NorthIowaToday.com

Founded in 2010

News & Entertainment for Mason City, Clear Lake & the Entire North Iowa Region

Blagojevich gives campaign-style farewell speech before heading to prison

By Bob Secter and Andy Grimm, Chicago Tribune –

CHICAGO — Rod Blagojevich may have a problem with hidden recording devices, but the convicted former governor of Illinois rarely met a camera he didn’t like and that held true even Wednesday with a choreographed-for-TV farewell on the eve of his imprisonment.

Showman to the end, Blagojevich emerged from his Ravenswood Manor bungalow in an appearance timed to catch the top of 5 p.m. newscasts and launched into a campaign-style monologue reciting a laundry list of accomplishments and insisting he never intentionally broke the law.

“I believe I always, always thought about what was right for the people,” said Blagojevich as his wife, Patti, stood by his side and teared up.

Blagojevich, due to begin a 14-year sentence for corruption Thursday at a federal prison in Colorado, spoke for 10 minutes, interrupted only by shouts of encouragement from hundreds of well-wishers and gawkers gathered on his lawn along with TV crews.

He then mingled for more than half an hour, signing autographs on everything from an ATM receipt to an M&M wrapper and ignoring his 8-year-old daughter, Annie, as she tapped on his elbow and pleaded, “Come on. You’ve signed enough, Daddy.”

Given the abundance of ex-Illinois governors sent to prison, it may come as a surprise that there appears to be no set protocol for their exit from public view. George Ryan went defiantly, declaring that he had “a clear conscience” and would continue a fight to clear his name.

Dan Walker said nothing, as did Otto Kerner before him, though Kerner made some sort of quiet statement by showing up at the gate of a federal prison in Kentucky in a Mercedes and wearing a silk suit.

During his long descent from public grace, Blagojevich has put a number of conflicting personas on display. Some times he has sounded indignant, at other times outraged, and at other times still he came off as jocular, self-deprecating or even manic. Testifying in his own defense last year, Blagojevich struck a humble tone before jurors.

And in December, minutes before U.S. District Judge James Zagel passed sentence for trying to sell a U.S. Senate seat and other corrupt acts, Blagojevich sounded downright contrite. For the first time, he publicly took responsibility for letting down his family and his constituents.

On Wednesday, he was back to vintage campaign stump Blagojevich. He thanked supporters for their prayers and support and said he was “honored” that voters had twice elected him governor and before that sent him to house seats in Washington and Springfield.

(EDITORS: BEGIN OPTIONAL TRIM)

Then he walked through a list of programs he championed: health care coverage for middle-income children, free mammograms and pap smears, and free rides for seniors.

“People got mad over that. I never understood that,” said Blagojevich, who was captured on a government wiretap complaining about voters who failed to appreciate that he had given “your grandmother a free (expletive) ride on a bus” and “your (expletive) baby a chance to have health care.”

(END OPTIONAL TRIM)

Blagojevich long has had a flair for seeking — and getting — attention from the news media. There was no letup after he was booted from office by lawmakers and spent 2 1/2 years battling the extensive corruption charges he was convicted of by a federal jury in June.

He did the late-night talk show circuit, had a turn on a Donald Trump reality series, wrote a book, hosted a radio gabfest, starred in a commercial for pistachios and impersonated his hero Elvis.

With Blagojevich’s prison report date approaching, his publicist, Glenn Selig, advised media outlets that the former governor planned to make a statement before his departure. Selig timed it perfectly for maximum live TV exposure and followed that up Wednesday by tweeting warnings as Blagojevich was about to leave his house.

“The governor never memorizes,” Selig said of Blagojevich, who prides himself on an ability to memorize long passages from famous books and speeches. “He speaks extemperaneously. He will speak from the heart.”

The build-up had its desired effect. Hours before Blagojevich was to speak, at least 15 TV vans were parked outside his home as news crews and photographers milled on the parkway amid a forest of tripods and cameras.

Twice, rumors that Blagojevich had stepped out a back door sent the media mob darting like a school of fish. “Instead of everybody running, why don’t we have some lookouts?” said an exasperated cameraman after jogging back to the Blagojevches’ alley for a second time.

Handmade banners hung from the railing on the family porch, reading “THANKS MR GOVERNOR WE WILL PRAY”, surrounded by scribbled signatures from supporters. A smaller sign read, “leniency for Gov Rod!!! Call the whitehouse 1-202-456-1111.”

(EDITORS: STORY CAN END HERE)

A steady stream of pedestrians, enjoying the summer-like day, paused to regard the scene.

Some, like Will Ross, were drawn by what they saw as a theater of the absurd, not endearment for Blagojevich. “Really, if they were filming that awful ‘Transformers’ movie today, we would probably be watching that. It’s something to see,” said Ross. “It’s like a public execution.”

However, Connie Wojdyla, Blagojevich’s neighbor, said she was there to show support for someone whose “done a lot of good and he’s a good person.” Wojdyla took credit for making the banners praising Blagojevich that she hung from the railing of his home.

“We didn’t ask. He doesn’t mind,” she explained “He wants us to.”

As he walked out of his house to address the throng, Blagojevich was trailed by a camera crew. One of his lawyers said it was filming a personal documentary and that the Blagojeviches weren’t yet sure what they were going to do with it.

When Blagojevich spoke, he described his situation as a “calamity” and quoted the Bible and ancient Greeks who wrote that “through suffering comes wisdom.”

“I have to confess,” he said. “There are times when I just want to give up, but then I look into the eyes of my daughters…and I think that is not what a father is supposed to do. You are supposed to show them you fight through adversity.”

He also expressed confidence that an appeal of his conviction would succeed. “I still believe this is America,” he said. “…That the truth ultimately will prevail, that right makes might and that this, as bad as it is, is the beginning of another part of a long and hard journey that will only get worse before it gets better but that this is not over.”

“I’ll see you around,” he concluded before plowing into the crowd for extended handshaking and autograph signing.

0 0 votes
Article Rating
Subscribe
Notify of
guest

0 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments

Even more news:

Copyright 2024 – Internet Marketing Pros. of Iowa, Inc.
0
Would love your thoughts, please comment.x
()
x