The level of arrogance and
political stupidity exhibited by wealthy office-seekers never ceases to amaze
me.
Long before the media got
wind of it last year, much of Democratic US Senate candidate Blair Hull's top
staff knew about the police report that alleged Hull struck his then-wife
during a late night argument. Some of those staffers, particularly the
high-paid DC consultants, were dead set against going public early about the
charges. If an early revelation had killed off Hull's candidacy, then that
would have meant the end of their boffo monthly paychecks. Hull, a political
novice without a whole lot of common sense, listened to the vultures and paid a
heavy price - both monetarily and electorally.
Jack Ryan sought out
reporters as long ago as the 2000 Republican National Convention to ask,
without revealing too much, what they thought about a potential skeleton in his
closet. He also asked the advice of top Republicans in 2000 - four years before
the Republican US Senate primary - about whether the m edia would try to delve
into partially locked secrets in his past.
Ryan decided to lie and
spend a fortune. But the damaging info about his sex club jaunts came out
anyway and exposed Ryan as someone who couldn't bring himself to tell the
truth. Like Hull, all of Ryan's money couldn't buy his way out of trouble, and
he was forced to resign the ticket in disgrace.
Almost exactly one year
after the Jack Ryan debacle, we have yet another millionaire candidate on the
verge of self immolation: Ron Gidwitz, a Republican candidate for governor.
A Gidwitz family company
manages a hellhole of an apartment complex in downtown Joliet. Gidwitz also
partially owns the building. Congressman Jerry Weller, a fellow Republican,
recently told the Daily Southtown that the property is an, "unsafe,
unhealthy, crime- and drug-ridden, outdated public housing project."
Weller has been working with Joliet to shut the place down and turn it into a
mixed-income development.
Gidwitz is a well-known
philanthropist, and he seems defensive when questioned by the media about the
project, claiming that he is trying to do good for the poor of Joliet. But the
place is obviously a mess and Gidwitz admitted to the Daily Southtown recently
that he hasn't even bothered to visit the apartment complex "in a long
time."
With the Joliet paper,
local ministers and prominent civic leaders condemning the building as a rat
hole - enough to fill hours of negative TV ads with amazingly frank and
damaging quotes - you would have thought that Gidwitz would have dumped the
dump long before he decided to run for governor. But that would have been the
easy way out, not to mention the politically smart thing to do.
Instead, Gidwitz, like
Hull and Ryan before him, believes he can go his own way. Perhaps he's hoping
that his money will extricate himself from this mess. Money solves a lot of
problems in this life, but as Hull and Ryan discovered just last year, all the
money in the world can't buy an unknown candidate out of bigtime media trouble.
If lots of voters already
knew who he was and had a high opinion of him, then this Joliet situation might
not be such a big deal. But Gidwitz was at one percent in the most recent
Republican primary poll. Despite chairing the Illinois State Board of Education
and all of his other philanthropic work, there is no well of goodwill out there
for him to draw from.
There are rumors that
somebody is planning a statewide television advertising blitz soon. If it's
Gidwitz, he ought to save his money. It doesn't make any sense to hand over a
bunch of cash to an ad placement consultant if he won't first deal with
reality. And the harsh political reality is that if Ron Gidwitz doesn't fix
this very real Joliet problem then he has virtually no chance of winning next
year no matter how many TV ads he buys. It's as simple as that.
Politics is not a terribly
difficult game. But if a candidate won't come to the realization that part of
his existence is potentially repugnant to voters and then refuses to take the
necessary steps to change the reality on the ground, then that candidate is
hopeless - useful only as a pigeon to be plucked clean by the consultant class.
Just ask Blair Hull and Jack Ryan.
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Rich Miller also publishes
Capitol Fax, a daily political newsletter. He can be reached at
capitolfax.blogspot.com.