Chicago Sun-Times

OUT OF THE PICTURE

Why isWh i Daley’s D l ’ photo h t still till missing i i from wall of mayors at City Hall?

- BYFRANSPIE­LMAN City Hall Reporter Email: fspielman@ suntimes. com Twitter: @ fspielman

Richard M. Daley was Chicago’s longest- serving mayor. His 22 years on the job surpassed the longevity record set by his father, former Mayor Richard J. Daley, who served for 21 years.

Why, then, is Daley’s photo still missing from the wall of mayors in the reception area in the mayor’s office on the fifth floor of City Hall six years after he left office?

Why is there a photo of David Orr, who spent eight days as acting mayor after the 1987 death of Harold Washington, but not one of Richard M. Daley?

Mayor Rahm Emanuel’s administra­tion insists that it has nothing to do with any tension between Emanuel and his predecesso­r and political mentor caused by Emanuel’s decision to chart a decidedly different course to solve the problems Daley left behind.

It’s simply the fact that Emanuel was hoping to make the hanging of Daley’s photo on the wall of mayors a bigger deal than the Daley family wanted it to be.

“There’s been an effort to have a larger ceremony . . . We wanted to put together an event that would honor his service to the city just the same way that we named Maggie Daley park in honor of Maggie Daley’s contributi­ons to the city and hadn’t been able to arrange that,” Emanuel’s communicat­ions director Adam Collins told the Chicago Sun- Times.

A top mayoral aide, who asked to remain anonymous, added, “We have the photo ready to go. It’s been ready for a long time. We reached out to the family. We just never got it together. For whatever reason, they weren’t that interested in doing it. We asked them if they wanted to come down. They never responded.”

Jackie Heard, a spokeswoma­n for the Daley family who previously served as Daley’s mayoral press secretary, refused to comment on the missing photo.

Another source close to the Daley family said the former mayor has no interest in turning the photo hanging into a mini- ceremony.

“It’s not a portrait. It’s a photo. Put it up. Nobody wants a ceremony for a photo. That’s crazy. Who would say yes to that?” the Daley family source said.

In 1989, Emanuel used his TypeA personalit­y and relentless fundraisin­g tactics to rake in $ 7 million in just 13 weeks for then- mayoral candidate Richard M. Daley.

After serving as Daley’s financial muscle man, Emanuel did the same for presidenti­al candidate Bill Clinton with Daley’s help before joining Clinton’s White House staff.

In 1999, he was Daley’s choice to serve as vice chairman of the Chicago Housing Authority. Three years later, Daley endorsed Emanuel for Congress, something the mayor rarely did in Democratic primaries, and went all- out to get him elected.

Emanuel’s congressio­nal campaign was managed by former Daley aide Greg Goldner, a sidekick of Hispanic Democratic Organizati­on chieftain Victor Reyes. Emanuel was also among those to benefit from the political army commanded by convicted First DeputyWate­r Commission­er Donald Tomczak.

When Daley chose retirement over running for a seventh term, Emanuel stepped down as thenPresid­ent Barack Obama’s White House chief of staff and was replaced by Daley’s brother, Bill.

But since taking office, Emanuel has criticized and changed virtually everything Daley did — from the widely despised parking meter deal to city and school finances, labor negotiatio­ns, city services, public schools and City Colleges.

Emanuel has proposed a seemingly endless wave of ethics reforms as if to turn the page from the Hired Truck, city hiring and minority contractin­g scandals that cast a dark cloud on Daley’s 22- year reign.

Emanuel also succeeded where Daley failed — by getting Chicago out from under the federal Shakman decree and the costly constraint­s of a federal hiring monitor, and by identifyin­g dedicated funding sources for all four city employee pension funds.

Sources said all of that has placed a strain on the relationsh­ip between the present and former mayor.

Although Emanuel has been respectful enough of Daley not to mention the formermayo­r by namewhen he criticizes the things Daley did and the financial mess Emanuel inherited, the criticism has still been hurtful to amanwho lived, ate, breathed and bled Chicago for 22 years.

Two years ago, Daley had lunch with Emanuel, then endorsed his protege for re- election in a written statement.

“He is working hard in a job that, I know, is very difficult. I believe he deserves another four years to continue to strengthen this city we all love,” Daley was quoted as saying.

At the time, aides said Daley would probably have been willing to hold a news conference endorsing Emanuel, but he wasn’t asked.

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