In
north suburban Niles Township, which encompasses
all of Lincolnwood, Skokie and Morton Grove, and
parts of Glenview, Golf and Niles, the Democratic
organization is commonly – but not necessarily
fondly – known as the “House of Sutker.” And
the longtime Democratic committeeman, 81-year old
Cal Sutker, is a political icon, despised by many,
but venerated by substantially more.
However,
houses deteriorate, and icons fade.
The
fall of the House of Sutker is not imminent, and
certainly won’t occur in the 2005 municipal and
township elections; but structural cracks are
developing, and it is likely that Sutker will
relinquish his committeemanship in 2006.
In
2005, however, Sutker’s Democrats, running under
the guise of the “Caucus Party,” will keep
control in Skokie, and will win all the township
offices. But Morton Grove will be a major test,
with Sutker-backed Rick Krier running for mayor
against Republican Dan Staackmann, to succeed the
retiring Mayor Dan Scanlon. “Krier will win,”
promised Sutker.
To
perceptive observers, the political strength of
the House of Sutker, as compared to other North
Shore township organizations, is highly
exaggerated. Sutker lost his 2002 bid for
renomination in the Democratic primary as Cook
County commissioner in the mostly suburban 13th
District when Evanston’s Larry Suffredin amassed
a bigger vote in his base (7,724-2,542), a
thumping 75.2 percent of the vote, than Sutker did
in Niles Township (7,410-4,852), a 60.4 percent
margin. Sutker lost to Suffredin by 4,427 votes.
And, in 2004, Sutker-backed Skokie Democrat
Michele Bromberg got 65 percent of the vote in her
Skokie base, but that was still insufficient to
overcome Republican State Representative Beth
Coulson’s (R-17) huge vote in her
Glenview/Northfield base. Bromberg lost by 3,849
votes in a race she was favored to win.
In
the township, the feeble and disorganized
Republicans present no challenge, so Sutker’s
Democrats are perceived as a colossus, and control
most offices.
But,
surprisingly, there are some manifestations that
the Republicans are resurgent: In the 2004
presidential contest, Democrat John Kerry beat
President Bush 28,666-15,981 in Niles Township,
winning with 64.2 percent; that appears to be an
impressive victory. But, in 2000, Democrat Al Gore
beat Bush 27,591-12,811, winning with 68.2
percent. Turnout increased in the township from
40,402 in 2000 to 44,647 in 2004; the Republican
vote climbed, while the Democratic percentage
dropped.
Sutker,
however, ascribes the slight Republican uptick to
demographic change, not Democratic organizational
decrepitude. “The Jewish vote (in the township)
is dwindling,” Sutker acknowledges.
The
2000 census showed ongoing increases in the
township of Asian, Asian Indian, Pakistani, Arab
and Assyrian populations. Sutker estimates that
the township’s Asian population, consisting of
Vietnamese, Laotian, Cambodian, Filipino, Korean,
Japanese and Chinese immigrants, is now up to 15
percent; and that the Arab population is close to
ten percent. The census pegged blacks at less than
three percent, and Hispanics at eight percent;
Sutker projects that the overall township Jewish
population is around 28 percent, and that the
Catholic population is over 40 percent.
“It’s
a very diverse population,” said Sutker.
As
for 2006, when Sutker’s term as committeeman
expires, he says he has “made no decision” as
to his plans. Sutker was first appointed
committeeman in 1973, and has been re-elected
eight times. “I could retire,” he said. “It
may be a time for a younger generation to take
over.” Sutker mentioned State Representative Lou
Lang (D-16), of Skokie, or Jeff Greenspan,
Skokie’s former assistant corporation counsel,
as potential successors. Another possibility is
Krier, if he wins the Morton Grove mayoralty.
Sutker will not challenge Suffredin for county
commissioner in 2006.
But,
focusing on 2005, the House of Sutker is full of
optimism. “The Democratic presence (in the
township) is significant, and the Caucus Party is
popular,” said Sutker. Here’s an early look at
developing contests:
Skokie:
The long-dominant “Caucus Party” was founded
by the late Mayor Al Smith (1965-86), and
then-corporation counsel Harvey Schwartz (later a
county judge), in the 1960s. Schwartz was a
Republican, but broke with the local party to form
a coalition with the Democrats. Sutker ran against
Smith for mayor in 1969, losing big. Eventually,
the Democrats came to dominate the Caucus Party,
and Sutker came to dominate the Democrats, and the
Sutker-Schwartz combine ran the township.
When
Smith retired in 1986, Jacqueline Gorell was named
as his successor, and she was unopposed in 1989,
1993 and 1997 -- testimony to the
Caucus’s/Democrats’ power. When Gorell
resigned as mayor in 1999, George Van Dusen, a
Skokie trustee, longtime district aide to U.S.
Representative Sid Yates (1949-63; 1965-79), and
ally of Sutker, was named as her replacement. In
the hotly contested 2001 mayoral race, Van
Dusen pulverized Tom Dammrich 7,501-1,948
(79.4 percent), and the six Caucus (meaning Sutker/Democratic)
backed trustees won easily.
After
Skokie’s corporation counsel, Barbara Meyer, was
appointed to a county judgeship, Trustee Harry
Piper was named to her job. Edie Sue Sutker,
Cal’s daughter, was then appointed as Piper’s
replacement. Rejecting any inference that he
fosters nepotism, Sutker said that “she (Edie)
should not be penalized because she is related (to
me). She (Edie) has been on the (Skokie) Plan
Commission for 11 years, is qualified for the job,
and has a master’s degree as a social worker.”
Sutker’s
other daughter, Shelley Sutker-Dermer, was elected
in 1996 as a Cook County judge, and is now the
presiding judge in the 2nd District (Skokie).
Sutker’s former son-in-law, Mike Gelder, is a
Skokie trustee. “There’s a glut of Sutkers,”
complained one political foe. But voters don’t
seem to be repulsed. For 2005, all six incumbent
trustees, including Bromberg, Gelder, Randy
Roberts, Edie Sutker, Frank McCabe, and longtime
Republican (and Schwartz ally) Don Perille, are
running for re-election; they, along with Van
Dusen, will win overwhelmingly.
Niles
Township: Sutker was present at the creation. In
1977, Sutker and the Democratic/Caucus alliance
backed Ed Warman for township supervisor, and he
won – the first Democrat in history, according
to Sutker, to capture the post. Warman, who
unsuccessfully ran for Congress in 1969 and 1970
against Republican Phil Crane, died in 1981, and
was succeeded as supervisor by Tom McElligott, who
has won re-election to the post five times as the
Caucus Party candidate.
McElligott
was re-elected in 2001 by 9,234-3,401 over Bob
Malooly, who was part of the Republican-backed
slate, which included longtime township assessor
Bob Hanrahan, who defected from the Caucus party.
Scott Bagnall opposed Hanrahan, and beat him
7,957-4,748; other Caucus Party nominees won for
clerk (Charles Levy) and collector (Pramod Shah),
as well as for the four township trustees: Suzanne
Schwartz, Harvey’s wife; Levon Tamraz; Les
Brownstein (a Republican), and Usha Kamaria.
For
2005, Schwartz is retiring, replaced on the Caucus
ticket by Marilyn Glazer; clerk Shah is replacing
Kamaria; and Brownstein and Tamraz are running for
re-election. D.C. Modi is replacing Shah for
collector. “We have diversity,” said Sutker,
noting that Shah and Modi are Asian
Indian-Americans. The Caucus Party, which has
dominated the township for 28 years, will win in
2005 with minimal opposition.
Morton
Grove: It’s been 32 years since a Republican (Jule
Bode) has been elected as the town’s mayor, but
Republican Dan Staackmann, a village trustee for
two years, and a park board commissioner for 18
years, has a good chance to change that.
Two-term
(1997-2005) incumbent Mayor Dan Scanlon is
retiring. He was elected as the Action Party
candidate, defeating Staackmann 2,326-1,354 in
1997, and winning unopposed in 2001. Scanlon’s
predecessor was Dick Flickinger (1977-97), a
Democrat and Sutker ally, whose Action Party was
really an adjunct to the Caucus Party/Democratic
Party, even though a majority of the village
trustees were Republicans.
In
2003, Sutker strongly backed Rick Krier for one of
the three trustee posts, and, in a six-candidate
field, Krier (with 1,784 votes) topped the Action
Party’s Joe Moll, finishing third; Staackmann
(with 1,906 votes), now with the Action Party,
finished second. Krier’s father, Ray, was once
the Niles Township Democratic committeeman
(1966-70), as was his grandfather, Scotty Krier
(1960-66). “He (Rick Krier) is angling to take
that (Democratic committeeman’s) job,” said
one Morton Grove politician.
Krier
may have too much baggage to win. Krier was an
employee of the Cook County Forest Preserve
District, lived in a house on the Chick Evans Golf
Course for many years, and was a north suburban
supervisor of the district’s operations. In
2003, the county board, which had a $1.5 million
operational golf course deficit, contracted Billy
Casper Golf Co. to run them, and they turned a
$1.5 million annual profit. “He couldn’t run
them (the golf courses), which demonstrates that
he can’t run the village (of Morton Grove),”
said one Action Party official.
Krier,
who currently has a job in the Cook County
Assessor’s office, voted for gas tax hikes to
close the $2 million deficit in Morton Grove’s
2004 budget. Now he opposes any tax or fee hike to
close the village’s 2005 budget deficit of
$500,000, and is attacking Staackmann and the
Action Party as tax-hikers.
Krier
is running for mayor as the “Morton Grove Caucus
Party” candidate, and Staackmann as the
“Morton Grove Action Committee” candidate.
Expect a nasty campaign. But, if Staackmann wins,
the Republicans will have at least some political
presence in Niles Township – and the House of
Sutker will take a big knock.