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Book Reviews
By ALTON MILLER
William J. Grimshaw. Bitter Fruit:
Black Politics and the Chicago Machine, 1931-1991. Chicago: University
of Chicago Press, 1992. Pp. 248 with
tables, figures, maps, notes, references &
index. $24.95 (cloth).
Pierre Clavel and Wim Wiewel (eds.).
Harold Washington and the Neighborhoods: Progressive City Government
and Chicago, 1983-1987. New Brunswick, N.J.: Rutgers University Press,
1992. Pp. 307 with notes, maps, table
and index. $45 (cloth); $15.95 (paper).
As we assess the first hundred
days of a federal administration
elected to promote a "politics of
change," the experiences of Harold Washington's years as Chicago's mayor take
on a fresh significance.
Of the handful of "Council Wars"
histories on the market, most are what
reporters call "clip-jobs" — rewrites of
newspaper articles strung together on a
loose thematic thread. But there are two
works that probe beneath the surface of
the Harold Washington phenomenon
which should interest anyone working to
translate the "politics of change" into
progressive government policies.
Bitter Fruit Black Politics and the Chicago Machine, 1931-1991 benefits from
the insights of an author who is both a
scholar and an insider. Illinois Institute of
Technology social sciences professor
William J. Grimshaw was also a political
adviser to Harold Washington. His wife,
Jacky Grimshaw, was a top mayoral
aide. He warns that while his book is "as
scholarly as I could make it," it is not a
"journalistically balanced, or detached
work." But his caution is generally misplaced; it is as a scholarly treatment that
Bitter Fruit is most valuable.
Grimshaw surveys Chicago's recent
political history from three loosely integrated perspectives — economic, sociological and political. Through this triangulation he clarifies many a political
muddle of the past several decades.
In politics, traditional economic motives center on the spoils of victory.
Organizationally, a political machine is a
business enterprise whose purpose is
winning elections. From the standpoint
of the electorate, political support is just
another sales transaction, a trade of votes
for jobs and contracts. So what explains
the endurance of the black "submachine," despite its scant rewards?
The sociological perspective takes a
look at how things really are. It reveals a
cat's cradle interplay of many interests
which make the idea of a unitary machine hopelessly simplistic. Electorally,
the sociological perspective suggests "a
collective ethnic-cultural interest, as opposed to an individual economic interest," Grimshaw notes; it encourages
"conceptualizing voting behavior" based
on "some type of group interest: ethnic,
racial, territorial, institutional, ideological belief, and so forth."
Yet another perspective, the political,
focuses on the individual politicians'
looking out for themselves. In this light,
what seems to be the behavior of a single
machine or a monolithic black political
movement, or the invisible hand of an
abstract political marketplace, can be
seen, in part at least, as the net effect of
the behavior of individual bosses and
conteeological belief, and so forth."
"Sorting out these analytic distinctions in the messy real world of electoral
politics is no simple task," Grimshaw
acknowledges. But his effort to do so
makes a significant contribution to the
field.
The general reader looking for a
guide to contemporary Chicago politics
will also benefit from Grimshaw's economic, sociological and political analysis
of: the New Deal shift of black voters
from Republican to Democratic, with
divergence between national and local
voting patterns; Mayor Richard J. Daley's strategy in choosing which black
politicians (and non-politicians) to elevate within his machine; the significant
differences affecting black political organization in the south side wards, the
poorer "black belt" wards and the "plantation wards" on the west side; the rationale behind the seemingly erratic actions
of Mayor Jane Byrne; and the inner
workings of the Harold Washington coalition.
Where Grimshaw strays from scholarship into polemics is in the final chapter, "Machine Politics, Reform Style,"
covering the period from Washington's
death through Richard M. Daley's first
two years as mayor. This section is a
learned polemic, to be sure, but too
dependent on newspaper citations and
presumably on his wife's experience as
an on-again, off-again political worker
in the tragi-comic electoral campaign
that pitted Acting Mayor Eugene Sawyer
against Tim Evans, would-be Washington heir apparent.
Here the quality of the analysis suffers
from the passion of the analyst — for
instance, in Grimshaw's faulting Washington for "refusing to purge the machine loyalists," including Eugene Sawyer. Grimshaw suggests that Washington
"was advancing his own political self-interest at the expense of institutionalizing his reform movement." This allowed
Washington to keep "his monolithic
black base intact, but at what would
prove to be a terribly high price":
"Washington's reforms were not institu-
28/April 1993/Illinois Issues
tionalized as much as they were personalized." These conclusions fail to account for political necessity, despite
Grimshaw's acute attention to such realities when dealing with earlier politicians
in the pre-Washington era. Along with
closing observations on the new Daley
administration, these judgments suffer by
comparison with the depth and diversity
of perspective which Grimshaw affords
the earlier period of his study.
If Grimshaw's book reveals the simplistic foolishness of an expression like
"the black vote," there's another contemporary history which demonstrates convincingly that Harold Washington progressives don't all think alike. Harold
Washington in the Neighborhoods: Progressive City Government in Chicago,
1983-1987 is compelling contemporary
history written by people who made it,
told in a series of articles neatly framed
within introductory and concluding
chapters by editors Pierre Clavel and
Wim Wiewel.
Of the eleven primary contributors,
seven were insiders: Kari Moe, one of the
mayor's senior aides; commissioners Robert Mier (economic development), Elizabeth Hollander (planning), Judith
Walker (human services), Timothy
Wright (intergovernmental affairs) and
Maria Torres (Commission on Latino
Affairs); and deputy commissioner Robert Giloth (economic development).
A major point of the book is that
before Washington took office, these insiders were outsiders — progressive reformers, heads of neighborhood organizations — who one day found
themselves running the nation's second
largest city. Four additional articles are
by community activists who remained
outside government — but not outside
"the system": Robert Brehm, Donna Ducharme, Doug Gills and John Kretzmann.
Under Harold Washington "the system" expanded to embrace the community organizations. In theory, the organizations that helped elect a mayor went
on to inform city government at the
department level and within the mayor's
office, and to set the agenda, and to
mobilize constituencies. In practice, the
meld was uneven. The key players here
tell essentially personal stories of how it
all played out, and in this reckoning each
writer shares the sometimes painful lessons to be learned in the course of a
revolution that works.
The insights have particular relevance
today, and not only on the national scene.
Most of the Chicago community organizations profiled in these chapters are still
dominant in the 1990s, more than ever
the front line of democracy at work.
Even though the social movement of
which they form the staff and perhaps
the spearhead is no longer the same, the
role they played in electing and shaping
the Harold Washington administration
remains vital for a new generation.
From their separate but parallel viewpoints, the writers chart a trail — with
well-marked pitfalls — for those who
may follow in the work of developing
policies at the grass roots and using the
powers of government to implement
them. Cumulatively if not unanimously,
they suggest that Harold Washington did
indeed manage to institutionalize his reforms by "transcending the base" that
concerns Grimshaw, providing a forum
for talented individuals like those who
wrote this book and empowering political associations at the grass roots. *
Alton Miller, who teaches politics and the
media at Columbia College in Chicago, was
press secretary to Mayor Harold Washington
from 1985 to 1987. He is the author of three
books, two of them about the Washington
years.
April 1993/Illinois Issues/29 |
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