Chicago Sun-Times

Everybody was there — except Rahm

- LAURA WASHINGTON Follow Laura Washington on Twitter: @MediaDervi­sh Email: LauraSWash­ington@aol.com

Everyone was there. Last week more than 1,000 people packed the Hyatt Regency McCormick Place Ballroom, a mostly female and African-American crowd from every corner of Chicago’s elite, and beyond.

The Rainbow/ PUSH 50th Annual Internatio­nal Women’s Luncheon was hosted by Jacqueline L. Jackson, wife of PUSH founder, the Rev. Jesse L. Jackson. It was a tailormade showcase of the civil rights leader’s shiny new clout.

The keynote speaker was Hillary Clinton, back in her native Chicago for a victory lap as the 2016 presumptiv­e Democratic presidenti­al nominee.

For Jesse Jackson, another kind of victory lap, a return from an eight- year exile from presidenti­al politics. He recently endorsed Clinton. He can come in from out of the cold.

Jackson should have been front and center in the 2008 campaign that elected Barack Obama.

But the reverend was caught on an open mike, making a harsh, semi-obscene remark about Obama. Then his son, U. S. Rep. Jesse Jackson Jr., an Obama friend and ally, was caught in a scandal that sent him and his wife, Ald. Sandi Jackson, to prison.

So Rev. Jackson was frozen out of the historic first black presidency.

In 2016, the black vote will be crucial once again. Clinton needs Jackson’s political juice, now more than ever. His imprimatur reinforces her standing with African- American voters — a must- have if she is to prevail over Donald Trump in November.

Everyone was there. Chicago area U. S. Representa­tives Robin Kelly and Jan Schakowsky, U. S. Rep. Maxine Waters, in from California, Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkl­e, Illinois Attorney General Lisa Madigan and renowned actress Cicely Tyson ( the octogenari­an is an old friend of the Jacksons). Sizakele Zuma, the wife of South African President Jacob Zuma, and Michael Eric Dyson, the author and former DePaul University professor.

I spotted former Gov. Pat Quinn doggedly working the room and posing for celebrity selfies. Former Chicago Public Schools CEO Paul Vallas was there, along with Randi Weingarten, president of the American Federation of Teachers, who excoriated Gov. Bruce Rauner from the podium.

Everyone. Except Mayor Rahm Emanuel.

One might presume that the hard- driving aide in Bill Clinton’s White House, the former Obama chief of staff, the current secondterm Chicago mayor, would also be front and center.

Yet, during the competitiv­e Illinois primary season, every time Clinton came stumping in Chicago, Emanuel seemed to be somewhere else.

He has been consumed in unpreceden­ted challenges: murderous street violence, a federal investi- gation into police misconduct, a near- bankrupt school system and, now, a looming new property tax increase.

Emanuel’s name didn’t come up during the twohour luncheon, but his heaviest political burden was on painful display.

Jesse Jackson noted that 300 people have been killed in Chicago already this year. “The stakes are high, the blood is running down the streets of our city,” he declared.

During her 30- minute speech, Clinton saluted mothers who have lost their children to violence.

She called out the carnage Chicago has suffered this summer. She noted that the nation “must mourn and remember the 64 people shot across this city, right here in Chicago, on Memorial Day weekend.”

Chicago, the city of her old friend, Rahm Emanuel.

Now, Emanuel is out in the cold.

 ?? ANDREW HARNIK/ AP ?? The Rev. Jesse Jackson watches at right as Hillary Clinton hugs an audience member after speaking at the Rainbow/ PUSH 50th Annual Internatio­nal Women’s Luncheon in Chicago, last Monday.
ANDREW HARNIK/ AP The Rev. Jesse Jackson watches at right as Hillary Clinton hugs an audience member after speaking at the Rainbow/ PUSH 50th Annual Internatio­nal Women’s Luncheon in Chicago, last Monday.
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