Park
Ridge Mayor Howard Frimark is the envy of his
peers. Republicans are calling him the
"Fabulous Frimark." Democrats curse him.
Suburban
mayors, after grappling with quarrelsome,
nettlesome, obstreperous city councils, must exert
a Herculean effort to defeat their adversaries in
the next election s to protect their power.
Frimark has that problem, but in a stroke of
political genius, he engineered passage of a
referendum that abolished the jobs of half the
city's aldermen and eliminated virtually all of
his opposition.
Add
this to the lexicon of politics: The Democrats who
tried to take over Park Ridge got "Frimarked."
It's much like the Legislative Cutback Amendment,
put on the ballot in 1980 by now-Lieutenant
Governor Pat Quinn, which reduced the size of the
Illinois House from 177 members to 118. A total of
59 legislators got canned -- or, as was then said,
"Quinned."
In
a little-noticed referendum last November, Park
Ridge voters approved a reduction of their city
council from 14 aldermen to seven, effective in
2007. The vote was 3,669-3,211 -- hardly a
landslide, and just a 53.3 percent win. But
Frimark, a Republican who was elected mayor in
2005, had his organization circulate the petitions
needed to get the referendum on the ballot,
submitting 1,100 signatures.
And,
by that victory, Frimark thwarted what was deemed
to be the certain takeover of Park Ridge
government by the Democrats.
The
saga of Park Ridge, at least as it affects
Democrats, is surely a sequel to the movie
"Dumb and Dumber." In 2003 a
Democratic-backed slate of "independent"
aldermanic candidates ripped then-Mayor Ron
Wietecha, a Republican, for spending more than
$650,000 in contributions to the Suburban O'Hare
Commission, which sought to block expansion at
O'Hare Airport. In a low turnout,
Democratic-aligned independents, led by Rex Parker
and Jeff Cox, won five of six contested aldermanic
elections; the only Republican winner was Frimark,
running on the Homeowners' Party slate, the
longtime Republican moniker.
The
"Independent Five" soon became the
"Independent Seven," as two Homeowners'
Party aldermen bolted, creating a 7-7 council
impasse. So intimidated was Wietecha that he
resigned, after 13 years as mayor. Mike MaRous, a
Homeowners Party alderman and a longtime
Republican, then cut a deal with the independents
and was chosen as the new acting mayor, keeping
his seat and creating an 8-6 governing majority.
The
transformation of Park Ridge from staunchly
Republican to independently Democratic was
supposed to have occurred in 2005. It didn't.
Republicans
learned the lesson of 2003, and Frimark, an
insurance broker, ran as an independent in 2005.
The Democratic-backed mayoral candidate, Alderman
Mike Tinaglia, had a bunch of skeletons in his
legal closet, and Frimark hammered Tinaglia's
"ethical" transgressions. Frimark won
4,889-3,224, a solid 60.2 percent victory.
Only
three of the seven 2005 Park Ridge aldermanic
races were contested. The pro-Frimark candidate
won two. When the new council was seated, the
Democrats voted to strip Frimark of his authority
to make all committee, board and commission
appointments and assignments. On May 3, 2005, the
council voted 7-6 to let the mayor make such
appointments, but only with the consent of the
council, voted 9-4 to require council approval of
all appointments, and voted 9-4 to substitute the
council's appointees for Frimark's appointees. In
effect, Frimark was a political eunuch.
But
Frimark, who is the deputy Republican committeeman
of Maine Township, had a better perception of
public opinion than his foes. Park Ridge
residents, even if increasingly liberal,
Democratic and independent, don't want infantile
conduct in their government. They want
performance, not bickering. They're also fiscally
conservative. The idea of slicing government, even
if it only meant chopping seven aldermen who
earned $100 a month -- or saving $8,400 annually
-- had great allure.
Until
2007 each Park Ridge ward elected two aldermen for
staggered 4-year terms, with one alderman in each
ward elected every 2 years. The 2006 referendum
mandated that only one alderman be elected per
ward, effective in 2007, and that those who were
elected in 2005 for 4-year terms had to run in
2007.
In
2007, incredibly, 10 of 14 incumbents retired. And
of those 10, six were implacably anti-Frimark: Don
Crampton, Jeannie Markech, Jim Radermacher, Mark
Anderson, Mary Ryan and Jeff Cox. Only Rex Parker
is seeking re-election, and the Frimark forces are
backing Tom Carey in the 6th Ward. Two incumbent
pro-Frimark aldermen, Rich DiPietro and Jim
Allegretti, are running as independents, and the
unaligned Frank Wsol is running again in the 7th
Ward. In the 5th Ward, Chuck Baldacchino, who
unsuccessfully sued the city to stop the downtown
redevelopment project, claiming violation of
density requirements, is running, and he is
opposed by two pro-Frimark candidates.
The
outlook: Frimark will have a 2007-09 majority of
at least five aldermen, and six if Cox loses, as
is likely. "They blew it," said one
Democratic activist of his party's failure.
"Howard is not a lovable guy, but they made
him a sympathetic figure." But, he added,
"Howard will get arrogant. Without
opposition, he'll do what he wants, and will start
making enemies. Then we'll beat him."
But
they won't beat him in 2009, when his term
expires. Because all the new aldermanic terms run
through 2011, the only offices on the ballot in
2009 will be mayor and city clerk. Without
aldermanic races to spike activity and turnout,
and with the Democrats in total disarray, Frimark
will win easily.
Already,
some Republicans are booming Frimark to run for
state senator in 2008, against newly elected
Democrat Dan Kotowski (D-33). He won't do it. He's
now "King Howard" in Park Ridge, and he
wants to reign for at least 6 more years.
Here's
a look at two more 2007 mayoral races:
Niles:
The U.S. attorney is energetically trying to end
the 46-year reign of "King Nick" in
Niles. In October the feds indicted Mayor Nick
Blase, along with two insurance agents, on five
counts of mail fraud, and Blase was alleged to
have taken $420,000 in bribes and kickbacks since
1997.
Did
this engender an explosion of voter rage and
disgust? The answer: Not a peep. Blase's mayoral
term runs through 2009, and two incumbent pro-Blase
village trustees, Kim Biederman and Bart Murphy,
along with park district director Joe LoVerde, are
seeking three trustee seats -- and all are
unopposed.
Blase
has always been a hands-on mayor and a fervent
believer in commercial growth to generate tax
revenue in order to hold down property taxes. His
current focus is on the renovation of the Golf
Mill shopping center, which has suffered
economically due to "big box" stores
such as Wal-Mart. A new theater has opened, and
Target is expanding. The new Golf Mill off track
betting facility is expected to generate tax
revenue of about $500,000. A new Super H Mart
opened at Waukegan Road and Oakton Street, and a
second Wal-Mart in the village opened last fall on
Golf Road. The mayor also is pushing the
revitalization of the Milwaukee Avenue corridor
between Devon Avenue and Golf Road.
"People
may be unhappy with their mayor's ethics, but
they're not unhappy with his work ethic,"
said one observer. "Niles is a good place to
live."
Carbondale:
In this academic town, which houses Southern
Illinois University, yet another Illinois dynasty
is rising. Sheila Simon, the daughter of the late
U.S. senator Paul Simon, a much-revered
politician, is running for mayor, opposing
incumbent Brad Cole, a Republican. Simon is an
attorney, a former prosecutor, an SIU law
professor and a Carbondale City Council member. If
she wins, she'll be on track to win a local
legislative seat or to step up to run for
statewide office in 2010.
Of
course, the Democrats have a glut of dynasties
cramming various offices, leaving little room for
Simon. The offspring of Richard J. Daley and John
Stroger dominate Cook County, the offspring of
Mike Madigan and Tom Hynes hold state office, and
the governor is the son-in-law of a powerful
Chicago alderman.
Republicans
are backing Cole to the hilt, having determined
that it will be easier to beat Simon now than
later. Carbondale's population is 25,597, and
there is the usual tension between the townies and
the students, with the townies backing Cole. The
April election is set for just after spring break
My
prediction: Turnout won't exceed 10,000, but Simon
has enough celebrity that she'll get more of the
townie vote than Cole gets of the student vote.
She will win narrowly, and then run for attorney
general in 2010.