Everything about John Stroger totally explained
John H. Stroger, Jr. (
May 19 1929 –
January 18 2008) was an
American politician who served from
1994 until
2006 as the first African-American president of the
Cook County,
Illinois Board of Commissioners. Stroger was a member of the
Democratic Party. He was also a member of
Alpha Phi Alpha, the first intercollegiate
Greek-letter fraternity established for African Americans. Cook County's
Stroger Hospital was renamed in his honor.
Early life
John Stroger was born
May 19 1929 in
Helena, Arkansas. In 1953 he graduated from
Xavier University in
Louisiana with a B.S. in business administration. Stroger then relocated to Chicago in 1953 and became active in the Democratic party in the South Side of Chicago. After only a year Stroger was appointed as an assistant auditor with the Municipal Court of Chicago. Stroger then served as personnel director for the Cook County Jail from 1955 to 1961. Stroger attended
law school at the
DePaul University College of Law and graduated in 1965. While earning a law degree he worked for the financial director of the State of Illinois. In 1968, Stroger was elected 8th Ward Committeeman. After his election to the Cook County Board of Commissioners in 1970, Stroger went on to chair every major board committee, including finance, health, building and zoning. As Commissioner, Stroger sponsored legislation aimed at assisting minority- and female-owned businesses.
Board president
Stroger completed much of what he set out to do as board president including balancing the county's $2.9 billion dollar budget. He also instituted a Juvenile Drug Court, appointed a Commission on Women's Issues and opened a new
AIDS treatment and research facility. Stroger served on the Chicago Metropolitan Healthcare Council and the board of South Shore Hospital. The new Cook County Hospital was renamed the
John H. Stroger, Jr. Cook County Hospital after Stroger while he was serving as County Board President. Stroger was a past president of the National Association of Counties and was appointed by former President
Bill Clinton as a member of the Advisory Committee On Intergovernmental Relations.
Religion and family
John Stroger was a longtime member of St. Felicitas
Catholic Church on the South Side of Chicago. He and his wife, Yonnie, were the parents of three children, two of whom survive him: son Todd and daughter Yonnie Lynn. Another son, Hans Eric, died a year after graduating from his father's alma mater, Xavier University of Louisiana. Todd Stroger succeeded John as Cook County Board Commissioner.
Conflicts as Cook County Board President
Stroger came under increased fire in the later years of his presidency for what his critics call a scandal- and patronage-ridden administration. Stroger supporters counterclaimed that he dedicated his public career to providing quality and affordable health care for the poorer residents of Cook County.
Campaigns for Cook County Board President
In the 1994 Democratic primary election, Stroger defeated two opponents for county board president, which had been made on open office when incumbent President
Richard Phelan unsuccessfully sought the Democratic nomination for governor. Stroger trounced Republican Aurelia Pucinski in the general election, beating her even in many white ethnic wards, to the surprise of many "machine" watchers. In
1998, he defeated a Republican-turned-Democrat challenger, Cook County Commissioner Cal Sutker. In 2002, Stroger had no Democratic primary challenger and went on to rout Republican challenger Christopher Bullock by a margin of more than two to one. Stroger sought a fourth term in
2006 and was challenged in the Democratic primary by Cook County Commissioner
Forrest Claypool, who ran as a reform candidate and accused Stroger of presiding over a "bloated" government.
2006 election
The 2006 election was among the most controversial in the colorful history of Cook County politics. Despite suffering a severe
stroke just a week before the primary election, John Stroger still managed to secure his party's support by a final margin of 53 percent to 47 percent over Claypool. The severity of Stroger's condition was concealed from voters both before the primary election and for three months thereafter, possibly allowing his primary victory and preventing independent opposition to the replacement Democratic candidate in the general election. Although he'd overcome health complications in the past, questions still lingered regarding his ability to serve another term as Cook County Board President.
In late
June 2006 John Stroger was removed from the Democratic ticket for Cook County Board President and replaced by his son,
Todd Stroger. Stroger also resigned as Cook County Board President effective
August 1 and was replaced by interim president
Bobbie L. Steele. Republicans and some Democrats saw the move as nepotism, and Claypool even told the
Chicago Sun-Times that he wouldn't vote in the November general election. Todd Stroger faced a challenge in that race from Republican Anthony Peraica, a vocal critic of the John Stroger regime. Chicago Mayor
Richard M. Daley blasted Claypool, his own former chief of staff, and warned that Claypool risked "destroying [his] political career" by not backing Stroger against Peraica. While Peraica did very well in suburban Cook County, Todd Stroger received strong support from the powerful Mayor Daley and the Chicago Democratic machine. Stroger's strength among Chicago voters allowed him to win the election with 54 percent of the total vote.
Health problems and death
Stroger had an extensive history of medical complications. He was a
diabetic, had battled
prostate cancer and underwent a quadruple bypass in 2001. On
April 5 2006 Stroger was moved to the
Rehabilitation Institute of Chicago to continue his treatment for partial
paralysis on his left side and other damage caused by the
stroke. He hadn't been seen by the public since his March 2006 stroke. In July of that year, CBS television in Chicago reported that he was back in the hospital after suffering seizures. Todd Stroger broke a long public silence in December 2007, telling the
Sun-Times that his father had been improving until the seizures began. Now, though, "it's just a matter of making sure he's comfortable," Todd said. He also noted that once the seizures started, "He's not been better since."
John Stroger died on
January 18 2008, aged 78.
Further Information
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