In Chambers
The judge will see you now. Step into Springfield Bureau Chief Aaron Chambers’ chambers for an insider’s view on Illinois politics and government. No, Chambers isn’t a real judge. At least not in the sense of wearing a robe, wielding a gavel and issuing orders. But like a good judge, Chambers tells it like it is.

Archive for March 18th, 2008

Spotlight on Axelrod

Add comment March 18th, 2008

David Axelrod is the Chicago-based mastermind behind U.S. Sen. Barack Obama’s presidential campaign. The political consultant has long been well known to Illinois political insiders, with clients like Chicago Mayor Richard Daley, and insiders of national politics too, with a slew of congressional races and other high-profile races behind him.

Now the behind-the-scenes campaign guru is gaining a celebrity of his own.

In the most recent in a series of Axelrod profiles, Business Week looks at Axelrod’s other consulting firm, ASK Public Strategies. The firm has worked mostly in secret, though its clients have included ComEd and AT&T. Just as Axelrod’s well-known firm, AKP&D Message and Media, is focused on aiding the campaigns of Democratic candidates, ASK is geared toward the (super-secret) interests of corporations.

ASK’s predilection for operating in the shadows shows up in its work. On behalf of ComEd and Comcast, the firm helped set up front organizations that were listed as sponsors of public-issue ads. Industry insiders call such practices “Astroturfing,” a reference to manufacturing grassroots support. Alderman Brendan Reilly of the 42nd Ward, who has been battling the Children’s Museum’s relocation plans, describes ASK as “the gold standard in Astroturf organizing. This is an emerging industry, and ASK has made a name for itself in shaping public opinion and manufacturing public support.”

ASK’s Web site says little about the firm’s activities. AKP&D’s Web site, on the other hand, is loaded with info, including the firm’s impressive client list.

Perhaps the more comprehensive profile of Axelrod appeared last spring in the New York Times Magazine. It walks through the evolution of Axelrod’s career, from his days as a Chicago Tribune reporter to campaign aide for the late U.S. Paul Simon of Illinois to chief strategist for Obama’s presidential race.

When the first major profile of Axelrod appeared in Chicago magazine in 1987, three years after he left a high-profile job as the lead political reporter for The Chicago Tribune to work as a political operative, the article (“Hatchet Man: The Rise of David Axelrod”) began by comparing him to an “exotic rodent.”

The Times Magazine story continues:

Two decades later, there remains the matter of the comb-over and the damp mustache, but his looks seem less important now. In the last four years, Axelrod has helped steer campaigns for fully four of the Democrats now running for president — Obama, Clinton, John Edwards and Chris Dodd — and one who dropped out (Tom Vilsack); framed the messages for the new young governor of Massachusetts, Deval Patrick; and served as the chief political adviser for Representative Rahm Emanuel when the congressman helped orchestrate the Democratic takeover of the House of Representatives last fall.

The Washington Post also profiled Axelrod last February.

A measure of his status in the top tier of Democratic spinners, scripters and fixers is that when his peers detect something subtle and good, they presume Axelrod must have had a hand in it.

Of course Axelrod won’t take credit for specific lines. Consultants are supposed to stay in the background. “One thing I came to realize early in the process of working with Barack was, he was always going to be the best writer in the room,” Axelrod says. “If you appreciate words and the power of them, he’s a wonderful person to work with. . . . I’d say 80 percent of what he did on that platform on Saturday was in that initial draft,” which Obama had e-mailed to Axelrod at about 4 a.m. Thursday.

The liberal Nation weekly also weighed in last February. And if you’re looking for video, here is PBS’s Charlie Rose’s interview with Axelrod. A Tribune profile, complete with video, is here.

From the Trib:

By 1984, while still in his 20s, David Axelrod had already built an impressive career as a star political reporter, columnist and City Hall bureau chief for the Tribune, the largest and most influential newspaper in Illinois.

It was his dream job. But he was unhappy.

Always awash with doubts and anxieties, Axelrod would agonize over the nuances of the stories he was writing, putting in long hours in the city’s wards doing research and then spending hours more at the computer keyboard. But that was who he was.

Illinois Announces 2008 State Fair Theme, Updated X1

Add comment March 18th, 2008

From the governor’s office: Burma Shave

Governor Rod R. Blagojevich and Illinois State Fair Manager Amy Bliefnick today announced the theme for the 2008 Illinois State Fair will be “A Family Tradition” and feature a contest inspired by the well-known 1950s advertising campaign for Burma Shave. A brand of brushless shaving cream, Burma Shave was made famous by their catchy rhymes on small highway billboards across the U.S. As part of the 2008 State Fair, the Governor and Bliefnick are launching a contest modeled after Burma Shave’s advertising campaign encouraging children statewide to submit five-line rhymes that reflect the theme.Winners will be featured on State Fair promotional materials and signs.

“This year’s theme for the Illinois State Fair truly reflects what the ten-day event is for so many families across our state – a tradition – as traditional as those Burma Shave billboards that dotted our landscape in the 50s,” said Governor Blagojevich. “That’s why we’re modeling our theme after the Burma Shave advertising campaign and inviting children to participate in our efforts. We’re bringing generations together in celebration of this year’s Illinois State Fair.”

A couple of years ago, I spent a summer as an intern for another GateHouse paper, the (Springfield, Ill.) State Journal-Register. The Illinois State Fair is a pretty big deal in Springfield, and among the myriad stories on the fair in the paper that summer, I was assigned to write a feature about the clown band, which has been a fixture of the State Fair for more than 45 years.

Over that time, the band’s leader, Gene Trimble, said he has watched fewer and fewer families come to the state fair. You can read the full story here.

Strolling around the state fair for 45 years, Trimble has watched as the annual celebration has evolved.

After years of declining attendance, the fair crowd has begun to pick back up, he said, adding that the fair is an important part of Illinois history and tradition.

“It is dependent on families bringing their kids and making a tradition out of it,” he said. “You’ve got to find people who want to take their kids out and see the fat cows or the pigs or the fish.”

So, it should be interesting to see if a family-focused theme will help the fair continue to slowly crawl back from the mid-90s, when low attendance figures almost closed the celebration down.

Oh, and if you are feeling exceptionally witty today, perhaps you should consider entering the State Fair’s contest. Here are some examples of the Burma Shave slogans.

UPDATE 1 - By AC

The most common Burma Shave-style signs along Illinois highways belong to a pro-gun group called gunssavelife.com. Or at least, they’re the signs I see most often in my travels.

Bob Steigmann, a downstate appellate court justice, co-opted the group’s strategy when he ran unsuccessfully for Illinois Supreme Court in 2002:

The signs alert motorists that Steigmann is “tough on thugs” and has “earned your vote.” They don’t speak to gun owners’ rights, and the judge says they were not a deliberate attempt to court pro-gun voters. Nonetheless, he acknowledges that, in as much as his signs mirror the pro-gun signs, they could help make his campaign attractive to voters who care deeply about that issue.


Search

Latest Posts

Calendar

March 2008
M T W T F S S
« Feb   Apr »
 12
3456789
10111213141516
17181920212223
24252627282930
31  

Posts by Month


Most Recent Posts

Posts by Category

Syndication