Presidential
Medal of Freedom recipient, Illinois reformer Mikva dies
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[July 06, 2016]
By Dave McKinney
CHICAGO (Reuters) - Abner
Mikva, who served as a White House adviser, federal
judge, congressman and mentor to President Barack Obama,
has died at age 90, his Chicago non-profit organization
said on Tuesday.
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Mikva, who died on Monday, emerged in the 1950s as a liberal
reform leader who defied an electoral culture in Illinois
dominated by machine politicians before moving on to Washington.
Obama, who presented Mikva the Presidential Medal of Freedom in
2014, credited Mikva with steering him into public service when
the future president was a law school student.
"He saw something in me that I didn't yet see in myself, but I
know why he did it," Obama said in a statement. "Ab represented
the best of public service himself and he believed in empowering
the next generation of young people to shape our country ...
"Like so many admirers, I’ve lost a mentor and a friend."
Mikva also served as former President Bill Clinton's White House
counsel.
U.S. Senator Dick Durbin of Illinois called Mikva "my North Star
for integrity."
"In an era of cynicism and disappointment, Abner's record of
public service was proof that the good guys can win without
selling their souls," he said in a statement.
Mikva's first brush with politics came in 1948 as a University
of Chicago law student, when he approached a city ward boss
about volunteering for the Democratic campaigns of gubernatorial
candidate Adlai Stevenson and senatorial candidate Paul Douglas.
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"The quintessential Chicago ward committeeman takes the cigar out of
his mouth, says, 'Who sent you kid?' And I said, 'Nobody sent me.'
He puts the cigar back in his mouth and said, 'We don't want nobody
nobody sent,' and that was my introduction to Chicago politics,"
Mikva recounted in an oral history recorded by the Abraham Lincoln
Presidential Library.
Mikva was elected to the Illinois state legislature in 1956 and
served in the U.S. House during the 1960s and 1970s.
In 1979, President Jimmy Carter nominated him to the U.S. Court of
Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit, where he became chief
judge. One of his law clerks was Elena Kagan, now a U.S. Supreme
Court justice.
Mikva remained on the bench until 1994, when he was appointed by
Clinton as White House counsel.
Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel, who worked on one of Mikva's
congressional re-election campaigns, issued a statement calling him
"one of the great public servants of our time."
Mikva's death was confirmed by Mikva Challenge, a leadership program
for Chicago youth, but it did not provide a cause of death.
(Editing by Fiona Ortiz and Bill Trott)
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