Chicago Sun-Times

GOING DEVAL-IN

He’s late to the party, but South Side native and Obama pal Deval Patrick jumps into crowded Dem race for president

- LYNN SWEET

WASHINGTON — Jumping in late, former Massachuse­tts Gov. Deval Patrick kicked off a Democratic presidenti­al bid Thursday, throwing a spotlight on growing up poor on Chicago’s South Side.

Patrick, the first African American Massachuse­tts governor, leaned on his biography as he launched a 2020 race some of his rivals have been running for almost a year. He filed papers to get on the New Hampshire ballot on Thursday, a day before the deadline.

On Thursday morning, Patrick, 63, focused on his hardscrabb­le South Side roots in his announceme­nt video.

“I used to be governor of Massachuse­tts, but that’s not where I started,” Patrick said.

“I grew up on the South Side of Chicago. I lived there with my grandparen­ts, my mother and sister in our grandparen­ts’ two-bedroom tenement, some of that time on welfare. I went to big, broken, overcrowde­d public schools.

“Still, my grandmothe­r used to tell us we were not poor, just broke, because broke, she said, is temporary. Through the love and support of family, great teachers, adults in the neighborho­od and in church, I learned to look up, not down, to hope for the best and work for it.”

Patrick a year ago rejected a 2020 bid because his wife, Diane, now cancer-free, was diagnosed with uterine cancer. He has only weeks before the Feb. 3 kick-off presidenti­al vote in Iowa followed by the Feb. 10 New Hampshire balloting, and later in February, Nevada and South Carolina.

His entry comes as ex-Vice President Joe Biden leads in many polls but is seen by some influentia­l Democrat donors and activists as slowly imploding. Vermont Sen.

Bernie Sanders and Massachuse­tts Sen. Elizabeth Warren are the other frontrunne­rs as South Bend Mayor Pete Buttigieg is surging.

Patrick’s Chicago story

I interviewe­d Patrick in 2011 about his South Side youth. As I wrote then, his family was so poor he was born in an apartment on 79th and Calumet on July 31, 1956. He was swaddled and placed in a turkey pan and placed in an oven — the door left open — to keep him warm, he told me.

More from that 2011 column: His mother, Emily, was forced to move in with her parents in a flat at 54th and Wabash after his father, known as Pat, a sax player, left the family for New York when Patrick was 5. Patrick’s grandfathe­r was a janitor at the old South Shore Bank, at 71st and Jeffery.

He worshiped at the Cosmopolit­an Community Church at 53rd and Wabash. He attended the Mary C. Terrell School at the Robert Taylor Homes through sixth grade, then the DuSable Upper Grade Center — where his life changed.

At DuSable UGC, a teacher, Darla Weissenber­g, saw his promise and led him to a scholarshi­p for Milton Academy outside of Boston, the same prep school Gov. J.B. Pritzker attended. After undergradu­ate and law school degrees from Harvard, Patrick remained in Massachuse­tts.

Obama Foundation board

Patrick just cut ties to Bain & Company, where he was a partner, and CBS News, where he was a contributo­r. A friend of former President Barack Obama, Patrick will quit by the end of the year the Obama Presidenti­al

Foundation board. Foundation CEO David Simas was Patrick’s deputy chief of staff for several years when he was governor.

Patrick was elected to the first of two terms in 2006. He used a “Together We Can” slogan with the themes of his aspiration­al campaign echoed in Obama’s 2008 bid — not surprising since they both used David Axelrod and David Plouffe, key players in Obama’s first White House run.

Sydney Asbury, who was Patrick’s 2010 campaign manager, told the Chicago Sun-Times Patrick “has the potential to be aspiration­al without being offensive to corporate America. He is a unifier, and that has been a message in his 2006 and 2010 gubernator­ial campaigns and will likely be a message you hear in the presidenti­al campaign.”

Asbury added, “I only wish he had jumped into this race twelve months ago. Much of the magic of the Deval Patrick campaign was how he built a strong grassroots organizati­on, and I fear there is not enough time to do this in this race.”

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 ?? CHARLES KRUPA/AP ?? Democratic presidenti­al candidate Deval Patrick adds his campaign sign Thursday to a display in Concord, N.H.
CHARLES KRUPA/AP Democratic presidenti­al candidate Deval Patrick adds his campaign sign Thursday to a display in Concord, N.H.
 ?? AP FILES ?? Then-Sen. Barack Obama looks on as thenMassac­husetts gubernator­ial candidate Deval Patrick speaks in 2006.
AP FILES Then-Sen. Barack Obama looks on as thenMassac­husetts gubernator­ial candidate Deval Patrick speaks in 2006.
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