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sniper7
02-22-2011, 22:12
CHICAGO -- Rahm Emanuel decisively won Tuesday's mayoral election, becoming the city's 55th mayor.

President Obama complimented his former chief of staff, saying in a statement: "I want to extend my congratulations to Rahm Emanuel on a well-deserved victory tonight. As a Chicagoan and a friend, I couldn't be prouder. Rahm will be a terrific mayor for all the people of Chicago."

With 86 percent of the city precincts reporting, Emanuel had 55.63 percent of the vote -- enough to avoid a runoff election. His main rivals were Gery Chico, with 24.52 percent, City Clerk Miguel del Valle, with 9.53 percent, and former Sen. Carol Moseley Braun (D-Ill.) with 8.87 percent.

"What we will see going forward is Rahm putting together his team and what I believe will be a transparent process of bringing together the stakeholders who need to be part of the solutions to the problems we face -- public employees, teachers and business leaders," said Rep. Jan Schakowsky (D-Ill.)

The mayoral election season started with a bang on Sept. 7, 2011, when Mayor Richard M. Daley made a bombshell announcement that he would not seek a seventh term.

"The truth is, I have been thinking about this for the past several months. In the end, this is a personal decision, no more, no less," Daley said.

From his perch in the West Wing, Emanuel, who had been coy publicly about his interest in the mayor's job, immediately started to prepare for a run, staying out of the spotlight until he was ready to quit as chief of staff and return to Chicago.

Emanuel departed the White House on Oct. 1 in a lavish East Room ceremony hosted by the president and orchestrated by Emanuel. It was attended by Cabinet members and top Obama administration staffers. Obama spoke warmly about his chief of staff, and Emanuel made radio and television commercials from the event. While Obama never officially made an endorsement, giving Emanuel permission to make extensive use of the material amounted to a defacto endorsement.

For all his meticulous planning, Emanuel never considered that his moving to Washington to work for Obama would yield a challenge to his Chicago residency. But it did. He was tossed off the ballot by an Illinois Court of Appeals panel on grounds that he did not meet residency requirements to run for mayor.

But he ultimately survived the challenge -- the Illinois Supreme Court ordered him back on the ballot -- and the pictures and stories of him sitting through a circus-like residency hearing were a turning point in his campaign, portraying the abrasive Emanuel as a sympathetic character.

A prolific fundraiser, Emanuel quickly amassed a huge political war chest after leaving the White House.

He had a running start, transferring $1.1 million from his federal House fund to his city race. Between Oct. 1, when Emanuel quit as chief of staff, through Dec. 31, he raised an additional $10.5 million to Chico's $2.5 million, Braun's $445,760 and del Valle's $111,499. Each has raised more money since then, but nothing close to closing the gap with Emanuel.

Rahm Israel Emanuel, the son of an Israeli immigrant, was born Nov. 29, 1959 in Chicago. His family moved to the North Shore suburb of Wilmette when he was in elementary school. After graduating from New Trier West High School in 1977, Emanuel received an undergraduate degree from Sarah Lawrence.

Emanuel won election to the House of Representatives in 2002 with the help of Daley's political foot soldiers. For years Emanuel has been close to the mayor's brother, William Daley, who replaced him as White House chief of staff. And Emanuel has a deep friendship with David Axelrod, who just stepped down as a White House senior adviser and was a key strategist for Mayor Daley before taking on Obama. Axelrod's former consulting firm made Emanuel's political commercials.

Tuesday's election marks a milestone -- Emanuel is the city's first Jewish mayor -- and the end of the long Daley era in Chicago.

Daley, the city's 54th mayor, first ran for the job in 1983, but lost the Democratic primary to Harold Washington, who went on to become the city's first black mayor.

Daley, then the Cook County State's Attorney, tried again and took office on April 24, 1989 -- Emanuel helped him raise millions of dollars for that campaign. Daley had been reelected ever since, presiding over an increasingly complacent 50-member City Council.

In May, Daley steps down as the city's longest-serving mayor, ruling Chicago from his fifth-floor City Hall office longer than his father, Richard J. Daley.





horray!!!! more bullshit coming from chicago. oh, and I highlighted the amazing red part. apparently liberals can predict the future. pretty sure on that date I will be either elk hunting or prepping to go elk hunting. fuck you rahm. I hate chicago, the shady way things are done, and most things about the city.

Marlin
02-22-2011, 22:48
Always nice to know that the dead can still make it to the polls.

BigMat
02-22-2011, 23:05
been to Chicago once, that was enough for a lifetime.

I worked in construction in Wisconsin and our trucker got semi-jacked in Chicago on a run, so the next day he won't go back, I show up, and I'm the new guy. Guess who took the flat bed to the city. Show up to have the stupid union turds not let me on the site because I didn't carry a union card. Had to drop all the crap off on the side walk, by myself, without crossing the fence, where they loaded it up themselves on a different truck, and took it 100 feet to the site. Presumably to stare at it for a few hours over coffee, and then maybe, weather permitting, scratch their asses for a spell. Made me wonder how they got anything done in that city.

sniper7
02-22-2011, 23:09
Always nice to know that the dead can still make it to the polls.

ju kno my uncle vino can take care of tings if ju guyz needz anyting...k.

theGinsue
02-22-2011, 23:36
The guy wasn't protected by the Soldiers & Sailors Civil Relief Act - which is the ONLY thing protecting the home state/city citizenship of military members.

He MOVES out of Chicago to D.C. (where he would officially have to become a citizen. Did he have D.C. plates on his personal vehicles?).

He comes back to Chi-town and declares he's running for Mayor - even though he diudn't meet the citizenship requirement.

Lib courts rule in favor of Raum - against city statues protecting citizens against this very cr@p.

Just goes to show another example of where citizenship requiremnets don't apply to/for/by lib's; this time it was at a city level versus their normal national level.

Those people deserve what they get.

sniper7
02-22-2011, 23:51
The guy wasn't protected by the Soldiers & Sailors Civil Relief Act - which is the ONLY thing protecting the home state/city citizenship of military members.

He MOVES out of Chicago to D.C. (where he would officially have to become a citizen. Did he have D.C. plates on his personal vehicles?).

He comes back to Chi-town and declares he's running for Mayor - even though he diudn't meet the citizenship requirement.

Lib courts rule in favor of Raum - against city statues protecting citizens against this very cr@p.

Just goes to show another example of where citizenship requiremnets don't apply to/for/by lib's; this time it was at a city level versus their normal national level.

Those people deserve what they get.

perfect example of corruption of the local and national level. they don't have to be citizens, pay taxes, follow the constitution....hmmm, sounds like we need to start putting our foot down.

DFBrews
02-22-2011, 23:56
Good link. I am feeling quite argumentive this week and this is more fodder for me.
OT arguing on facebook with a friend who thinks the WI "14" are saviors for what they are doing I call bull crap.

DeusExMachina
02-23-2011, 00:22
I thought the courts had voted he was not on the ballot, as he wasn't a citizen? What the hell is going on here?

BlasterBob
02-23-2011, 08:56
fuck you rahm. I hate chicago, the shady way things are done, and most things about the city.

I sure agree there. I lived (more like just existed) in the City of Chicago for some years and saw so much graft and corruption that no other large City could even begin to compete with. That's the famous Chicago Democratic "Machine" way of doing stuff.
Truthfully, just a few years ago, money could buy your way out of anything and money could buy your way into anything you may want. Won't be any better with this new illegal dipshi- Mayor.[Rant1]

Just watched the new TV show "Chicago Code". This new show is starting off pretty accurate until it mentioned an address of 2434 WEST Harlem or some such number like that. Anyhow, as I remember, Harlem ran North and South NOT East and West.

Demodave
02-23-2011, 12:00
Always good to see you can buy just about anything...including Mayor

NOT!

TS12000
02-23-2011, 12:49
Everything about that town sucks: Bears, Cubs, Soxs, Bulls, weather, people, gun laws, and now their new mayor. Reap what you.... Hope he makes the town a living hell. Just don't want them moving here. Already got enough libs from that state and Kalifornia and NY and Mass.

What I don't understand is their pride. Everyone I have ever met from Chicago makes sure you know that's where they are from and how much they love it. I always wonder "Why are you here then? Go home".

Irving
02-23-2011, 20:46
I had a lady tell me the other day that she thought that Chicago was the best place in the entire world to be in the summer. I had to bite my lip to keep from laughing in her face.