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In the first Democratic primary
-- his only close race -- Blagojevich faced Paul Vallas, widely praised for improving the troubled Chicago public schools as CEO. Knowing Vallas would be a tough opponent in the city, Blagojevich bombarded the far reaches of rural Illinois with TV ads, stressing his humble roots. It worked. Blagojevich was elected in 2002, but had his eye on a bigger prize: the White House. Democrats were thrilled to have one of their own in the governor's chair for the first time in 26 years. The honeymoon was brief. Blagojevich soon made enemies
-- Democrats and Republicans. He was an eager campaigner but, some say, he was bored with the nitty-gritty of governing. "He enjoyed the sexy part of government, the glad-handing, the attention of followers," says Fritchey, the state lawmaker. "But at a certain point, you've got to get out of campaign mode and into governing. That's where he had difficulty." Blagojevich immediately angered folks outside Chicago when he refused to move to the governor's mansion in Springfield; he says he didn't want to uproot his two young daughters. Critics says he was a fleeting presence in the capital, and when he was around, he didn't exactly dig in. "His lack of attention to details and his work ethic were mind-boggling," says State Sen. Kirk Dillard, a veteran Republican lawmaker. "He didn't seem to want to make any difficult decisions." Lou Lang, another Democratic state representative, says he was antagonistic.
"He went out of his way to offend legislators ... to blame them for all the ills of Illinois," Lang says. "He did all sorts of things to evade us, to do end runs, to stick it to us. He ran Illinois by press conference." Blagojevich claims he's a "big picture" guy, not a detail man. In his book, he insists he didn't want to be "slowed down by having to spend my time mired in a bureaucracy that could be like quicksand." But the man who says he wanted to avoid "petty squabbles" found himself in name-calling exchanges with lawmakers. They said he broke his word. He claimed it was lonely being governor. Tensions grew. Once he ordered legislators to Springfield to vote on a critical transportation bill he wanted, then ended up attending a Chicago Blackhawks game 175 miles away. The measure was defeated. He called lawmakers into special session so often they stopped coming. Then he sued House leader Madigan for not ordering them to attend. He won. And when a new tax proposal he offered was defeated in the House by a 107-0 vote, he inexplicably declared "things went pretty well today." For all his problems, his dreams of the White House endured until the 2004 Democratic National Convention when Obama was tapped to be the keynoter
-- a star-making turn launching him on the path to the presidency. Blagojevich, some recall, repeatedly joked how he was chosen to speak at 3 a.m. "He realized not only was he not going to be the golden boy of the Democratic Party nationally, but he had been jumped over by a state senator from his own state," Fritchey says. "For a man who fancied himself the next JFK, Obama's pick to give the keynote address was devastating." Still, Blagojevich, bolstered by a Democratic majority, racked up a list of accomplishments, even as the deficit more than doubled to $11 billion during his tenure. He raised the minimum wage (angering some business groups), provided state-subsidized health insurance to every child in Illinois, banned discrimination of gays and lesbians, increased education spending, won approval to expand preschool and increased mammogram and cervical cancer screening for uninsured women. "He did a lot of good," says Clifford Kelley, a former Chicago alderman who now is a talk show host on a black radio station and has welcomed Blagojevich as a guest. "Once two ladies called to thank him for saving their lives" with mammograms, he says. "I really think he cares about people." By 2006 when he was facing re-election, Blagojevich already was under increasing scrutiny by the feds. Agents were investigating patronage hiring and reports that money management firms were being squeezed to come up with payoffs and campaign cash if they wanted the lucrative business of investing state teachers pension money. Blagojevich's relationship with Dick Mell, his father-in-law, also had soured. Mell had made an explosive claim that a Blagojevich adviser was arranging state appointments in exchange for campaign cash. Mell retracted his accusation. Blagojevich blamed it on a dispute they were having over a landfill. None of it dampened Blagojevich's fundraising. He spent more than $26 million on his re-election (both the primary and general contests), compared with about $9 million for his Republican opponent, Judy Baar Topinka, then the state treasurer. He portrayed her as a crony of Ryan, the convicted ex-governor, and breezed to a second term. She says she was overwhelmed by Blagojevich's TV ad blitz. "I used to be stunned -- he could raise $2, $3, $4 million in a night," Topkina says. "If we made $5-to-$10,000, we thought we were doing well. I played by the rules, he didn't." Topinka is referring to another part of the allegations -- that Blagojevich engaged in so-called pay-to-play politics, illegally pressuring potential contributors, including the head of a children's hospital. "It's so embarrassing," Topinka says. "If you say you're from Illinois, people know about Rod Blagojevich in the worst possible way. They think we're a bunch of doofuses. How could we have elected someone like that? Not just once
-- but twice." Blagojevich plans to testify at his trial, one more step in his high-profile campaign. Will it succeed? "I don't know if it's a plan or it's just goofy," Green says. "No one knows. I don't know if HE knows, but he didn't get this far by just being frivolous. And if it does work, he's a genius ... and I guarantee you he'll run for office again
-- as a victim."
[Associated
Press;
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