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Chicago’s first woman mayor, 80, dies

Jane Byrne had not previously run for office before her win

The Columbian
Published: November 15, 2014, 12:00am
3 Photos
Chicago Mayor Jane Byrne, right, applauds Vice President Walter Mondale before his speech in September 1980 at Medina Temple, in Chicago. Byrne, Chicago's first and only female mayor, has died at the age of 80.
Chicago Mayor Jane Byrne, right, applauds Vice President Walter Mondale before his speech in September 1980 at Medina Temple, in Chicago. Byrne, Chicago's first and only female mayor, has died at the age of 80. Byrne's daughter, Kathy, says her mother died Friday. Photo Gallery

Jane Byrne, whose blizzard-stoked victory in Chicago’s 1979 mayoral election made her the city’s first female mayor and who broke the grip of former Mayor Richard J. Daley’s Democratic patronage machine, has died. She was 80.

She died Friday at a hospice in Chicago, her daughter, Kathy Byrne, said, according to the Associated Press. No cause was given.

A career civil servant and political operative, Byrne had never previously run for office.

Her administration was marked by sudden policy changes and acerbic rhetoric. Byrne’s decision-making style led the Chicago Tribune’s City Hall reporter to write that she governed with “a whim of iron.”

Byrne’s most famous exploit, which garnered national attention, involved living in the Cabrini-Green Homes, city-owned low-income housing plagued by crime, for three weeks.

Byrne held office for a single four-year term, losing narrowly in 1983 to Harold Washington in a three-way race that included Richard M. Daley, son of former Mayor Richard J. Daley.

The elder Daley, who dominated Chicago politics and patronage for more than two decades, was -Byrne’s political mentor. In the 1960s, he appointed her to lead Chicago’s Head Start program, then made her director of the city’s consumer affairs department.

In that role, Byrne developed a reputation as a scrappy fighter for stricter labeling of meat and other products sold in supermarkets. She put a spotlight on grocery stores that she claimed were gouging customers in the city’s poorer neighborhoods.

In 1979, Byrne mounted a long-shot challenge to Mayor Michael Bilandic, who was elected in a special election after Richard J. Daley died while in office, in 1976.

The months before the Democratic primary in February were marked by heavy snowfalls that crippled the city, toppling the Democratic machine’s long-held reputation for competence delivering basic municipal services. Bilandic’s poll numbers plunged as the snow piled up and Byrne won the primary.

As was customary in heavily Democratic Chicago, the party’s primary is paramount. The general election against a Republican challenger wasn’t close: Byrne received 82 percent of the vote.

“I didn’t win the election,” she told the New Republic in 1979. “Bilandic lost it.”

Jane Margaret Burke was born on May 24, 1934, in Chicago, the daughter of William Burke and the former Katherine Nolan, according to Marquis Who’s Who. Her father was an executive at Inland Steel Co. who later owned a warehousing company, Gordon- Burke Steel Inc.

She attended Barat College of the Sacred Heart in Lake Forest, Ill., where she studied chemistry and considered attending medical school, according to a 1975 Chicago Tribune story. In 1956, she married William Byrne, a Marine flier, who died three years later when his Douglas A-1 Skyraider crashed while landing in heavy fog at a naval air station in Glenview, near Chicago. Their daughter was 18 months old at the time.

Byrne said she got involved in grass-roots politics as a volunteer for John F. Kennedy’s 1960 presidential campaign after she heard the candidate make a speech about servicemen who died while training. Mayor Richard J. Daley noticed Byrne and became her political sponsor.

In 1975, Daley made -Byrne co-chairman of the Cook County Democratic Central Committee of which he was chairman. She clashed with Daley’s successor, Bilandic, over a rise in taxi fares and in 1977 he fired her from her post at the consumer affairs department. She accused Bilandic and a “cabal of evil men” of hijacking the Daley legacy and began her long-shot campaign.

After being defeated for re-election in 1983, Byrne lost comeback bids in 1987 and 1991.

“She brought transparency to the city budget process, was Chicago’s first mayor to march in the Gay Pride Parade and was the nation’s first big-city mayor to successfully enact a ban on handguns,” Illinois Gov. Patrick Quinn said in a statement. “Jane Byrne was a barrier-breaker and a role model for countless women.”

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Though no longer a political force thereafter, she stayed feisty. In a 2010 interview with the Chicago Tribune Byrne recalled a time when she was mayor and the comedian John Belushi asked permission to film part of the 1980 movie “The Blues Brothers” in the city. Belushi presented her with a long list of particulars.

“He said, ‘Wait. We also want to drive a car through the lobby of Daley Plaza. Right through the window,’ ” Byrne recalled. The site houses municipal offices.

“I remember what was in my mind as he said it,” Byne said. “I had the whole 11th Ward against me anyway, and most of Daley’s people against me. They owned this city for years, so when Belushi asked me to drive a car through Daley Plaza, the only thing I could say was, ‘Be my guest!’ “

The city council named the plaza surrounding Chicago’s landmark Water Tower in honor of her earlier this year.

In 1978, Byrne married Jay McMullen, a former City Hall reporter at the Chicago Daily News, who died in 1992.

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