David M. Axelrod (born 1955)

ASSOCIATIONS


https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_Axelrod_(political_consultant)

2022-08-10-wikipedia-org-david-axelrod-political-consultant.mp4

David Axelrod (political consultant)

For other persons with this name, see David Axelrod (disambiguation).

David Axelrod


Axelrod in 2015




Senior Advisor to the President


In office

January 20, 2009 – January 10, 2011


President

Barack Obama

Preceded by

Barry Jackson

Succeeded by

David Plouffe

Personal details


Born

February 22, 1955 (age 67)

New York City, New York, U.S.

Political party

Democratic

Spouse(s)

Susan Landau ​(m. 1979)​

Relations

[Myril Jessica (Davidson) Axelrod Bennett (born 1920)] (mother)

Children

3

Education

University of Chicago (BA)



David M. Axelrod (born February 22, 1955) is an American political consultant and analyst and former White House official. He is best known for being the chief strategist for Barack Obama's presidential campaigns. After Obama's election, Axelrod was appointed as Senior Advisor to the President.[1] He left the position in early 2011 and became the Senior Strategist for Obama's successful re-election campaign in 2012.[2][3] Axelrod wrote for the Chicago Tribune, and joined CNN as Senior Political Commentator in 2015.[4] As of May 2021, Axelrod serves as the director of the non-partisan University of Chicago Institute of Politics.[5] His memoir is titled Believer: My Forty Years in Politics.[4][6]

Contents

Early life[edit]

Axelrod was born on the Lower East Side of Manhattan, New York City, and grew up in its Stuyvesant Town area.[7][8] He was raised in a liberal Jewish family[9][10] and had his bar mitzvah ceremony at the Brotherhood Synagogue in Manhattan.[11] His mother, [Myril Jessica (Davidson) Axelrod Bennett (born 1920)], was a journalist at PM, a liberal-leaning 1940s newspaper, and later an advertising executive at Young & Rubicam.[12] His father, Joseph Axelrod, was a psychologist and avid baseball fan, who migrated from Eastern Europe to the United States at the age of eleven.[13][14][15][16][17] He attended Public School 40 in Manhattan. Axelrod's parents separated when he was eight years old. In 2021, Axelrod disclosed in a CNN op-ed that his father suffered from severe clinical depression, unbeknownst at the time to the family, which led to his suicide when the younger Axelrod was 20.[18]

Describing the appeal of politics, he told the Los Angeles Times, "I got into politics because I believe in idealism. Just to be a part of this effort that seems to be rekindling the kind of idealism that I knew when I was a kid, it's a great thing to do. So I find myself getting very emotional about it."[19] At thirteen years old, he was selling campaign buttons for Robert F. Kennedy. After graduating from New York's Stuyvesant High School[14] in 1972, Axelrod attended the University of Chicago, where he majored in political science.[20] Axelrod described his childhood as "very turbulent", although he did not specify the exact details that elicited this characterization.[18]

As an undergraduate, Axelrod wrote for the Hyde Park Herald, covering politics, and earned an internship at the Chicago Tribune.

Personal life[edit]

Axelrod lost his father to suicide in 1977, around the time of his college graduation.[21]

While at the University of Chicago he met his future wife, business student Susan Landau (daughter of research doctor Richard L. Landau),[22] and they married in 1979.

In June 1981, they had their first child, a daughter.[23] She was diagnosed with epilepsy at seven months of age.[24] Axelrod describes Lauren as having had brutal seizures, requiring a constantly changing regimen of medications for some time. This left her developmentally disabled, but nevertheless mainstreamed in school.[23] For a few years after high school, the family struggled to find programs that would keep her happy and fulfilled, but were able to place her in Misericordia, a large dormitory-style group home in 2002, where she leads an active life.[23] As of 2021, Axelrod advocates for a flexible, mixed approach to group homes and support environments for people like his daughter, in contrast to the common approach of exclusively moving toward smaller group homes.[23]

The Axelrods have two other children.

Career[edit]

Prior to first Obama campaign[edit]

The Chicago Tribune hired Axelrod after his graduation from college. He worked there for eight years, covering national, state and local politics, becoming their youngest political writer in 1981. At 27, he became the City Hall Bureau Chief and a political columnist for the paper.[25] He left the Tribune and joined the campaign of U.S. Senator Paul Simon as communications director in 1984. Within weeks he was promoted to co-campaign manager.[26]

In 1985, Axelrod formed the political consultancy firm, Axelrod & Associates. In 1987 he worked on the successful reelection campaign of Harold Washington, Chicago's first black mayor, while spearheading Simon's campaign for the 1988 Democratic Presidential nomination. This established his experience in working with black politicians; he later became a key player in similar mayoral campaigns of black candidates, including Dennis Archer in Detroit, Michael R. White in Cleveland, Anthony A. Williams in Washington, D.C., Lee P. Brown in Houston, and John F. Street in Philadelphia.[21] Axelrod is a longtime strategist for the former Chicago Mayor Richard M. Daley[27] and styles himself a "specialist in urban politics." The Economist notes he also specializes in "packaging black candidates for white voters".[27]

In January 1990, Axelrod was hired to be the media consultant for the all but official re-election campaign of Oregon Governor Neil Goldschmidt.[28] However, Goldschmidt announced in February that he would not seek re-election.[29] Axelrod was retained by the Liberal Party of Ontario to help Dalton McGuinty and his party in 2002 to be elected into government in the October 2003 election. Axelrod's effect on Ontario was heard through the winning Liberal appeal to "working families" and placing an emphasis on positive policy contrasts like canceling corporate tax breaks to fund education and health.[30]

In 2004, Axelrod worked for John Edwards' presidential campaign. He lost responsibility for making ads, but continued as the campaign's spokesman. Regarding Edwards' failed 2004 presidential campaign, Axelrod has commented, "I have a whole lot of respect for John, but at some point the candidate has to close the deal and—I can't tell you why—that never happened with John."[31][32]

Axelrod worked as a consultant for Exelon, an Illinois-area utility which operated the largest fleet of nuclear reactors in the United States.[33][34]

Axelrod contributed an op-ed to the Chicago Tribune in defense of patronage after two top officials in the administration of longtime client Chicago Mayor Richard M. Daley were arrested for what federal prosecutors described as "pervasive fraud" in City Hall hiring and promotions.[35][36] In 2006, he consulted for several campaigns, including the successful campaigns of Eliot Spitzer in New York's gubernatorial election and Deval Patrick in Massachusetts's gubernatorial election. Axelrod served in 2006 as the chief political adviser for Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee chair U.S. Representative Rahm Emanuel for the U.S. House of Representatives elections, in which the Democrats gained 31 seats.

He was an Adjunct Professor of Communication Studies at Northwestern University, where, along with Professor Peter Miller, he taught an undergraduate class titled Campaign Strategy, analyzing political campaigns, and their strategies.[37] On June 14, 2009 he received an honorary Doctor of Humane Letters degree from DePaul University, speaking at the commencement exercises of the College of Communication and College of Computing and Digital Media.[38]

Barack Obama presidential campaign, 2008[edit]

See also: Barack Obama presidential campaign, 2008

Axelrod first met Obama in 1992, when Bettylu Saltzman, a Chicago Democrat, introduced the two of them after Obama had impressed her at a black voter registration drive that he ran. Obama consulted Axelrod before he delivered a 2002 anti-war speech,[39] and asked him to read drafts of his book The Audacity of Hope.[40]

Axelrod contemplated taking a break from politics during the 2008 presidential campaign, as five of the candidates—Barack Obama, Hillary Clinton, John Edwards, Chris Dodd and Tom Vilsack—were past clients. Personal ties between Axelrod and Hillary Clinton made it difficult, as she had raised significant funds for epilepsy on behalf of a foundation co-founded by Axelrod's wife and mother, Citizens United for Research in Epilepsy (CURE). (Axelrod's daughter suffers from developmental disabilities associated with chronic epileptic seizures.) Axelrod's wife even said that a 1999 conference Clinton convened to find a cure for the condition was "one of the most important things anyone has done for epilepsy."[41] Axelrod ultimately decided to participate in the Obama campaign, and served as chief strategist and media advisor for Obama. He told The Washington Post, "I thought that if I could help Barack Obama get to Washington, then I would have accomplished something great in my life."[14]

Axelrod contributed to the initial announcement of Obama's campaign by creating a five-minute Internet video released January 16, 2007.[42][43] He continued to use "man on the street"-style biographical videos to create a sense of intimacy and authenticity in the political ads.

Axelrod talking to reporters in the "spin room" after the Cleveland Democratic debate in February 2008

While the Clinton campaign chose a strategy that emphasized experience, Axelrod helped to craft the Obama campaign's main theme of "change." He was critical of the Clinton campaign's positioning, and said that "being the consummate Washington insider is not where you want to be in a year when people want change...[Clinton's] initial strategic positioning was wrong and kind of played into our hands."[44] The change message played a factor in Obama's victory in the Iowa caucuses. "Just over half of [Iowa's] Democratic caucus-goers said change was the No. 1 factor they were looking for in a candidate, and 51 percent of those voters chose Barack Obama," said CNN senior political analyst Bill Schneider. "That compares to only 19 percent of 'change' caucus-goers who preferred Clinton."[45] Axelrod also believed that the Clinton campaign underestimated the importance of the caucus states. "For all the talent and the money they had over there," says Axelrod, "they—bewilderingly—seemed to have little understanding for the caucuses and how important they would become."[45] In the 2008 primary season, Obama won a majority of the states that use the caucus format.

Axelrod is credited with implementing a strategy that encourages the participation of people, a lesson drawn partly from Howard Dean's 2004 presidential campaign as well as a personal goal of Barack Obama. Axelrod explained to Rolling Stone, "When we started this race, Barack told us that he wanted the campaign to be a vehicle for involving people and giving them a stake in the kind of organizing he believed in". According to Axelrod getting volunteers involved became the legacy of the campaign.[46] According to Axelrod getting volunteers involved became the legacy of the campaign.[46][failed verification] This includes drawing on "Web 2.0" technology and viral media to support a grassroots strategy. Obama's web platform allows supporters to blog, create their own personal page, and even phonebank from home. Axelrod's elaborate use of the Internet helped Obama to organize under-30 voters and build over 475,000 donors in 2007, most of whom were Internet donors contributing less than $100 each.[47] The Obama strategy stood in contrast to Hillary Clinton's campaign, which benefited from high name recognition, large donors and strong support among established Democratic leaders.

Politico described Axelrod as 'soft-spoken' and 'mild-mannered'[48] and it quoted one Obama aide in Chicago as saying, "Do you know how lucky we are that he is our Mark Penn?"[49] Democratic consultant and former colleague Dan Fee said of Axelrod, "He's a calming presence."[50] "He's not a screamer, like some of these guys," political advisor Bill Daley said of Axelrod in the Chicago Tribune. "He has a good sense of humor, so he's able to defuse things."[51] In June 2008, The New York Times described Axelrod as a "campaign guru" with an "appreciation for Chicago-style politics."[52]

Senior Advisor to the President, 2009–11[edit]

Axelrod with President Barack Obama

On November 20, 2008, Obama named Axelrod as a senior advisor to his administration. His role included crafting policy and communicating the President's message in coordination with President Obama, the Obama Administration, speechwriters, and the White House communications team.[53][54]

Foreclosure scandal[edit]

When details of the 2010 United States foreclosure crisis were publicized in 2010, notably robo-signing, Axelrod was widely criticized for downplaying the magnitude of the crisis in his comments to the press,[55][56] telling the audience of CBS News' Face the Nation that the Obama administration's "hope is this moves rapidly and that this gets unwound very, very quickly" and that he's "not sure that a national moratorium" is called for since "there are in fact valid foreclosures that probably should go forward."[57] Notably, Axelrod made this statement after several banks had voluntarily suspended foreclosures and evictions in order to investigate improprieties.[58]

Barack Obama presidential campaign, 2012[edit]

See also: Barack Obama presidential campaign, 2012

Axelrod left his White House senior advisor post on January 28, 2011. He was a top aide to Obama's 2012 re-election campaign.[2][3] Axelrod also stated that his job as Obama's chief campaign strategist in the 2012 campaign would be his final job as a political operative.[59]

After second Obama campaign[edit]

Axelrod in Chicago in 2016

In January 2013, Axelrod established a bipartisan Institute of Politics at the University of Chicago, where he serves as director.[60] On January 23, 2013, La Stampa reported that Axelrod was helping Italian prime minister Mario Monti with his election campaign and had flown to Italy to meet with Monti ten days earlier.[61] Monti's coalition went on to come fourth with 10.5% of the vote in the Italian general election, 2013. On February 19, 2013, Axelrod joined NBC News and MSNBC as a senior political analyst,[citation needed] a position he held until September 2015 when he moved to CNN.

In 2014 Axelrod was appointed senior strategic adviser to the British Labour Party to assist party leader Ed Miliband in the run-up to the 2015 general election.[62]

He is the co-founder of AKPD Message and Media, along with Eric Sedler, and operated ASK Public Strategies, now called ASGK Public Strategies, which were sold in 2009. In Feb. 2015 Axelrod's book Believer: My Forty Years in Politics was published.[63][failed verification]

In 2015, Axelrod began hosting a podcast titled The Axe Files, a series of in-depth discussions and interviews with various political figures.[64] In June 2019[65] he started the podcast Hacks on Tap with co-host Mike Murphy, a show where the two discuss news and updates from the 2020 presidential campaign trail.[66] He also joined CNN as a senior political commentator in September, 2015.[67]

In 2018, Axelrod vocally opposed Democratic support for impeachment, arguing that if "we “normalize” impeachment as a political tool, it will be another hammer blow to our democracy".[68]

In 2022, he announced his intention to retire as director of the University of Chicago Institute of Politics, and become a senior fellow and chair of its advisory board, effective January 2023. UChicago President Paul Alivisatos said of his tenure that "David’s leadership of the IOP has driven its incredible growth and success over the past decade."[69]

References[edit]

External links[edit]

Wikimedia Commons has media related to David Axelrod.


Joseph Axelrod

Detail Source

Name:

Joseph Axelrod

Gender:

Male

Death Age:

87

Birth Date:

3 Oct 1926

Birth Place:

Lawrence

Residence Place:

North Andover

Death Date:

2 Jul 2014

Death Place:

Boston

Burial Date:

6 Jul

Spouse:

Marilyn

Child:

David Axelrod

Sandra Axelrod

Siblings:

Marion Chaet

Save

https://www.ancestry.com/discoveryui-content/view/501678829:2190?tid=&pid=&queryId=a244abe1a2d6c8ff84c8552b8ac28a6a&_phsrc=Kxi169&_phstart=successSource




https://www.ancestry.com/genealogy/records/joseph-axelrod-24-14vmdhm


Joseph Axelrod

(1910 - 1974)

Photos:

91Records:

382

Born in Khotyn, Chernivtsi, Ukraine on 7 Jul 1910 to Morris Moise Axelrud Axelrod and Adelle Cidela Feldman. Joseph Axelrod married Myril Jessica Davidson. He passed away on 31 May 1974 in New York, New York, New York, USA.


Joseph Axelrod family tree

Parents

Morris Moise Axelrud Axelrod

1888 - Unknown

Adelle Cidela Feldman

1886 - Unknown

Spouse(s)

Myril Jessica Davidson

1920 - 2014

Wrong Joseph Axelrod? See other search results for Joseph Axelrod



NEWS

Dr. Richard Landau, who led endocrinology at University of Chicago, dies

By Graydon Megan

Chicago Tribune

Nov 06, 2015 at 2:53 pm

Expand

Dr. Richard Landau, shown in 1965, led the endocrinology department at the University of Chicago for many years. Landau, 99, died of natural causes Nov. 3 in Montgomery Place, an assisted-living facility in Hyde Park. (University of Chicago)

Dr. Richard Landau was a specialist in endocrinology at the University of Chicago and over more than 40 years burnished the school's reputation in the field through his own work and by recruiting and mentoring talented young physicians and scientists.

"He built it up and brought it up to a level that was rated No. 5 nationally," said Dr. Samuel Refetoff, a U. of C. professor of medicine who met Landau in 1969.

Landau developed strong personal relationships with younger scientists despite a reputation for being demanding, blunt and outspoken about people and issues.

"Irascible and outspoken and irreverent" is how Dr. Arthur Rubinstein described him. Rubinstein, now a professor of medicine at the University of Pennsylvania, came to the U. of C. in 1967 as a postdoctoral fellow and was later recruited by Landau to join the endocrine group.

"He was never negative or hurtful," Rubinstein said, "just called it like it was."

Landau, 99, died of natural causes Nov. 3 in Montgomery Place, an assisted-living facility in Hyde Park, according to his daughter Susan Axelrod, the wife of political consultant and former Barack Obama adviser David Axelrod. Landau was a longtime resident of Hyde Park.

Landau was born and grew up in St. Louis. In a memoir, he traced his decision to go into medicine to the book "Microbe Hunters," by Paul de Kruif, a book that is said to have influenced a number of careers in science and medicine.

He received undergraduate and medical degrees from Washington University in St. Louis before coming to the U. of C. in 1940 for a three-year residency. During that time, he began working in the laboratory of the late endocrine specialist Allan Kenyon.

Refetoff defined endocrinology as the study of organs that secrete hormones that enter the blood stream and have an effect distant from their source. Endocrine diseases include diabetes and thyroid, adrenal and pituitary disorders.

Near the end of World War II, Landau served as an Army physician in the Pacific theater. He returned to the U. of C. in 1946 as an instructor in medicine. He soon became an assistant professor and then an associate professor before becoming a full professor in 1959.

In 1961, he became program director of the university's Clinical Research Center and a year later became associate chairman of medicine. In 1966, he became chief of the endocrinology section.

Rubinstein said in addition to his leadership and research work, Landau was dedicated to caring for patients.

"He was a person who could identify with patients, look out for them and protect them," said Rubinstein, who recalled making rounds with Landau. "The atmosphere of respect, his ethical standards — irrespective of rich or poor, Richard always stood for what was right.

"It was impressive, and we all learned from him," Rubinstein said, adding that he still finds himself doing things with respect to patient care and treatment based on Landau's example.

Dr. Edward Ehrlich, now retired as a professor at the University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health, met Landau as a medical resident at U. of C.

Ehrlich called Landau his "mentor and academic father figure," who influenced his career path. "After having met Richard, I was so impressed that I wanted to associate with him. I became an endocrinologist. I thought he would be a source of comfort and admiration, and that's the way it turned out."

Ehrlich described his mentor as extremely open and completely honest. "That made him seem to some people a little blunt," Ehrlich said, "but he was just a very, very straight shooter — and completely loyal to the people in the section."

Landau's concerns with ethical issues led to his appointment as the first chairman of the medical center's Institutional Review Board, the group that monitors all research involving human subjects. He held the post for many years.

Landau published more than 90 papers and was a member of the editorial board at the Journal of the American Medical Association. He was also editor of the journal Perspectives in Biology and Medicine, published for many years by the University of Chicago and managed for 28 years by his wife, Claire, who died in 2002.

Landau retired in 1987 but continued to meet with university colleagues until his health began to fail when he was well into his 90s.

Landau's impact on medicine was far-reaching, according to Dr. Louis Philipson, a professor of medicine at U. of C. and director of the Kovler Diabetes Center.

"He had a major impact on so many faculty here — chairmen, deans, professors," Philipson said. "He really brought an outstanding group of faculty together in the 1970s and 1980s who are leaders in diabetes and endocrinology. He led us in understanding that patients came first, but that science was still critical."

Survivors include another daughter, Kay Fricke; a brother, William, also a physician; five grandchildren; and one great-granddaughter.

A memorial service at the University of Chicago is planned.

Graydon Megan is a freelance reporter.

https://www.chicagotribune.com/news/ct-richard-landau-obituary-met-20151106-story.html

2015-11-06-chicago-tribune-com-richard-landau.pdf


https://www.floppingaces.net/2012/07/12/david-the-red-axelrods-communist-roots-reader-post/

2012-07-12-flippingaces-net-david-the-red-axelrods-communist-roots-reader-post.pdf


David “The Red” Axelrod’s Communist Roots [Reader Post]

Posted by anticsrocks on 12 July, 2012 at 3:51 pm. 17 comments already!


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It may be accurate to blame Barack Hussein Obama for the woes that this country is facing, but the man behind the curtain, the leftist version of a Karl Rove is solely more responsible for getting him elected than any person on the planet. Since the “historic” ascendancy and 2008 election of Obama, it has come out that Axelrod is more than just a paid political hack, more than just an “adviser.” As Paul Kengor writes in the American Spectator:

“He is imager of the image and narrator of the narrative. No single person is more responsible for making Barack Obama president. Come November 2008, it was nothing short of a stunning change for America, a genuinely historical feat the man known as Ax hopes to repeat in November 2012.

And it helps that the two—story-maker and story, composer and theme—think alike. “You know, he and I share a basic worldview,” Obama told the New York Times. “I trust his basic take on what the country should be and where we need to move toward—not just on specific policy but how politics should be able to draw on our best and not our worst.”

Born in New York in 1955, Axelrod says of his parents that they were, “your classic New York leftist Democrats.” But that doesn’t really do justice to the activities of his mother, Myril Bennett Axelrod. She worked for an extremely political newspaper, the liberal New York daily, the PM.

Existing only from 1940 to 1948, the problem at the PM was infiltration by communists pushing the “Stalinist line.” One such person was a confirmed soviet spy, I.F. Stone, among many others.

Axelrod followed in his mother’s footsteps and began writing a leftist political column for a local Chicago newspaper, the Hyde Park Herald. Following his father’s suicide, young Axelrod caught the attention of two men who would be instrumental in guiding his political leanings and by extension, Barack Hussein Obama’s as well.

Don Rose and David Canter began to mentor Axelrod and this brought him to the attention of the Chicago Communist Party USA. While Rose’s involvement with CP-USA has not been established, Canter’s communist activities are well documented. His father served time in jail for radical communist activities and eventually became the secretary of the Boston Communist Party. He ran for Governor of Massachusetts on the Communist Party ticket in 1930.

Harry Canter’s devotion to the communist party earned him an audience with Stalin in 1932 – he brought along his entire family, including his son, and future Axelrod mentor, David Canter. They stayed in Moscow until 1937, when they abruptly moved back to America, locating in Chicago and the CP-USA. Here Harry caught the attention of the Democratic controlled Congress in 1944.

Harry’s grandson Evan says, “He was a Communist. He was involved in the Party, as was my father.” Evan’s father is of course the above mentioned Axelrod mentor, David Canter.

David, like his father also caught the attention of Congress. He was called in to testify in 1962 before the Democrat-run House Committee on Un-American Activities, where he refused to answer questions about past or present membership in the Communist Party. Canter pleaded the Fifth Amendment from start to finish. Among the activities he was being investigated for was the riots during the 1968 Democratic National Convention. His publishing house was said by one source to have been a “great help” to one of the communist publications that had agitated and disrupted the convention: “We wouldn’t be anywhere without him,” said the source.

His partner, Don Rose was knee-deep in subversive activities as well. He was a member of the National Mobilization Committee to End the War in Vietnam. This group, of course, was the ultimate Who’s Who of Sixties radicals, and thoroughly penetrated by communist ringleaders. Rose did press work for the Mobilization Committee and for Students for a Democratic Society (SDS). Yes, the same SDS that gave birth to Bill Ayers’ domestic communistic terrorist group, the Weather Underground.


Sensing a pattern here?

There is much more to the Axelrod/Obama story than what I have related here, but in the spirit of brevity, I shall summarize. You can always follow the links at the end of my article to read the details for yourself. One small tidbit is the fact that Axelrod got his job at the Chicago Tribune via a glowing letter of recommendation by Don Rose. This led to Axelrod’s work in political campaigns such as Chicago Mayor, Harold Washington and the bow tie wearing Paul Simon.

Now does all this history mean that David Axelrod is a Communist?

No.

But what it shows, which is a very important point to remember is that he, like Barack Hussein Obama gravitated towards the extreme left, whether it was the Progressive Left, the Socialist Left or even the Communist Left. These statist ideological memes helped to form their opinion of America, and let us not forget that President Obama himself said of David Axelrod, “You know, he and I share a basic worldview. I trust his basic take on what the country should be and where we need to move toward—not just on specific policy but how politics should be able to draw on our best and not our worst.”

Please read the two articles I drew this information from, for the more informed we make ourselves about the backgrounds of our elected leaders and their advisers, the better off America will be.