Edwin Eisendrath Explained

Edwin Eisendrath
Birth Date:3 February 1958[1]
Birth Place:Chicago, Illinois
Office:Member of the Chicago City Council from the 43rd ward
Predecessor:Martin J. Oberman
Successor:Charles Bernardini
Party:Democratic
Children:Three
Residence:Chicago, Illinois

Edwin Eisendrath (born February 3, 1958)[1] is former CEO of the Chicago Sun-Times and former alderman of the 43rd ward of Chicago (Lincoln Park area).

Early life

Edwin Eisendrath III was born into a Jewish family,[2] the son of Edwin W. Eisendrath Jr.[3] and Susan Rosenberg. His father was an attorney and his mother came from a powerful West Side political family.[4] Eisendrath's younger brother is television producer and writer John Eisendrath.[5] Eisendrath's parents divorced when he was a child (in 1970), and his mother married Lewis Manilow.

Eisendrath was raised in the East Lake View neighborhood of Chicago. After graduating from Harvard University, he taught in public schools in both Appalacia and later Chicago's Wicker Park neighborhood.[4] In 1983, he earned a master of arts in teaching at National Louis University.[6]

Chicago City Council

In 1987 (at the age 29), Eisendrath successfully ran to succeed the retiring Martin J. Oberman as alderman (city councilor) in Chicago's 43rd ward. The race between him and attorney Robert Perkins was dubbed by observers as the "Battle of the Blue Bloods", as both young candidates came from wealthy and well-connected families.[4] [7] Eisendrath raised $225,000 for her campaign, and his campaign spent what was at the time an all-time record amount for a Chicago City Council campaign. As a candidate, Eisendrath's platform focused on city finances and school reform. He promised that he would be neutral in the Chicago Council Wars, not joining either of the council's warring political factions. He was described by the Chicago Tribune as positioning himself to be a "Lakefront independent".[8] He was re-elected in 1991.

Eisendrath backed the Chicago School Reform Act,[9] legislation enacted by the state of Illinois in 1988 to reform Chicago Public Schools. Among the changes that it made was removing academic tenure from principals, and creating Local School Councils to which principals had to answer.[10]

Eisendrath endorsed the ward redistricting map proposed by Mayor Richard M. Daley when it was put to a public vote via a 1992 referendum. The referendum offered Chicagoans the unusual opportunity to provide input in the redistricting, allowing them to vote between two options. Rather than providing voters a visual representation of each of the two options, the phrasing of the question on the ballot provided voters with a list of the aldermen that supported each respective map. Eisendrath supported the option preferred by Mayor Daley.[11]

1990 congressional campaign

Eisendrath ran in the 1990 Democratic primary election for the U.S. House of Representatives in Illinois's 9th congressional district, challenging longtime incumbent Sid Yates. Eisendrath ran an anti-incumbent campaign focused on the decades-long length of Yates' tenure. He also made an issue of Yates' advanced age.[12] Eisendrath lost in a landslide.[13]

Subsequent career in government, politics, and education

In October 1993, Eisenhdrath resigned as alderman to become the administrator for the Region V office of the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) in Chicago, one of HUD's largest and busiest offices. He later served as Vice President of Academic Affairs for Kendall College but resigned the position in 2007.

From 2007 to 2017, Eisendrath was an international business consultant with a focus on global higher education.

2006 gubernatorial campaign

Eisendrath sought the Democratic nomination for Governor of Illinois in 2006, but was defeated in the primary by incumbent governor Rod Blagojevich.

CEO of the Chicago Sun-Times (2017–2019)

In 2017, Eisendrath led a group, including retired WLS-TV anchor Linda Yu and the Chicago Federation of Labor, to place a bid for the Chicago Sun-Times newspaper. It was announced July 13 that the group, ST Acquisition Holdings LLC, purchased the Sun-Times.[14] [15] Shortly thereafter, Eisendrath was named the new chief executive officer of the newspaper.[16]

In January 2018, Eisendrath hired Mark Konkol as executive editor of then-Sun-Times-owned Chicago Reader[17] Konkol soon published an issue with racist cover and Eisendrath fired Konkol.[18] Later in 2018, Eisendrath resigned as CEO after meeting his original goals stating "Not only did we stop the (Tribune) merger, we successfully relocated, rebranded, restructured”.[19] [20]

Later career

In 2019, Eisendrath helped launch Verifiable, a company that uses advanced technologies to provide real-time license verification and continuous monitoring of healthcare providers to increase efficiency and reduce compliance costs to hospitals and other health care organization.

Most recently, Eisendrath is guest hosting at the progressive Chicago radio station WCPT820am.[21]

Patents

Edwin is an inventor on several issued and pending US and international patents related to virtual on-line universities.[22]

References

  1. Ben Joravsky, Why Is This Man Running?, The Chicago Reader, February 15, 1990.
  2. https://www.jta.org/1987/04/20/archive/behind-the-headlines-jewish-voters-played-a-key-role-in-the-chicago-election Behind the Headlines Jewish Voters Played a Key Role in the Chicago Election
  3. Gerry Doyle, Edwin W. Eisendrath Jr., The Chicago Tribune, June 30, 2006.
  4. Felsenthal. Carol. Who Is Edwin Eisendrath?. Chicago. Springfield, Illinois. tronc. June 22, 2017. August 29, 2017.
  5. https://www.chicagoreader.com/Bleader/archives/2017/07/20/the-new-owners-kid-brother-used-to-work-here The new owner’s kid brother used to work here
  6. Web site: Facebook Status Update July 13th. https://ghostarchive.org/iarchive/facebook/54486905469/10155298057775470 . 2022-02-26 . limited. National Louis University. July 13, 2017. August 31, 2017.
  7. Green. Paul M.. A walk on the wild side. Illinois Issues. Springfield, Illinois. Sangamon State University. 16. 7. 46–47. July 1987. August 31, 2017.
  8. Web site: Baquet . Dean . Griffin . Jean Latz . Kass . John . Lucky 13 Make Up the City Councils Class of 1987 . Chicago Tribune . 21 November 2024 . 9 April 1987.
  9. Joravsky. Ben. The Chicago school mess. Illinois Issues. Springfield, Illinois. Sangamon State University. 14. 4. 12–15. April 1988. August 31, 2017.
  10. Web site: Bennett . Albert L. . Byrk . Anthony S. . Easton . John Q. . Kerbow . David . Luppescu . Stuart . Sebring . Penny Bender . Charting Reform The Principals' Perspective . University of Chicago Consortium on School Research . 21 November 2024 . en . December 1992.
  11. Galvan. Manuel. Redistricting city wards by referenda March 17. Illinois Issues. Springfield, Illinois. Sangamon State University. 18. 3. 32–33. March 1992. August 31, 2017.
  12. Ylisela . James, Jr. . Old Sid Is Looking Better Than Ever in the 9th District Race . Illinois Issues . March 1998 . 37 . 20 November 2024.
  13. Camper. John. Reynolds and Eisendrath: What Chance Against Incumbents?. Illinois Issues. Springfield, Illinois. Sangamon State University. 16. 3. 34–35. 0738-9663. March 1990. August 31, 2017.
  14. News: Potential Sun-Times buyers line up ahead of deadline. Miller. Rich. June 5, 2017. June 5, 2017. Capitol Fax. Springfield, Illinois.
  15. News: Esposito. Stefano. New investors in Chicago Sun-Times revealed. July 13, 2017. Chicago Sun Times. Chicago, Illinois. August 29, 2017.
  16. News: Blumberg. Nick. Meet Edwin Eisendrath, the New Chicago Sun-Times CEO. Chicago Tonight. July 18, 2017. July 19, 2017.
  17. News: Pulitzer winner Mark Konkol to lead Chicago Reader. January 31, 2018. September 16, 2019. Chicago Reader.
  18. News: Edwin Eisendrath discusses the offensive Reader cover, staff diversity, and the paper's future. February 21, 2018. September 16, 2019. Chicago Reader.
  19. https://www.chicagotribune.com/business/ct-biz-sun-times-ceo-resigns-20181031-story.htm
  20. News: Edwin Eisendrath resigns as Sun-Times Media CEO. October 31, 2018. September 16, 2019. Main. Frank.
  21. Web site: Just another WordPress site Management Site.
  22. https://patents.google.com/?oq=%22edwin+eisendrath%22 Google patent search on "Edwin Eisengrath"