Is
Gene Moore about to become the Michael Vick of
Cook County politics?
Vick,
the quarterback of the NFL Atlanta Falcons, was
indefinitely suspended after pleading guilty to
felony dog fighting charges.
Moore,
the county's recorder of deeds since 1999, has
committed what some consider a similarly egregious
sin: He lost his post as Proviso Township
Democratic committeeman in 2006. Therefore, in the
eyes of many ward and township Democratic
committeemen, he is not deemed worthy of being
reslated as recorder.
Moore's
partisans are enraged, and they are busily heaping
abuse on Cook County Circuit Court Clerk Dorothy
Brown, who is not a committeeman. How can Brown be
reslated, they ask, after she ran for mayor in
2007 against Rich Daley? Is this not treachery,
perfidy or disloyalty to such a degree that she
should be dumped? By comparison, is not Moore's
"sin" inconsequential?
Party
slatemaking is set for Sept. 7 and 8, and until
mid-August, Moore looked like a goner. State
Representative Karen Yarbrough (D-7) of Maywood,
who beat Moore for township committeeman in 2006,
wanted to be recorder. She lined up commitments
from 28 of 30 suburban committeemen, and she had
the support of Illinois House Speaker Mike Madigan,
the powerful 13th Ward committeeman, who always
helps his members. But despite her solid suburban
base and the likelihood that white Chicago
committeemen would endorse her, Yarbrough, who is
black, abruptly withdrew from the race.
With
similar abruptness, Alderman Ed Smith (28th)
entered the race. Smith, age 62, is a strong ally
of Daley and a towering figure on the West Side.
He broke into politics in 1983 as a Harold
Washington supporter, and he has been re-elected
alderman six times. He's been the ward's
Democratic committeeman since 1984. Of the city's
50 ward Democratic committeemen, 23 are aldermen.
That gives Smith a huge base of support.
But,
according to party insiders, Smith may have
emerged too late. Suburban committeemen who
aligned themselves with suburbanite Yarbrough are
not inclined to back Chicagoan Smith. In fact,
many feel betrayed. Why did Yarbrough quit? Was
she simply a stalking horse for Smith?
There
remains substantial resistance to Moore, age 65,
of Maywood. He is a political drone. He does his
duty, which is the recording, microfilming and
posting online of roughly one million deeds,
mortgages, releases and liens filed annually, and
he will do so until he's dumped or dies. He will
not use his office as a steppingstone, as did
predecessors Jesse White (1992 to 1999) and Carol
Moseley Braun (1988 to 1992).
Yarbrough's
argument, now embraced by Smith, is that an
insider -- meaning a committeeman -- should be the
recorder. That may not be persuasive.
Moore
has been the record since January of 1999, when he
succeeded White, who had been elected Illinois
secretary of state. John Stroger, then the Cook
County Board president, delivered the votes to
elect Moore as White's replacement. Moore was a
state representative, a loyal cog in Madigan's
Springfield machine and a close ally of Stroger.
Moore was elected to the Illinois House in 1992,
and he was elected the Proviso Township Democratic
committeeman in 1998, beating incumbent Gary
Marinaro 6,883-3,935.
Moore
was nominated as recorder without opposition in
2000, and he was renominated without opposition in
2004.
But
the recorder's office, in the pantheon of county
offices, is the runt of the litter. With an annual
budget of $13 million and 275 employees, it's not
an office in which the holder can build a
political machine.
Moore
tried, but failed. In 2002 he beat Yarbrough
for committeeman by 9,073-7,911, getting 53.4
percent of the vote. In 2005 his anti-Yarbrough
allies, the so-called "Mighty Mayoral
Machine," consisting of the white mayors of
Melrose Park, Brookfield, Berkeley, Bellwood,
Broadview and LaGrange Park, fielded a slate for
eight township offices, including Mari Harrell for
supervisor. Harrell lost to Republican incumbent
Kathy Ryan, but the slate won seven of the other
eight township offices. That should have provided
Moore with a political base.
However,
Yarbrough's husband, Henderson, was elected mayor
of Maywood, getting just 31 percent of the vote,
while Moore's candidate got 16 percent.
In 2006
Moore got pulverized. He obviously had no base.
Yarbrough beat him for committeeman by
9,746-7,045, getting 58 percent of the vote.
Moore's vote dropped by 2,208 from 2002, while
Yarbrough's increased by 1,835. In the Democratic
primary for state representative against
Yarbrough, Moore backed his ally, Proviso Township
High School District 209 Board of Education
President Chris Welch. Yarbrough obliterated him,
getting 9,825 votes (73.3 percent of the total) to
Welch's 3,574.
Cook
County is now habitually Democratic. All of the 17
countywide offices are occupied by Democrats. The
three Board of Review commissioners are Democrats,
even though one seat is wholly suburban. Of the 17
county commissioners, each elected from a
single-member district, just five are Republicans.
Of
the "Big Eight" posts -- County Board
president, sheriff, assessor, treasurer, clerk,
circuit court clerk, state's attorney, and
recorder -- five are held by white Democrats and
three are held by black Democrats (board
president, court clerk and recorder). Of the
eight, Moore is the only suburbanite. Two off the
eight are women. Of the so-called "Big
Four," three of the most powerful and
patronage-heavy spots -- board president, sheriff,
assessor and state's attorney -- are held by white
Democrats, while County Board President Todd
Stroger is widely regarded as a puppet of county
Commissioner John Daley and the Democratic
majority on the board.
Interestingly,
only Todd Stroger among the countywide
officeholders is a Democratic committeeman. He
succeeded his late father in the 8th Ward. But
Sheriff Tom Dart and Assessor Jim Houlihan are
sponsored out of the Southwest Side 19th Ward, and
retiring State's Attorney Dick Devine is a protege
of Mayor Daley. County Clerk David Orr beat a
slated Democratic committeeman in 1990, and Clerk
of Court Dorothy Brown, who is black, beat a
slated white alderman in 2000 (and ran against
Daley for mayor in 2007). Maria Pappas, a
pro-Daley independent, is the county treasurer.
In
terms of jobs, the board presidency, sheriff and
court clerk are critical. In terms of contracts
(and campaign contributions), the board president
is critical, and in terms of property tax
assessments and reductions (and campaign
contributions), the assessor and Board of Review
are critical, but the recorder's office is not
critical.
Yarbrough,
before withdrawing, shopped around the story that
Moore, as owner of EMM Associates, allegedly
billed School District 209, where ally Chris Welch
is president, $18,000 a month in premiums for many
years for supplemental health insurance coverage
for teachers and employees. If not a scandal, that
could be construed as questionable conduct.
Smith
may pounce on the issue, but Moore has two
persuasive arguments: First, that he's run the
recorder's office in a competent, business-like,
scandal-free manner, and second, that he's the
only suburbanite among the "Big Eight."
My
prediction: Moore is in a win-win situation. If he
is dumped he can blame the white committeemen and
run as an "independent reformer," much
as Brown did in 2000, tying his campaign to Barack
Obama's for the presidency and to Howard Brookins'
for state's attorney. He can lambaste Smith as a
puppet of Daley and the white establishment. If
Moore is slated, Smith won't run, and Moore's in.
Expect Moore to be reslated.
32nd
Ward (Wicker Park, south Lakeview, Ukrainian
Village): Ted Matlak is emerging as a veritable
glutton for punishment. After losing his bid for
re-election as alderman in 2007 by 122 votes and
spending in excess of $700,000, the hapless Matlak
is being set up for another fall.
According
to party sources, the resignation of beleaguered
32nd Ward Democratic Committeeman Terry Gabinski
has been tendered, and Matlak will be named as his
successor when the party slatemakers convene on
Sept. 5. Gabinski, who was an alderman from 1968
to 1999, called in all his markers to rescue
Matlak in 2007 and failed; now he's calling in his
markers to get his party colleagues to pick Matlak.
State
Representative John Fritchey (D-11), who is
visible and popular in the ward, is already
running for committeeman in 2008. He wants to
solidify his political base in preparation for a
run for Illinois attorney general in 2010.
Gabinski knows Fritchey would beat him and is
bailing out.
Fritchey
has his own precinct operation, plenty of money
and the support of Alderman Scott Waguespack
(32nd) and his independent precinct organization.
If Matlak gets close to 35 percent of the vote, it
will be a miracle.
41st
Ward (Norwood Park, Edison Park, Oriole Park,
Edgebrook): Like the "Energizer Bunny,"
Ralph Capparelli keeps going and going. "I'm
running again" for ward Democratic
committeeman, said the 82-year-old Capparelli, who
served 34 years in the Illinois House. That's
great news for the ward's Republicans, as
Capparelli has no precinct organization. Alderman
Brian Doherty (41st) and state Representative Mike
McAuliffe (R-20) will continue to get a free pass.
Capparelli faces Frank Coconate and Mary O'Connor
in the primary.