By MICHAEL TARM
Associated Press
CHICAGO — Abner Mikva, a liberal stalwart from Illinois who served in all three branches of the federal government, mentored a young Barack Obama and famously learned firsthand the brazen nature of Chicago’s political machine, has died.
The 90-year-old died of bladder cancer Monday at Rush University Medical Center in Chicago, Steven Cohen, who is married to Mikva’s oldest of three daughters, told The Associated Press.
Mikva worked his way up from a welfare-recipient family to the Illinois House, U.S. House of Representatives, the U.S. Court of Appeals’ bench and later the White House as an adviser to President Bill Clinton. But his story about his initial attempt to get involved in Chicago politics became legendary in Illinois.
He described walking into the headquarters of the Chicago ward where he lived in 1948 to ask for a volunteer campaigning job, where the cigar-chomping ward boss asked who sent him. Mikva answered, “Nobody sent me,” and the boss responded: “We don’t want nobody nobody sent.” That punchline became a household phrase in Illinois, encapsulating the often-corrupt patronage system of a political machine that gripped the city for decades.
“Ab Mikva was the pol ‘nobody sent’ but Illinois and America are better today because he defied the Bosses and rallied thousands to beat them,” Democratic U.S. Sen. Dick Durbin said in an emailed statement.
Obama has said Mikva was one of his political mentors, and awarded him the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2014. After Obama graduated from law school, Mikva offered the future president a job as a clerk, though Obama declined.
“No matter how far we go in life, we owe a profound debt of gratitude to those who gave us those first, firm pushes at the start,” he said in a statement. “For me, one of those people was Ab Mikva.
“When I was graduating law school, Ab encouraged me to pursue public service. He saw something in me that I didn’t yet see in myself, but I know why he did it — Ab represented the best of public service himself and he believed in empowering the next generation of young people to shape our country.”
Mikva was saddened by partisan rancor in Washington, according to Brian Brady, national director of the nonprofit leadership ground Mikva Challenge that Mikva helped found.
“He thought it had a lot to do with people not socializing together anymore,” he said. “He had dinner and played poker two or three times a week with Republican leaders.”
A friend of Mikva’s told the AP about how Mikva and him disagreed publicly over Illinois’ 2014 gubernatorial race, but that it didn’t undermine their friendship.
“Abner was a good example of how a politician could surmount partisanship,” former Federal Communications Commission Chairman Newton Minow said.
Mikva, who was born in 1926 in Milwaukee to Yiddish-speaking Ukrainian immigrants, described his family’s economic hardship during the Great Depression to the Chicago Daily Law Bulletin in 2012, saying his father was often unemployed and that the family relied on welfare.
“We all wore the same blue wool caps and big bulky shoes and same jackets,” he said. “So everybody knew if you were on relief.”
Mikva enrolled in the Army Air Corps in 1944, but World War II ended before he saw active service. In 1951, he got his law degree from the University of Chicago.
Mikva was elected in 1956 to the first of five consecutive terms in the Illinois General Assembly, where he sponsored legislation for fair employment practices and open housing, and labored to overhaul the Criminal Code. He was elected to the U.S. House in 1968 and served for five terms as a member of the Judiciary Committee and the Ways and Means Committee.
Appointed by President Jimmy Carter to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia, Mikva served 15 years, the last four as Chief Judge; Supreme Court Justice Elena Kagan was one of his clerks.
In 1994, Mikva resigned from the bench to become White House counsel to Clinton. He lasted a year, saying, “… I don’t find the rubber band snapping back as fast at (age) 69 as when I was 40.”
One of Mikva’s more than 300 opinions as a federal judge challenged the Pentagon’s ban on gays in the military.
“It is fundamentally unjust to abort a most promising military career solely because of a truthful confession of a sexual preference different from that of the majority,” he wrote in 1993.
That particular ruling was later overturned, though Obama said at Mikva’s Presidential Medal of Freedom ceremony that “history proved him right.”
Cohen, his son-in-law, said it was “fitting he died on the Fourth of July,” adding, “He was a true patriot and had a flair for doing things in a historic way, and he did that right up to the end.”
Talk to us
> Give us your news tips.
> Send us a letter to the editor.
> More Herald contact information.