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Liberal groups pounced, fearing White House accommodation to ascendant Republicans and a softening toward Wall Street regulation. "Why in the world is President Barack Obama selecting as his chief of staff a person who comes from the very Wall Street that wrecked the economy?" said Robert Weissmann, president of Public Citizen, a liberal advocacy group. Said Roger Hickey, co-director of the liberal Campaign for America's Future: "I'd be happier if one of these major appointments was closer to Main Street than to Wall Street." Daley is a proud to tout his centrist credentials. And he is joining a White House team just as Obama is coming off a successful stretch of achievements that required compromises and bipartisan outreach. He has talked about the need for a moderate course of governing and is on the board of Third Way, a moderate Democratic think tank. "His selection sends a clear signal that (Obama) intends to govern and campaign from the center," said Third Way's president, Jonathan Cowan, about Daley. Daley, 62, is a lawyer who has been a president of a bank and communications company. He has been serving as Midwest chairman for JPMorgan Chase. Daley will serve as an unquestioned bridge to a community of business executives, who have openly sparred with Obama over the last two years. The U.S. Chamber of Commerce hailed the choice; Daley's appointment met a cool reception from labor unions. The youngest of seven children, Daley learned politics early at the kitchen table, in conversations led by his father, Richard J. Daley, who served as mayor of Chicago from 1955 until his death in 1976. William Daley picked up lessons about the importance of compromise, said one of his brothers, John Daley, a Cook County commissioner in Illinois.
"They both knew that, both my mom and my dad, that people should listen to other people's points of view, and that no one is right all the time," John Daley said. William Daley emerged as a natural candidate for the chief of staff post, particularly after other internal candidates ended up in other positions. He is close to some of those in Obama's orbit, including Axelrod, Emanuel and senior presidential adviser Valerie Jarrett. Daley is expected to start as chief of staff before Obama's State of the Union speech, which is expected on Jan. 25. The general understanding around the White House is that the chief of staff must put in extraordinary hours to be successful. That's what Daley inherits. "It is a critical time, in terms of the president's agenda, and in terms of getting the president re-elected," Klain said. "It's hard for anyone who cares about this nation to turn down an opportunity to be a part of that. It is definitely not a quality of life choice, that's for sure."
[Associated
Press;
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