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Durkin’s wise move and Shiner shines light on former Preckwinkle chief

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* My weekly syndicated newspaper column

The Anti-Harassment, Equality, and Access panel set up by the Democratic Party earlier this year released its final recommendations last week.

The AHEA panel wants the state’s political parties to make their funding of candidates contingent on campaigns adopting specific policies and training. The panel was created in the wake of numerous sexual harassment allegations at the Statehouse and in campaigns.

Among other things, the panel published a model anti-harassment policy for campaigns as well as a list of some things that can be considered harassment, bullying and discrimination. It recommends that bystanders speak up and says campaigns should adopt strict rules against retaliation and set up procedures for reporting violations.

Comptroller Susana Mendoza, Sen. Melinda Bush, D-Grayslake, and Rep. Carol Ammons, D-Champaign, held six listening sessions throughout the state and they seem to have put a lot of thought into the final product, which was sent to all party leaders at the state and county level as well as all statewide and state-level campaigns.

The panel’s final report also includes a goal of making sure at least half the members of the General Assembly (and other state and local governments) are women. It wants the state parties to each hire a “director of diversity” to recruit candidates and staff and invest in training women to run for office. The panel also recommends that the parties require diversity in the pool of applicants for every political vacancy and establish an advisory board to oversee the changes.

The panel wants to “attack the culture of silence that keeps sexual harassment and other misconduct shrouded in secrecy” by instituting a ban on the use of non-disclosure agreements or mandatory arbitration clauses in campaigns relating to sexual harassment.

Campaign staffers often spend long hours with each other, both at work and at play. So, the panel is recommending a “one ask” rule for dating, pointing to Facebook’s implementation of the policy. In other words, if a person declines a date invite for any reason, he or she cannot be asked again. The report does acknowledge that “over-regulation” of the dating issue could “discourage the friendship and camaraderie that is a hallmark of a well-run campaign and may be impossible to enforce.”

The panel also wants campaigns to “monitor” alcohol use and prohibit consumption “to the extent it interferes with a campaign worker’s ability to perform his or her job or exercise proper judgment.” The panel also warns that alcohol policies shouldn’t ever be used to “justify harassing and inappropriate behavior or used to discredit a victim.”

But how realistic are some of these policies in high-pressure, non-stop campaign environments that are exclusively focused on winning the race at hand?

The panel’s report included “paraphrased comments” from participants of the listening sessions like this: “Expecting campaigns or parties to handle harassment internally during a campaign may be unrealistic because everyone, including the victims of harassment, is trying to win the election. This desire to win may be a deterrent to reporting because victims may worry it would hurt the campaign.”

I think that’s why House Republican Leader Jim Durkin’s recent decision to abandon Rep. Jerry Long’s (R-Streator) re-election campaign was so important and so under-appreciated by the media and other political observers.

Durkin has said that his best hope in a year like this is to focus lots of resources on picking up and/or holding on to Downstate seats. Long’s Downstate seat was once in Democratic hands, but pro-Trump, anti-Madigan sentiment helped propel him into the General Assembly two years ago (along with a 2016 opponent who reportedly didn’t care to walk precincts). The Democrats were coming after him hard this year.

Yet, when a campaign worker reported allegations of harassment, Durkin ordered an outside investigation and then publicly walked away from the candidate. There was no attempt to sweep it under the rug until after the election, which is pretty much what you’d expect in other times (and, frankly, even now).

What Durkin clearly demonstrated by abandoning Long’s campaign is that some things have to be more important than winning. That’s an all too rare concept in politics.

It was also prudent in the long-term. Covering up the Long situation could’ve seriously endangered his leadership position if the truth emerged.

However you look at it, this was absolutely the right move by Durkin and it took guts, particularly since some House members on his far-right flank are still not condemning Long and the state’s leading newspaper editorial boards have remained silent.

* Meanwhile, from Meredith Shiner

Over a week ago, the chief of staff for prominent Chicago politician Toni Preckwinkle, for whom I once worked, was forced to resign because of alleged “inappropriate behavior,” which he did not deny. Two days later, Preckwinkle declared her candidacy for mayor and, as the current president of Cook County and head of the Democratic Party, is a presumptive favorite. I could never match the bravery of the woman or women who came forward to ensure her chief of staff would no longer have a job. To be clear, I never was physically violated or threatened at work or out of it. But this former chief of staff was dismissive and demeaning to me in ways I am sure other women would find familiar.

When I first arrived for an interview with him for the County job, I was left waiting for two hours only to be told he had no time to speak with me. When I accepted the position, it was on the condition I would be promoted to replace a retiring staff member. The promotion was delayed indefinitely with no explanation. When I voiced countervailing opinions to his, I was shut out of conversations I should have been in, watching him walk past my door to get to my male colleague’s office. And when I finally gave up and gave a full two-weeks notice, he confirmed receipt of my resignation letter to me, but told HR he never received it because he wanted me to stay longer; he thought that if he didn’t send along my resignation, I wouldn’t be able to leave.

To me, he was a run-of-the-mill sexist. But as I’ve seen the headlines and tweets about his resignation, I’ve grappled internally with how, in less than a decade of professional life, I’ve come to this place where I’ve accepted that sexism is a normal consideration in the workplace.

I left that government office relatively quietly because I didn’t think anyone would care about my experience. Instead of trying to fight the sexism I endured, I walked away, even though I knew I was good at my job, leaving the door open for another smart, capable woman to potentially be treated the way I was. It’s an embarrassing pattern I recognize in myself because I walked away from my journalism career in Washington D.C., too, in part, because I was tired of dealing with the kind of men in politics who live there.

Preckwinkle has some questions to answer I think.

posted by Rich Miller
Monday, Oct 1, 18 @ 9:17 am

Comments

  1. Rich, you are totally right that Preckwinkle has some questions to answer. But does anyone in the Chicago media have the testicular virility to ask them of her?

    Comment by Ravenswood Right Winger Monday, Oct 1, 18 @ 9:41 am

  2. ==some things have to be more important than winning. That’s an all too rare concept in politics.==

    Worth repeating. And repeating. . . .

    Comment by Out Here In The Middle Monday, Oct 1, 18 @ 9:42 am

  3. Really? Testicular virility? Do you really want to sound like that right now?

    Comment by Cheryl44 Monday, Oct 1, 18 @ 9:47 am

  4. Don’t blame me, I am just quoting our former governor who is now in federal prison.

    http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/chi-blago-quotes-1208-story.html

    Comment by Ravenswood Right Winger Monday, Oct 1, 18 @ 9:59 am

  5. ==Don’t blame me, I am just quoting our former governor who is now in federal prison.==

    Always a smart move. “Hey look a guy in prison said this thing once, so I’m definitely adding it to my vernacular”.

    Comment by Lester Holt’s Mustache Monday, Oct 1, 18 @ 10:19 am

  6. “Right Winger”…..I think maybe you’re putting a target on your comments…..”Ravenswood Middle of the Roader” sounds tapioca, but not inflammatory to most. LOL

    Comment by Anonymous Monday, Oct 1, 18 @ 10:57 am

  7. My only question on Keller is whether the behavior she’s describing was confined to women. In the weeks leading up to his resignation, I had heard from multiple people that this had become his MO. Kind of a classic arrogance from someone who thought proximity to power gives you the right to be a jerk. Not clear whether he reserved a special kind of scorn for women.

    Comment by Equal opportunity offender? Monday, Oct 1, 18 @ 11:22 am

  8. ==“Right Winger”…..I think maybe you’re putting a target on your comments…..==

    Not for me, I don’t really have a problem with the term or whatever his/her politics are. Seems weird though, right? Blago said it, therefore I’m going to use it in a sexual harassment post comment?

    Comment by Lester Holt’s Mustache Monday, Oct 1, 18 @ 1:58 pm

  9. While she is answering questions, she can explain why she has continues to stand with Berrios despite his obvious corruption.

    Comment by Just Me Monday, Oct 1, 18 @ 2:06 pm

  10. Having worked with Keller and Toni’s other Chief of Staffs, they all were jerks, male or female (except Brian Hamer). It’s a cultural thing, not necessarily a personal thing. It’s unfair to make this a “me-too” moment, when that culture is set at the top.

    Comment by Anon Monday, Oct 1, 18 @ 3:42 pm

  11. the story about the chief of staff sounds less sexist and more extreme jerk. Toni has much to answer for, but I think the Berrios bit is the most disturbing. she simply is not the person many believe she is because they are clouded by what she used to be. she’s a hack.

    Comment by Amalia Monday, Oct 1, 18 @ 5:27 pm

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