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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

Well, good luck, governor, and to Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson too. Here’s hoping our political leaders have learned some important lessons from our past convention experiences, including the missteps.

A special commission headed by Dan Walker, general counsel for Montgomery Ward who later would become Illinois governor, famously blamed the 1968 chaos in the streets on a “police riot.” The report confirmed the widespread public impression that the Chicago police, in a classic Daley understatement, ”overreacted.” But it also pointed out the provocations they suffered, as well as examples of police showing proper restraint.

The success of the 1996 convention under Mayor Richard M. Daley, son of Richard J., showed how much the son and the city had learned from the mistakes of 1968. It’s hard to remember now, because 1996 went so well, but there was palpable nervousness beforehand.

So it is in 2024. The reasons are different this time. In 1996, what caused the angst was the pressure of exorcising the demons of 1968. In 2024, what is prompting the worry is a new generation of activists and protesters using a level of aggression we haven’t really seen since the late ’60s. Once again, Chicago’s 1968 demons have returned to fray our nerves. It’s only the issues fueling the anger that have changed.

Brandon Johnson is about as far from Richard J. Daley in terms of ideology as a mayor can get. But he is likely to be confronted with similar quandaries over how much force to allow his police force to employ. A nervous city for now can only wait for August. It won’t provide any comfort to him that Daley’s reputation never recovered from the brutal scenes in Grant Park.

Chicago has been hosting party conventions since the Republican National Convention that nominated Abraham Lincoln in 1860. The vast majority of those gatherings have reflected well on the city and pumped money into the local economy.

 

It’s your turn now, Mayor Johnson. It’s not that the whole world is watching, as the young protesters chanted in 1968. But a whole country will be.

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(E-mail Clarence Page at cpage@chicagotribune.com.)

©2024 Clarence Page. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.


(c) 2024 CLARENCE PAGE DISTRIBUTED BY TRIBUNE MEDIA SERVICES, INC.

 

 

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