An end to the Mayor Daley show after 21 years
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On a day that marks the start of the traditional fall election season, the biggest political shocker is unrelated to the November election: Chicago Mayor Richard M. Daley won鈥檛 seek a sixth reelection in 2011.
It鈥檚 hard to imagine Chicago without a Daley at the helm 鈥 a situation that has been the reality for fewer than 13 of the past 55 years. This Christmas, in fact, Mayor Daley will break the record his father, Richard J. Daley, set of 21 years in office.
鈥淚n the end this is a personal decision, no more, no less,鈥 Daley said in his announcement at City Hall, where he appeared with his wife and adult children, saying he was 鈥渞eady with my family to begin the new phase of our lives.鈥 Simply put, he added, 鈥渋t鈥檚 time for me, it鈥檚 time for Chicago to move on.鈥
But while his news stunned the political set both in Chicago and nationally, pundits are quickly scrambling to begin handicapping an election without Daley, who 鈥 despite occasional rumblings of corruption and falling approval ratings 鈥 has always been a virtual shoo-in.
The most intriguing suggestion: Obama Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel, who told Charlie Rose that he would one day love to run for mayor of Chicago, provided Daley left office voluntarily. So far, Mr. Emanuel, who has said he plans to stay in his White House post for at least another year, whether he's interested.
Other possibilities: Cook County Sheriff Tom Dart, Cook County , and a slew of Chicago aldermen.
Under Daley, Chicago has run like clockwork, thanks largely to his virtually monolithic control and a guaranteed rubber stamp from a compliant City Council, though many Chicagoans have chafed at his perceived dictatorship. In one famous (or infamous) Daley move, he was frustrated by the lack of momentum in his efforts to shut down the Meigs Field airstrip in the city and turn it into a park. So he sent bulldozers in during the middle of the night to gouge X鈥檚 across the field. He later justified his actions as motivated due to post-9/11 safety concerns.
Time magazine in 2005 named him the best big-city mayor in the country, and despite his connections to various scandals or rumors of corruption, Daley has largely enjoyed widespread popularity. During his last three elections he won with more than 70 percent of the vote. That has fallen lately, with a poll this summer showing him with just a rating.
He鈥檒l certainly be leaving a strong physical mark on the city he adores. Among the changes to Chicago that are directly attributable to Daley: Millennium Park, renovations to Navy Pier, the O鈥橦are Airport terminals, Soldier Field, and the rebuilding of State Street and Museum Campus. The city under Daley became greener, and sprouted 鈥済reen roofs鈥 鈥 including at City Hall 鈥 and thousands more trees. Notorious public housing towers came down. And dozens of schools have been shuttered and reopened under his ambitious 鈥淩enaissance 2010鈥 plan.
President Obama, a Chicago resident, said in a statement Tuesday: "No mayor in America has loved a city more or served a community with greater passion than Rich Daley. He helped build Chicago鈥檚 image as a world-class city, and leaves a legacy of progress that will be appreciated for generations to come."
One seeming certainty about the next mayor: It will be a Democrat. The last time Chicago elected a Republican mayor was when William Hale Thompson was elected in 1927.