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Scott Turow

Who You Calling Second City?

BS Article - Turow Chicago Blog How an Obama win would make Chicago the new world capital.

Chicago, my hometown, and far more significantly, that of Sen. Barack Obama, appears poised with his election as president—pooh, pooh, pooh!—to become the Center of the Known Universe. For a city with a permanent chip on its shoulder, a place that willingly refers to itself as the Second City and which deeply identifies with the perpetual failures of the Cubs, who, as I like to say, teach us to take the bitter with the bad—for that place, becoming in many senses the most important city in America will require some serious attitude adjustment.

But the transformation appears imminent. The president’s home city and state traditionally prosper from added attention and influence, as well as the influx of visitors inspired by curiosity about our nation’s leader. More important, Barack has already signaled that Chicago will also be America’s political center. In June, the candidate-designate merged the Democratic National Committee into his own campaign apparatus and officially moved the DNC to Chicago. The decision produced not only a more efficient and less rivalrous organization, but it also, in some eyes, deepened the political insight. Roland Martin, the esteemed radio host and CNN political commentator, credits Obama’s decision to move the Democratic National Committee to Chicago as one of the key factors in keeping his campaign in touch with the “real” America, by removing campaign officials from the barrage of conventional wisdom absorbed in the media capitals and the beltway. If it ain’t broke, don’t fix it. As president, Obama’s political apparatus is virtually certain to stay here.

Even the most hard-bitten Chicagoans have to see very good times on the horizon.

But that is not the only reason that Chicago is about to become a place with formidable political swack. There is a kind of perfect storm brewing that will greatly enhance Chicago as a power center. The Assistant Majority Leader in the Senate, Dick Durbin, the likely Majority Leader if Harry Reid ever steps down, is from Illinois, and on the House side, Rahm Emanuel, a representative from Chicago, is Chair of the Democratic Caucus, the number four position in the Democratic leadership. Jan Schakowsky, a congresswoman whose district includes parts of the North Side of Chicago, is also a member of the House leadership, as a Chief Deputy Whip. All three—Durbin, Emanuel and Schakowsky—have unusually close relations with Obama. Emanuel, a fabled political operative, who was Director of Finance in Bill Clinton’s original presidential campaign and then a senior adviser to the president, has emerged as an important figure in the Obama campaign this fall. Durbin and Schakowsky may be even closer to the man who would be prez. As the private lore goes, it was those two who were the first major elected officials in 2005 to try to convince Obama to take on Hillary Clinton in the primaries. They argued, reportedly, that Sen. Clinton would make a wonderful president, but that she would prove unelectable in November and that Obama was the only figure in the Democratic party who could seize part of Clinton’s base and wrest the nomination from her, thus saving the party—and the nation—for another four years of ruinous Republican rule. Durbin may be the closest of all to Obama, a sage figure with a sharp political wit, who mentored our junior Senator even before his election and who, should he care to leave the Senate, could end up as Attorney General.

Not only is there an unusually strong coterie of congressional leaders from Chicago, but the city is also the home to David Axelrod, Obama’s chief political strategist. Axelrod has been the keeper of the flame from the start. Even in the grim days last October, when Hillary Clinton was blowing Barack away in national polls, Axelrod was sanguine, even in private. He reminded friends that at the same point four years before the “inevitable” Democratic nominee had been—remember him?—Howard Dean. Instead, Axelrod was confident that Obama had been handed a unique advantage that would lead to victory in the Iowa caucuses. The date of the event had been pushed so far forward in the game of leapfrog being played with New Hampshire and other states that the college students, who were Obama’s chief bastion of support, would still be home on Christmas vacation. Axelrod was sure they would arrive in record numbers to caucus for his—and their—man. They did. It is great to be loyal in politics. But it is even better to be right. Axelrod’s crystal ball has been the best in the business this year.

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October 31, 2008 | 5:44am
Comments ()
buzzer

Good point, I remember when Clinton was in office, and Arkansas became the new capital of the world. Get over Chicagoans, no place like second, or third place.

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9:07 am, Oct 31, 2008
stephencon

Obama's election may provide an opportunity but Chicago has a long way to go. (I live in the south suburbs) The city is desperately in need of an infrastructure overhaul. The crime rate is disgraceful and the focus on the Olympics is short-sighted. There's an international recession and Chicago can ill-afford to throw money down the IOC money-pit. The Olympics didn't solve Atlanta's problems or do much to improve its image.

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10:41 am, Oct 31, 2008
dixie-chik

Scott, did you just "pooh pooh pooh" the election of Barack Obama as president? How tacky.

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11:13 am, Oct 31, 2008
chisoxpoet

Chicago is second to no one. Plus Barack is a White Sox fan and a southsider he knows what grit and winning means.

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12:02 pm, Oct 31, 2008
muckety

For a discussion of Chicago's powerbrokers and their connections to Obama, check out 'Chicago's top 100: From the nation's heartland to Washington'
'http://news.muckety.com/2008/05/22/chicagos-top-100-from-the-nations-h eartland-to-washington/2902

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12:52 pm, Oct 31, 2008
Xertruk

From another perspective, over the past decade or three the focus of the nation has been on the two coasts or on odd states like Arizona (in which I live) and the middle of the country has been written off or ignored -- except when there is a disaster. If Obama wins and Chicago and the center of the country gets more attention, that can only help bring Americans together as the rest of the country learns more about the good portions of the midwest and might even bring more economic development (as well as a Frank Lloyd Wright and Louis Sullivan revival) to the region.

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1:39 pm, Oct 31, 2008
GaiaTerra7

Anyone else try to leave a comment on the latest "Button" post? I didn't see any comments AT ALL. I left one which promptly vanished.

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2:37 pm, Oct 31, 2008
GordonM2

Dixie-Chik.... The "pooh pooh pooh" is just th opposite. Some think is bad luck to take something for granted before it occurs. The "pooh pooh pooh" is to ward off any evil from the statement.

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4:55 pm, Oct 31, 2008
mahjlady

@dixie-chik: "pooh pooh pooh" is spitting in the evil eye when you say something you wish would happen but are worried that you will jinx it by even mentioning it. A common thing among even slightly superstitious members of the (Jewish) tribe. see: http://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/jsource/Judaism/spitting.html

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5:07 pm, Oct 31, 2008
PatriceFitz

The "pooh pooh pooh" is supposed to represent spitting on your hand, a little superstitious gesture to avoid jinxing something positive that you think is going to happen.

At least, I think that's what he means. Scott Turow is definitely in favor of Obama!

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5:19 pm, Oct 31, 2008
CalexanderJ

Hopefully it will also alter the perception of Chicago style politics.

But can we wait until Wednesday to speculate about the changes an Obama presidency is going to bring. Should McCain pull this out, there is going to be a lot of irrelevant articles floating around.

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6:35 pm, Oct 31, 2008
jsinaiko

Scott - as a north sider you may want to invoke the loser Cubs as a metaphor for Chicago, buit please remember that Barack is a SOUTH SIDER and a proud White Sox fan.

And the Sox won it all in 2005 - a much better example for Sen Obama; a dark horse contender who over came all sorts of pitfalls to make it to the top. You have written a fine piece on Chicago and Obama's relationship to it, but please spare us the Cubs crapola. Again, Obama is a White Sox fan and their winning ways are a much better parable than whatever the Cubs have done to screw themselves up.

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6:22 pm, Nov 1, 2008

This user is no longer registered.

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9:02 am, Nov 2, 2008
zampano

Is Chicago a rust belt city? Kind of. It was, but unlike Detroit, Buffalo, Pittsburgh, Cleveland, etc, Chicago was able to recover from manufacturing jobs migrating overseas. Chicago was able to successfully adapt it's economy to a service based economy, somewhat sparing droves of citizens leaving either the city limits or the metro region altogether. There are a lot of complicated reasons why Chicago survived, there are books, and of course, wikipedia.

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3:06 pm, Nov 2, 2008
milaco

The moniker "Second City" refers to the rebuilding of Chicago after the great fire, like a phoenix & all that, not to its status compared to New York or anywhere else.

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5:12 pm, Nov 3, 2008
unscum

Given the financial hurricane engulfing New York City, a fiasco of their own making. As NYC goes down economically and politically, Chicago is coming up.

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7:55 pm, Nov 6, 2008
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Who You Calling Second City?

by Scott Turow

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