The
proverbial cow pie has hit the proverbial fan in
the Northwest Side 45th Ward.
Alderman
Pat Levar's worst nightmare has materialized: His
top aldermanic aide, Terry Boyke, has resigned and
is running against Levar in 2007. Boyke, age 41,
was on Levar's staff for 6 years, and he has been
a Democratic precinct captain for 16 years.
Boyke
intends to portray Levar, age 55, as ill,
ineffectual, inattentive, complacent and intending
to resign during his next term and hand off the
job to his son, Pat Levar Jr. "He is not seen
and is not heard," Boyke said. "There's
been scandal after scandal in city government.
It's time for a new energy level in the 45th Ward.
It's time for a change."
Levar
suffers from diabetes and back disc problems, and
Boyke said that he has repeatedly muttered that
he's "sick of the job." When Levar tried
for a promotion in 2000 as the slated candidate
for clerk of the Circuit Court, he got trounced in
the Democratic primary by Dorothy Brown
216,631-123,309, getting 27.5 percent of the vote
to finish a distance second in a four-way race.
Afterward, rumors swirled that Levar blamed 45th
Ward Democratic Committeeman Tom Lyons, the Cook
County Democratic chairman, for not doing enough
to get him nominated.
As
for Boyke, Levar views his candidacy as nothing
short of perfidious. "I treated him like a
member of my family," said the alderman.
"He was a city tree-trimmer when I hired him.
I taught him much. He made $59,000 a year. He told
me he was quitting to become a builder and
developer. He lied to me. I am very
disappointed."
Levar
said that he is healthy and that he is "on
call 24/7," adding that he may be
"occasionally frustrated" by his job but
that still enjoys it, is not ready to quit, and
"still has much to do" in terms of ward
projects. The alderman pledged to serve his full
4-year term if he is re-elected. As for his son,
"I see a bright future for him," Levar
said. As for his 2000 countywide defeat, Levar
acknowledges that he was the "wrong candidate
at the wrong time." "I don't blame
anybody for my loss," he said.
In
most Chicago wards the alderman is the Democratic
committeeman, and thus atop the political heap. In
the 45th Ward, the heap is occupied by a trio of
Democrats:
*Levar,
who first was elected alderman in 1987 with 54.5
percent of the vote over incumbent Gerry
McLaughlin and re-elected in 1991 (82 percent),
1995 (68.6 percent), 1999 (unopposed) and 2003 (65
percent). The alderman's father, Joe Levar, has
been a precinct captain in the Six Corners area
for almost 50 years, and his brother, Tom Levar,
is the ward's former sanitation superintendent. In
1986 Levar, then an employee of the Circuit Court
clerk and a longtime precinct captain, won a
precinct captain "convention" to be the
organization's choice to face McLaughlin, who beat
Lyons' alderman, Dick Clewis, in 1983.
*Tom
Lyons, age 75, who has been the committeeman since
1968. An attorney, Lyons was a state senator in
1965-66 and 1971-72, and he lost a bid for state
attorney general in 1972. A longtime ally of Rich
Daley, Lyons backed Daley in the tempestuous 1983
mayoral primary and carried his ward 15,920-14,309
for Daley over Jane Byrne, with 483 votes for
Harold Washington. With Byrne out of City Hall,
Lyons rallied his troops and dodged a bullet in
1984. In that year's committeeman race, Lyons got
10,609 votes (48 percent of the total), to 7,152
(33 percent) for McLaughlin and 3,331 (15 percent)
for John Donovan. Donovan, Byrne's Department of
Streets and Sanitation commissioner, surely would
have beaten Lyons in 1984 had Byrne been mayor.
Lyons
had heart bypass surgery in April, and he is
rarely seen in the ward or at his law office. His
term as committeeman runs through 2008.
*Joe
Lyons, age 55, Tom's cousin, id a veteran precinct
captain who was first elected state representative
in 1996 and who has been easily re-elected since.
He is part of the House Democratic leadership as
an assistant majority leader. He makes no secret
of his desire to spend another decade or two in
Springfield, perhaps rising to be majority leader
or speaker. Lyons has long been a double dipper,
holding the job of manager of training and
education of the Cook County Department of Human
Resources.
It
is presumed that Joe Lyons will become
committeeman when Tom Lyons retires.
And
now along comes Boyke, upsetting the apple cart.
"A lot of (45th Ward Democratic organization)
precinct captains will be supporting me,"
Boyke claimed. "They're tired of Levar.
They're demoralized by city scandals. They resent
the idea that the alderman's job is hereditary.
And they don't want young Pat to succeed old
Pat."
Boyke's
logic is flawed. To be sure, the mayor appoints a
new alderman should a vacancy arise. If the
vacancy occurs before the mid-point of the 4-year
term, a special election is held, so the
presumption is that Levar would resign some time
after April of 2009. But if Daley is mayor, he
surely would consult with Tom Lyons and not let
Levar dictate a successor. Of course, that
presumes that Lyons is still committeeman in 2009.
What if Lyons retires in 2008, and Levar, after
winning re-election in 2007, runs for the post and
wins? Then he's atop the heap.
Boyke
thinks that the Lyons' faction captains will
switch to him to beat Levar in 2007 and save Tom
Lyons in 2008. That's absurd. They remember
McLaughlin. If Boyke beats Levar, the temptation
to run for Democratic committeeman in 2008 and
consolidate his political base would be
irresistible.
"Tom
is running for re-election," insisted Levar.
"I support him."
Boyke
hopes for a one-on-one race against Levar on Feb.
27, figuring that outsiders could flood the ward
in an April runoff. Two other candidates may run:
Dave Haynes, a police officer and the ward's
Republican committeeman, and Bob Bank, a board
member of the Jefferson Park Neighborhood
Association, who got a measly 23 percent of the
vote for committeeman against Lyons in 2004.
"I
have never been in a runoff," Levar boasted.
"I will have a majority." Levar got
15,615 votes in 1987, 15,850 in 1991, 10,842 in
1995, 14,199 in 1999, 6,883 in the 2000 clerk
primary and 8,667 in 2003. "He's clearly
losing support," Boyke said. That's the
"Pucinski Syndrome": Over time, voter
fatigue sets in with any alderman. Roman Pucinski,
who was the 41st Ward alderman for 18 years, lost
in 1991. Levar probably has a rock-solid
7,500-vote base. To win, Boyke needs a turnout of
well over 15,000.
Boyke
hopes to raise $100,000 for his race, but,
surprisingly, the "L&L Boys" aren't
too flush. As of July 1, Levar's campaign account
had $45,281, the 45th Ward Democrats $2,483 and
Joe Lyons $61,685. They better get busy.
On
issues, Boyke must tread a fine line. He boasts
about his knowledge of ward issues and his ability
to push the right buttons in City Hall, but,
having worked for Levar, he can't criticize
Levar's ward service operation. He must criticize
Levar personally.
Boyke
said he is a "full-time candidate" and
that he would be a "full-time alderman."
"I will be accessible," he said. "I
will invite the residents to be part of the
decision-making process." Boyke promised to
create a zoning advisory board composed of
community leaders to get input on residential and
commercial zoning matters and to have
"frequent town hall meetings" throughout
ward.
In
particular, Boyke referred to the $1.32 million
allocated annually to each ward for infrastructure
and capital improvements. "(Levar) spends
virtually all of it on resurfacing streets and
alleys, even if they don't need it," Boyke
said. "I will go to every community and ask
people how they want their money spent."
Boyke
said he also will focus on revitalizing the
Portage Park and Jefferson Park shopping
districts. He said that people want to shop in
their neighborhood but that they are deterred
because of parking problems and lack of variety.
"They've revived the commercial district in
Ravenswood," Boyke said. "We can do it
here."
Boyke's
first test will occur on Sept. 19, the first day
to circulate petitions. It takes fewer than 300
signatures to get on the ballot for alderman, and
the ward has 30,666 registered voters. In
September of 2002, Democratic precinct captains
(including Boyke) scoured the ward on the first
day and gathered almost 12,000 signatures for
Levar. The signature of a voter who later signs
for another candidate is invalid. On that pretext,
Levar challenged police officer Mike Lappe's
petitions, and Lappe withdrew.
"I
will have 40 people on the street, and I will get
3,000 signatures," Boyke said.
The
early outlook: Lyons' organization suffers some
decrepitude. Gone are the days when it could
muster seven workers in each of the ward's 53
precincts. The organization's members don't want
an outsider (like McLaughlin) as alderman, and
they definitely don't want an
insider-turned-outsider (like Boyke) as alderman.
There is Levar fatigue in the ward, but he is
still the early favorite to win.