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A New Chicago Mayor Faces Similar Iissues to the Ones that Dogged Richard J. Daley in 1968

Clarence Page, Tribune Content Agency on

When a friend reminded me that it’s almost time for the Democratic National Convention, I wanted to say, “That’s OK, I’m good with the last one.”

But, I didn’t. I’m too much of a political junkie to ignore this level of political history while it’s being made.

As a matter of historical importance, it’s not the party that matters to me as much as the role these events play in making political history. But I also am a Chicagoan who cares about the city and the image it presents to the world.

As such, I felt great apprehension before the last Democratic convention in Chicago in 1996, especially in light of the fiasco that erupted during the party’s convention in 1968.

Yes, the 1968 convention, in case you weren’t around, was the one widely and unpleasantly remembered for violent clashes between police and protesters, a chaotic scene that set the party up for what became nominee Hubert Humphrey’s loss in the fall to Republican Richard Nixon.

Fortunately, the 1996 convention came off well enough to be remembered less for the reasonably peaceful protests outside than for the sight of first lady Hillary Clinton, later the U.S. secretary of state, clapping along with other delegates doing the Macarena during an intermission.

 

Ah, talk about the politics of joy.

But I was sensing flashbacks to chaotic 1968 last week when about 40 people were arrested for blocking roads leading into O’Hare International Airport, one of the world’s busiest, for more than an hour.

Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker later reassured the public that the city and state are ready to stop any disruption to the big event.

“Look, we believe in free speech, and we’re going to allow people to protest,” he told Dana Bash on “CNN Sunday Morning.” “But the reality is we’re going to make sure people have ingress and egress and that they’re safe in our state.”

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