Posted on 03/05/2012 3:42:59 PM PST by STARWISE
In a surprise turnaround, the White House announced Monday afternoon that Chicago wont be hosting the controversial G-8 summit after all.
It will be held at Camp David instead of Chicago.
The NATO summit will proceed here May 20-21.
City Hall insisted that it was President Barack Obamas decision that Mayor Rahm Emanuel did not ask the White House to take the more controversial of the two summits off Chicagos hands.
One leading demonstrator pledged the protests will go forward here despite the switch.
The White House issued a terse statement dropping the bombshell shortly before 3 p.m.
In May, the United States looks forward to hosting the G-8 and NATO summits. To facilitate a free-flowing discussion with our close G-8 partners, the president is inviting his fellow G-8 leaders to Camp David on May 18-19 for the G-8 summit, which will address a broad range of economic, political and security issues, White House Press Secretary Jay Carney said.
The president will then welcome NATO allies and partners to his hometown of Chicago for the NATO summit on May 20-21, which will be the premier opportunity this year for the President to continue his efforts to strengthen NATO in order to ensure that the Atlantic Alliance remains the most successful alliance in history, while charting the way forward in Afghanistan.
Lori Healey, executive director of the NATO-G8 Host Committee, unequivocally denied that Emanuel played a role in the decision or that pressure from skittish business leaders convinced the mayor to ask the White House to move G-8 somewhere else.
*snip*
Healey tried to put the best possible face on the decision. She argued that Chicago would still play host to 50-plus countries, including 28 NATO members and 22 partner countries.
It has minimal impact on our planning in Chicago, except that it shortens it by 24 hours and I anticipate there will be replacement programming to highlight the city on that Saturday evening, Healey said.
Top mayoral aides had pegged the cost of the back-to-back summits at $40 million-to-$65 million. They had repeatedly insisted that private donors and federal reimbursements would keep Chicago taxpayers off the hook.
On Monday, Healey said she doesnt know yet whether the fund-raising bar would be lowered now that the G-8 will be held at Camp David.
But, she argued that the international spotlight will still shine brightly on Chicago.
*snip*
The White House apparently did not consult members of Chicagos congressional delegation before making the surprise announcement.
Police Supt. Garry McCarthy told WLS-AM (890)s Roe & Roeper show that the White House announcement about the G-8 moving was a surprise to him.
Just hours before the White House stunner, Emanuel was still talking up the back-to-back summits at McCormick Place and playing down the political risks.
That lends credence the claim that the decision came from Washington.
This is a unique opportunity for Chicago to showcase itself to the world and the world to see the city of Chicago, the mayor said before the White House announcement.
Our Police Department is highly-trained, very professional with the right leadership. And, as you saw over the fall [with the ginger handling of Occupy Chicago protesters], Chicago unlike any other city did not have any issues. It had the ability to protect peoples First Amendment rights and also to enforce the law. I think youll see that in the weeks ahead.
*snip*
Andy Thayer, a spokesman for the Coalition Against NATO-G-8, didnt buy the City Hall spin. He believes that pressure from local business leaders concerned about an international onslaught of protesters convinced the mayor to cut the risk in half.
Theres been a lot of grumbling from business leaders in the city about what a total pain in the neck this thing would be. [The White House] probably looked at what a mess they were gonna make of the city and decided to move part of it to Camp David, Thayer said.
I really think the business community began to lean on Emanuel and Emanuel probably realized he was in over his head.
Although the economic summit will be held in the secluded environment around Camp David, Thayer stressed that the demonstrations in Chicago will go forward, but maybe not on the 19th of May.
Our protest will go forward because NATO is the military arm of the G-8. NATO has bombed whole countries to smithereens and is currently engaged in the U.S.s longest war in history, Thayer said.
Id say plenty of people have got tons to be upset with NATO about. If anything, people understood much more readily what NATO was about than G-8, which is more of a shadowy institution in peoples minds.
Joe Iosbaker of the Coalition Against NATO-G-8 said protesters originally received parade permits for May 19, the first day of the G-8 summit. Now they plan to apply for permits to march on May 20, he said.
Were going to ask the city to adjust our permits to conform to the dates of the summit. If the opening day is the 20th, we will want permits on the 20th, Iosbaker said.
He said his organization and Occupy Chicago have claimed victory with the withdrawal of the G-8 summit from Chicago.
They realized this would be an enormous embarrassment for the Obama administration, he said.
Asked why the G-8 was moved from Chicago to Camp David, National Security Council spokeswoman Caitlin Hayden said, The President felt that Camp David would provide an informal and intimate setting to have a free-flowing discussion with his fellow leaders. He very much looks forward to coming to his hometown for a critically important NATO Summit, as planned.
The Obama administration and the Emanuel administration apparently under-estimated the hometown opposition to the summit and the fears of rioting that accompanied it.
The average Chicagoan never seemed sold on the potential benefits of the summit the way some business and civic leaders were.
The political benefits of the NATO summit seemed more tangible.
When Ben Rhodes, deputy national security adviser for strategic communication, briefed reporters Jan. 31 about the potential topics of discussion and agreement for the twin G-8 and NATO summits, he had a longer list of potential areas of agreement among leaders at the NATO summit than he did for G-8.
Washington sources speculated Monday that negotiations with other G-8 counties must not be producing any tangible areas of agreement that would justify moving ahead with the summit in Chicago where it is generating such controversy.
Obama started contemplating moving this a few weeks ago Hayden said.
Asked if it was because of security concerns, Hayden said, We have full confidence in Chicagos ability to host both summits and NATO is still being held in Chicago.
Emanuel had promoted the back-to-back summits here as a vehicle to showcase Chicago on the world stage.
But the mayor has run into a buzz saw of aldermanic opposition against the extraordinary security measures he wants to put in place to contain NATO and G-8 protesters and make permanent after the world leaders depart.
Several aldermen joined the protesters in warning that the changes could stifle public dissent in Chicago for years to come.
The measures include: dramatically higher fines for resisting arrest; more surveillance cameras; parks and beaches closed until 6 a.m.; sweeping parade restrictions and higher fees for those events and empowering Police Supt. Garry McCarthy to deputize out of state police officers.
A large security perimeter will also prevent motorists from driving and parking on some downtown streets during the NATO and G-8 summits. The host committee has promised to reimburse the company that leased Chicago parking meters for revenues lost to spaces temporarily taken out of commission.
Chicago was to spend $40 million to $65 million to host the NATO and G-8 summits, but City Hall insisted federal reimbursements and private donations would ultimately prevent local taxpayers from getting stuck with the tab.
Emanuels administration was planning to tap police officers from other jurisdictions to assist Chicago Police in handling the thousands of protesters expected to descend on Chicago for the May event at McCormick Place.
Mass detention areas are anticipated, but those locations have not yet been identified.
From Day One, the FOP has been saying to the citizens of Chicago that this is not a good idea, said Michael Shields, president of the Fraternal Order of Police. Finally our president listened.
In the past, Shields has questioned whether the city provided officers with adequate training to control thousands of protesters.
Now, Shields said he hopes the federal government will reimburse the city for the training it has already done. He also wondered whether officers furloughs will be canceled to make them available for crowd control.
Shields also mused whether the police department still needs a separate office dedicated to planning for the G-8 and NATO summits. A chief of international relations and three deputy chiefs positions were created for that purpose, he said.
*snip*
With no formal entertaining and with logistical issues minimized, the secluded setting of Camp David changes the dynamic and lets Obama proceed more on his terms at his home.
The decision to have the G-8 in Chicago, piggybacked on the NATO meeting was made before the rise of the Occupy protest movement.
SUMbodies protesteth too much ... ;)
They probably need some of that billy club reeducation and re-purposing.
Isn’t it rich to watch the leftists create a society in which even they can’t live?
Obama is a coward.
How much will it cost to expand the Camp David facility? Airports in DC, baltimore,harrisburg will need to be secured. Where will all these folks be staying? Maybe tents and cots!!!!!!! Logistical nightmare.
“The useful idiots are getting out of control. They probably need some of that billy club reeducation and re-purposing.”
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lol; The mobs got ahead of themselves. T hey don’t yet know that “re-purposing” is the purpose.
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Asked why the G-8 was moved from Chicago to Camp David, National Security Council spokeswoman Caitlin Hayden said, The President felt that Camp David would provide an informal and intimate setting to have a free-flowing discussion with his fellow leaders. He very much looks forward to coming to his hometown for a critically important NATO Summit, as planned.
The Obama administration and the Emanuel administration apparently under-estimated the hometown opposition to the summit and the fears of rioting that accompanied it.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Howdy Doody didn’t want to be embarassed by his OWS friends. He doesn’t want to be that close to his creation.
OK, Freepers could volunteer to house a dignitary or two for a donation to the republican candidate of your choice.
Gettysburg is not far away. Hope they don’t billet them there. That would just be wrong in so many ways.
Yes,yes it is.Libs sequesterd in doorman buildings and gated communities. Also reminds me of a cool line in the first Batman movie whe someone says to Jack Nicholson(before he turns into the joker)”this town isn’t fit for
decent people” to which he replies “decent people shouldn’t
live here” Loved that.Didn’t know at the time(1989) that i’d
live to experience it. Guess the jokes on us.
Poor Mayor Rhambo got cut out of the gravy LOL.
Rahm Emanuel said jump and Obama said how high. When government says things like “unequivocally Emanuel played no role” in the decision, you know they mean just the opposite.
I’m sure Frederick County, Maryland, and the Maryland State Police have budgeted for this. /sarc.
I’d say just the opposite.
Being as it’s Chicago, you know Rhambo and Company were going to suck up some of the gravy being dispensed by the international crowd.
Now all those $1000/night hotel rooms, limos, and $500/person restaurant meals go to the east coast.
And policemen doing security overtime to keep it under control.
Be careful who you bunk with. Love your responds.
I’m all for it. No traffic snarls. Great security. Give someone credit for a good idea.
Obama wants the protests in a context he can control and he can’t do that in Chicago. Off to Camp David where there will be no protests.
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