Chicago’s far Southwest Side 19th Ward cannot be
characterized as the cradle of U.S. presidents.
Nor can it be characterized as the cradle of
Chicago mayors. And, as a result of the March 16
Democratic primary, it will not be the cradle of
U.S. senators.
Over the past half-century, the clout-heavy ward
has produced a Cook County assessor (Tom Hynes), a
sheriff (Mike Sheahan), and a county board
president (John Duffy) – but never a mayor. And
no Chicago ward has ever produced an occupant of
the White House.
Nevertheless, Tom Hynes -- the ward’s
influential Democratic committeeman since 1976,
the Illinois Democratic national committeeman, the
county assessor from 1978 to 1997, and a longtime
ally of Mayor Rich Daley -- had a dream that he
could one day put his son, Dan Hynes, in the White
House. And that dream progressed from a fantasy to
a possibility when young Hynes, with his
father’s clout bulldozing the way, was elected
state comptroller in 1998, at the tender young age
of 29.
When Hynes the Elder resigned as assessor in 1997,
and was replaced by his protégé, Jim Houlihan,
the Hynes’ Clan’s White House gameplan was
already in place. Despite the fact that a number
of state legislators, including Skokie’s Lou
Lang (D-16), wanted to run for the job, Tom
cleared out the field, and young Dan, then just
five years out of law school, and with no prior
elective office experience, was unopposed in the
primary. He then beat a better-qualified
Republican with 58.6 percent.
Young Hynes’ political advancement was supposed
to proceed under an aura of inevitability: he
would use his visibility as comptroller to
generate headlines and name recognition, and then
run for attorney general or secretary of state in
2002 or 2006; and then use that post as a
steppingstone to run for governor in 2006 or 2010;
and then use the governorship as a base to run for
president in 2012 or 2016 (or for vice-president
in 2008).
But the ambitions of some other clout-heavy
Democratic Clans interceded. Just as Hynes cleared
out the comptroller’s primary for Dan in 1998,
Illinois House Speaker Mike Madigan (who is also
the 13th Ward Democratic committeeman) cleared out
the 2002 attorney general’s race for his
daughter, Lisa Madigan. Even though Tom wanted
that job for Dan, the speaker’s clout prevailed,
and Mayor Rich Daley’s political operatives
emphatically insisted that they didn’t want a
nasty Madigan-versus-Hynes primary. They told Tom
that young Dan could wait.
So
Tom capitulated and the party establishment backed
Lisa Madigan – who won her primary with 58.2
percent over John Schmidt. Tom carried his 19th
Ward for Lisa by just 9,399-9,177 over Schmidt,
causing much irritation among daddy Madigan’s
13th Ward contingent, who thought Tom didn’t
work hard enough for Lisa. In the speaker’s
ward, Lisa walloped Schmidt 12,043-3,479.
In
the secretary of state’s contest, Democratic
incumbent Jesse White sought re-election. So Dan
had only two 2002 options: run for re-election, or
run for governor. And since the Mell-Blagojevich
Clan was out front early in the gubernatorial
race, and the field already crowded with Rod
Blagojevich, Paul Vallas and Roland Burris, the
Hynes Clan opted for re-election. In the 2002
election, against desultory Republican opposition,
Dan Hynes was resoundingly re-elected with 63.2
percent of the vote.
In
fact, Dan Hynes garnered 2,150,425 votes, less
than ticket-leading Jesse White’s 2,390,181, but
far more than Lisa Madigan’s 1,762,949,
Blagojevich’s 1,847,040, and even more than U.S.
Senator Dick Durbin’s (D-Ill) 2,103,766. Such
heady vote totals are the stuff of dreams.
However,
the victories of Blagojevich and Madigan
constituted huge roadblocks in the Hynes’ march
to the White House. The Hynes’ Clan, back in
1998, thought that George Ryan would serve two
terms, and that a Democrat would succeed him as
governor in 2006. Now Blagojevich is sure to seek
a second term in 2006, and Lisa Madigan is first
in line to succeed him. So Dan’s path to the
Statehouse is blocked until, at the earliest,
2010, and maybe much later.
But
Dan got some good publicity in 2003, carping
regularly about how Illinois’ budget deficit was
the worst in the nation, and generating major
headlines when he refused to pay a cost-of-living
pay increase to state judges. The governor vetoed
the hikes, the Supreme Court ruled the veto
unconstitutional and ordered Hynes to pay them.
Hynes defied the order, which would have cost the
state $4.5 million. But instead of putting Hynes
in jail for contempt – and making him a
political martyr – the judges relented, and the
veto held.
With
his Springfield trajectory stalled, the Hynes Clan
shifted their focus to the U.S. Senate. Incumbent
Republican Peter Fitzgerald announced his
retirement in early 2003, and young Hynes, if
elected to the Senate at age 35, would, at best,
have plenty of time to carve a national
reputation. At worst, even if he never got on the
national ticket, he could be a senator for decades
– making the 19th Ward a cradle of senators.
But
Dan Hynes caught a bad break when Carol Moseley
Braun, the one-term black senator defeated by
Fitzgerald in 1998 chose to run for president in
2004, and not try to reclaim her old seat. There
is no doubt that Hynes could have defeated her in
a primary. Nevertheless, as the only statewide
officeholder in the contest, and with his dad
lining up the support of every white pro-Daley
ward committeeman in Chicago (and even a few
blacks like John Stroger), young Hynes entered the
senate race as the early favorite. His principal
opponents were wealthy investment broker Blair
Hull, black Chicago state Senator Barack Obama,
and former Chicago schools CEO Gery Chico, and
county treasurer Maria Pappas.
The
outcome was a major embarrassment for Tom Hynes,
as he delivered an anemic 51.2 percent of the 19th
Ward’s vote to his son, with Dan topping Obama
9,490-7,689, with the rest scattered. Given the
fact that Hynes’ hand-picked alderman, Ginger
Rugai, was re-elected to her fourth full term in
2003 by 10,701-7,905, it is safe to conclude that
the Elder Hynes’ grip on his power base is
eroding at breakneck speed.
The
primary outcome is also a major impediment to Dan
Hynes future prospects. Abraham Lincoln may have
lost the 1858 Illinois Senate race to Stephen
Douglas, and gone on the win the White House in
1860, but young Hynes will have no such good
fortune.
Dan
Hynes’ dismal 23.7 percent 2004 showing is not
remotely Lincolnesque, and is a clear indication
that he’s not ready for political prime time.
His senate campaign, managed by younger brother
Matt, was bland and unfocused. He failed to craft
an identifiable image for himself, or identify
himself with any salient issue. And he failed to
demonstrate that he has a solid political base –
either in Chicago, among his dad’s fellow
committeemen, or Downstate. It is now obvious that
Dan’s prior wins in 1998 and 2002 were due to
his political affiliation, not his
less-than-sparkling personality.
More
critically, he has yet to establish any clear or
concise reputation as comptroller, the state’s
chief fiscal officer. During the Ryan
Administration (1999-2002), Hynes was critical of
Ryan’s “fiscally reckless” spending
policies, hit the rise in the state’s
indebtedness, and carped about the need to set
aside “rainy day funds” for future budget
shortfalls. During the Blagojevich Administration,
Hynes has uttered not a critical peep about the
new governor’s borrowing policies, the
skyrocketing state debt, or the ongoing budgetary
squeeze. In essence, Hynes is being a (Democratic)
team player, which means he is not establishing
any independent image for himself – as was
apparent in his March 16 loss.
In
a primary turnout of 1,242,986, Hynes got 294,717
votes (23.7 percent), to Obama’s 655,924 (52.7
percent). Obama won 41 of 50 Chicago wards, to
Hynes’ five: the 11th, 13th, 19th, 23rd, and
36th wards. Obama won 24 of 30 suburban townships,
to Hynes’ six. Obama won the five collar
counties: DuPage, Lake, McHenry, Kane and Will.
Downstate, however, Hynes won 80 counties, to ten
for Obama, and seven for Hull.
To
be sure, Hull’s $24 million media buy dominated
the airwaves, and cut into Hynes’ Downstate
base. But Obama spent only $4.5 million, and his
black/liberal base was solid. Hynes spent just
under $3 million. Had Hull’s campaign not
imploded, it is likely that Hynes would have done
even worse. Obama won because, unlike Hynes, he
crafted an image that appealed to a liberal base.
Young
Hynes’ career is not over, but it has been
rudely detoured. In the past half-century, state
officials who lose primary bids for governor or
senator rarely get another opportunity. Roland
Burris (comptroller from 1979-90, and then
attorney general from 1991-94) lost a senate
primary in 1984, and governor’s primaries in
1994, 1998 and 2002. Three lieutenant governors
failed to move up: Paul Simon lost for governor in
1972, and Dave O’Neal and Bob Kustra for senator
in, respectively, 1980 and 1996. Comptroller
Loleta Didrickson lost the 1998 senate primary.
Treasurer Bill Scott lost for governor in 1964.
Only Simon came back, winning a senate seat in
1984.
Young
Hynes can probably remain comptroller for another
decade. There is life after defeat. But his aura
of inevitability has been punctured, and, like
Simon, he will have to wait many years for his
second chance.