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Chicago’s Political Machine: By: Roger Biles

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Urban political machines, built largely on the votes of diverse immigrant populations, dispensed jobs and assorted welfare benefits while offering avenues of social mobility at a time when local governments provided a paucity of such services. In the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, Chicago sustained a strong two-party tradition that prevented the development of a centralized political machine. Neither the Democrats nor the Republicans succeeded in consolidating power citywide. Republicans prevailed most often in national elections; the Democrats won the majority of local contests; and both parties experienced considerable divisiveness that prevented any faction from establishing hegemony. Several Chicago mayors, most notably Carter H. Harrison (Democrat, 1879–1887, 1893), Carter H. Harrison, II (Democrat, 1897–1905, 1911–1915), and Republican William Hale “Big Bill” Thompson (1915–1923, 1927–1931) enjoyed loyal followings but failed to translate personal popularity into lasting organizational strength.

The potent Democratic machine that dominated Chicago politics for nearly half a century formed under the leadership of Anton Cermak, a Bohemian immigrant of working-class origins. After the death of Cook County Democratic leader George Brennan in 1928, Cermak secured control of the party hierarchy and defeated Thompson in the 1931 mayoral campaign. He subsequently forced the party’s dominant Irish contingent to accept other ethnic groups into his “house for all peoples,” bringing representatives from the German, Polish, Czech, and Jewish communities into leadership positions. The life of the Democratic machine’s George Washington was cut short in 1933 when Cermak became the unintended victim of an attempted assassination of president-elect Franklin D. Roosevelt.

After Cermak’s death, the Irish seized control of the Democratic machine as party chairman Patrick A. Nash engineered the appointment of Edward J. Kelly as mayor. The Kelly-Nash machine followed Cermak’s lead, however, doling out patronage jobs, political appointments, and favors to a broad spectrum of ethnic groups. Kelly not only held the fledgling political machine together in its infancy but strengthened it by utilizing three important sources. First, he became a fervent supporter of Franklin D. Roosevelt’s New Deal and kept the city solvent through the liberal use of federal funds at a time when the Great Depression provided the most serious threat to the financial well-being of municipal governments. Second, he acquired additional financial resources from organized crime. By ignoring the operation of gambling, prostitution, and other forms of vice in the Windy City, Kelly obtained from illegal sources the “grease” necessary to keep the machine operating. Third, he actively cultivated African American voters, and his success paid huge dividends in later years when Chicago’s black population increased dramatically. Kelly won reelection in 1935, 1939, and 1943, but problems arose by 1947. Concerns about the number of scandals in municipal government (especially in the public school system) surfaced alongside a rising public outcry against the highly visible presence of organized crime in the city. But among the Democratic faithful, Kelly’s greatest liability proved to be his uncompromising stand in favor of public housing and desegregated public schools. The party leadership persuaded Kelly not to seek reelection in 1947 and replaced him with a figurehead, civic leader Martin H. Kennelly.

The Democratic machine endured Kennelly’s presence in the mayor’s office for two terms but then replaced him with a party regular, Richard J. Daley, in 1955. During Daley’s prolonged tenure in city hall—he was reelected five times prior to his sudden death in 1976—the machine reached its apogee. At a time when virtually no urban political machines survived, Daley steered the Cook County Democratic organization to one electoral triumph after another. The “last boss” controlled an estimated 35,000 patronage jobs, the use of which ensured party discipline and relegated the local Republican Party to insignificance. To a great extent, Daley managed to circumvent civil service regulations by repeatedly hiring the same loyal Democrats to “temporary” jobs that were not subject to the regulations. As government workers died or retired, the machine filled their positions temporarily pending civil service exams that were never given. A series of court decisions in the 1970s, culminating in the Shakman decrees, severely reduced patronage by first prohibiting the politically motivated firing of government workers and, several years after Daley’s death, by outlawing politically motivated hiring practices. By the 1980s, the mighty Democratic patronage army shrank significantly, but during the Daley years civil servants who worked hard for the party at election time and precinct captains who produced healthy victory margins at the polls kept their patronage jobs and received other rewards.

Despite the conventional wisdom that political machines were hopelessly inefficient, Mayor Daley’s reliable provision of services and apparent ability to balance the city’s financial books led Chicago to be known as “the city that works.” The years of his mayoralty saw the opening of O’Hare International Airport, construction of the University of Illinois branch campus, expansion of the city’s interconnected expressway system from 53 to 506 miles, and a monumental building boom that revitalized the downtown Loop area—and created, courtesy of the Democratic machine, a wealth of contracts and jobs for the construction industry.

Long reliant upon the electoral support from a rapidly expanding black population, the political machine’s prolonged success finally wavered because of demographic changes. Daley was an avid defender of residential segregation and an opponent of affirmative-action policies in government, and his conservatism ran afoul of the civil rights and black power movements. Daley’s support among black voters dwindled in the 1970s, and wholesale changes came following his death in 1976. To succeed Mayor Daley, the Democrats chose Michael A. Bilandic, a colorless party functionary whose inept handling of a record-setting snowstorm led Chicagoans to question whether the machine could still deliver services efficiently. Unseating Bilandic at the first opportunity, the voters opted instead for Jane Byrne, a former machine regular who campaigned as a reformer but whose chaotic and ineffectual years in office enhanced the level of dissatisfaction with city government. Despite campaign promises to the contrary, Byrne ignored black political demands. The election of Harold Washington as the city’s first black mayor in 1983 and his subsequent reelection four years later unequivocally ended Democratic machine rule in Chicago. Nor did the election to the mayoralty of Richard M. Daley, the eldest son of the deceased boss, indicate a resurrection of the machine in a new guise. As the younger Daley readily acknowledged, radically different demographics and the attendant alterations in the political calculus clearly made the machine politics for which Chicago became famous an anachronism by the end of the twentieth century.

IS IT TRUE? October 30, 2011

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The Mole #??

IS IT TRUE? October 30, 2011

IS IT TRUE that it was a good weekend to be a Cardinal?…that it all started off with the St. Louis Cardinals winning the 2011 World Series?…that it continued into Saturday afternoon when the University of Louisville Cardinals defeated the Syracuse Orangemen to forge into a tie for 2nd in the embattled Big East Conference?…that Saturday night completed the trilogy of victory for any Cardinal fan with the Stanford University Cardinal defeating the USC Trojans in multiple overtimes at the Los Angeles Coliseum?…that ever getting out of the LA Coliseum with a win over the Trojans is rare?…that while St. Louis and Louisville are named after birds it is a little known fact that Stanford has no mascot, the “dancing tree” is a member of the band, and the name “The Cardinal” while having many legends is really just the color of the uniforms?

IS IT TRUE that much has been written and filmed regarding the now infamous secret meeting to discuss the Homestead Tax Credit?…that we who are close to local politics are as sick of this as this writer is of the word VETTING?…that believe it or not there are still vast numbers of people in the City of Evansville who are still oblivious to both and thus the banging on the drum continues?…that it is the people of Evansville who will elect the next Mayor and City Council and that as long as a large number of Evansvillians are oblivious that it is good political strategy for any candidate who may benefit from the dissemination of this knowledge to keep pounding the drum?…that those of us who are hearing about it for the 1,000th time really need to let the campaigns be the campaigns and hope that when the ballots are casted that those voting are not oblivious to anything?…that Eric Bradner wrote a column today that seems to be the best that the CCO has seen regarding this issue?…that we endorse the following column?

http://www.courierpress.com/news/2011/oct/29/new-democratic-ads-put-weinzapfel-in-political/#comments

IS IT TRUE that other mainstream media outlets are finally seeming to catch on to what may be the most telling thing about the Davis for Mayor campaign?…that we can talk all day about meth, parks, jobs, FloatGate, BoothGate, and the three ring circus called the Vanderburgh County Democratic Party, but the very consistent rock on which the Davis campaign is built is the disdain for the Evansville political establishment, or “the machine” as it is now commonly referred to as?…that the CCO wishes success for the future of Evansville and that either Mr. Davis or his opponent Lloyd Winnecke will be chosen to drive the machine called Evansville starting on January 1, 2012?…that one thing for certain is that Evansville needs to change and it is not the moronic hopey-changey kind from the 2008 election cycle?…that real fundamental changes in how we think and act are what the government of the City of Evansville needs?…that we hope that whomever is elected to be the next Mayor of Evansville will not have to deal with any “machine” that is dedicated to keeping things as they are for selfish purposes?

IS IT TRUE that the Ford Center had its first official event that had the potential to draw a large crowd and test the parking situation yesterday?…that both the UE Aces men’s and women’s basketball teams played well and that the crowds were 3,846 and 643 respectively?…that neither of those crowds should have taxed the available parking in the least?…that the Aces games with Butler and IU should be the first real opportunities for capacity crowds and then we shall learn just how well the anticipated traffic and parking problems have been managed?

IS IT TRUE? October 29, 2011

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Maybe this guy Started FLOATGATE

IS IT TRUE? October 29, 2011

IS IT TRUE the Cardinals came through last night with a hometown boy from St. Louis driving in runs and making a key defensive play to win the 7th game in the 2011 World Series and bring an 11th World Series Championship to St. Louis?…that the St. Louis Cardinals franchise is second only to the New York Yankees in World Series Championships?…that the Yankees dominance is certainly helped by the gargantuan budget for talent that is enjoyed by that team in that market?…that the CCO is pleased as we are sure that nearly everyone in Evansville is who does not happen to be a native Texan?…that we can speak for the festive atmosphere at the Buffalo Wild Wings on Evansville’s East Side that kept rolling for the last 3 innings?…that there were a few Texas fans in the room but we all treated them with respect and that Evansville is a better town that Morgantown, West Virginia when it comes to sportsmanship?…that there were plenty of festivities last night but no couches were set afire?

IS IT TRUE that this looks like a perfect day for taking in a college football game?…that it would be nice to have the privilege of doing so in Evansville?…that back in the day, the University of Evansville Purple Aces football team took down some pretty strong teams?…that somewhere in a box is a football with a victory over the Louisville Cardinals?…that this is really a tale of teams and cities?…that today the Cardinals have a number of Bowl Championships including the 2007 Orange Bowl and play in a 57,000 seat stadium adjacent to Churchill Downs?…that all of this was put into place in the City of Louisville before their consolidation with Jefferson County?…that all of these places which sell out nearly every game are within the old city limits of Louisville?…that all are former dirty and abandoned industrial sites that were first torn down in mass and then revitalized with private dollars?

IS IT TRUE that the “official” verdict of what went on that caused FLOATGATE has finally been released?…that the finding is that Sgt. Hubbard was not proven to have acted upon any motive other than taking a person with a warrant out on them off of the street?…that the “official” position of the EPD is that if Alex Jarvis, the Political Director of the Vanderburgh County Democratic Party would have taken care of his outstanding warrant issue that Sgt. Hubbard would have had no reason to have him apprehended from the Democratic Party Float at the Fall Festival?…that the CCO still maintains that the timing was too perfect to have had no motive whatsoever and that Mr. Jarvis was at the very least the butt of a cruel joke?…that anyone who knows this guy would not seen his riding on a float as a threat to society?…that FLOATGATE shall live on in Evansville legend just as alien abductions in trailer parks and big foot sightings do in rural areas where MOONSHINE is openly available?…that maybe it was ALIENS that abducted Mr. Jarvis after all?…that it was a full moon so maybe some local version of a Werewolf was lurking?…that we look forward to the next shenanigans over the weekend?

IS IT TRUE among all of the political hoopla that Whirlpool Corporation has conducted another layoff and that there were even a few let go here in Evansville?…that the sister plant to the Evansville operation that was closed last year in Fort Smith, Arkansas in now on the list for mothballs?…that was probably just a matter of time?…that we seem to remember several tax abatements granted by the Weinzapfel Administration during the last couple of years of Whirlpool’s run in Evansville?…that we wonder if any actions are being taken in the last days of this administration to recover some of the incentives that Whirlpool was given that were never earned?…that the CCO would encourage Mayor Weinzapfel to use some of his last 61 days in office to recover some unearned incentives that are out there to fill the coffers of the City of Evansville and forget about emptying the coffers on special deals like pole barn tennis centers and any resurrection of any $2 Million baseball fields?

IS IT TRUE that our traffic is setting more records now than we can count and that we will be providing an update after the end of the month?

Cardinals Win World Series

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add 2011 to this list

Not much else to say but that Evansville’s home Major League Baseball franchise just won the World Series for the 11th time. The MVP was David Freese who grew up in the St. Louis area. What a great night for the Cardinals and for the Cardinal fans of Evansville. I can honestly attest that the Buffalo Wild Wings on the East Side was in winning mood from the 7th inning on and erupted at the end of the last out.

From Hotel Owner to Desk Clerk: The State of the Hotel Market in America

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Excerpts:

“Alkesh Patel, a 44-year-old immigrant from India, borrowed about $5 million to open the Best Western Plus motel on Main Street in this city of 17,500 north of Portland, Ore….But Mr. Patel doesn’t own the Best Western anymore. Five years later, Mr. Patel still works the front desk with his wife, chats with the housekeeping staff and helps do laundry while making the morning rounds, much as family members have done at other motels nearby for two decades.The bank that lent him the money failed in 2008, and his loan was sold to one of the many investment firms specializing in buying distressed assets from the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. in the wake of the financial crisis. The new owners of the loan demanded $3 million in repayment. Mr. Patel didn’t have it, so the owners foreclosed.”

“”We never missed a payment,” said Bhaskar Zaver, an immigrant from Zambia of Gujarati ancestry who borrowed $2.7 million from BB&T Corp. to buy a Microtel Inn in Lawrenceville, Ga. The loan was due to be refinanced last year when BB&T, of Winston-Salem, N.C., sent a foreclosure notice, demanding that he pay off the loan, he said. Revenue at the motel shrank to $400,000 last year from a peak of $1 million before the financial crisis, and its value has declined, but Mr. Zaver said he tapped his savings to avoid falling behind on the mortgage. He was about to refinance with a different bank when BB&T sold the loan for $800,000. The loan’s buyer foreclosed on the property, and the Microtel has been empty since March. He said he has lost about $750,000.”

“Over time, Patels became entrepreneurs in small cities and towns across America. Families often own or operate several properties, leaning on economies of scale to squeeze profits from the low-margin motel business. But the current turmoil threatens to undo all that hard work, some motel owners said. Banks are calling in some loans and are leery of financing construction of new motels because of economic uncertainty and concerns about the health of the commercial real-estate market.”

“Dr. Patel, 52, said he “cannot afford to file for bankruptcy,” adding that he already has sunk nearly $3 million into his motel properties. Columbia State Bank spokeswoman JoAnne Coy wouldn’t comment on the lender’s actions, though she said bank officials “recognize a lot of businesses are being challenged in today’s economy. Vijay Patel, a naturalized U.S. citizen born in Uganda, forfeited more than $150,000 in licensing fees on four properties after failing to find a bank willing to lend him money to build the motels. Mr. Patel, 55, said he never missed a loan payment since getting into the business in 1994.”

Full WSJ Story:

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052970203911804576653523797370668.html?KEYWORDS=patel

Bankrupt City: Harrisburg, PA Having a Yard Sale to Raise Funds

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Excerpts:

“Stowed in a warehouse with a leaky skylight is one of this city’s remaining valuable assets: a U.S. Cavalry horse’s hoof purportedly found on the battlefield at Little Bighorn, the site of Lt. Col. George A. Custer’s Last Stand in 1876.”

“The hoof was headed for a National Museum of the Old West here in Pennsylvania’s capital. The museum was never built, but the hoof is now part of Harrisburg’s push to escape $310 million in debt.”

“Few people expect a stampede to buy the stuffed buffalo in the corner. “Quite frankly, it looks like something that was in my grandmother’s attic,” Harrisburg Mayor Linda Thompson recalls saying when she saw the collection.”

“Two weeks ago, the city council filed for Chapter 9 bankruptcy protection. Harrisburg is the second U.S. city to have done so this year. While the move was opposed by Ms. Thompson and Pennsylvania’s governor Tom Corbett, they agree that the city of about 50,000 needs a plan to get out from under its debt. The city is projected to be insolvent within about six months, according to the governor’s office.”

“The word on the street is that everything is for sale,” says Anniken Davenport, a lawyer who has lived here for 25 years.

” Last year, Arizona sold state legislative buildings and other properties for $735 million, leasing them back for 20 years. Pontiac, Mich., sold the Silverdome, former home of the Detroit Lions, for $583,000.”

“The museum idea died when Harrisburg couldn’t pay the debt on the incinerator and ran into grave financial problems. The artifacts cost about $7.8 million, although Ms. Thompson says the records are scattered. A yellowing invoice under an overturned coffee cup in the former water plant shows $12,050 for photographs of William “Buffalo Bill” Cody and scenes from Nevada.”

“Even though Harrisburg looks like a desperate seller, “we are not going to have a fire sale,” Ms. Thompson says.”

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052970203687504577001570935149322.html?mod=WSJ_hp_MIDDLENexttoWhatsNewsThird

Evansville Redevelopment Commission AGENDA Tuesday, November 1, 2011 – 8:30 am

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Evansville Redevelopment Commission
AGENDA
Tuesday, November 1, 2011 – 8:30 am
Civic Center Complex – Room 307

1. Call to Order

2. Approval of Minutes of October 18, 2011

3. Approval of Accounts Payable Vouchers

4. DESIGN REVIEW
Downtown Redevelopment Area
Kunkel Group/Hilliard Lyons – rear parking area w/ wrought iron fencing & landscaping
Walnut /6th / MLK Jr (old Hotel tower site) – temporary paving
Strouse Building – 203-205 Main – façade renovation
Main Gate – 518-520 Main St –Sidewalk Sandwich sign

5. Downtown Redevelopment Area
11-ERC-76 – Approval of License Agreement For Usage of the Ford Center by the University of Evansville Basketball Program TABLED FROM 10-04-2011
11-ERC-86 – Change Order No. 3 for Downtown Sidewalk Repair Project Phase 1

6. Evansville Arts District
11-ERC-87 – Approving a Development Agreement with Michael S. Martin Realty IX, LLC for the Euclid Apartment Restoration Project in Arts District
11-ERC-88 – Approving a Development Agreement with Soap Solutions for 213-215 Blackford Ave Mixed Use Development in Arts District

7. Other Business

8. Adjournment

Democrats Sign Resolution of Support for Councilwoman Robinson

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Councilwoman Connie Robinson

RESOLUTION

Whereas, Connie Robinson has served as a City Council representative for the Fourth Ward of the City of Evansville, Vanderburgh County; and

Whereas, she has served in said position for the past 16 years and shall serve for next 4 years as Fourth Ward Council representative since she has no opposition; and

Whereas, in addition to serving on the City Council, Connie has served as Vice-Chairwoman of the Vanderburgh County Democratic Party Central Committee for the past 6 years; and

Whereas, Connie has donated thousands of dollars and significant hours of volunteer work to help local and state Democrats get elected to public office; and

Whereas, she has been a loyal party supporter for more than 30 years.

Now, therefore, be it resolved by the following Vanderburgh County Democratic Party Central Committee Officers, Ward Leaders, Elected Officials of Vanderburgh County and candidates for public office that Connie Robinson remain as Vice-Chairwoman of the Vanderburgh County Democratic Party Central Committee due to dedication and loyalty to our local, state and national Democratic Party. Furthermore, that any and all issues involving Connie Robinson be resolved by the Vanderburgh Democratic Central Committee.

Mark R. Owen, Chairman
Vanderburgh County Democratic Party

Conor O’Daniel, Treasurer
Vanderburgh County Democratic Party

Rob Faulkner, Secretary
Vanderburgh County Democratic Party

Chris Cooke, 2nd Ward Leader
Vanderburgh County Democratic Party

Stephanie Brinkerhoff Riley, 3rdWard Leader
Vanderburgh County Democratic Party

Louise Williams, 4th Ward Leader
Vanderburgh County Democratic Party

Tom Shoulders, 5th Ward Leader
Vanderburgh County Democratic Party

David Mosby, 6th Ward Leader
Vanderburgh County Democratic Party

Jonathan Weinzapfel, Mayor
City of Evansville

Alberta Matlock, City Clerk
City of Evansville

B.J. Watts, Councilman
City of Evansville

Curt John, Councilman
City of Evansville

John Friend, Councilman
City of Evansville

Missy Mosby, Councilwoman
City of Evansville

Eric Williams, Sheriff
Vanderburgh County

Annie Groves, Coroner
Vanderburgh County

Z Tuley, Recorder
Vanderburgh County

Bill Jeffers, Surveyor
Vanderburgh County

Stephanie Terry, Councilwoman
Vanderburgh County

Mike Goebel, Councilman
Vanderburgh County

Kathryn Martin, Trustee
Knight Township

Fred Happe, Trustee
German Township

Jonathan Weaver, candidate
City Council at Large Candidate

/ss/

Signatures on file at the offices of the Vanderburgh County Democratic Party

The Evansville Polo Grounds: Back By Reader Request

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A Visionary Idea to Benefit Citizens of Privilege

By: Thurston Howell IV

I have been reading with interest the willingness of local government officials in Evansville, Indiana to invest $20 Million in 8 ballfields and to donate public land and contribute public money to building tennis courts in order to stimulate the tourism industry. I think that I have a better idea for Evansville to consider.

My family has been enthusiasts for the sport of polo for many years. My father Thurston Howell III lost his edge in playing the sport while stranded on a tropical island with that foolish Gilligan and his boorish Skipper. Ginger and Mary Ann always made for good eye candy and the Professor was ingenious in helping the castaway crew survive. I have such fond memories of my childhood watching my dear fathers hired hands wash and groom our polo ponies prior to our participation in the grand sport of polo. Afterwards we would enjoy lobsters and quaff champagne while our servants tended to our ponies and replaced the divots in the polo fields.

It is my privilege and pleasure to propose to the government of the City of Evansville that your good public money should be appropriated to construct a polo grounds in Wesselman Park.

The beauty of the tourism dollars attracted by polo players is that it takes so few of us to make such a big economic impact. With just one polo tournament per year your local economy can expect at least two dozen private jet landings complete with an entourage’ that includes our polo ponies. Furthermore we will require the services of your local workforce to carry our bags, tend to our monstrous children, and prepare our clothing so that we are always prepped to our finest. Of course we will rent all of the finest suites in every 4-Star or above hotel that you may have in your village. We absolutely adore items of luxury like good Midwestern beef, lobster, Cuban cigars, beluga caviar, and Napoleon Cognac and will frequent your finest dining facilities for our entire stay. Money is no object to us so you can tell your constituents whatever large number that you like for what we have available to spend on our little soirees.

We are simply thrilled at the prospect of introducing Evansville to the sport of polo and equally delighted that no Evansville natives will participate giving us and our exclusive club of friends free reign over your public lands and facilities.

All we ask in terms of land is the 10 acres that the polo grounds will require, an air-conditioned barn that holds 50 polo ponies, a luxury paddock in which our entourage’ can watch us play, 20 cases of Opus One per match, and of course the obligatory fountain of Dom Perignon to celebrate our victories over each other.

Please consider our proposal. We are willing to ascend on your village aboard our fleet of Lear Jets to hijack one of your Parks Board meetings soon. Remember do not step on the steaming divot.

Ciao,

TH4