Rodney, We Hardly Knew Ye! By Henry J. Stern
Historic Land of Lincoln Takes a Turn for the Worse as Governor Goes Bananas in Corrupt, Obscene Tirade
Today’s newspapers describe the downfall of the Governor of Illinois, who was taped by Federal prosecutors in an obscene tirade about his intention to sell President-elect Barack Obama’s seat in the United States Senate to the highest bidder. The grossness and ludicrousness of the attempted crime, the vile language used by the perp, and the proximity of the case to the President-elect have made the matter a national scandal, despite the fact that there is no evidence that Mr. Obama knew of, or had anything to do with the Governor’s corruption.
Mr. Blagojevich’s
behavior could be described as the audacity of a dope.
The Daily News’
editorial cartoon today shows the Illinois Governor in prison stripes, standing
on an Olympic-style pedestal, in front of a sign declaring “world’s sleaziest
governor.” Blagojevich has dethroned Governor Spitzer, who is seen on the
floor clad in boxer shorts festooned with hearts, and Governor McGreevey, who
is simply lying on his stomach, which his back up.
If there were space
for a third runner up, the cartoon might have included Governor Rowland of Connecticut
Michael Goodwin
raises the Obama issue today in a News column on p35, OBAMA MUST EXPLAIN BLAGO TIES. His column faces the
editorial on p34, DIRTIER THAN THE BLACK SOX.
If any of you
didn’t know, the “Black Sox” is a reference to baseball’s biggest scandal, when
the Chicago White Sox threw the World Series to the Cincinnati Reds in
1919.
Chicago was also
the site of the St. Valentine’s Day massacre in 1929, the shooting of gangster
John Dillinger by FBI agents in 1934, the conviction of Al Capone for income
tax evasion in 1931, the Great Fire of 1873, the Republican convention in 1860
which nominated Abraham Lincoln, and the Democratic convention of 1968 (marred
by street violence and the police response). At that time, Richard J.
Daley was mayor. The current mayor is his son, Richard M. Daley.
The question some
people ask is: if the Governor was such a crook, as he appears to have been,
what did Senator Obama know about it? Furthermore, what, if anything, did
Obama do about it, and what could he possibly have done if he wanted ‘change’
in Illinois
This is the subject
of a piece by Mike McIntire and Jeff Zeleny in today’s New York Times, p33,
headed OBAMA’s EFFORT ON ETHICS BILL HAD ROLE IN GOVERNOR’S FALL.
It describes how Obama’s intervention in favor of state ethics reform in
September 2008, inadvertently led the Feds to wiretap Blagojevich’s
phone. Eventually, that effort yielded evidence of widespread corruption,
and prompted the criminal charges which were brought against the governor
yesterday.
It is agreed that
the President-elect had nothing to do with the attempted sale of his
seat. Mr. Obama supported a candidate, a black woman attorney named
Valerie Jarrett, who was highly regarded, but she did not bring a dowry to the
Governor’s table. On November 10th, the Governor said, of Obama, “this
motherfucker” wasn’t giving him a cabinet post, yet still expected him to
appoint his choice for senator. The Governor’s words do not suggest
enormous respect for his fellow Illinoisan. To head off any concerns over
past political ties to Blagojevich, Obama called for the Governor’s resignation
today, a day after the governor’s arrest.
Blagojevich’s dishonesty and erratic
behavior came out in his second term. His first four years were
relatively clean. His staff was professional. Some, in fact, were
recruited from New York City
What happened
within the Blagojevich administration after that is a mystery, but it appears
the governor followed a spiraling downward path. His defiance of the
Federal wiretappers, expressed on the phone shortly before he was arrested,
evokes former Senator Gary Hart’s challenge to reporters to follow him around
to check on his social life, during his 1988 campaign for the Democratic
presidential nomination to oppose George H. W. Bush.
A short time later,
Hart was photographed on a pleasure boat, aptly named “Monkey Business”,
consorting with a woman named Donna Rice. When asked which
candidate she supported, Ms. Rice could well have replied: “In my heart,
I am for Bush. But in my bush, I am for Hart.”
The widely
publicized sighting led to the complete collapse of Hart’s Presidential
campaign, just as former John Edwards’ betrayal of his cancer-stricken wife
terminated his own political ambitions (and made him the father of a baby
girl). New York Congressman Vito Fossella also fathered a daughter in an
extramarital affair with a woman he described as a “close friend.”
Fossella will finish out his remaining weeks in Congress before he faces a
different term: he may serve five days in a
From my own
experience with the late Queens Borough President Donald Manes, who committed
suicide in 1986 while facing corruption charges, it is often a very small
circle that knows what a senior politician is up to. Manes was ultimately
caught because a conspirator in Chicago
People who are not
in government often assume that when a political crook is caught, all the
insiders knew about it and covered up the criminality. That is not the case.
Most of an official’s staff doesn’t know anything about his crimes, and some
that are suspicious have no evidence they can present to the authorities.
Whistle blowers are often hounded by investigative agencies more anxious
to determine the source of rumors than to ascertain their accuracy.
One could describe
from personal experience the hazards of reporting suspicious behavior, but one
would risk litigation resulting from such disclosure.
P.S. This afternoon Congressman Jesse L. Jackson was outed as candidate No. 5, who sought the senate appointment from the governor. The Congressman denied the allegation. He had, however, met with the Governor the day before the Governor was arrested.
Henry J. Stern writes as StarQuest. Direct email to him at StarQuest@nycivic.org.
Peruse Mr. Stern’s writing at New York Civic.



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