“You have to have passion. You have to have honesty in office. You have to love the people.” Those words summed up the outlook, if not always the actions, of Chicago Mayor Richard M. Daley. Elected to govern a city roiled by racial and economic crises, Daley adroitly wielded the tools of power in the rough-and-tumble world of Chicago politics. Under his rule, Chicago rebuilt a dying downtown, becoming a cultural and tourism mecca punctuated by construction of the iconic Millenium Park. To drive growth, he engineered a massive expansion of O’Hare Airport. To correct a historical injustice, he razed the city’s notorious public housing high rises as part of a sweeping plan to transform the lives of the city’s poorest residents. Yet corruption and graft, City Hall’s role in calamities like the 1995 heat wave, and Daley’s inaction in the face of evidence of police torture, tarnished his many accomplishments. A two-time Daley chief-of-staff, Forrest Claypool draws on his long career in local government to examine the lasting successes, ongoing dramas, and disastrous failures that defined Daley’s twenty-two years in City Hall. Throughout, Claypool uses Daley’s career to illustrate how effectual political leadership relies on an adept and unapologetic use of power--and how wielding that power without challenge inevitably pulls government toward corruption.
A warts-and-all account of a pivotal figure in Chicago history, The Daley Show tells the story of how Richard M. Daley became the quintessential big city mayor.
An OK look at Mayor Daley's run as mayor. It might be useful for some folks in City Hall to read this just to remember what things were like when he started. There are some excellent insights in his rare criticisms. I would have loved to read more about Degnan and Bedore and the guys that started at the beginning.
This is a very thorough book about Daley that is largely pro-Daley, a fact that shouldn't be surprising given that the author is Daley's one-time chief of staff (and at another time the guy Daley pegged to run the Chicago Park District).
Sometimes the pro-Daley-ish of the book can be a bit much, as when he offers a partial defense of the parking meters deal. (Hey, with the rise of uber, the 75-year deal may not be the complete catastrophe it first appeared to be!). That said, there is a lot of things Daley did that were positive, especially in those boring details that often get overlooked.
Claypool goes term-by-term for Daley's six terms, with a series of short chapters. A ten-pager qualifies as a long one here. Some stuff from the book . .. ..
Daley used a I&I hotline (Inquiry and Information) to let citizens give the city info on small-time problems in their area, and then the city did a good job responding. The rat population went down by 90%. The homeless were removed from O'Hare. Area Two and its torture of suspects occurred for a long time, with so many turning a willfully blind eye. Daley was the first mayor to serve as Grand Marshall in a Gay Pride Parade. TIFs were used to help rebuild blighted areas, even as the definition of blight was stretched to the breaking point. Cows on Parade and Gallery 37 were sucessess and casino efforts failed. The River Flood and '95 heat waves were disasters (Daley comes off terrible in the heat wave). Airport wars with downstate was one with a Gary two-step creating a multi-state aviation area, putting it outside Springfield's control (letting Chicago keep the O'Hare proceeds from Pate Phillip). The park district's den of patronage and incompetence was clened up and revenue went up. Crack cocaine and the crime with it peaked in the early 1990s. Daley used the broken windows philosohpy (Claypool doesn't even acknowledge criticism that late came with this approach). City authorities met regularly with civic neighborhood groups in CAPS (Community Alternative Policing Strategies).
Claypool says the Bulls helped revitalize the West Side. The 1996 DNC also helped. Daley was able to keep IIT in chiago and put a new police station nearby it. The Robert Taylor Homes went down. The GOP controlled Springfield from 1994-6 and gave Daley full control of the schools to hurt him. But he embraced it and schools improved under Chico and Vallas. The Meigs Field fight happened. LSD was shifted to create the Museum Campus. THey found out the Illinois Central didn't own the Millennium Park grounds after all. Daley used tech to help policing (which sounded a little Orwellian, frankly). There were two seprate shooting of black men killed by cops on June 4, 1999, neither of whom were criminals.
Daley fired Vallas, who was getting too full of himself. Arne Duncan began a less confrontational style. O'Hare was renovated into six parallel runways which increased traffic flow considerably. Millenium Park went up. Public housing went down.
21 died at the EZ Club after a stampede caused by pepper spray. 13 died in a deck collapse in June 2003. This is the problem of silo'ed city bureacuracies. The Tomczak scanal around hired trucks happened. Daley increasingly demanded full city council obediance, becoming more high and mighty. There's Sorch and the patronage scandal. Daley: the micromanger who doesn't know? Reinassane 2010 replaced the worst Chicago schools and you can point to some big successes but overall it didn't move he needle too much. To promote safety, schools were turned into communisty centers, allowing for more afterschool programs. County government under Stroger was a shitshow, especially at the hospital. His budget failed to pass in 2004. More of the cops were used dynamically in the "cops on dots" program. Area Two came to light. Some off-duty cops beat up some bartendrs. The chief wasn't defending them leading to more "blue flu." A new education reofrm included teacher residencies in Renaissance 2010. They finally get a longer school day under Rahm.
The Skyway was privitized in 2005. Grant Park's underground parking was as well. Then came the parking meters. It was poorly done, poorly implimentned, affected residents more than suburbanites, and didn't bring in enough money. The Olympic bid failed. Daley stepped down.
Claypool doesn't think much of Pritzker or Brandon Johnson, aruging lots of good reforms are being undone.
The Daley Show is a fascinating account of Mayor Richard M. Daley’s time in office, and it made me realize how much I tend to look back on his tenure with rose-colored glasses. The book dives into one of the classic political science insights: that public officials can “build up a reservoir of goodwill” with constituents through big, visible infrastructure projects—Millennium Park, Navy Pier, O’Hare expansion, downtown revitalization, investments in public parks, & even very basic things, like city cleanliness—and later cash in that goodwill to push through less popular policies (privatizing city assets, Chicago’s failed 2016 Olympics bid).
It’s also packed with intriguing tidbits (like the backstory behind the CTA Orange Line—who knew Reagan played a role?). I really enjoyed learning about the political shenanigans behind control of O’Hare airport & the perennial discussion on adding a 3rd major airport. That said, the author doesn’t shy away from the valid criticisms, especially around the parking meter debacle, truck patronage scandals, Jon Burge & police brutality, and chronic underinvestment in neighborhoods outside the city core, particularly on the South and West Sides.
Still, I genuinely believe Daley was a solid mayor who deeply cared about Chicago and Chicagoans. When a public library opened up in my Southwest Side neighborhood growing up, he actually showed up. That was a pretty cool experience as a 10-year old, who practically lived in the local library at the time.
This was a great book by Mr. Claypool and went in-depth regarding a lot of the transformative actions that has influenced Chicago over the last 4 decades. It’s amazing how good leadership can change the trajectory of a city. I feel he was unbiased and caught the good and bad of Major Daley’s tenure. A great read for people who love cities and politics.
Being the mayor of Chicago is not easy and really requires understanding many perspectives. Chicago's finances today are pretty bad but the author presents a series of chapters around key moments/big things that Chicago has done. Very focused on bread and butter government issues
There is a great story to be told about the R M Daley administration but this isn’t it. The book does contain many segments and matters of his time in office which as a professional working in the City at the time I enjoyed. I thought it was just not woven together with a clear conclusion.
Really interesting take on the Daley reign in Chicago. Towards the end author talks about personal political aspirations too much. Seemed to now follow the theme of the book.
This insider account of the Daley years unfortunately comes out feeling primarily like a vanity project for the author. By focusing on showcasing Daley’s successes, it allows him to burnish his own credentials. He glosses over the “white mayor” controversy, which almost cost son of Boss the election. He claims that Daley was the first mayor to see the need to develop Chicago as a cultural magnet, completely overlooking the efforts of his Predecessor Jane Byrne to showcase the city by attracting films and starting events like Taste of Chicago. He claims Daley solved problems of crime, reformed the schools, straightened out city finances. Yet, all these problems persist today. Of more importance, Daley borrowed heavily and overspent, leaving Chicago with horrendous debt that complicates financial decisions today. So if you want to know about all the roles Claypool held and the efforts he undertook over 3 decades of public service, this book is for you.