By Philip Klein on 12.10.08 @ 6:11AM
The Rod Blagojevich scandal raises a number of important
questions about our next president.
Does what happens in Chicago stay in Chicago?
Tuesday's arrest of Illinois Gov. Rod Blagojevich on charges that
included trying to sell President-elect Barack Obama's U.S.
Senate seat has brought renewed national attention to the state's
corrupt political culture while creating a headache for the
incoming administration.
Blagojevich's declaration, recorded by wiretap, that a Senate
seat "is a fu--ing valuable thing, you don't just give it away
for nothing," is sure to enter the political scandal lexicon
along with Larry Craig's "I have a wide stance" and Marion
Barry's "the bitch set me up."
In a press conference, prosecutor Patrick Fitzgerald emphasized
that the 76-page complaint against Gov. Blagojevich contained "no
allegations" against Obama. In fact, the document quotes
Blagojevich using an Oedipus-themed
slur in reference to Obama, and the governor lamented that
the President-elect wasn't willing to dole out bribes to secure
the Senate seat for his preferred candidate.
Nonetheless, the wide-ranging scandal, which also included
charges that Blagojevich tried to shake down a children's
hospital and have an editor removed from the Chicago
Tribune, raises a number of important questions about our
next president. The most immediate is whether Obama or any of his
representatives had any interaction with Blagojevich over the
past month regarding the Senate vacancy.
On this point, there is already some uncertainty.
"I had no contact with the governor or his office and so I was
not aware of what was happening," Obama told reporters in the
wake of Tuesday's indictment.
But soon after his statement, ABC's Jake Tapper
posted video of a November 23 interview in which senior
adviser David Axelrod said of Obama's involvement that "I know
he's talked to the governor."
Later in the day, Axelrod claimed he was "mistaken" in the
interview.
The scandal has also drawn attention to Obama's relationship with
Blagojevich, which Obama's defenders say is tangential, while
other evidence suggests otherwise.
In a July New Yorker
article, reporter Ryan Lizza quotes Obama's chief of staff
designate, Rahm Emanuel, as saying that he and Obama served as
key advisers to Blagojevich in his run for governor, along with
two other campaign staffers. "We basically laid out the general
election, Barack and I and these two,” Emanuel said, according to
the magazine.
Lizza goes on to write that "a spokesman for Blagojevich
confirmed Emanuel’s account, although David Wilhelm, who now
works for Obama, said that Emanuel had overstated Obama’s role.
'There was an advisory council that was inclusive of Rahm and
Barack but not limited to them,' Wilhelm said, and he disputed
the notion that Obama was 'an architect or one of the principal
strategists.'"
What is clear is that Obama endorsed and campaigned for
Blagojevich in 2002. In June of that year, he
told Jeff Berkowitz, a local television interviewer, that his
"main focus is to make sure that we elect Rod Blagojevich as
governor," and when asked whether he was working hard for him,
Obama responded, "you betcha."
Some of Obama's signature moves could be seen in Blagojevich's
2002 campaign: promising change and reform, tying his Republican
opponent (Jim Ryan) to the unpopular Republican incumbent (George
Ryan), and turning his unusual name into an asset and source of
humor.
"How can you replace one Ryan with another Ryan and call that
change?" Blagojevich asked at a rally that summer at the Illinois
State Fair, according to an Associated Press account at the time.
"You want change? Elect a guy named Blagojevich! Now that's
change."
Obama also endorsed Blagojevich for reelection, even as the
governor was embroiled in a controversy over hiring. "If the
governor asks me to work on his behalf, I'll be happy to do it,"
Obama told the Chicago Daily Herald in July 2006.
Obama's past political support for Blagojevich should renew
concerns about the incoming president's pattern of troubling
associations, or at least, his willingness to look the other way
in the face of wrongdoing if it's in his political interests at
the time.
Such was the case when he accepted fundraising and other favors
from convicted businessman Tony Rezko even after the developer's
dealings were under public scrutiny, and when he derived
political benefits from his decades-long membership in Jeremiah
Wright's church, tuning out the pastor's disturbing views.
Thus far, most of Obama's top appointments have not come from the
world of Chicago politics, but there are prominent exceptions,
including Axelrod, Emanuel, and Valerie Jarrett, who worked for
Chicago Mayor Richard Daley and will serve as a senior adviser in
the Obama White House.
The looming question concerning the new administration is whether
Obama could have thrived in a corrupt political environment that
routinely produces the likes of Blagojevich without picking up a
few tricks along the way.
topics:
Barack Obama, Corruption, Rod Blagojevich