In Mayoral Runoff, Rahm Emanuel’s Corrupt Governance Has Finally Caught Up With Him
by Rick Perlstein
On Tuesday, Chicagoans voted themselves a reprieve. With 45.4 percent of the vote, Mayor Rahm Emanuel ended the first round of his first re-election bid almost five points below what he needed to avoid a runoff election in April and three points below his performance in the last major pre-election poll. Mayor 1 percent will face second-place finisher Jesus Chuy García, the soft-spoken, compassionate Cook County board member who proclaimed himself with a Chicagoan lilt the neighborhood guy who over-performed the poll.
Perhaps what turned some voters against Rahm at the last minute or motivated them to go to the polls in the first place on a cold Chicago day that started out in the single digits was an Election Day exposé that appeared in the British paper the Guardian by investigate reporter Spencer Ackerman. The Disappeared revealed the existence of Homan Square, a forlorn black site that the Chicago Police operate on the West Side.
There, Chicagoans learned many for the first time arrestees are locked up for days at a time without access to lawyers. One victim was 15 years old; he was released without being charged with anything. Another, a 44-year-old named John Hubbard, never left he died in custody. One of the NATO 3 defendants, later acquitted on most charges of alleged terror plans during a 2012 Chicago protest, was shackled to a bench there for 17 hours.
It struck legal experts as a throwback to the worst excesses of Chicago police abuse, with a post-9/11 feel to it, the Guardian reported. And for a candidate, Rahm Emanuel, who ran on a message he was turning the page on the old, malodorous Chicago way, the piece contributed to a narrative that proved devastating.
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http://billmoyers.com/2015/02/26/mayoral-runoff-rahm-emanuels-corrupt-governance-finally-caught/