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・ Richard M. Beyer
・ Richard M. Bishop
・ Richard M. Bissell, Jr.
・ Richard M. Blatchford
・ Richard M. Bohart
・ Richard M. Borchard Regional Fairgrounds
・ Richard M. Bowen III
・ Richard M. Bracken
・ Richard M. Brett
・ Richard M. Brewer
・ Richard M. Burton
・ Richard M. Chitwood
・ Richard M. Cohen
・ Richard M. Cook
・ Richard M. Cooper
Richard M. Daley
・ Richard M. Davidson
・ Richard M. DeVos
・ Richard M. Dolan
・ Richard M. Dudley
・ Richard M. Duncan
・ Richard M. Durbin
・ Richard M. Eakin
・ Richard M. Edwards
・ Richard M. Ehrlich
・ Richard M. Elliot
・ Richard M. Fairbanks
・ Richard M. Frank
・ Richard M. Freeland
・ Richard M. Givan


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Richard M. Daley : ウィキペディア英語版
Richard M. Daley

Richard Michael Daley (born April 24, 1942) is an American politician and former Mayor of Chicago, Illinois. Daley was elected mayor in 1989 and was re-elected five times until declining to run for a seventh term. At 22 years, he was the longest-serving Chicago mayor, surpassing the tenure of his father, Richard J. Daley. Mayor Daley took over the Chicago Public Schools, developed tourism, oversaw the construction of Millennium Park, increased environmental efforts and the rapid development of the city's central business district downtown and adjacent near North, near South and near West sides. Daley expanded employee benefits to same-sex partners of City workers, and advocated for gun control. Daley was a national leader in privatization and the lease and sale of public assets to private corporations. Daley was criticized when family, personal friends, and political allies seemed to disproportionately benefit from city contracting. Mayor Daley took office in a City with regular annual budget surpluses and left the City with massive structural deficits. His budgets ran up the largest deficits in Chicago history. Prior to serving as mayor, Daley served in the Illinois Senate and then as the Cook County State's Attorney. Police use of force was an issue in Daley's tenures as State's Attorney and Mayor.
== Early and personal life ==
Richard M. Daley is the fourth of seven children and eldest son of Richard J. and Eleanor Daley, the late Mayor and First Lady of Chicago. Daley was raised in Bridgeport, a historically Irish-American neighborhood located on Chicago's South Side.〔(【引用サイトリンク】publisher=Chicago Tribune )〕〔(【引用サイトリンク】publisher=Little, Brown and Company )
Daley is a brother of William M. Daley, former White House Chief of Staff and former United States Secretary of Commerce under President Bill Clinton; John P. Daley, a commissioner on the Cook County Board of Commissioners and chairman of the Board's Finance Committee; and Michael Daley, an attorney with Daley & Georges, a law firm founded by their father Richard J. Daley, that specializes in zoning law and is often hired by developers to help get zoning changes through City Hall.〔〔(【引用サイトリンク】url=http://www.daleygeorges.com/attorneys/daley1.shtml )〕 Daley was married to Margaret "Maggie" Corbett until her death on Thanksgiving Day, November 24, 2011 after a decade-long battle with metastatic breast cancer, which had spread to her bones and liver; Maggie Daley Park in the Chicago Loop commemorates her. They have four children: Nora, Patrick, Elizabeth and Kevin, all born at Mercy Hospital and Medical Center in Chicago. Their second son, Kevin, died at age two of complications from spina bifida in 1981.〔(【引用サイトリンク】publisher=City of Chicago )
Daley graduated from De La Salle Institute high school in Chicago and obtained his bachelor's degree from Providence College in Providence, Rhode Island in 1964. In 1962, at age 19, home on Christmas break, Daley was ticketed for running a stop sign at Huron and Rush, and the ''Chicago Sun-Times'' headline was "Mayor's Son Gets Ticket, Uses No Clout," with a subhead reading "Quiet Boy."〔
Sources conflict on Daley's military record. The only book-length biography of Daley makes no mention of military service. A 1995 profile in the ''Chicago Sun-Times'' stated that Daley served in the United States Marine Corps Reserve from 1961 to 1967, while a 1996 profile in ''People Magazine'' cited 1960 to 1964. A civilian website for Marines and their families found no military record for Daley.
Daley earned a Juris Doctor degree from DePaul University.〔 He passed the Illinois Bar Examination on his third try.〔 Daley later reflected, "I flunked the bar exam twice. I had to keep studying harder and harder and harder. I passed it the third time." Daley never tried a case. Daley was elected to his first party office as a delegate to the 1969 Illinois Constitutional Convention.
According to journalist Rick Perlstein, in June, 1972, Daley led a mob on behalf of his father's Democratic Party regulars against pro-McGovern reformers meeting in a church in Illinois' Fifth Congressional District. The action was unsuccessful and the reformers' slate (which included Rev. Jesse Jackson) replaced the Daley slate at the Democratic National Convention in Miami Beach, Florida.〔Rick Perlstein, ''Nixonland: The Rise of a President and the Fracturing of America'' (NY: Scribner, 2008), pp. 691-693.〕
After his father died in 1976, Daley succeeded his father as the 11th Ward Democratic committeeman, a party post, until succeeded in the post by his brother John P. Daley in 1980. With John P. Daley holding the post from 1980 to the present, a Daley has held the post of 11th Ward Committeeman for 60 years.

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