A VIEW FROM CHICAGO
Old Sid is looking better
than ever in the 9th District race
by James Ylisela Jr.
Up here in the 9th Congressional
District, the gang has been waiting, not
very patiently, for the day when Sidney
Yates will finally hang it up and retire
from his long and noble career in the
U.S. Congress.
These folks have been pretending
not to run for Yates' seat for so long
that being the heir apparent to the
88-year-old congressman probably
should qualify for its own federal
pension. One could get old waiting for
Sid Yates to get old.
Yates is a revered figure in the 9th
District, and probably could have
stayed in office until his death or term
limits, whichever came first. But last
March he announced his decision not
to seek a 25th term, ending a string of
Election Day victories interrupted
only by an unsuccessful bid for the
U.S. Senate in 1962. That set off the
stampede of candidates who have been
good to go in the 9th District for years,
only to pull back from the launch pad
every time Yates said he wanted just
one more orbit.
State Rep. Jan Schakowsky of
Evanston has been poised for a
congressional run for at least three
election cycles, as has longtime state
Sen. Howard Carroll, whose district
encompasses Chicago's far North Side
50th Ward.
Even J.B. Pritzker, a young man
whose family owns the Hyatt
Hotel chain, has spent the last two
even-numbered years preparing for a
race that never came to be � until now.
Being an heir apparent to the
88-year-old U.S. Rep. Sidney
Yates probably should qualify
for its own federal pension.
But Yates says he's really retiring this
time, and one of these three long-suffering uncandidates will likely be moving
to Washington next year. After 48
years with the same congressman, 9th
District voters can be forgiven if they
appear momentarily confused by the
sudden return of choice to their ballots.
They shouldn't expect much to
change. The 9th includes the north
suburbs of Skokie and Evanston and
snakes down the lakefront. It's a throwback to the days when the Democratic
power brokers sliced up Chicago's
congressional districts along ethnic
lines: a couple of Italians here, a few
Poles there and, yes, even several black
districts, as long as the Machine could
control who went to the Capitol.
The 9th District was the Jewish seat,
and it still is. Carroll, Pritzker and
Schakowsky all share the basic liberal
Democratic Party agenda that Yates
made famous, so all they have left to
fight about is which of them is more
Jewish. Pritzker got things off to a
rollicking start when he attacked
Carroll for accepting money from the
American Muslim Council, a group
Pritzker said has connections with
Hamas, an Islamic organization linked
to terrorism. That was a pretty goofy
charge, given Carroll's longstanding ties
to the Jewish community, not to mention the 9th District's sizable and influential Indo-Asian population.
Schakowsky, seeking the higher
ground, accused Pritzker of faxing
anonymous attacks throughout the
district as part of a campaign of "fearmongering." She unwrapped a clean
campaign pledge and demanded
Pritzker and Carroll sign it. Both
challengers declined, perhaps because
they want to reserve the right to taint
Schakowsky by reminding voters of the
problems of her husband, Robert
Creamer, who resigned last year as head
of Citizen Action of Illinois over an
alleged check-kiting scheme.
With the campaign threatening to
turn uglier, one crafty Irishman might
have stepped in and taken this thing.
That might be the strategy of the fourth
candidate, Charles "Pat" Boyle, if anybody actually knew he was in this race.
And to think that all anybody used to
argue about up here was Sid Yates' age.
In 1990, then-Chicago Alderman
Edwin Eisendrath challenged Yates in
the Democratic primary and hinted the
veteran congressman was too elderly to
continue in office. He even sent out a
campaign mailing that mistakenly
raised Yates' age from 80 to 90.
Yates may be older than most of his
constituents, but he has never been
feeble or shy about defending his turf.
In the primary, Yates had Eisendrath
for lunch, sending a clear message to
future challengers: Don't mess with me.
I'll leave when I'm good and ready. He
has been doing his slow dance toward
retirement ever since, and almost
seemed to delight in watching the
poseurs to his throne squirm impatiently like children on a long car trip.
And the way this campaign is going,
Sid Yates is looking younger all the
time.
James Ylisela Jr. teaches urban reporting at
Northwestern University's Medill School of
Journalism. He's the consulting editor of The
Chicago Reporter.
Illinois Issues March 1998 / 37