The
Feb. 5, 2008, primary will be a confusing
amalgamation of the abnormal, the subnormal and
the paranormal.
The
abnormality will be the early primary, which is
helpful only to presidential candidates. All
others will get no attention during the Christmas
holidays, minimal attention during the January
football playoffs, and, just as the primary
arrives, they'll be eclipsed by a media avalanche
heaped on the presidential contest, due to the 18
other primaries also set for Feb. 5. Illinois
primaries used to be held in the third week in
March.
The
subnormality will be the lack of voter focus.
Ordinarily, candidates must educate, motivate and
then turn out their voter base. By Feb. 5, voters
will surely be aware of the primary, but they will
be almost totally unaware of who is running for
down-ballot offices.
And
the paranormality will be the inability of
ordinary candidates to penetrate the clutter of
bad weather, sports, holiday hangover and the
plethora of presidential campaign stories. It
would take psychic powers to break into voters'
consciousness.
Political
discontent and turmoil may be rife throughout the
country, but it's still politics as usual in
Chicago and Cook County. With the close of filing
on Nov. 5, here's how key county and local races
shape up:
State's
Attorney: The Democrats did not slate a candidate
to succeed the retiring Dick Devine, and six
contenders filed. Since each ward and township
Democratic organization can endorse whom they
desire, the conventional wisdom is that manpower
will trump money, namely, that precinct captains
will deliver a big vote for their candidates. But
January isn't March, so don't expect a lot of
door-to-door activity in freezing conditions.
The
variables in the contest are race, reform,
geography and money. The candidates are Aldermen
Howard Brookins (21st) and Tom Allen (38th),
county Commissioner Larry Suffredin of Evanston,
first assistant state's attorney Bob Milan of
Glenview, Devine's second in command, second
assistant state's attorney Anita Alvarez of River
Forest, the number three prosecutor in the office,
and former state official Tommy Brewer of
Evanston.
Brookins
and Brewer are black, and Brookins is backed by
almost all black committeemen. Brookins and
Suffredin will portray themselves as reformers,
pledging to use the office to investigate city and
county corruption. Milan and Alvarez will stress
their experience and crime-fighting record.
Allen's base is on the Northwest Side, and he is
strong with the unions, who will fund him heavily.
Suffredin's base is among Lakefront and North
Shore liberals.
The
early outlook: With Barack Obama on the
presidential ballot, black turnout will be huge,
benefiting Brookins. Suffredin helps Allen by
drawing white liberal votes that otherwise would
go to Brookins, but he also hurts him by drawing
white independent-minded (or anti-Daley) voters in
the ethnic wards and suburbs that otherwise would
back Allen over Brookins. The alderman has a
serious packaging problem: He's not as
"experienced" as Milan or Alvarez, and
as an alderman generally supportive of Mayor Rich
Daley, he can't suddenly become a champion of
"reform." He's a candidate in search of
a message, and time is running short.
The
early outlook: Blacks will comprise 40 percent of
the countywide turnout, and Brookins will get 90
percent of the black vote and 10 percent of the
white vote. That gives him roughly 38 percent of
the total cast. To win, Suffredin or Allen would
have to get 70 percent of the white vote. That
won't happen.
Recorder:
Incumbent Gene Moore was reslated, and he is
opposed in the primary by Alderman Ed Smith (28th)
and John Kelly. Moore and Smith are black, and the
obscure Kelly is hoping that they fractionalize
the black vote while his sweet-sounding Irish
surname carries the white vote. It won't happen.
Moore is the endorsed party candidate, and white
committeemen will back him.
Metropolitan
Water Reclamation District: Obscurity breeds
notoriety, and water district primaries for three
commissioners, elected to 6-year terms, are
notoriously unpredictable. Gender, race and ballot
position easily outweigh qualifications. Voters
don't know who's running, and they don't care.
This year there are 11 candidates, including six
men and five women, four blacks, three
Greek-surnamed whites and two Irish-surnamed
women. The party slate includes incumbents Kathy
Meany and Frank Avila, and Dean Maragos. Also
running is dumped incumbent Cynthia Santos, as
well as four black candidates: Diane Jones (who
ran for city clerk in 2007 and who is backed by
black committeemen), Ronald Oliver, Marlon Rush
and Derrick Stinson; also on the ballot are
Kathleen O'Reilley, Matt Podgorski and Mariyana
Spyropoulos. The outlook: Jones, Meany and
O'Reilley are the early favorites, primarily
because of their gender and surnames.
41st
Ward (Far Northwest Side): As expected, incumbent
Democratic Committeeman Ralph Capparelli is being
challenged. Filing against him were Frank Coconate,
the chairman of the Northwest Side Democratic
Organization, Mary O'Connor, who owns an Edison
Park restaurant and who allegedly is backed by
Republican Alderman Brian Doherty, and Pat
Mulligan, who was put into the race by Coconate.
The
outlook: Capparelli's organization is decrepit,
with fewer than a dozen precinct workers. But he
did manage to accumulate 1,500 petition
signatures. O'Connor can win if she spends money
on direct mail attacking Capparelli as
ineffectual, and if Coconate amasses 25 percent of
the vote. But it's hard to imagine Capparelli
getting less than 40 percent of the votes cast.
He's favored.
50th
Ward (West Rogers Park): The proverbial yarmulke
has hit the proverbial fan in this ward. State
Senator Ira Silverstein (D-8) is challenging
venerable Alderman Berny Stone for Democratic
committeeman, setting off a nasty battle for the
"Jewish succession." The ward becomes
less Jewish with each passing year, and Stone's
ward organization becomes less potent with each
passing election. But for an influx of outsiders,
Stone would have lost the 2007 aldermanic election
to Naisy Dolar. Stone wants to run again in 2011,
as does Dolar.
Silverstein
argues that Dolar will win next time unless he
takes over Stone's ward organization and rebuilds
it. Dolar has endorsed Silverstein, as has 2007
loser Greg Brewer. Stone roars back that
Silverstein, once his protege, is a turncoat and
that he wants to be committeeman so that he can
make Dolar the alderman. That charge will resonate
in heavily Jewish precincts such as Winston
Towers, where older Jewish voters are appalled at
the possibility of not having a Jewish alderman.
The
outlook: To win, Silverstein must build a base
among independent, non-Jewish voters and retain
the support of at least 40 percent of the Jewish
voters. He will do it.
42nd
Ward (Gold Coast): In a ward packed full of
high-rise condominiums, precinct captains are an
absurdity. With a flurry of direct-mail pieces,
Brendan Reilly upset longtime Alderman Burt
Natarus (1971 to 2007) in February. According to
sources in the ward, Natarus, as the ward's
Democratic committeeman, still had about 40
workers in his organization, and they encouraged
him to run again. So a deal allegedly was cut:
Natarus wouldn't run in 2008 if Reilly didn't run.
Reilly picked attorney John Corrigan for the spot,
and they attended a meeting at which Natarus gave
the captains their new marching orders. They
didn't march.
Rumors
were rampant that Natarus would run after all, so
Reilly filed, but Natarus didn't. The
outlook: Expect Reilly to stay and Corrigan to
withdraw.
32nd
Ward (Wicker Park, south Lakeview): They say it
ain't over until it's over. In the ward that Dan
Rostenkowski and Terry Gabinski built, it's over.
Rostenkowski was a congressman from 1959 to 1995;
Gabinski was an alderman from 1969 to 1999 and the
ward's committeeman after Rostenkowski quit in
1988. In 2007 Gabinski's hand-picked successor,
Ted Matlak, lost to Scott Waguespack by 122 votes.
Gabinski resigned last summer, and Matlak was his
replacement.
But
Matlak didn't file to run for the post. State
Representative John Fritchey (D-11), an
independent-minded liberal who backed Waguespack,
did file, as did Roger Romanelli, a member of
Waguespack's organization. The outlook: Fritchey
will win easily. He's eyeing a run for Illinois
attorney general in 2010.
43rd
Ward (Lincoln Park): It's never too early to
start. Last April Michele Smith lost to incumbent
Alderman Vi Daley by 549 votes, having spent
$400,000. Daley will retire in 2011, and her ally,
Peg Roth, is retiring as committeeman in 2008.
Smith is running for Roth's job, as is Tim Egan,
who got 12 percent of the vote for alderman in
2007, and Charles Eastwood. The outlook: Smith
will win in 2008 and 2011.