Stokes: Compromises
By Thomas L. Stokes
Chicago, Illinois –
Democrats are really hard up this year.
You are sure of that when the boys in the back room, meaning the notorious Kelly-Nash Democratic machine of Cook County and this city, accepts as the party’s candidate for governor a hard hitter, who has been tossing nasty adjectives their way for years.
He is Thomas J. Courtney, Cook County state’s attorney for three consecutive terms over the opposition of the machine and for whom, times being normal the bosses would not give a second thought, and certainly not a kind thought.
The Courtney case is typical of the compromises that are going on here among Democrats in this year of desperation, themselves the measure of the worry of Mayor Ed Kelly, who now rules the roost alone since the death of his sidekick, Democratic National Committeeman Pat Nash; the worry of Senator Scott Lucas, up for reelection, and the worry of the national administration.
Boss Kelly is not sitting so pretty. Republicans have been whittling away at his once-lavish majorities in the city. At stake this year is a whole flock of Cook County jobs which are essential cogs in his once-well-greased machine.
A New Deal worry
This translates itself into administration’s worry. The machine’s Cook County majorities, offsetting downstate Republican votes, have given President Roosevelt the state’s 29 electoral votes three times in a row. His majority, however, dwindled to 105,000 in 1940 against Wendell Willkie, falling from a peak of 700,000 against Alf M. Landon in 1936.
Nor is it pleasant to recall that while President Roosevelt carried the state by 105,000 in 1940, the Republican Dwight Green won the governorship by 150,000. The President thus ran 250,000 ahead of the Democratic state ticket.
Governor Green, running for reelection, is assured of renomination at the April 11 primary. Mr. Courtney has no opposition and will be his opponent.
The President’s political lieutenants, looking dolefully over the terrain, are anxious to win Illinois to put together with a big state or two in thew East, scattering small states in the Far West, and the Solid South to carve out a scant victory in November.
Kelly makes his gesture
Out of the common plight of all concerned has emerged a series of deals typified by the Courtney case, an all-for-one and one-for-all program. Boss Kelly has made his compromising gestures.
The result is that the party has an unusually respectable slate of candidates, the object was to build a good base for President Roosevelt.
A part of the program, too, is that the national administration shall keep hand-off. No meddling is wanted by Washington New Dealers with more ardor than practical political sense.
Democrats will play the war heavily to offset the influence of Col. Robert R. McCormick and the Chicago Tribune and their hand-picked candidates, isolationist in hue, on the Republican ticket. A certain victory is seen for the Tribune candidate for the Republican senatorial nomination, Richard J. Lyons, a hell-roaring orator, in the primary against Deneen Watson, sponsor of the Republican Post-War Policy Association organized to jimmy the party away from isolationism. Mr. Lyons will oppose Senator Lucas in November.
At this stage, things look none too bright for the Democrats.