By Brian O'Connell on 9.11.09 @ 6:05AM
Rod Blagojevich tells his long, strange tale.
The Governor
By Rod
Blagojevich
(Phoenix Books, 264 pages, $24.95)
"I'm Icarus, who flew too close to the Sun. And I crashed to the
ground."
For a man who many believe is guilty of federal crimes, disgraced
former Illinois Gov. Rod Blagojevich has been anything but quiet.
He defiantly asserts his innocence in his book that hit stores
this week. Blagojevich uses numerous and probably excessive
historical and pop culture references -- comparing his plight to
Teddy Roosevelt, Jake LaMotta of Raging Bull, George
Bailey of It's a Wonderful Life, in addition to invoking
Greek mythology. He sees his political rise and fall as one large
Shakespearean tragedy -- exhibiting elements from Henry
IV, Henry V, Othello, King Lear,
Julius Caesar, and "throw in a little Richard the
Third."
Alas, he forgot to invoke Shakespeare's Hamlet. As his
trial approaches, it seems the man doth protest too much.
Rather than flying too close to the Sun, Blagojevich admits he
flew too close to real estate peddler Tony Rezko, his corrupt
father-in-law, Chicago Alderman Dick Mell, and an assortment of
other shady Chicago pols. But, as he reminds readers dozens of
times, "I did nothing wrong."
It takes nearly two-thirds of the book before Blagojevich
actually addresses the charges he is facing: that he tried to
sell Barack Obama's Senate seat to the highest bidder. Although
the kicker to the book claims, "Finally, the truth behind the
political scandal that continues to rock the nation," the former
governor spends most of book meandering from topic to topic --
devoting an entire chapter to his case for universal health care,
another to the trip he and Jesse Jackson took to Serbia to
negotiate the release of captured U.S. soldiers, and several
chapters to the blue collar, no nonsense upbringing he received
from his immigrant father.
When he finally does address the scandal, he asserts that it was
his corrupt father-in-law's business practices that attracted the
attention of the FBI. The wiretapped conversations, he says, were
taken out of context. Rather than "sell" the Senate seat, he only
wanted to barter it to strike a political deal whereby he
believed he could pass a public works project with House Speaker
Mike Madigan if he appointed his daughter, Attorney General Lisa
Madigan, to fill Obama's Senate seat. Only in that context, he
says, can his wiretapped remarks that his seat "is a f---ing
valuable thing, you just don't give it away for nothing" be
understood.
Even if one takes his explanation at face value, it wouldn't
absolve him of his using the Senate seat as a negotiating chip.
Rather than find the best candidate to represent Illinois, the
former governor was more interested in making either a financial
score or a political score. He claims he made the preliminary
decision to appoint Madigan after asking, "How much do I love the
people of Illinois?" Apparently, he didn't love them enough to
appoint someone not tied to his cynical agenda.
Given his unpopularity after his arrest, he claims it became too
difficult to act on the deal he'd bartered. That's when he
decided, "I wanted to appoint an African-American." He lists
several of the African Americans he considered, before finally
settling on Roland Burris. "I was about to make history," he
proudly declares, finding his selection of Burris as "altogether
fitting and proper" as anything attempted by Abraham Lincoln.
Throughout his book, Blagojevich makes sure to name-drop -- and
thus establish his ties to -- all the prominent Illinois
Democrats who have ascended to national power. He tells the story
of how he met Barack Obama -- their mutual friend Tony Rezko
introduced them in 1995. Senior adviser to the president David
Axelrod was his media consultant. He alleges that in one of the
conversations recorded by the FBI incoming Obama chief of staff
Rahm Emanuel called him to try to get him to appoint a
placeholder for Emanuel's congressional seat. Once eventually
back in Congress, Blagojevich writes, Emanuel would position
himself to become Speaker of the House.
Blagojevich contends that the embarrassing contents of such
wiretapped conversations with Emanuel, and many in the Illinois
legislature, are what largely kept them from being released or
from being heard at his impeachment hearings. What's more, he
argues, he was impeached by the legislature because it felt it
could co-opt now Governor Pat Quinn into raising taxes --
something Blagojevich had opposed.
In all, the book contains several interesting anecdotes and
stories of Chicago politics that one might find readable. Still,
at only 264 pages, without footnotes, endnotes, an index, and
with several typos and curse words, it seems a bit overpriced,
even if he's not giving copies away to readers for f---ing
nothing.