Saturday, July 8, 2006

Personal Asides: Somebody Tell Me What Bush Sees in Daley?

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That’s right: I wish somebody would fill me in. Undeniably the mayor has ordered the beautification of the city—but at a cost that enriches his personal army of supporters. The idea that a patronage army is required to govern effectively is ridiculous. I’m been guilty of propagating that mistaken view in my early, formative years (during my 40s and 50s). Why, the very state I served as a top aide to a governor, Minnesota, has been governed very effectively through echelons of Republican and Democratic-Farmer-Labor governors with only a relatively tiny crew of policy appointees, the remainder civil servants. This nation gets along very well and presidents are enabled to push their programs effectively with 1,300 or so political appointees (of which I was one) and 3 million civil servants.

Yet the idea has gained currency in the city that only political favoritism can enable this city to run effectively: that’s because since Anton Cermak the view has triumphed over logic that only this city can be run by feudalistic measures. To an extent both Daleys have been the beneficiaries of a large-scale hoodwink to that effect. It’s nonsense. We can have every bit as effective a municipal government as mythology maintains Daley has given us with probably only 150 employees who are designated as political because of their policy involvement. Ridding Chicago of the fat patronage system and supplanting it with a clean civil service should be the main agenda for reformers. And I don’t mean a civil service that should be prostituted by political employees who serve political ends with a wink and a shrug. As a matter of fact, a very left-leaning civil service in New York City was overcome by a determined mayor named Rudy Giuliani and a handful of political employees who enforced his will on a shapeless mass.

Why in the world this president, whom I very much admire because of his willingness to hold firm positions on an array of issues against an overwhelming tide of liberal media current…why this president should believe that Richard M. Daley is the best mayor in the nation…why this president should behave like a lovesick calf or mooning schoolboy about Daley is the biggest unsolved mystery about him—one, evidently, that the media have not pursued or he is unable to answer. Perhaps it’s something about presidents. Richard Nixon, who pathologically envied so much about the Kennedys and the Democrats, behaved like a tongue-tied suitor concerning John Connally who had been shot with JFK, even to the extent of thinking of putting him on the national ticket and pushing him for president. At least Bush isn’t that moonstruck about Daley—but he’s pretty bad.

Does the president realize that on the very day he dined with Daley, his top United States Attorney had served indictments on two of the mayor’s patronage people while issuing warnings to “stay tuned”? Aside from the urgent need to improve the tone of government here, what in the world does Bush think Daley has done for Bush? Daley collaborated with Illinois’ all-time worst governor, George Ryan, to carry Illinois for Al Gore in 2000. Nothing he did in 2004 could be remotely seen as friendly to Bush. If anyone who reads this Blog has the faintest idea of what has prompted this, so far as I can see, unrequited love affair, please let me know.

10 comments:

  1. There's got to be something in the air in Illinois which completely distorts the perceptions of outsiders. David Brooks got a whiff of it and declared that the machine is dead in Chicago even though the convictions demonstrate otherwise. The same thing happened to Bush who declared Chicago to be a "well-run city" under Daley.

    On a more serious note, did you consider that Bush is just trying to keep Daley from becoming an active enemy of his? Ever since the 1960 presidential election, pols have been wary of getting on the bad side of Chicago's Mayor. It seems ludicrous today, but pols have long memories.

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  2. The pictures sum it up. I think these two see a lot of each other in each other: Sons of politicians, derided as not very smart, but very much political survivors, and solid leaders, though terribly confused from time to time.

    If Bush has the choice of dining with Mayor Daley and talking about the great taste of Pork Chops or dining with a screechy Senator Durbin harping about Guantanamo, I will lay odds that GW will choose the Mayor and the chops.

    JBP

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  3. Perhaps Dubyah is trying to emulate Our Lord by eating with sinners and tax collectors?

    P.S. What happened to the Cool (Water) Contest?

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  4. along with Judy and Edgar and Brady and that the war is another big government program that increases federal employees and spending.

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  5. I don't know the answer. Karl Rove is supposedly close to Kjellander. I think it was in 2000 that George Ryan was Bush's Illinois campaign manager. I saw a clip from then where Bush said of Ryan, "He's a good man."

    P.S. Probably wrong, my un-Googled guesses for "Cool Water" are the Kingston Trio, Highwaymen(?), or Brothers Four.

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  6. "...the war is another big government program that increases federal employees and spending."

    It's not? It makes us less, not more, safe and increases government intusion into our lives. War is as big a government program as it gets.

    War is the health of the State.

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  7. Well when you think about it, they're both "conservative" in their thinking. Daley is a family man, hard on crime, critical of the public school systems, etc. And they're both Irish. What more do you want?

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  8. Daley cozied up to Bush as he wanted federal money. Bush wanted to carry Illinois in '04, so he became buddies with Daley so he wouldn't campaign vigorously against him.

    Now Daley sees the possibility he may be indicted. If he's convicted he'll pray that Bush includes him in his last-minute pardons in '09.

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  9. Both love and fight for the expansion of government, expansion of illegal immigration, amnesty for illegal immigrants, and the "war on terror" as a cover to do whatever they want without consequence (Meigs Field).

    Both also sell out the middle class and alienate those who initially elected them (I’m guilty on Bush but never have or will vote for any Daley).

    Cheers

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  10. Both love and fight for the expansion of government, expansion of illegal immigration, amnesty for illegal immigrants, and the "war on terror" as a cover to do whatever they want without consequence (Meigs Field).

    Both also sell out the middle class and alienate those who initially elected them (I’m guilty on Bush but never have or will vote for any Daley).

    Cheers

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