Chicago Sun-Times

Spend every dollar available to ensure safe and secure elections this fall

- LAURA WASHINGTON lauraswash­ington@aol.com | @MediaDervi­sh Laura Washington is a political analyst for ABC-7 Chicago.

Illinois election officials must take advantage of every dollar available to them during the COVID-19 pandemic to ensure the upcoming vote goes as well as possible.

Gov. J.B. Pritzker last week sent a letter urging the Illinois State Board of Elections to distribute at least $4 million in federal aid to pay for additional secure mail-in ballot drop boxes and to recruit more election judges.

Secure drop boxes are needed for voters who get their ballots by mail but who worry the U.S. Postal Service won’t deliver them on time to be counted.

Pritzker frets that in a state with 102 counties, only 54 election authoritie­s have requested money for secure drop boxes, which require time to order and install. He’s also concerned about recruiting enough election judges because many older people who traditiona­lly served as judges may be afraid to expose themselves to COVID-19.

Not everyone is on board with Pritzker’s request. A lobbyist for the Illinois Associatio­n of County Clerks and Recorders reportedly said the organizati­on’s members oppose spending the $4 million the way Pritzker wants. ISBE will take up the issue at its board meeting on Monday morning amid reported complaints in some quarters that it has been sitting on federal money that should be channeled to local election authoritie­s.

Around the state, election authoritie­s have been scrambling to hire staff, install secure drop boxes, recruit election judges and move polling places to areas such as school gyms where voters can keep a safe distance apart. ISBE has distribute­d millions of dollars in response to grant requests to pay for those efforts, but some additional money remains unspent.

Local election authoritie­s should be identifyin­g whatever they still need to ensure a safe, secure and seamless election. Then, they should hustle their grant requests while there is still time to spend the money before voting starts.

Last week, on the first day of early voting in Virginia, some voters had to stand in line for up to four hours. We don’t want to see that scene replayed all across Illinois.

Throughout Illinois, election authoritie­s will begin sending out mail-in ballots starting Thursday.

Once the Nov. 3 election is over, we might find Illinois actually did more than was necessary to ensure that no one was disenfranc­hised.

But that sure beats doing too little.

Don Rose, who turns 90 on Monday, can log a few items next to his name. Columnist, political strategist, progressiv­e stalwart, anti-war radical, racial justice crusader, jazz aficionado, gourmet foodie, ultimate party host, Paris denizen.

And Chicago’s political and cultural polymath. Rose, born in 1930 in Rogers Park to Jewish parents, later moved to Hyde Park, then Lincoln Park. He has made history in his hometown.

Rose is my longtime friend, mentor and guide to the wild and wily ways of Chicago politics. I asked him for the reflection­s of a nonagenari­an.

“Probably, my obituary will read that I managed Jane Byrne’s campaign,” Rose replied. He was the architect of Byrne’s election as

Chicago’s first woman mayor, trouncing the Democratic Party Machine. It was a short-lived victory as Byrne flipped and joined forces with the party leaders she once dubbed the “evil cabal.”

“I think I’ve made some contributi­ons to the betterment of the city and maybe a bit to the world,” Rose added. “But it’s a frustratin­g thing.”

For “a would-be revolution­ary, it seems like every two steps forward is one step back.”

He added: “The biggest problem is still racism and the prevalence of institutio­nal racism.”

Now, more than ever.

In Chicago, no one has fought as many fights for racial justice. His decades of battles are book-ended by a race riot and the election of the first Black female and openly LGBTQ mayor in Chicago history.

In 1953, the 23-year-old Hyde Parker jumped into a scorching effort to integrate the Trumbull Park Homes, an all-white public housing developmen­t on the Far South Side.

The Chicago Housing Authority attempted to move 10 Black families in. White residents responded by rioting for days. “The neighborho­od just blew up,” Rose recalled. “No one was killed, but there were bombings, harassment. The city had to have policemen escort the Black residents from their buses to their homes.”

Rose joined a band of well-meaning white liberals to circulate flyers that urged peace and brotherhoo­d with their Black neighbors.

“And we had the naive idea that if we talked to people, and . . . write little pamphlets to deliver to people, to the white residents in that area, that we could calm things down,” he said.

Heh. “And as it turns out, we probably wound up being as despised as Black people there because we were ‘N-lovers.’ ”

Onward. In 1963, Rose helped organize the “Freedom Trains” and sent a Chicago contingent to the historic March on Washington. He later served as press secretary to the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. during his Chicago drive for open housing.

But “my greatest personal triumph was defeating Edward Hanrahan in 1972.”

Hanrahan was the Cook County state’s attorney who backed a police raid that led to the murder of Black Panther leaders Fred Hampton and Mark Clark.

Rose managed the campaign of Hanrahan’s Republican opponent, Bernard Carey. In Cook County, then and now, defeating a Democratic incumbent is no trifling feat.

Onward, to manage and advise a long string of other campaigns, for Chicago mayors Harold Washington and Lori Lightfoot, U.S. Sen.

Paul Simon, Illinois Supreme Court Justice Seymour Simon, Illinois Gov. Jim Edgar, U.S. Rep. Jesus “Chuy” Garcia, Cook County State’s Attorney Kim Foxx.

In April 2019, political strategist David Axelrod tweeted: “Don Rose, a legendary Chicago political strategist and provocateu­r whose activism dates to the ‘60s, was right in the thick of the @LightfootF­orChi campaign. Still stirring things up after all these years!”

Axelrod, another Chicago political operative, helped engineer the election of Barack Obama. He has called Rose a mentor.

There are other little things, like the time he coined the phrase “The Whole World is Watching,” chanted by Chicago demonstrat­ors as they were beaten in the infamous police riot at the 1968 Democratic National Convention.

These days, Rose the revolution­ary is penning a weekly political column, pontificat­ing in Zoom appearance­s, cooking up his famed cassoulet, and enjoying a glass — or two, or three — of his favorite Burgundy.

How are you handling the menace of COVID-19 at 90?

“Actually, for a radical, I am extremely conservati­ve on that matter. I go out as little as possible.”

He admits to “one pandemic violation. I have a lady I’m seeing.”

Onward!

 ?? MIKE MORONES/THE FREE LANCE-STAR VIA AP ?? People vote in Spotsylvan­ia, Virginia, on Friday, the first day of the state’s 45-day early voting period.
MIKE MORONES/THE FREE LANCE-STAR VIA AP People vote in Spotsylvan­ia, Virginia, on Friday, the first day of the state’s 45-day early voting period.
 ?? SUN-TIMES FILES ?? Veteran political activist and consultant Don Rose
SUN-TIMES FILES Veteran political activist and consultant Don Rose
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