William E. Rodriguez

Chicago City Alderman William E. Rodriguez.

William E. Rodriguez (1879–1970) was an American socialist politician and lawyer. A founding member of the Chicago chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union, Rodriguez is best remembered as the first Hispanic individual elected to the Chicago City Council.

Biography

Early years

William (christened Eldritus) Emilio Rodriguez was born in Naperville, Illinois on September 15, 1879. His father, Emilio, was a Spaniard who worked as a laborer and his mother, of ethnic German extraction, was born in Germany.[1]

Rodriguez attended public schools and worked as a house painter following his graduation from high school.

He later entered law school, graduating from John Marshall Law School in 1912 and joining a small firm in Chicago.

Rodriguez married Sophia V. Levitin and was the brother-in-law of radical journalist J. Louis Engdahl, who was married to another Levitin sister.

Political career

Rodriguez joined the Socialist Party of America from shortly after his graduation of high school.[1]

Rodriguez made a first unsuccessful attempt at winning election to the Chicago City Council in April 1910, running in Ward 20 as part of a slate of 35 Socialist candidates.[2] Only 324 votes were recorded for Rodriguez in this inaugural effort.[2] In 1911, Rodriguez was the Socialist candidate for Mayor of Chicago. In this race he garnered 24,825 votes, trailing the major party candidates by over 135,000 each.

Rodriguez moved into the 15th Ward of Chicago, located in the city's northwest, and ran for Chicago City Council in 1914. When the Republican victor of that race died suddenly not long after the election, Rodriguez announced his candidacy in a replacement election. Rodriguez won the race for the remainder of the term with a plurality and gained reelection in 1916.[1]

As a Chicago City Council member, Rodriguez targeted the city's transit companies, which he charged were making exorbitant profits and billing the public for unnecessary "public service messages" in the press.

Rodriguez was targeted in the 1918 City Council race in the climate of anti-Socialist nationalism and the Republicans and Democrats in his ward united behind a "fusion" candidate, who won by 266 votes.[1]

In 1918, Rodriguez became involved in the Labor Party of Cook County, a forerunner of the Labor Party of the United States.[3] He subsequently left the Socialist movement.

Later life

After his defeat in 1918, Rodriguez retired from politics to practice law. He helped to establish the Chicago chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union and ran unsuccessfully for judge in 1933.[1]

Rodriguez continued to practice law until he was in his late-80s. After his retirement, Rodriguez moved to Phoenix, Arizona.[1]

Death and legacy

William E. Rodriguez died in 1970 in Phoenix.

Footnotes

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 "Chicago's First Hispanic Alderman: How William E. Rodriguez broke ethnic — and political — barriers," Chicago magazine, vol. 30, no. 11 (November 1981), pp. 144–147.
  2. 1 2 "Socialists in Slight Gain in Chicago Poll," Chicago Daily Socialist, vol. 4, no. 139 (April 7, 1910), pg. 2.
  3. Tim Davenport, "Labor Party of the United States/Farmer-Labor Party of the United States/Federated Farmer Labor Party (1918–1925): Organizational History," Early American Marxism website. Retrieved July 3, 2010.
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