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Some were critical of Emanuel's role in the Obama administration. Others wondered if he was more concerned about landing himself a job than he was for the city. And some suggested that after being away from Chicago for so long, he was ineligible to run for mayor
-- an argument one city elections official said is likely without merit. Talking to reporters Monday, Emanuel briefly addressed another issue bound to come up often during the campaign: Rod Blagojevich. The impeached former Illinois governor's retrial is set to start in January, when the mayoral campaign should be in full swing. Emanuel is not accused of wrongdoing, but his name came up during the first trial, including when then-Gov. Blagojevich was heard on wiretap tape recordings played in court allegedly talking about trying to sell or trade Obama's old Senate seat. Asked if he'd heed calls for full disclosure about his contact with Blagojevich at that time, Emanuel suggested there was nothing new to reveal, saying there were "no dealings, no quid pro quo." And he didn't sound daunted by the prospect of being called to testify at the retrial. "If they asked me to testify at trial, absolutely. ... We'll do it," he said. Emanuel joins a crowded field of Democrats who have announced or hinted they're running. Among them are Chicago School Board president and close Daley ally Gery Chico, Chicago City Clerk Miguel del Valle, Cook County Sheriff Tom Dart and state Sen. James Meeks, who's also the pastor of a South Side church. Former U.S. Sen. Carol Moseley Braun, who also is considering a mayoral run, visited one of the same South Side eateries as Emanuel on Monday and also was filmed talking with voters, but a spokeswoman said the overlap was a coincidence. Braun had been planning her own listening tour of the city's South Side for weeks to solidify her base, a spokeswoman said, and has been quietly building support among business and community leaders since mid-September. One other potential rival didn't sound overly worried about Emanuel. Speaking at the Cook County Jail for the official launch of a new laundry operation staffed by jailed military veterans, Dart told reporters he was presently focused on his own family and his current job serving Chicago. "My time is spent on my family and my job," he said. "What he does or what he doesn't do, what his strong points, weak points are
-- are really not going to be the thing that determines what I do at all."
[Associated
Press;
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