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Dan Walker, From Power To Prison

A former governor of Illinois has died. Dan Walker ran the state for one term in the 1970s. A Democrat, he focused much of his brief political career fighting members of his own party as he did the opposition Republicans.Brian Mackey reports on the battles of the late Illinois Gov. Dan Walker.

At a time when most Democratic politicians in Illinois were cogs in a massive political machine, Dan Walker was a nobody.

That changed in 1971, when he set out on a walking tour that spanned the length of Illinois. The trek was later memorialized in a flattering country song by Stan Hitchcock called “A Winner Walkin' Home: The Ballad of Dan Walker."

A UPI report from 1974 described "A Winner Walkin' Home" as "tailor-made to 'go' nationally. It's slick and professional and the pro-Walker message is strong enough so that the record firm included a statement with copies sent to radio stations, disclaiming any endorsement of Walker as governor."
Credit file / WUIS/Illinois Issues
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WUIS/Illinois Issues
A UPI report from 1974 described "A Winner Walkin' Home" as "tailor-made to 'go' nationally. It's slick and professional and the pro-Walker message is strong enough so that the record firm included a statement with copies sent to radio stations, disclaiming any endorsement of Walker as governor."

"Illinois sun comes shining through the corn stalks by the road he’s walkin’ on, mmm-hmm."

“Dan Walker was very intense. His folksiness was contrived — that red bandanna and the walk across the state. But he tapped into public discontent," says JimNowlan, a retired professor and former member of the Illinois House.Nowlanhad a close-up view of the 1972 campaign — as the running mate of the defeated incumbent, RepublicanGov. RichardOgilvie.

“Dan Walker was great at campaigning and maybe not so good at governing," Nowlan says.

Walker had a white hot political career, but much of that heat burned off in battles with one man: Mayor Richard J. Daley of Chicago. Walker frequently derided the boss of Illinois’ Democratic machine.

“I have been trying very hard to bring to this state a Democratic Party that is ... representative of people all over the state of Illinois, and does not just respond top the wishes of one man in Chicago," Walker said at the opening a Decatur campaign office in 1975. He was running for re-election, but Daley endorsed then-Secretary of State Michael Howlett, who defeated Walker in the primary.

“Well, the score is now Walker 1, Daley 1," Walker said as he conceded to Howlett.

Charlie Wheeler, a professor of journalism at the University of Illinois Springfield, says part of Walker's difficulty was that he wanted to be the top Democrat in Illinois at a time when Daley already occupied that perch. "And Richard J. Daley was not interested in ceding that position," he says.

During the Walker years, Wheeler covered state government for the Chicago Sun-Times. He says Walker’s style of governing made it hard for him to get things done.

“In his inaugural address he talked about ‘the free ride is over.’ So he came in as an outsider … and he was never able to get along with the leadership in the Republican Party or the Democratic Party."

Dan Walker was Illinois' last Democratic governor of the 20th century. It would be a generation before his party would retake the executive mansion, with the 2002 election of Rod Blagojevich.
Credit file / WUIS/Illinois Issues
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WUIS/Illinois Issues
Dan Walker was Illinois' last Democratic governor of the 20th century. It would be a generation before his party would retake the executive mansion, with the 2002 election of Rod Blagojevich.

Walker’s loss begat 26 years of Republican rule, a streak that wasn’t broken until the people elected Rod Blagojevich in 2002. But Walker's electoral defeat was not his low point.

On a summer day in 1987, he pleaded guilty to federal charges of bank fraud.

Walker said he had always tried to stay upbeat about life, even when he lost the governor’s office. But in a 2007 interview, he said going to prison sent him "into the depths."

“There was a big, tall water tower," Walker said. "I’d look up there and say, ‘Well, why not just climb that ladder and just step off into nothing. You don’t have to jump. You just step off, and nothing swallows you up."

Walker says he eventually found peace through a vision of Jesus. Literally — he’d see it when he closed his eyes.

"All I know is that he was there," he said. "And he gave me peace. Peace. And so I finally found peace in prison."

“It’s a long, long way to go. His body’s tired, but not his soul. He’s a winner walkin’ home."Dan Walker’s family says he died Wednesday at his home in California. He was 92. 

Dan Walker, right, was governor of Illinois from 1973 to 1977.
file / WUIS/Illinois Issues
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WUIS/Illinois Issues
Dan Walker, right, was governor of Illinois from 1973 to 1977.
In 1971, then-candidate Dan Walker, left, walked the length of Illinois to call attention to his Democratic primary campaign.
file / WUIS/Illinois Issues
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WUIS/Illinois Issues
In 1971, then-candidate Dan Walker, left, walked the length of Illinois to call attention to his Democratic primary campaign.
The back cover of the 45 RPM single "A Winner Walkin' Home: The Ballad of Dan Walker."
file / WUIS/Illinois Issues
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WUIS/Illinois Issues
The back cover of the 45 RPM single "A Winner Walkin' Home: The Ballad of Dan Walker."
"A Winner Walkin' Home" was featured at a series of fundraising concerts for Walker's Illinois Democratic Fund (the "I.D.F." referenced in the poster).
file / WUIS/Illinois Issues
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WUIS/Illinois Issues
"A Winner Walkin' Home" was featured at a series of fundraising concerts for Walker's Illinois Democratic Fund (the "I.D.F." referenced in the poster).

Copyright 2015 NPR Illinois | 91.9 UIS

Brian Mackey covers Illinois state government and politics from the WUIS Statehouse bureau. He was previously A&E editor at The State Journal-Register and Statehouse bureau chief for the Chicago Daily Law Bulletin. He can be reached at (217) 206-6020.
Brian Mackey
Brian Mackey formerly reported on state government and politics for NPR Illinois and a dozen other public radio stations across the state. Before that, he was A&E editor at The State Journal-Register and Statehouse bureau chief for the Chicago Daily Law Bulletin.