Dueling Dynasties

With Chicago’s Mayor Daley embroiled in scandal, Jesse Jackson Jr. eyes the 2007 race

BY Ethan Michaeli

Chicago Mayor Richard M. Daley is in trouble.

After a smooth run of 17 years, Daley is suddenly facing an aggressive federal prosecutor and a growing number of potential political challengers.

A total of 30 City of Chicago employees and contractors have been indicted and 21 convicted on charges that range from stealing asphalt to trading city contracts for bribes to selling heroin on the job. Dozens of city employees–including several department heads and the city’s inspector general–have been fired, retired or forced to resign. Some of the city employees have been linked to organized crime.

The federal prosecutor for Northern Illinois, U.S. Attorney Patrick Fitzgerald, may be zeroing in on the mayor from other directions as well. Mickey Segal, a longtime player in city politics and business associate of the mayor’s brother, John Daley, was convicted of insurance fraud last year and will likely serve decades in prison.

Fitzgerald is a tenacious prosecutor whose previous assignment was the conviction of the first World Trade Center bombers; his current portfolio includes investigating the alleged leak of CIA agent Valerie Plame’s identity and undercover assignment by White House officials. He is almost certainly trying to get the cooperation of Segal and others to indict those higher up in the City Hall hierarchy.

It is a remarkable turn-around from a seemingly impregnable position. Just a few years ago, Daley was known for his fiscal responsibility and civic pride. He was praised for restoring the downtown and beautifying the city with trees and planters. He took control of the city schools, quelled their querulous labor union, and is boasting of improving test scores among city school children.

For years, Mayor Daley operated unscathed as federal prosecutors picked off corrupt Chicago aldermen one by one, along with a few county officials and state legislators. He even got to appoint many of the aldermen’s replacements; he has named more than one-half of the current City Hall roster. Daley even wields considerable power in the state capital at Springfield, usually hostile territory for Chicago mayors.

Out-of-towners still shower Daley with plaudits. Lauding him for his “imperial power,” Time praised “Richard the Second” in April as one of the nation’s top five mayors. The city’s new downtown Millennium Park has dazzled visitors with its public art and amenities. Like the new metallic sculptures that ring the park, Daley may shine from a distance. But up close, Chicagoans can see that the continuing scandals have scraped away the Mayor’s Teflon coating.

Underneath Daley’s technocratic veneer is a pinstripe patronage version of his father’s political machine. Take Millennium Park itself: Many Chicago taxpayers gasped at the price tag-more than $475 million, including $270 million in public funds-and were shocked by the sweetheart deal given to a politically connected restaurateur. They noted that funds were spent without any public input at a time that rising property taxes were making every property owner groan.

Though the cost of Daley’s appetites may not be apparent to those attending grand lakefront festivals like the Blues Fest and the Taste of Chicago, it is obvious in Chicago’s neglected low-income neighborhoods. In 2000, the Mayor announced his Plan for Transformation, a $1.6 billion plan to tear down the notorious high-rise public housing buildings in Cabrini-Green, Robert Taylor Homes and other developments, and replace them with low-rise, mixed-income housing.

Halfway through the plan, however, dozens of buildings have been demolished but only a small number of replacement units have been built. Most residents have relocated using Housing Choice Vouchers to private apartments in other segregated, impoverished, crime-ridden areas further from the city center. Hundreds of families, if not thousands, have been rendered homeless. The demolitions also eliminated buildings that drug-dealing street gangs effectively used as storefront space, spurring fights for new territory that have driven up the murder rate.

Daley’s failures will not shift the balance of power between Democrats and Republicans. The Chicago GOP has been a fringe party in Windy City politics for decades. One of their more memorable recent candidates, Ray Wardingly, is better known by his stage name, “Spanky the Clown.”

But Daley is likely to face a challenger from the progressive wing of the Democratic Party in the 2007 mayoral race. So far, the most likely opponent is U.S. Rep. Jesse Jackson Jr. (D-Ill.), whose district includes a wide swath of the city’s predominantly African-American South Side. The son of the prominent civil rights leader, the junior Jackson was an early opponent of the invasion of Iraq and among the first to endorse former Vermont Gov. Howard Dean’s presidential bid for the Democratic nomination in 2004.

In a city that has been reticent to criticize Daley, Jackson has spoken out unequivocally about the mayor’s performance. In reference to Daley’s minority set-aside program, Jackson told the City Council to “clean up the stench.” Jackson described the mayor’s recent moves to fire several officials as “too little, too late.”

If Jackson runs, it will be a battle royal between a new generation of two American political dynasties. The current Mayor Daley sat in his father’s booth while Chicago police pummeled protestors outside the Democratic National Convention in 1968. At the next convention in 1972, the senior Jackson, in dashiki and Afro, supplanted the elder Daley amid a major realignment of national politics. Jesse Senior was part of a wider progressive coalition within the Democratic Party that opposed the Vietnam War, demanded civil rights legislation and programs to help the poor.

Should he be elected, current Chicago public housing residents would hope to receive similar attention from Jesse Junior. On his Web site, Jackson makes it plain that “adequate, safe, and affordable housing is a human right.”

The Web site’s housing page continues: “Adequate and fair housing for all of the American people should not be treated like peanuts, soybeans, beer, and cars-a commodity to be produced, distributed, and sold privately in the marketplace for profit.”

Ethan Michaeli is the publisher of Residents' Journal, a bi-monthly magazine written by and for Chicago public housing residents.

More information about Ethan Michaeli

  • Reader Comments

    Fuck the Democrats, Daley is a perfect example of how the egotistic, corporatist, Democrats are not fit to govern.
    Join the Nader Revolution
    www.votenader.org

    Band: Thought Riot
    Song: I Voted for Nader
    (Download it for free at www.anti-flag.com)
    Poignantly phrased to shift the burden of the blame
    Sick and tired but you keep on marching in their same old parade
    Accuse, construe - dare I even venture - abuse,
    Frustrations channelled through the paths worn well with use

    Binary politics, packaged sound bite rhetoric;
    And you think it makes no difference?
    Watered down party lines, beholden to corporate ties;
    And you still inquire why?

    Maybe you can tell me when my vote was decided for me?
    Oh, oh… Oh ,oh
    I guess the enemy of the enemy, is still the fucking enemy
    Oh, oh… Oh ,oh.

    And one more time around,
    The played out reasons why:
    “Jack knife the diesel to let the bicycle pass on by”
    Reproaching failed attempts
    At restoring representative government
    This poli-earthquake is long over due

    Plastic smiles and candy lies,
    Prestige built on family ties;
    And you find it so offensive.
    Dirty mouths and muddied hands,
    Promises written in sand;
    Still every election you comply?

    Maybe you can tell me when my vote was decided for me?
    Oh, oh… Oh ,oh
    I guess the enemy of the enemy, is still the fucking enemy
    Oh, oh… Oh ,oh.

    A pointed finger, a furrowed brow,
    Relying on the way’s it’s been,
    To get us through the now
    A waning courage, just play it safe.
    Well this is where safe’s landed us: The problems of today!

    Reach out a broken hand! - You have the right to make demands!
    Reach out a broken hand! - We have the right to make demands!

    Maybe you can tell me when my vote was decided for me?
    Oh, oh… Oh ,oh
    I guess the enemy of the enemy, is still the fucking enemy
    Oh, oh… Oh ,oh.

    Posted by NaderRaider on Aug 2, 2005 at 12:43 PM

    God, I love Chicago. Run Jesse Jr., Run!

    http://www.dailykos.com/story/2005/6/19/20455/9214

    Posted by Tim Christopher on Aug 3, 2005 at 5:58 PM

    Dear Lefty: Come on Naders platform being virtually identical to the Dems is ridiculous!
    1. Nader is for a living wage
    2. Nader is for universal health care
    3. Nader was the only anti war campaign in 2004, and dont even say Kerry was anti war you know better than to say that
    4. Nader does not accept corporate donations unlike the corporate whores that are the Dems
    5. Most importantly Nader is a true independent. Wouldn’t you honestly like to finally see this happen instead of Dems and Reps having to worry about answering to the heads of the party
    6. The Democrats are anti-democratic spending millions of dollars in several states to bring suit to keep Nader off the ballot, and thus drain the funds of the Nader campaign and not allow the public to vote for whom they choose
    7. Nader is not a career politician and thus we could see a person with a non profit background gain power, maybe just for once
    8. Didnt Clinton (a Dem) back NAFTA? So how has that worked out for us?
    9. Please Please Please explain how the Dems have been partners in the Drug War which has cost us billions and arrested millions, and has affected minorities especially, while Nader is against the illegal wasteful Drug War makes them similar
    10. Nader is fully for campaign finance reform, the Dems are not (although many are). I must say here that I really like John McCain and if I was too vote for a major party candidate it would be him.
    Some Links
    www.votenader.org
    www.norml.org
    www.ssdp.org
    www.dpa.org
    http://www.votenader.org/contribute/index.php?cid=61
    http://www.votenader.org/why_ralph/index.php?cid=175
    Please everyone dont be partisan get knowledge first before you make a decision
    Nader in 2008
    Nader Raiders gonna take it over

    Posted by NaderRaider on Aug 3, 2005 at 9:28 PM

    In These Times you once told me that you told the stories that the corporate media doesnt tell, well thats partly true but by becoming a whore for the Dems (look at the number of recent articles that deal with how the Dems can improve compared to how we as progressives in general can improve) we have too wonder what about the stories you dont tell?
    1. When has www.inthesetimes.com spoken of the horrific drug war? Please someone tell me the last time its gotta be at least many months if not a year
    2. What about the fight for representation in Congress for the mostly black district of columbia (more info at www.dcvote.org)
    Think about these two more too come
    And please think of your own and post them lets turn www.inthesetimes.com back to a proud liberal progressive read and not something which the Democrats stamp of approval is needed for

    Posted by NaderRaider on Aug 3, 2005 at 9:33 PM

    its about time daley is getting into trouble.  His famiy is the most corrupt, and he has done nothing for the people of chicago.  Daley, worse than other democrats, heolps those who are wealthy and does not take into account the low income residents.  His worst action was when He got rid of the housing projects without having a place to house the residents.  He has stolen money for years and is finally getting what he deserves.  Jesse Jackson Sr. is a self serving civil right leader, lets just hope his son is better then he.

    Posted by ana on Aug 4, 2005 at 11:15 AM
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