By CHARLES B. CLEVELAND
Chicago |
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FOR YEARS there was speculation among politicians and columnists on who would succeed Mayor Richard J. Daley — but all of the guesses fell wide of the mark — not surprising considering the intricacies of big city politics, but surprising in another way. The succession story often mirrored the two previous times in Chicago history when a mayor died in office.
In 1933 Mayor Anton Cermak was the victim in an attempt to assassinate President-elect Franklin D. Roosevelt. Daley left no obvious successor; nor did Cermak, but two men stood out in both cases.
Patrick A. Nash had spent a lifetime
in politics. If the successor came from
politics directly, Nash was the likely
choice.
The other major contender was John
S. Clark, father of the present Illinois
Supreme Court justice. Clark, then 42,
had been elected to the city council in
1917 and, 10 years later, had reached the
top of that body — chairman of the
finance committee which gave him
power of city budgets, jobs and spending; almost — but not quite — the power
of a mayor. Precedent was with Clark. When
Carter Harrison — the first mayor to die
in office — was assassinated in 1893, his
successor was picked from the city
council and the man chosen was chairman of the finance committee, the job
Clark now held. Even more important
Clark had the votes —28 out of 50
members. It appeared cut-and-dried. When party leaders met at their
Morrison Hotel headquarters on the
Sunday following Cermak's death,
Clark made no effort to block Nash's
election as county chairman. He was out
after the big job and, if he won, Nash's
role as party chairman would be a
figurehead. Two days later the city
council was scheduled to meet in special session to hear the city's attorney's
opinion on how the city should handle
the mayoral vacancy. Clark decided on a daring gamble. He
figured any delay would give Nash time
to undermine his support; Clark found a
little-known rule permitting any three
city council members to call a meeting.
With the help of two backers he called a
meeting for 5 o'clock that afternoon,
just seven hours after the meeting to
hear legal opinions. Clark took one precaution: He issued
a lengthy statement to the public saying
he would serve only as temporary mayor
and pledged an early election (Michael
Bilandic, years later, also said he would
serve only as interim mayor). The legal meeting contained a surprise. The city's attorney, William
Sexton, reviewed what had happened 40
years earlier when Harrison died and the
city council named one of its members
as mayor. Sexton vetoed that concept
and ruled the council could only call a
special election. The Illinois General
Assembly, then in session in Springfield,
was the only body that could change
that law. This still left Clark in command; the
earliest possible date for a citywide
election was three months away. As
acting mayor, Clark could probably
meet any challenge Nash could devise.
And, come 5 o'clock and the second city
council meeting of the day, Clark would
have his 28 votes and victory. Nash, however, had other plans. He
called a meeting for 2:30 in the afternoon of all ward committeemen, including, of course, Clark. But, while
Clark and others waited in the meeting
room, upstairs in a penthouse bungalow, Nash was conferring with the
state's attorney and other top leaders. It
was effective strategy. Clark couldn't
leave the meeting room for fear Nash
would arrive and outmaneuver him. At the penthouse meeting Nash
pulled a sleight-of-hand. He recommended the party pick an acting mayor — Frank J. Corr, a likeable but pliable alderman. Nash went into the meeting with a signed letter of resignation from
Corr already in his pocket, a kind of
political insurance against any slipup. Meanwhile an old Republican friend
of Nash's, Roy O. West, had swung
some Republicans; pressure won others; there were persistent, but unproved,
charges that money was spent to influence votes. Whatever the reason, Clark no longer had 28 votes; where
once he had 10 Democrats now he had
five; once he had 18 Republicans and
one Independent, on roll call he had 11— and Corr was acting mayor. Still the battle wasn't over. There was; still the matter of a popular election, but
Nash had an answer for that too. There
was a bill pending in Springfield to fill
the vacancy for probate judge - a
vacancy caused when Henry Horner left
the bench to run, and win, for governor.
On the day Corr was named acting
mayor, Democratic Floor Leader Benjamin S. Adamowski (later elected
state's attorney as a Republican) introduced an amendment to the Horner
vacancy bill to permit the city council to
choose the mayor, either from its own
ranks or from outside as it saw fit. This meant no election at all for two
years. Clark had no power in Springfield; Republicans tried to exploit the
situation, but in vain. Newspapers and
civic groups supported the change.
Chicago, like the rest of the nation, was
in the depths of a major depression and
on the verge of bankruptcy. Now the decision reverted to the city
council and there was widespread
speculation Nash himself would take the
job. But Pat Nash had one more surprise
up his sleeve: Edward Joseph Kelly.
Continued next month
30 / May 1977 / Illinois Issues