Rush to defeat

Chicago Mayor Richard Daley is a shoo-in thanks to a weak campaign by a congressman who should have been a contender.

Feb 23, 1999 | CHICAGO -- Mayoral elections these days in Chicago are more like Super Bowls from the 1980s than actual political contests, with Mayor Richard M. Daley in the San Francisco 49ers role. Daley has all the talent and all the power on his side, and since 1989 he has regularly mowed down his challengers, patsies selected from a weak pool, one after another. He regularly racks up 65 percent of the vote or higher, and rarely has to resort to actual campaigning. He just wins. In this year's mayoral vote on Tuesday, Daley will demolish his challenger, Rep. Bobby Rush, by at least 20 percentage points. Political observers here, who had hoped for a better game this time, are disappointed. Daley has barely campaigned at all, and Rush has flailed around desperately, swinging at air.

It wasn't supposed to be this way. Rush is the most serious challenger Daley has faced yet. He nearly ran for mayor in 1995, but at the last minute let Joe Gardner, a longtime city bureaucrat, get served up as sacrifice. He also stood by and watched as Daley handily took care of former Illinois Attorney General Roland Burris, in the general election. Having to run two campaigns became a hassle for Daley, so he managed to get the Legislature to declare municipal elections "nonpartisan." There would be no more primaries, just one shot, one opposition candidate. For 1999, there was no confusion: Daley's opponent would be Bobby Rush.

Rush had a distinguished nine-year career as an alderman in a city council that is often a clearinghouse for corrupt buffoonery. His seven years in Congress have been similarly above reproach. He co-founded the Illinois Black Panther Party in 1968, which no one considers a detriment, except perhaps the local chapter of the Fraternal Order of Police. He is well-respected and widely known across the city.

Nevertheless, Rush's flaws became evident even before he officially declared his candidacy. Last summer, he led a 600-person march on City Hall to protest public-transportation service cuts. Security guards wouldn't let Rush and his people in, and in a standard trope of Chicago political theater, Rush declaimed that the city's government was closed to ordinary citizens. But when the service cuts had actually been debated by the Chicago Transit Authority in 1997, Rush had been noticeably absent from the protests. He had also voted in Congress against increasing federal public-transportation subsidies. All that could have been forgiven. But when Rush finally did march on City Hall, this crew included no senior citizens or Latinos -- the two populations hardest hit by the transit cuts.

Rush's biggest sin then was a lack of inclusiveness, and his problems have only grown during this election season. "Campaigns are about addition, not subtraction," says Rick Garcia, a leading Chicago gay-rights activist, "and Bobby hasn't added it up right. He's made all the mistakes of not broadening his base. He doesn't even play to his base, truth be told. There's no doubt that the mayor is a formidable obstacle with his money and influence and high favorability numbers, but no individual is immune from criticisms, and I thought the congressman would do much better than he has."

"Bobby doesn't have the knack of dramatizing the issues," says Leon Despres, a Chicago lawyer who served in the city council from 1955 to 1975. "If I were a mayoral candidate, I would hammer at the police brutality issue, but I would hammer at it so that anyone who would read what I say would feel personally involved. You might go out and be arrested, you might have your door broken in. How would you feel, being tortured for something you didn't do? Make every listener feel that they are in danger. He [Rush] raises the issue very well, but doesn't dramatize it, doesn't make shivers come up and down your spine."

When Rush has tried to personalize issues, he's ended up looking silly. He held a press conference in December to speak against Mayor Daley's "gang loitering" ordinance, which is currently being debated before the Supreme Court. Rush had several teenagers with him on the podium. He said that under the loitering law, any of these kids could be arrested at any time, merely for being young and black. It turned out, however, that most of the teens were related to Rush campaign staffers. When reporters asked them if they'd ever had trouble with police, they all said no.

From there, things only got worse for Rush. The city towed his car as he held a press conference criticizing the Daley administration's snow-removal techniques. A small group of Muslim fundamentalists booed him off the stage during an event to commemorate the end of Ramadan. When the Chicago Tribune disclosed that he owed $750 in parking tickets, Rush denied owing the money, saying that most of the tickets had been accumulated by his wife. Rush continued to rack up absurdities. In a press conference meant to criticize a rise in police brutality, he instead blamed the mayor for the deaths of 500 elderly people during a 1995 heat wave. In another event, he announced that he was being endorsed by the "Greek-American" community, as represented by Peter Pavilos, one of his few major financial backers. He scheduled Anthony Porter, a recently freed death-row inmate, to appear at his campaign headquarters, but Porter backed out at the last minute, saying he wanted to stay out of politics. When Rush planned a walk-around in an Indian neighborhood, he chose to kick off the event at a Pakistani restaurant whose owner was a fervent Daley supporter, down to having autographed pictures of the mayor on his walls.

Perhaps Rush's best opportunity to slam Daley came in late January, when the city decided to lock out dozens of homeless people from Lower Wacker Drive, where they've slept harmlessly for decades. Appearing on Lower Wacker before an enormous crush of media, Chicago homeless advocates and the legendary Studs Terkel decried the city's heartless actions. Rush showed up separately, with his own entourage, but he wasn't talking about homelessness. Instead, he was complaining that someone had spray-painted racist graffiti in the elevator of his campaign headquarters. By then, it was obvious that the Rush campaign was a wasted opportunity.

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