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A confident Blagojevich readies for his biggest stage

The day before Rod Blagojevich's world came crashing down, he stood before the TV cameras confident and defiant, as always, declaring he had nothing to hide - even as a giant political scandal was about to engulf him.

"If anybody wants to tape my conversations, go right ahead," the boyish, helmet-haired governor said, looking jaunty in a black leather jacket and turtleneck.

As it turns out, the feds had done just that.

The next morning, FBI agents woke him with a phone call, then led him from his house in handcuffs.

And so began a bizarre, 18-month melodrama expected to culminate Thursday in Blagojevich's trial, where he stands accused of - among other things - trying to trade or sell President Barack Obama's vacant Senate seat for personal gain.

In the year and a half since his arrest, Blagojevich lost his job and has become a political pariah and a punch line. But he's maintained the bravado that defined him as governor with repeated declarations of innocence that are vintage Blago: Confrontational. In the limelight. Never giving an inch.

"There has always been a damn-the-torpedoes aspect to his personality," said state Rep. John Fritchey, a friend-turned-critic.

That's been obvious as the impeached governor has popped up everywhere: Early morning radio, late-night TV. On stage with Second City comic actors lampooning him. At a block party where the avid Elvis fan crooned one of The King's songs.

And most recently, Blagojevich, now 53, was on "The Celebrity Apprentice," where he seemed baffled by a computer and was fired for the second time in a year.

"I think people are intrigued by him, fascinated by him," claimed Glenn Selig, his Florida-based publicist.

So is it wise for Blagojevich to be clowning around while facing serious charges?

"I think he has a great sense of humor and he's willing to laugh at himself," Selig said. "Self-deprecation is not necessarily a bad thing. He's the real deal."

Those who've followed Blagojevich's career have another view.

"His ego won't allow him to give up the stage," said Kent Redfield, a professor emeritus of politics at the University of Illinois-Springfield. "He has this supreme confidence in his ability to win people over."

Blagojevich's loose-lipped style has some former associates wondering if the ex-governor's endless patter is designed to show potential jurors he's full of political bluster, not criminal intent.

Blagojevich has his own explanation.

"I ... have this need to tell everyone and anyone who would listen that I didn't do anything wrong and that I am innocent of any criminal wrongdoing ...," he wrote in his book "The Governor."

Blagojevich maintains he wasn't trying to sell or trade Obama's Senate seat, he was trying to arrange a deal in which he'd appoint Lisa Madigan, the state's attorney general. In exchange, her father, House Speaker Michael Madigan - Blagojevich's political nemesis - would push through a public works bill the governor wanted.

Both Madigans say that's news to them.

Blagojevich later appointed Roland Burris, creating a new furor when the newly named senator repeatedly changed his story about his contact with the governor's friends and aides before he was chosen.

Rod, the fighter

Milorad "Rod" Blagojevich has long regarded himself a fighter for the little people.

He sees his life as an American dream that unraveled into a tragedy of Shakespearean proportions: The son of a Yugoslav-born steelworker, he was raised in a blue-collar family, attended law school and climbed the political ladder, he said, only to fall victim to betrayal and jealousy.

Blagojevich critics, though, see him as another name in the rogue's gallery of politicians who've polluted state government. His predecessor, George Ryan, now is serving a 61/2-year racketeering sentence.

Blagojevich's political career began with family connections.

His wife, Patti, is the daughter of Richard Mell, one of a fading breed of Chicago Machine ward bosses who can marshal an army of precinct captains and deliver votes on Election Day.

"He would never have gotten out of the dugout (and) into the batter's box if not for Dick Mell," said Paul Green, a political science professor at Roosevelt University.

Mell tapped his son-in-law for the state legislature. Blagojevich served four years before moving to the U.S. House.

In his first bid gubernatorial bid, Blagojevich showed that beneath that Beatle-bob (circa '65) of hair - he always had a hairbrush handy - there was the brain of a shrewd politician with a populist's touch.

"He's personable," Green said. "He speaks well on his feet. He's good-looking. ... And he was able to raise an awful lot of money."

Eye on the prize

When Blagojevich was elected in 2002, he already was eyeing a bigger prize: the White House.

Democrats were thrilled to have one of their own in the governor's chair for the first time in 26 years. But Blagojevich soon made enemies on both sides of the aisle.

"He enjoyed the sexy part of government, the glad-handing, the attention of followers," Fritchey said. "But at a certain point, you've got to get out of campaign mode and into governing. That's where he had difficulty."

Blagojevich immediately angered folks outside Chicago when he refused to move to the governor's mansion in Springfield, saying he didn't want to uproot his two young daughters.

Critics also said he was a fleeting presence in the state capital and, when he was around, "his lack of attention to details and his work ethic were mind-boggling," said state Sen. Kirk Dillard, a veteran Republican lawmaker.

Blagojevich claims in his book that he's a "big picture" guy who didn't want to be "slowed down by having to spend my time mired in a bureaucracy that could be like quicksand."

Tensions grew between lawmakers and the governor.

He once ordered legislators to Springfield to vote on a transportation bill he wanted, then attended a Chicago Blackhawks game 175 miles away. The measure was defeated.

He called lawmakers into special session so often they stopped coming, then sued House leader Madigan for not ordering them to attend. He won.

For all his problems, his White House dreams endured until the 2004 Democratic National Convention when Obama was chosen as the keynote speaker - a star-making turn that launched him on the path to the presidency.

Blagojevich, some recall, repeatedly joked how he was chosen to speak at 3 a.m.

"For a man who fancied himself the next JFK, Obama's pick to give the keynote address was devastating," Fritchey said.

'He did a lot of good'

Still, Blagojevich, bolstered by a Democratic majority, racked up a list of accomplishments: He raised the minimum wage (angering some business groups), provided state-subsidized health insurance to every child in Illinois, banned discrimination of gays and lesbians, increased education spending, won approval to expand preschool and increased mammogram and cervical cancer screening for uninsured women.

"He did a lot of good," said Clifford Kelley, a former Chicago alderman who now is a radio talk-show host and has welcomed Blagojevich as a guest. "Once, two ladies called to thank him for saving their lives" with mammograms, he said.

By 2006 when he was facing re-election, Blagojevich already was under increasing scrutiny by the feds.

Agents were investigating patronage hiring and reports that money management firms were being squeezed to come up with payoffs and campaign cash if they wanted the lucrative business of investing state teachers pension money.

Blagojevich's relationship with Mell, his father-in-law, also had soured. Mell had made an explosive claim - later retracted - that a Blagojevich adviser was arranging state appointments in exchange for campaign cash.

None of it dampened Blagojevich's fundraising.

He spent more than $28 million on his re-election, overwhelming his Republican opponent, Judy Baar Topinka, then state treasurer.

She now says the state has been damaged by the Blagojevich scandal.

"If you say you're from Illinois, people ... think we're a bunch of doofuses," she said. "How could we have elected someone like that? Not just once - but twice."

Blagojevich plans to testify at his trial, one more step in his high-profile campaign. Will it succeed?

"I don't know if it's a plan or it's just goofy," Green said. "... If it does work, he's a genius ... and I guarantee you he'll run for office again - as a victim."

Former Gov. Rod Blagojevich waves to his supporters after talking to the media in January 2009 outside of his Chicago home. Associated Press
Gov. Rod Blagojevich greets commuters in November 2006 as he campaigns during his successful re-election bid against Republican Judy Baar Topinka. Associated Press
Gov. Rod Blagojevich works from the library of his Chicago home in May 2003. After taking office Blagojevich immediately angered folks outside Chicago when he refused to move to the governor's mansion in Springfield. He said he didn't want to uproot his two young daughters. Critics says he was a fleeting presence in the capital, and when he was around, he didn't exactly dig in. FBI agents arrested Blagojevich Dec. 9, 2008 at his home and he now is getting ready to stand trial Thursday, accused of trying to trade or sell President Barack Obama's vacant Senate seat for personal gain. Associated Press
Impeached former Gov. Rod Blagojevich listens to a caller in March 2009 as he guest hosts the Don and Roma radio talk show on WLS-AM 890 radio in Chicago. Blagojevich's trial on corruption charges starts Thursday. Since his arrest in December 2008, Blagojevich has turned notoriety into celebrity. He has popped up on early morning radio and late-night TV. He's been on stage with Second City comic actors lampooning him and, most recently, was fired from "The Celebrity Apprentice." Associated Press
Rod Blagojevich Associated Press
Gov.-elect Rod Blagojevich runs past Illinois' Old State Capitol building in Springfield on Jan. 12, 2003, the day before his inauguration. FBI agents arrested Blagojevich Dec. 9, 2008, at his Chicago home and he now is getting ready to stand trial Thursday. Associated Press
In this Aug. 17, 2005 photo, then-Sen. Barack Obama laughs with Gov. Rod Blagojevich during Governor's Day at the Illinois State Fair in Springfield. Blagojevich was roused from bed and arrested Dec. 9, 2008 after prosecutors said he was caught on wiretaps audaciously scheming to sell Obama's vacant Senate seat for personal gain. Associated Press
Patti Blagojevich applauds with her father, Richard Mell, center, during inauguration day ceremonies in January 2003 for her husband, Gov. Rod Blagojevich, in Springfield. Mell, a powerful Chicago alderman, is widely credited with launching Rod Blagojevich's political career. Several years later Blagojevich's relationship with Mell would sour after Mell made an explosive claim that a Blagojevich adviser was arranging state appointments in exchange for campaign cash. Blagojevich faces corruption charges in a trial beginning Thursday. Associated Press
Former Gov. Rod Blagojevich talks to a customer during a signing for his book "The Governor" at a Chicago bookstore in December 2009. One year earlier, Blagojevich was arrested by FBI agents and stands accused, among other things, of trying to trade or sell President Barack Obama's vacant Senate seat for personal gain. Associated Press
Former Gov. Rod Blagojevich finishes his inaugural address during ceremonies in Springfield in 2007. Blagojevich was arrested Dec. 9, 2008, on charges of conspiring to get financial benefits through his authority to appoint a U.S. senator to fill the vacancy left by Barack Obama's election as president. His trial begins Thursday at federal court in Chicago. Associated Press
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