Initiate
the Internet search engines. Bring on Google.
For
Democrats, type in "Great White Hope/county
board president/2010." With at least three
black candidates -- Todd Stroger, Toni Preckwinkle
and Dorothy Brown -- running for the post, and
with county Commissioner Forrest Claypool taking a
pass, white Democratic committeemen are feverishly
searching for an electable white candidate.
For
Republicans, type in "Sarah Palin/Illinois/clone."
With middle-aged white men hogging all the key
spots on the 2010 statewide ticket, Republicans
desperately need a fiery and credible woman to run
for lieutenant governor and a black or Hispanic
candidate somewhere else on the slate.
To
be diverse, or not diverse enough? That, to wax
poetic, seems to be the question. Here's an early
analysis:
Cook
County Board president: Don't dub it "Back to
the Future;" instead, it's "The Future
is the Past." Although he indisputably is
inept and incompetent, Stroger has a chance to
extend his "Reign of Error" for another
4 years -- but only if there is a huge primary
field, with a multiplicity of white candidates.
Turnout
in the Democratic primary was 619,309 in 2006 and
791,605 in 2002. It will be at least 700,000 in
2010. In 2006 the late John Stroger beat Claypool
by 318,634-276,682, getting 53.5 percent of the
vote.
African
Americans constitute 40 percent of the Chicago
vote and 35 percent of the county vote. John
Stroger, a key ally of Mayor Rich Daley who
suffered a stroke just before the primary, won in
2006 because he got about a quarter of the white
vote. Stroger carried Daley's Southwest Side 11th
Ward with 62.9 percent of the vote, Mike Madigan's
13th Ward with 62.8 percent and Ed Burke's 14th
Ward with 64.4 percent, and he came close in Bill
Lipinski's 23rd Ward, getting 46.4 percent of the
vote. Count on this: That ain't gonna happen for
"The Toddler." He won't get 20 percent
of the vote in those wards.
Claypool
won the 10 Northwest Side wards by 48,803-19,566,
with Stroger getting 28.6 percent of the vote, but
pro-Daley white committeemen delivered more than
just a smidgen of votes to Stroger. He got 42.7
percent of the vote in Bill Banks' 36th Ward, 32.4
percent in the late Tom Lyons' 45th Ward, 32.3
percent in the 39th Ward, 31.2 percent in the 40th
Ward, and even 27.1 percent in the 41st Ward.
Count on this: "The Toddler" is anathema
to white voters, and he will get less than 10
percent of the vote in those wards in 2010. No
ward committeeman will back him.
John
Stroger got 84.2 percent of the black vote and 56
percent of the Hispanic vote in 2006. With three
black candidates running in 2010, the black vote
will be hopelessly fractured, which means that a
single credible white candidate will easily win
the job, as whites comprise nearly 60 percent of
the countywide vote.
But
who will be the "Great White Hope"?
Claypool's enigmatic exit puzzles observers. He
spent 8 years burnishing his reformer credentials,
spurned an opportunity to go to Washington as part
of the Obama Administration, and was a fierce
critic of Todd Stroger. Now he wants to
concentrate on a health-care start-up company. The
job was his on a platter. He was ahead in the
polls, he could have raised $2 million, and he had
scared off other white candidates.
A
furious behind-the-scenes struggle, based largely
on geography, has commenced. Two white county
office holders with ties to Tom Hynes's Southwest
Side 19th Ward, Sheriff Tom Dart and Assessor Jim
Houlihan, want the job. So does county
Commissioner Larry Suffredin, a liberal from
Evanston. But the emerging consensus choice is
Metropolitan Water Reclamation District Board of
Commissioners President Terry O'Brien, a North
Sider with ties to the 47th and 50th ward
Democratic organizations and who lives in the 41st
Ward.
Although
obscure, O'Brien, age 53, has been a commissioner
since 1988 and the board's president since 1996.
He has won four countywide primary elections, and
he has few enemies, a record as an able
administrator, no scandals attaching to his name
and an Irish surname. He also has $158,105 in his
campaign account. If he runs, he need not resign
his current post.
That
makes him the perfect compromise. O'Brien can
eschew racial issues and run on a platform
promising "competence." Dart and
Houlihan can run for their current jobs, thereby
avoiding messy primaries for their succession and
allowing the "Daley Machine" to focus
all efforts on the board president's race.
Turnout
in Chicago's black-majority wards in 2006 was
183,157, and John Stroger got 154,354 votes. In
2010 turnout surely will eclipse 240,000. Stroger
lost to Claypool in the suburbs in 2006 by
133,545-86,567 (with 39.3 percent of the vote),
which indicates a sizable black vote, amounting to
perhaps 300,000 countywide.
However,
Stroger, the 8th Ward Democratic committeeman,
Preckwinkle, the Hyde Park 5th Ward alderman, and
Brown, the clerk of the Circuit Court, are all
South Siders. They will split those 300,000 black
votes. In addition, U.S. Representative Danny
Davis (D-7), from the West Side, also may run,
further fragmenting the black base. Preckwinkle is
positioning herself as an "independent
reformer," and she could get the bulk of the
white liberal vote, unless Suffredin runs.
My
early prediction: The next board president will be
white and have an Irish surname -- which means
O'Brien, Houlihan or Dart.
Governor:
The economy is still tanking, Illinois' fiscal
crisis is unresolved, and the disgraced Rod
Blagojevich's corruption trial is set for June of
2010. That should be the "perfect storm"
for the Republicans. How could voters not want a
change? But a Republican governor could be just
too repugnant to voters.
The
2010 Republican gubernatorial field includes a
slew of lightweights, none having ever won
statewide office. It includes state Senators Bill
Brady (R-44) of Downstate Bloomington, Matt Murphy
(R-27) of Palatine and Kirk Dillard (R-24) of
Westmont. Also running are DuPage County Board
Chairman Bob Schillerstrom and publicist Dan Proft.
Brady,
a staunch but likable conservative, got 18.4
percent of the vote in the 2006 primary, with the
bulk of his vote coming from Downstate. He is
positioning himself as the anti-tax candidate,
hoping for a state income tax hike. Chicago
business tycoon Ron Gidwitz, who got 10.9 percent
of the vote in 2006, is Dillard's finance
chairman.
The
turnout for the 2006 Republican primary was
751,627, down from 946,339 in 2002. In 2006
138,182 votes came from Cook County, 283,475 came
from the Collar Counties of DuPage, Lake, Will,
McHenry and Kane, and 329,970 came from 95
counties Downstate.
In
2006, 61,169 of Brady's 135,370 votes came from
Downstate, but he still got only 28.8 percent of
the Downstate vote. "The (Downstate) county
chairmen will be with me," Dillard said. To
win, Brady needs over 50 percent of the vote south
of Interstate 80.
Dillard
and Schillerstrom are from DuPage County, a
bedrock Republican enclave which has been steadily
moving Democratic. DuPage's Republican primary
turnout was 98,230 in 2006, 126,767 in 2002,
86,684 in 1998, 91,739 in 1994 and 101,845 in
1990. DuPage casts about 15 percent of the
statewide total in a primary. If both DuPage
Republicans run, they split their county's vote
and lose.
Murphy
has been an ardent critic of Stroger's sales tax
increase, and he advocated having northwest
suburban townships secede from Cook County. His
northwest suburban base casts about 35,000 votes.
Although
every Republican aspirant is a fiscal
conservative, Dillard is the most moderate
candidate, and Brady is the most conservative.
Dillard claims that he will make inroads
Downstate, and he will win a plurality in Lake and
McHenry counties and in Chicago. The Republicans
must choose between purity and electability.
But
is the Republican nomination worth anything? The
anticipated 2010 Republican ticket will consist of
a white man for governor, DuPage County State's
Attorney Joe Birkett for attorney general, state
Senator Dan Rutherford (R-53) of Pontiac for state
treasurer and former treasurer Judy Baar Topinka,
the loser to Rod Blagojevich in 2006, for
comptroller.
Republicans
are taking a huge risk in fielding a drab and
dreary, all-white and mostly male statewide
ticket. The party's U.S. Senate nominee likely
will be U.S. Representative Mark Kirk (R-10),
another white man. Will diversity trump fiscal
catastrophe as the key issue?
Emulating
John McCain in 2008, Republicans need to recruit a
bold and brassy Palin-type woman to run for
lieutenant governor and a black or Hispanic
candidate to run for secretary of state. No names
have surfaced. The only candidates for the number
two spot are Carbondale Mayor Brad Cole and state
Representative Dave Winters (R-68) of Rockford.
The
likely Democratic nominee for lieutenant governor
is Chicago state representative Art Turner (D-9),
and Secretary of State Jesse White will easily win
reelection. So even if Roland Burris gets trounced
in the U.S. Senate primary, there will be two
black candidates on the statewide ticket.
My
prediction: Republicans can win in 2010 if they
establish themselves as responsible agents of
change. They cannot win if they are isolated as a
bunch of bland, boring right-wing men, without
minority support. They need a Sarah Palin.