CHICAGO
It was one of the most bizarre squanderings of presidential power
and prestige in memory.
In a last minute decision, President Obama flew off to
Copenhagen, Denmark, on October 1 to lobby for his adopted hometown
of Chicago’s 2016 Olympic bid. Only a few days before he had
lamented that he wouldn’t be able to go because of his urgent
commitment to fight for his health care bill. Then suddenly he
reversed course and made a frenzied flight to appear before the
International Olympic Committee as Pitchman in Chief for
Chicago.
It ended badly. Chicago didn’t even make it past the first round
of voting, garnering only 18 of the 94 votes cast on the first
ballot. The president was stung by criticism that he was taking
time out of his schedule to flack for the Olympics even though at
this critical juncture he had had only one telephone conversation
with General Stanley McChrystal, the commander of U.S. forces in
Afghanistan. So Obama hastily convened a 25-minute meeting with
General McChrystal on board Air Force One on the tarmac of the
airport in Copenhagen.
Flying home from Copenhagen he then received word that the U.S.
unemployment rate had risen to 9.8 percent, highlighting once again
just how off-target the president’s Olympic aim had been.
It wasn’t even as if the Olympics had been popular in Chicago.
The last Chicago Tribune poll taken just before the IOC
meeting found only 47 percent of residents backing the city’s bid
in the wake of Mayor Richard Daley’s decision to put taxpayers on
the hook for any cost overruns. Liberal columnist Margaret Carlson
noted that the Chicago citizenry was understandably wary because it
had seen this movie before: “So many cities have wooed a national
team to town, issued bonds to pay for a stadium and watched as
wealthy patrons on expense accounts scooped up the skyboxes for
clients.”
But the fact that Mayor Daley wanted the Olympics was all that
mattered. He had staked his legacy on snagging the games. The
67-year-old mayor has dominated the city for the past two decades,
but recent scandals and financial strains have dented his prestige.
His approval rating tumbled into the 30s this summer as more
scandals involving city contracting came to light. “The mayor’s
ability to continue to run the city as he sees fit could hinge in
great part on whether the Olympics bid succeeds,” reported the
Chicago Tribune.
That’s why Chicago sources tell me Mayor Daley pulled out all
the stops to mobilize Team Obama to save the city’s bid. He was
aided in his appeals by the fact that the White House is now
stuffed with top aides who are Daley loyalists, ranging from
Valerie Jarrett to David Axelrod to Rahm Emanuel.
“Obama’s sudden decision to go to Copenhagen showed the
staggering importance of the games to the Daley machine,” one
influential Chicago lawyer told me. “It also demonstrates that for
all of Mr. Obama’s protestations that he is independent of the
Daley machine, there is a leash that runs from the 5th floor of
City Hall to the Oval Office.”
Indeed, one of the back-stories behind the Olympics bid is the
extent to which the Daley machine was counting on the games to
enable Chicago to clear out “undesirable” neighborhoods on the
city’s South Side and allow developers to extend the city’s fabled
Gold Coast southward — all in the name of urban renewal.
Developers and other politically connected entities were salivating
at the prospect of huge public works projects being commissioned —
all with a price tag that would read, “Cost Plus Corruption.”
That helps explain why the mayor was able to assemble such a
large crowd on the day of the Olympics decision in front of the
Richard J. Daley Center, conveniently located on Richard J. Daley
Plaza in downtown Chicago. The pep rally was filled with city
workers given time off to attend. They were joined by employees of
compliant companies that do business with the city of Chicago. Many
of the attendees were decked out in orange “Chicago 2016” T-shirts
distributed in advance by Daley’s minions.
Pro-Olympics banners were flying, and supportive signs and
posters, many skillfully produced to look homemade, were handed out
from rented trucks.
Music was blaring, speeches by Oprah Winfrey, Obama, and Daley
filled giant video monitors, and the cheerleaders were working
overtime. The crowd was pumped, convinced the Olympics was coming
to Chicago.
It all came to a crashing halt at 10:30 that morning when word
spread that Chicago hadn’t even mustered enough strength to go to a
second ballot. Some in the crowd were disappointed in the way many
people are when a local sports franchise loses. But others — used
to seeing the Daley machine get its way — were angry. A friend of
mine was in Daley Plaza, and collected some of their comments:
“I don’t believe it. President Obama told them to give the
Olympics to Chicago.”
“Mayor Daley is going to be really mad.”
Poptropica | 4.7.10 @ 11:28PM
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