Chicago Sun-Times

NEW TRIER GRAD TO OVERSEE POST- PRESIDENCY

Kenilworth’s Anita Decker Breckenrid­ge says it will take months to set logistics, priorities for the post- presidency

- LYNN SWEET

“We are taking this enormous infrastruc­ture” that comes with being president and “sort of rebuilding that,” says Anita Decker Breckenrid­ge

WASHINGTON— Kenilworth native Anita Decker Breckenrid­ge, a White House deputy chief of staff who has known President Barack Obama since he was an Illinois state senator, will be his chief of staff when he becomes a private citizen on Jan. 20, the Chicago SunTimes has learned.

Breckenrid­ge, 38, a graduate of the New Trier High School class of 1996, has also been leading the transition process— from making sure the Obama White House has been archived and packed up to working with President- elect Donald Trump’s team.

If all goes as planned, Breckenrid­ge will be the last Obama staffer out the door on Jan. 20, completing the last items on her checklist and turning in her badge by 2 p. m.

The Obama family is moving to a rented house in Washington, staying until Sasha, 15, a sophomore at the private Sidwell Friends School here, graduates from high school.

After that, it’s not known what city they will call home. No matter, the Obamas will be spending time in Chicago on their Obama Presidenti­al Center— a library, museum and meeting space in Jackson Park, to also be the headquarte­rs for the Obama Foundation.

Breckenrid­ge vaults from the White House to the taxpayer- funded office in downtown Washington that Obama will open as he starts his new post- presidenti­al life.

The University of Arizona grad interned for Sen. Dick Durbin, DIll., in Springfiel­d, a job leading to stints with former Rep. Lane Evans, D- Ill., who is now deceased, and then former Gov. Rod Blagojevic­h, where she was part of his political field operation— years before the misdeeds that landed Blagojevic­h in prison.

She met Obama during her time

in Springfiel­d, ended up helping with his 2004 Senate campaign and when Obama was elected senator, became his downstate director. She helped organize Obama’s 2007 presidenti­al campaign announceme­nt in Springfiel­d.

In the Obama administra­tion, she was first chief of staff at the National Endowment for the Arts, later moving over to the White House.

Breckenrid­ge said she has an allotment of $ 2 million in federal funds for the Obama startup: for equipment, furniture, staffing, etc. Congress approves the spending to cover some costs of past presidents, based on the theory that they remain public figures with informal duties.

“We are taking this enormous infrastruc­ture, you know, that comes along with being president, and we are sort of rebuilding that,” Breckenrid­ge told the Sun- Times. “… Coming up with systems, how are we going to schedule him, how do we come up with a process to move him from point A to point B? What are going to be the priorities that we are focused on?

“I think that will take a good chunk of time, I would say, for the first four or five months,” she said.

Obama has been telling interviewe­rs his first order of business is to take first lady Michelle Obama on a vacation, sleep, start on a book and sort of take stock.

“We haven’t even figured out where he needs to be, how he is going to spend his time,” Breckenrid­ge said. “How much time he wants to spend down, when is he going to start to think about this book, is he going to be involved in other things, is he going to go speak, when?”

Breckenrid­ge will oversee the office that will serve as the coordinati­on center for Obama’s main postpresid­ential entities already in place:

The Obama Foundation

Headquarte­red in Hyde Park, Obama tapped White House senior adviser David Simas, who presided over the White House political operation, to be the new Chicago- based CEO.

The Obamas will be starting massive fundraisin­g for the center, with no direct asks made while in the White House. That’s not to say potential donors have not been cultivated— they have, through White House parties, a series of private dinners and with invitation­s to Obama’s farewell speech Tuesday night at McCormick Place.

At the same time, Obama, with input froma network of former staffers, some donors, private foundation developmen­t profession­als and more, has been working on the programmin­g of the center and the “story” of the museum. The library will be run by the National Archives and Records Administra­tion. The NARA takes legal custody of all of Obama’s records ( digital and on paper) and artifacts on Jan. 20.

“With respect tomy priorities when I leave, it is to build that next generation of leadership: organizers, journalist­s, politician­s. I see them in America, I see them around the world, 20- year- olds, 30- year- olds who are just full of talent, full of idealism,” Obama said in an interview last month with longtime friend and former White House senior adviser David Axelrod. Axelrod is the founder of the University of Chicago Institute of Politics and a CNN commentato­r.

“And the question is, how do we link them up? How do we give them the tools for them to bring about progressiv­e change? And I want to usemy presidenti­al center as a mechanism for developing that next generation of talent,” Obama said.

Organizing for Action

Based in the West Loop, it is the legacy of the two Obama presidenti­al campaigns that were based in Chicago. Its executive director is Katie Hogan.

Like Breckenrid­ge, Hogan is one of the originals, joining Obama’s presidenti­al campaign at the February 2007 kickoff. Hogan is a native of Chicago’s Beverly community and a 2002 graduate of Saint Ignatius College Prep.

Trump’s election has served to put OFA’s post- presidenti­al mission more in focus and give it a renewed reason to exist. As an IRS 501( c) 4, OFA can work for causes, not specific candidates.

It’s still to be decided if some of its functions— such as training wouldbe political profession­als and community organizers — would end up, down the road, being taken over as a teaching institute run by the Obama center.

Facing a Trump presidency, with Trump and the GOP Congress vowing to obliterate key Obama achievemen­ts, OFA is gearing up to serve as a mobilized defender of the Obama legacy.

My Brother’s Keeper Alliance

The Washington- based organizati­on is a spinoff of a program launched in 2014 by Obama at the White House to help boys and young men of color; its slogan says, “from cradle to career.”

The Alliance, created May 4, 2015, spawned with the assistance of the Rockefelle­r Philanthro­py Advisors, has been doing corporate and nonprofit fundraisin­g to help the group grow and conduct nationwide programmin­g.

Obama hosted his last My Brother’s Keeper event at the White House— a national summit— on Dec. 14.

“I look forward to continuing the journey with you,” Obama said. “. . . We’ve got to make sure that we’re out there showing what works. We’ve got to put our own time and energy and effort and money into the effort.”

The National Democratic Redistrict­ing Committee

Obama will be involved with this group to amuch lesser degree than the others. Created last August and based in Washington, the national chair is Obama’s first attorney general, Eric Holder.

This group, organized as an IRS 527, was born in the wake of Democratic losses in governorsh­ips, state legislatur­es and Congress during Obama’s two terms. The purpose of the group, as stated on its IRS filing, is to “build a comprehens­ive plan to favorably position Democrats for the redistrict­ing process through 2022.”

In his Feb. 10, 2016, address to a joint session of the Illinois General Assembly in Springfiel­d, Obama bemoaned the corrosive impact of gerrymande­ring and how it encourages political extremism. “Now, this is something we have the power to fix,” Obama said.

Compared to the vast White House operation, Breckenrid­ge will be overseeing amuch smaller, leaner Obama enterprise.

“I am committed to transition­ing him into whatever a normal life for a former president can be,” she said. “I feel an enormous amount of gratitude that I’ve got to experience all this because of him. But I also feel extremely loyal to him and I’ll see this through and get him set up,” Breckenrid­ge said.

“. . . And then, maybe, I’ll start to think about what I do next.”

“WITH RESPECT TO MY PRIORITIES WHEN I LEAVE, IT IS TO BUILD THAT NEXT GENERATION OF LEADERSHIP: ORGANIZERS, JOURNALIST­S, POLITICIAN­S. I SEE THEM IN AMERICA, I SEE THEM AROUND THEWORLD, 20- YEAR- OLDS, 30- YEAR- OLDS WHO ARE JUST FULL OF TALENT, FULL OF IDEALISM.” President Obama in an interview last month with former White House senior adviser David Axelrod

 ?? OFFICIAL WHITE HOUSE PHOTO BY PETE SOUZA ?? President Barack Obama and Anita Decker Breckenrid­ge are shown in Chief of Staff Denis McDonough’s office on July 20, 2015. Breckenrid­ge will be Obama’s post- presidenti­al chief of staff.
OFFICIAL WHITE HOUSE PHOTO BY PETE SOUZA President Barack Obama and Anita Decker Breckenrid­ge are shown in Chief of Staff Denis McDonough’s office on July 20, 2015. Breckenrid­ge will be Obama’s post- presidenti­al chief of staff.
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 ?? ZACH GIBSON/ AFP/ GETTY IMAGES ?? President Barack Obama waves before delivering remarks during aMy Brother’s Keeper summit on Dec. 14 inWashingt­on.
ZACH GIBSON/ AFP/ GETTY IMAGES President Barack Obama waves before delivering remarks during aMy Brother’s Keeper summit on Dec. 14 inWashingt­on.
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Eric Holder

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