Ocnus.Net
Chicago Remains The Tie That Binds
By Shailagh Murray, Washington Post 14/7/08
Jul 16, 2008 - 8:46:53 AM
The senator from Illinois does not typically travel with an entourage,
instead spending his time on the plane reading, working or listening to
music. But this was a special occasion -- the night last month when he
was claiming the Democratic presidential nomination. Joining him and
his wife, Michelle, for the flight from Chicago to St. Paul, Minn.,
were half a dozen of their closest friends, a biracial cross section of
the city's business and professional elite: Martin Nesbitt, a parking
lot magnate; Valerie Jarrett, a prominent businesswoman; Eric Whitaker,
an executive at the University of Chicago Medical Center; and John
Rogers, the founder of an investment fund.
Some were mainly social friends from Hyde Park, their Chicago
neighborhood. Some have played a major role in Obama's campaign,
including Penny Pritzker, a billionaire Hyatt hotel heiress and Obama's
national fundraising chairman; James Crown, son of Chicago billionaire
Lester Crown and another prominent member of the local Jewish
community; and David Axelrod, who has been Obama's Chicago-based
political adviser and confidant since his U.S. Senate campaign in 2004.
Together they constitute the core of Obama's inner circle, the friends
he had before he became a senator and entertained thoughts of the
presidency, and who he would bring with him in a sense if he ends up in
the White House. "There are a lot of people with shared values," said
Nesbitt, whose family vacationed with the Obamas over Easter and whose
daughters spend most Saturdays together.
Like Nesbitt, most were present at the creation of Obama's long-shot
presidential bid. They have opened important doors for him, given him
counsel and bad news, and demonstrated a low-profile loyalty that has
set the tone for his campaign. They also have taken to heart the two
rules Obama has imposed on everyone associated with his presidential
bid, whether old friend or new hire: "no drama" and "no leaks."
"He's going to gravitate toward people like him," said Jarrett, who
also serves as a senior campaign adviser and is one of the code's quiet
enforcers within Obama's world. "He's going to look for people with
similar temperaments."
One campaign aide described Jarrett's loosely defined role as liaison
between Obama's private life and campaign life. In meetings, she will
weigh in when an idea "doesn't sound authentically Barack," as one
campaign aide put it. She also will quietly smooth internal riffs and
other disruptions.
Whitaker goes back the furthest with Obama, having met the idealistic
community organizer during their student days at Harvard. They shared a
drive to reverse troubling patterns in the African American community.
A public health specialist, Whitaker founded "Project Brotherhood," a
barbershop-based program aimed at improving the health of black men,
and served as a senior physician at Chicago's Cook County Hospital, now
known as John H. Stroger Jr. Hospital.
Pritzker and Crown have played instrumental roles in building Obama's
huge campaign war chest, but their prominence has also provided him a
pathway to Jewish voters. Speaking at a synagogue in Boca Raton, Fla.,
in May, Obama called Pritzker and Crown "dear friends" from "pretty
prominent" Jewish families, and told the crowd: "One of the raps on me
when I first ran for Congress in the African American community was,
'He's too close to the Jewish community.' You can look this up. 'All
his friends are Jews. He's from Hyde Park; he's from the University of
Chicago.' "
Nesbitt fits into several circles. As the campaign's treasurer, he
plays a lead fundraising role. "Barack said, 'I want to run this like a
business,' and I've tried to help do that," he said. Nesbitt also
shares Obama's passion for basketball and is a member of a travel team
that includes Whitaker; Rogers, who founded Ariel Capital Management,
the country's first black-owned investment firm; Alexi Giannoulias, the
Illinois state treasurer, who played professional ball in Greece; and
Reggie Love, Obama's 26-year-old "body man" and a kind of surrogate
son, who played basketball and football at Duke University, and who is
one of the few mainstays on the court without Chicago ties.
While Love adds levity, Jarrett and Nesbitt provide a needed reality
check from time to time. The two can raise issues with Obama that
campaign aides are reluctant to broach, such as, 'You're dragging and
people are noticing" or "Don't be so curt."
Last spring, as gasoline prices were beginning another precipitous
rise, Nesbitt made sure his friend understood what was happening. "In
case you're not living in the real world, being driven around by Secret
Service," his e-mail to Obama said, "it just cost me $85 to fill up my
tank."
Axelrod said that "it's helpful to have people who the candidate
trusts, where you know anything they say is going to be motivated by
their concern for you."
But it's a role that Obama's friends sometimes take more seriously than
he does. "Every now and then, someone will send me on a mission because
he needs to be told something that only I can tell him," Nesbitt said.
"I'll say, 'Hey, you know, they think you should be doing this.' " And
Obama will respond, "You are just so transparent." Nesbitt added: "When
he knows we're just trying to cheer him up or pump him up, he'll just
start laughing."
Diverse Profiles
Obama's world includes other circles of friends and advisers, many of
whom remain little known to the public but who share the candidate's
discretion and intense sense of commitment -- and whose reward is to
rise along with him.
One group is connected to Obama through Harvard Law School and includes
economic adviser Michael Froman; domestic policy adviser Cassandra Q.
Butts; and Julius Genachowski, who engineered Obama's cutting-edge
campaign technology. Two of Obama's most prominent Harvard professors,
Laurence H. Tribe and Charles J. Ogletree, continue to provide guidance
on legal issues.
Obama's core foreign policy team is an eclectic mix of 40-somethings,
such as former assistant secretary of state Susan E. Rice, veteran
diplomats such as Anthony Lake; Senate aides Denis McDonough and Mark
Lippert; and prominent military experts such as Clinton administration
Navy secretary Richard J. Danzig and retired Air Force Maj. Gen. J.
Scott Gration. Gration, the son of missionaries in Congo, speaks
Swahili and voted for George W. Bush in 2000, but he fell for Obama
when the two traveled to Africa together in 2006. For help on the
Middle East, Obama turns to longtime Chicago friend Lee Rosenberg, an
entrepreneur and board member of the American Israel Public Affairs
Committee, a Jewish lobbying force.
Obama has collected a core of Washington insiders, including prominent
lawyers Greg Craig and Eric Holder; former Senate majority leader
Thomas A. Daschle (S.D.), and former congressman Timothy J. Roemer
(Ind.). Sen. Edward M. Kennedy (Mass.) and his niece Caroline Kennedy
also are close to Obama; Caroline Kennedy and Holder are leading the
campaign's vice presidential vetting team.
Despite their diverse profiles, Democratic establishment types who
gravitated early to Obama share his distaste for the divisive,
personality-driven culture of today's Washington. "He is a sincere,
down-to-earth, in-touch person," Roemer says. "It's just not that
common in politics today."
Another important group in Obama's life consists of the Chicago
progressives who have mentored him throughout his career. The leader of
this group is Abner J. Mikva, a retired federal judge, White House
counsel and congressman from Chicago who has known Obama for 20 years,
and who often is described as a father figure to the senator.
Mikva has quietly helped guide Obama since his Harvard Law School days.
He encouraged his political aspirations, was an early advocate of his
presidential run and has pulled numerous strings to help to ease the
candidate's path.
One Mikva protégé is Axelrod. A former Chicago Tribune reporter,
Obama's message maestro left his home town of New York for the
University of Chicago in the early 1970s and has never looked back.
Like Mikva, he belongs to the city's progressive elite. Axelrod and
Obama also shared a second mentor: the late senator Paul Simon (Ill.),
who took Obama under his wing when he joined the state legislature.
Other members of this circle include Newton Minow, a longtime Mikva
friend who hired Obama to join his civil rights law firm and whose
daughter taught Obama at Harvard; Forrest Claypool, a Cook County
commissioner and Axelrod partner who is a member of Obama's media team;
John Schmidt, a Clinton Justice Department official who founded the
reform-minded Chicago Council of Lawyers and is a member of Obama's
finance team; and John Bouman, a longtime friend from Springfield,
Ill., who is president of the Sargent Shriver National Center on
Poverty Law in Chicago.
Obama also turns to Rep. Rahm Emanuel (Ill.), a Chicago politician
through and through, who stayed neutral during the Democratic primary
because of his close Clinton family ties but who endorsed the home-town
candidate as soon as Obama crossed the delegate threshold. Emanuel is
close to Axelrod, Pritzker and Nesbitt, and has unofficially advised
Obama since he was a long-shot Senate candidate. It was Emanuel who
urged Obama never to board an airplane without his iPod and something
to read, telling him: "When people see those earphones, they leave you
alone."
Chicago taught Obama a key lesson, Mikva noted. He was an outsider with
an unusual name, but he was able to overcome those obstacles. "This is
a big city, but it's a very open city," Mikva said. "People plant their
flag in Chicago, and this is where they're from. You can be accepted
quickly. Being here has given Barack a very large comfort zone."
The city's tentacles reach deep into his campaign apparatus, linking
disparate circles by a single phone call from Mikva. In 2003, during
the early stages of Obama's U.S. Senate campaign, Mikva called Lake to
ask him "to talk to this guy who may not win." Lake held several
briefings with the candidate and put Obama in touch with Rice, who was
advising Sen. John F. Kerry's presidential campaign.
In one of their early meetings, Obama read Rice the rules: "I don't
want any drama. I don't want you to bring your history or your
internecine warfare." This was the political culture that Rice had been
seeking, with little success. "He creates a sense of openness and
security, and therefore you don't have a whole bunch of people who are
needy to prove themselves to the candidate," she observed.
Cautious and Protective
As Obama's campaign expands for the general-election campaign and the
candidate has less time for his friendships, certain strains are
starting to show. At his Chicago headquarters, insecurities have flared
as the circles multiply and more people crowd inside. Jarrett said her
main focus in the coming weeks will be to help the new hires integrate
smoothly: "It's important that people feel good about this."
Like others who know Obama well, Jarrett has watched her friend with a
certain amount of awe at the 18 months of nonstop motion and incoming
fire. "You can never be fully prepared for the rigor and the
discipline," she said. "The campaign itself takes some getting used to."
Obama still struggles to maintain balance in his life, especially with
his family. The only time he sounds wistful is when he talks about
Michelle and their daughters, Sasha and Malia, whom he often sees only
on Sundays.
As the stakes get higher, Obama's friends have grown more cautious and
protective -- and in some cases have attracted controversy. Whitaker's
name surfaced as part of the scandal involving longtime Obama
fundraiser Antoin "Tony" Rezko, because Obama had recommended his shy
and studious friend to Rezko for a state job. The exchange took place
after Rod Blagojevich was elected Illinois governor, and Whitaker
applied for the head job at the state Public Health Department.
A Chicago developer and early Obama supporter, Rezko, acting as one of
Blagojevich's liaisons, had contacted Obama to seek recommendations for
state jobs. Obama singled out Whitaker, noting that he had already
applied for the public health post. "I simply said, 'I think this guy
is outstanding and is certainly somebody who is worthy of an
interview,' " Obama told the Chicago Tribune in a lengthy interview
recounting his Rezko contacts. Rezko was later convicted of federal
corruption charges, and although the case did not implicate Obama, his
Rezko association has caused him significant political embarrassment.
Even now, Obama reverts to his Hyde Park friends and habits whenever he
has a free day. One recent Sunday, he played basketball at the
neighborhood's East Bank Club with Love, Chicago public schools chief
Arne Duncan and others while Jarrett chatted with Michelle Obama.
Later, the family headed over to Whitaker's house for a cookout. Most
of a pool report on the event was devoted to rehashing the
Whitaker-Rezko link.
The exposure has made some of Obama's friends, such as Whitaker and
Rogers, reluctant to speak to reporters; the two declined requests for
interviews. Others try to restrict their comments to generalities and
innocuous details. Nesbitt learned the perils of public exposure when
MSNBC host Chris Matthews saw a clip of Obama describing his friend's
gas-price e-mail and challenged the $85 cost as inflated. Nesbitt is
paying even more now to fill his 22-gallon tank -- but he's too
embarrassed to disclose the make and model of his luxury sedan.
Acquaintances are "reaching out" to Nesbitt, knowing that he has ready
access to the presumptive Democratic nominee. He tries not to e-mail
Obama often, other than the occasional "hang in there" note and
complaint about onerous tax provisions. They had fun hanging out in St.
Thomas over Easter, but those moments come rarely now. "He can detach
for hours at a time, but it's a constant now," Nesbitt said. "He's off
for a conference call or an interview or something."
He recalls telling his friend early on, "I'm so glad I'm not running
for president." And Obama replied, "No, but you are."
Source: Ocnus.net 2008