular son, the 54th mayor. Aides of the Daleys may have been convicted of corruption but neither father nor son has ever been indicted. And thanks to their prowess, Chicago is today in effect a one-party city - out of 50 alderman, 49 are Democrats. |
As for Blago, he's being written off as a crazy, but Tribune columnist John Kass dryly notes that the pundits making such diagnoses have never in their lives talked to a Chicago precinct captain. He writes: "Don't be alarmed when a Chicago machine politician acts like a raving lunatic. It is when they are quiet and reasonable that you've got to worry." | As for Blago, he's being written off as a crazy, but Tribune columnist John Kass dryly notes that the pundits making such diagnoses have never in their lives talked to a Chicago precinct captain. He writes: "Don't be alarmed when a Chicago machine politician acts like a raving lunatic. It is when they are quiet and reasonable that you've got to worry." |
Add your comments on this story, using the form below. | Add your comments on this story, using the form below. |