By Steve Rhodes
Upon the death of Jim Thompson on Friday, I decided to dig out the profile I wrote about him and his post-governship for Chicago magazine in 2000. Because it’s not online, I had to retype it here and take camera photos of the art. (Original photography by Tom Maday.) Enjoy!
Once thought to be Presidential timber, former Illinois Governor Jim Thompson instead has struck it rich as a power lawyer, ubiquitous board members, and big-gun-for-hire lobbyist. Although he hasn’t held public office since 1991, he now wields more clout than any other Chicagoan not named Daley.
One day last December, 31 Chicago power brokers gathered in the grand oval lobby of the Old Courthouse Building in River North. It was a uniquely broad coalition of politicians and legal luminaries – a prime selection of clout rallying to the cause of Cook County Criminal Courts judge Thomas Fitzgerald, who was running for the Illinois Supreme Court. Among those standing behind Fitzgerald on a three-tiered riser were former Cook County assessor Thomas Hynes, civil rights lawyer James Montgomery, Democratic grand dame Dawn Clark Netsch, and author Scott Turow. It was a formidable cast for any occasion.
But one man, planted in front and just a shade off center – visible behind the left shoulder of each person who stepped up to speak – towered above the rest, and not just because of his six-foot-six frame. Big Jim Thompson, the swashbuckling four-term Republican governor who left office in 1991, was mentioned in the official remarks that day almost as often as Fitzgerald.
Netsch, who had known Thompson for three decades, drew the honor of introducing him. She pretended she didn’t know who he was. Reading from note cards, she joked, “Let’s see, it says here he was governor. U.S. Attorney. Statesman. Statesman?
The crowd laughed, but in fact she had a point. Once talked about seriously as Presidential material, Thompson had not exactly spent his post-government years on statecraft, something he seemed to acknowledge. “C’mon, say it, say it,” Thompson good-naturedly pleaded. “In my next campaign, I’m going to say, ‘Dawn Clark Netsch called me a statesman.”
Thompson can afford to roll with the joke. Sure, he hasn’t become President. And he hasn’t ascended to the role of political wise elder, like former U.S. senator Paul Simon, or even Thompson’s successor, Jim Edgar. Both of those men hold dignified academic post. Instead, Thompson has gotten rich.
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Posted on August 18, 2020