Almost
20 years after the collapse of the Soviet Union
and of communist domination of Eastern Europe,
"perestroika" -- the attempt by Soviet
Premier Mikhail Gorbachev to restructure that
country's economy which paved the way for the fall
of communism -- has finally arrived in the 46th
Ward.
Long
derided as the "Uptown Commune" and
driven by Alderman Helen Shiller's vociferous
soak-the-rich, share-the-wealth, feed-the-poor
philosophy, the forces of Marxism-Leninism reigned
supreme until recently. Shiller and her erstwhile
allies such as Slim Coleman and his Heart of
Uptown coalition, once would have joyously
welcomed the ward becoming an appendage of Cuba or
some other "people's socialist
revolutionary" country. Now, incredibly,
Shiller is doing a Gorbachev and capitulating to
capitalism.
Rampaging
free enterprise, as exemplified by the eradication
of low-income housing and their replacement by
upscale condos and two-flats, is epidemic in the
46th Ward. After decades of obstructionist tactics
designed to delay or impede zoning changes and
opposition to the elimination of taverns by voting
precincts dry, Shiller has adjusted to reality,
namely, that her ward cannot forever remain a
Third World state.
Every
wealthy property owner's entry into the ward,
which precipitates the exit of some
"poor" renter or homeless shelter
dweller, causes Shiller's political base to
wither. The anti-Shiller "haves" are
inexorably outnumbering Shiller's
"have-nots." Shiller was re-elected to
her fifth term in 2003 by 1,704 votes, getting 58
percent of the votes cast, a veritable landslide
given 46th Ward history. In that race, Shiller's
foe was Democratic Committeeman Sandra Reed, who
had Mayor Rich Daley's endorsement. Reed also ran
in 1999, and Shiller won by 1,250 votes (55.5
percent). In 1995 Shiller beat Democratic
Committeeman Bob Kuzas by 1,528 votes (57
percent), in 1991 she beat Mike Quigley (now a
county commissioner) by 961 votes (52.9 percent),
and she won her first term in 1987 by ousting
incumbent Jerry Orbach by 498 votes (51.3
percent).
Shiller's
vote trajectory appears to be upward, as her
winning percentages are increasing. But the
reality is that her raw vote has decreased. She
had 9,751 votes in 1987, 8,613 in 1991, 5,988 in
1995, 6,272 in 1999 and 6,240 in 2003. Shiller's
base vote is about 6,000, and it is declining
slightly.
But,
as Shiller, age 59, contemplates her prospects in
the 2007 election, optimism reigns. That's because
she has:
(A)
Made an alliance with that flaming capitalist,
Mayor Rich Daley, whom she supports on most City
Council issues. She endorsed Daley in 2003, even
though he endorsed Reed. She will do likewise in
2007, and Daley will endorse her.
(B)
Got the mayor to back her signature ward
redevelopment project, the Wilson Yard at Montrose
Avenue and Broadway, which will contain 5 acres of
commercial property and 500
"mixed-income" residential units.
Opponents, such as the Uptown Neighborhood
Council, are livid about the project's rental
subsidies, public funding and unfocused commercial
aspect. An Aldi store will lease space, but Target
has yet to confirm, and the idea of movie theaters
has collapsed. The city's planning department is
proceeding to approve permits.
And
(C) got her ally, Tom Sharpe, elected the ward's
Democratic committeeman in 2004. Shiller and
Sharpe were supporters of Harold Washington back
in 1983, and Sharpe lost a bid for 1st Ward
alderman in 1991. He moved to Uptown in 1996, and
he filed to run against Reed in 2004. His
attorneys challenged Reed's nominating petitions,
and she was disqualified, so Sharpe won the
committeemanship unopposed. "Helen never
wanted to be committeeman, and now we have united
all Democrats in the ward," said Sharpe, who
is a county management analyst. Sharpe said his
organization will back the Daley-Shiller ticket in
2007.
With
Reed's removal, in only one of the 50 wards are
the alderman and the Democratic committeeman
antagonists: the South Side 2nd Ward, where
Alderman Madeline Haithcock has long feuded with
Democratic Committeeman (and U.S. Representative)
Bobby Rush. In 2004 Alderman Gene Schulter (47th)
finally won the ward committeemanship after Ed
Kelly's retirement, and Sharpe took Reed's place
in the 46th Ward.
For
decades, Shiller was a loose cannon in City Hall,
with her own foreign policy. She backed crackpot
schemes like making her ward a "nuclear-free
zone," which probably prompted the former
Soviet Union to re-target their ICBM's north of
Lawrence Avenue or west of Clark Street. She also
introduced council resolutions to condemn South
African apartheid and aid to the Nicaraguan
contras and to increase funding for AIDS research.
Of
late, Shiller has supported slavery reparations,
enforcing the Shakman decree to ban political
hiring, the smoking ban and "set asides"
for affordable housing, and she opposed the Iraq
War (supporting immediate troop withdrawal), the
Patriot Act and the construction of Wal-Mart
stores in the 21st and 37th wards. She supported
the mayor's $5.1 billion 2005 budget, even though
she had been a lone vote in opposition to the
budget for decades.
According
to Sharpe, Daley will endorse Shiller in 2007, and
Shiller, despite all of the ethics problems in
Daley's administration, will endorse the mayor.
Nevertheless,
there is discontent in the ward, which extends
from roughly Lawrence to Addison Street east of
Clark. Buena Park, the area between Irving Park
Road and Montrose, from Sheridan Road west, has
long been a haven for crime, such as drug sales
and prostitution; it also has a large homeless
population and numerous shelters. That's changing,
as young professionals flock into the northeast
corner of the ward near Broadway and Lawrence,
which elevates property values to the west. Soon
the shelters -- which provide Shiller with a solid
vote -- will be history.
Likewise,
the expanse of Lakefront condominiums along
Sheridan Road from Addison (3600 north) to
Lawrence (4800 north) is gradually filling with
affluent younger people who are replacing older
Jewish residents. Shiller is Jewish, and those
elderly condo owners have been loyal backers. That
base is now evaporating.
Another
key component of Shiller's political base has been
gays, who make up about 15 percent of the ward's
population. Shiller has been a fervent supporter
of gay rights.
Many
of those living in the ward's northwest corner
(Lawrence to Foster Avenue between Broadway and
Clark) occupy single-family dwellings and
two-flats, and those buying rehabbed buildings or
new construction in Buena Park are vociferously
opposed to the Wilson Yards project. They view
mixed-income housing as low-income housing, which
undermines their property values. The leaders of
the Uptown Neighborhood Council are Randy Lehner
and Kathy Boyda. One could run for alderman. To
date, nobody has announced against Shiller in
2007.
Sharpe's
2007 game plan is simple: Wrap herself in the
cloak of Daley and the Democrats. Al Gore won the
46th Ward over George Bush in 2000 16,077-3,886,
getting 80.5 percent of the vote. John Kerry won
the ward in 2004 19,042-4,750 (80 percent). Voters
in the ward, both haves and have-nots, are
overwhelmingly liberal and Democratic. If Shiller
runs as a traditional liberal Democrat, she wins,
but the Bush vote makes a clear trend: The number
of affluent Republican voters is increasing.
For
2007, Shiller's opposition is as yet undetermined.
Reed, who is black, has been beaten twice, and she
no longer is the committeeman; she has lost her
credibility to run. Cindi Anderson, who got 10
percent of the vote in 1999, is not running, but
Katherine Nathan, who got 20 percent in that
election, might. "I don't expect any
significant opposition (to Shiller)," Sharpe
said.
The
key is turnout. It was 19,963 in the 2000
presidential election and 23,792 in 2004. In
aldermanic races it has declined from 19,004 in
1987, to 16,265 in 1991, to 11,294 in 1999 and to
10,776 in 2003. With Shiller's base around 6,000
votes, any 2007 foe needs a turnout in excess of
12,000. That won't happen.
The
early outlook: An anti-Daley "wave"
could jeopardize Shiller, especially since,
according to Dick Simpson's recent City Council
study, she has backed the mayor on 77 percent of
the council's votes over the past 5 years.
Longtime "independent" Shiller, now a
Daley stooge, will win her sixth term in 2007, but
it likely will be her last. By 2011 the ward's
"haves" will have enough votes to elect
a sympathetic alderman.
In
a related matter, U.S. Representative Jesse
Jackson Jr. (D-2) reportedly has decided not to
run against Daley for mayor in 2007. Northwest
Side Democratic Organization chairman Frank
Coconate, who said that Jackson announced his
decision in a late-June meeting, called Jackson
"spineless." "He could have
won," Coconate said. "Chicago voters are
ready for change."
Without
a credible anti-Daley contender, the opposition
forces will find it difficult to field anti-Daley
aldermanic candidates. Despite the plethora of
convictions in the Hired Truck scandal, Chicago's
"Teflon Mayor" looks like a winner in
2007.