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"You need someone who can build a bridge," said Pablo Serrano, a 30-year-old community artist in the city's heavily Hispanic Pilsen neighborhood. "Race is a big issue. In a city as segregated as Chicago, it has to be transcended." Once in office, the new mayor's biggest challenge may be pushing through an agenda without the loyalty of alderman who owe him or her their jobs. Daley appointed 18 aldermen, noted Dick Simpson, a University of Illinois political scientist and former council member. "He has more dominance than any new mayor will have," Simpson said. David Orr, the county clerk and a former alderman who was mayor for a week after Washington died in 1987, said the city could finally get the kind of debate between mayor and City Council that has been lacking during Daley's tenure. "There's nothing wrong with having the mayor and council battle over issues," Orr said. "If that would have happened we never would have had the parking meter fiasco," he said of Daley's pushing through the privatization of the meters, a move widely seen as a major blunder that could cost the city billions of dollars in unrealized revenue. Others worry that without Daley's power and willingness to use it, the next mayor may not be able to get adversaries to work together. The Rev. Michael Pfleger, a Catholic priest on the South Side, said Daley successfully won City Council approval of construction of a Wal-Mart in the area because both the retailer and small-business proponents who opposed it knew he was willing to push his clout. "If you are going to take on Mayor Daley you better be able to fight (because) he is willing to go after what he believes in," Pfleger said. Still, Pfleger noted Daley garnered respect on all sides and the priest worries the next mayor won't be able to walk Daley's tightrope. "We can get a lot of community personalities and business banner carriers but if we don't have someone who is married to both ... we are in big trouble," he said. Whatever happens, some residents have trouble imagining Daley won't be pulling strings and don't buy his contention that he will not throw his support behind any one mayoral candidate. "He has his next person," said Carlos Miranda, a 62-year-old grocery store owner. "Chicago is good, but that's the way it's done."
[Associated
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