Posted on 07/27/2005 10:01:45 PM PDT by CHARLITE
In a move that amused some and worried others, the Cook County Republican Party announced yesterday a $10,000 reward to anyone who provides information leading to the indictment and conviction of Chicagos Mayor Daley for political corruption.
Writing in the Chicago Tribune, Jim Walsh reports that Gary Sokien, the Cook County GOP chairman said in a statement, The arrogance of Richard Daley is appalling...The corruption (in Chicago) is so pervasive, so extensive and has been going on so long that most of these insiders dont even have a clue that their actions are illegal. We hope that this reward will inspire someone with critical knowledge to come forward.
The mayors office called the reward ridiculous, politically motivated and undeserving of further comment, according to a statement by Mayor Daleys press secretary, Jacquelyn Heard.
All this back and forth is the result of an ongoing investigation of bribes by federal prosecutors. This investigation has lead to twenty-one people pleading guilty, including former high-ranking city officials. Others have fled to Mexico or gone into hiding. Nevertheless, more arrests and indictments are expected.
Whats new? many Chicagoans ask. Isnt this business as usual? If you live here, then you know whats going on. In Chicago, to get ahead its not what you know but who you know. There is a culture of who do you know politics that radiates from city hall, and for too long has been the trademark of city government. Richard M. Daley epitomizes the who do you know culture of Chicago.
Because of this who do you know culture, it sometimes seems there are two kinds of men here, self-made men and father-made men. The self-made men may move to the suburbs, while the father-made men get ahead in Democratic politics and bring their Oedipal conflicts to the public arena.
Even with all the glitter of the lake front and the Chicago-as-theme-park propaganda that many tourists take away from the city, it is an obvious assumption to most who live here that da mayor is who he is because his father was mayor before him and carried on the same way. This relationship makes the long needed reform in Chicago government more of a hope than a reality.
Just look at the political facts--in Chicago, a job working for the city means votes for the mayor. It was that way under Daley the Elder and continues that way under Daley the Younger. Today, there are about 40,000 people who work for the city. When you add to that figure relatives and friends, we are talking about 125,000 votes for the present mayor, no matter what. All these workers and relatives have a vested interest in business as usual and continuing the who do you know culture.
In the last mayoral election only about 35% of the registered voters went to the poles. Any candidate who hopes to win a mayoral race in Chicago begins his campaign 125,000 votes in the hole. Even though its a good start, its going to take more than a $10,000 reward or a few scandals to change these voting habits. As it stands now, neither ability nor character nor skills at public speaking make for much success in Chicago politics. Its who you know that counts.
Maybe the new voters who are buying the quarter-million dollar condos in the South Loop will join with others and actually vote Republican in the 07 election. They could bring a breath of fresh air to city hall. Yet even then, for both historian and Chicagoan alike, there remains always in the back of everyones mind the itch of a question we ask about father-made men: Who would Mayor Daley be if his name were Jones?
About the Writer: Robert Klein Engler is an adjunct professor at Roosevelt University in Chicago, and a versatile writer of op-ed articles, poetry, and philosophy. His recent book, "A Winter of Words," is available from amazon.com.
Whistleblower Time.
It's a stunt, signifying nothing. There's a reason Illinois Republicans are seen as losers.
A **lot** of risk involved for any such person, and any such person's family and so forth, wouldn't you agree?
$10,000? Who'd put his/her life on the line for that sum, in Chicago? Sheesh. Pikers.
This ''offer'' is just cheap (VERY cheap) theatrics.
I don't live in Illinois, and was only in Chicago one time in my life, long ago, so.......what do I know?.... but your comment sounds about right to me. This is like a "throw-away line" in a slapstick theater act, IMO, but I posted it because I know that there are quite a few Illinois FR members, and I was interested to see what the "natives" reaction would be!
Thanks for a clever comment, SAJ!
Char :)
As a lifelong Cook County resident, I'm delighted. "Cheap stunt"? Probably. But it got the Cook County GOP some publicity, which is all to the good. When you're in as much of a minority as Chicago Republicans are, you can't be harmed by publicity of any sort, you can only benefit.
Bump
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