I rise to acknowledge that Gov. J. B. Pritzker this year
officially became a “Davos Person,” traveling to a tiny Swiss village with
hundreds of other global-leader types, after two years in which the annual
power fest experienced a pandemic-enforced repose.
Of course, the Davos Person not long ago was known as the
Davos Man. But the times, and the nouns, have changed, though the purpose of
the confab remains pretty much the same: high-minded talk mixed with
bottom-line pursuit of commercial, state and national agendas.
The Davos Person’s reputation varies depending on the
audience. The conveners of the World Economic Forum in Davos see their
attendees as enlightened and powerful global citizens who come each year to
discuss and sort the world’s big problems. Climate change, the war in Ukraine,
slowing economies and economic disparities — that sort of topic.
You name it; they’ll discuss it. Some day, they may even do
something about it.
The Davos Person is of interest to Illinoisans this year
because Pritzker joined in. He accepted an invitation to speak on several
panels, and he stepped right up, with evident delight.
Consider Pritzker’s main stage turn on the topic of “America
(Un) Bound” — a panel meant to instruct the world about America’s policy
aspirations and its fractious politics, circa 2023. It was typical Davos stuff:
bromides and platitudes, mixed with healthy doses of partisan pugilism.
Pritzker played his part. He opened with chamber-of-commerce
boosterism about Illinois’ clean energy law and the assault weapons ban he
signed last week, then quickly pivoted to a critique of the election denialism
and QAnon tolerance that has beset some corners of the Republican Party.
Pritzker’s trip prompted predictable puzzlement about what
it might mean for the governor’s national political ambitions. And the short
answer is this: not much. Prestigious as a Davos invite can be, it has no
currency on the stump or at the polls.
That hardly means Pritzker made a mistake in going. As a
matter of fact, he should consider going again. And if he does, next time, the
governor might consider bringing more than just a handful of key staffers, as
happened this year.
Davos built its reputation as a place where unlikely
partners could parley and get results. In the early 1980s, the leaders of
Turkey and Greece worked out a deal that helped avert warfare between the
countries. South Africa’s Nelson Mandela and F.W. de Klerk chose Davos in the
early ’90s as the site of their first appearance at a major global event as
they worked together to dismantle apartheid.
As well known as those highlights may be — and as much
attention as the global gabfest gets — its most valuable contribution to the
world economy is the way it brings business and government leaders together in
an informal atmosphere that’s custom-built to get deals done. That’s the part
of Davos that could make a return trip for Pritzker worth the time and effort.
The way to do Davos for an Illinois politician was
pioneered, paradoxically, by Mayor Richard M. Daley. If ever there were a
public figure who did not look the part of the Davos Person, Daley would be the
one. Rumpled, not comfortable schmoozing, born of Bridgeport not Brussels,
Berlin or Buenos Aires, Daley on paper should not have fit in.
But he did, with brio. I saw it with my own eyes, wandering
the serpentine halls of the World Economic Forum’s convention center. Daley
attended year after year as mayor, recruited a posse of Chicago’s corporate
elite to attend with him, and had them fan out and work the high-end crowd,
spreading the word about Chicago.
Pritzker has shown a talent for this sort of work. His trip to
the United Nations’ climate summit in Glasgow, Scotland, in 2021, offered a
first chance to tell Illinois’ clean-energy story on the global stage. He
emphasized the electronic vehicle marketplace, on the strength of the state’s
ability to secure a $70 million investment from Lion Electric of Montreal.
That was a good start. But the trip to Glasgow and London
also marked Pritzker’s first international travel as governor — a reflection of
the pandemic’s effect on global travel, true, but also an indication that
Pritzker has not seen himself, as other governors have, as the state’s top
salesperson, willing to travel the globe to drum up business for Illinois.
The Davos appearance could mark a turning point. Pritzker
was scheduled to reprise his clean-energy pitch. He was scheduled to speak on a
panel about infrastructure, too: a good fit for a governor who has a $45
billion infrastructure improvement plan underway.
With his appearance this year, Pritzker is now officially a
Davos Person. Based on what has surfaced so far about the trip, as well as
video available on the World Economic Forum website, he did represent. Not bad
for a trial run.
If Pritzker returns to Davos in 2024, it shouldn’t be just
him and staff again. To make the trip worth repeating, he might consider
organizing a posse of business leaders — and putting together a plan to get
business done.
David Greising is president and CEO of the Better Government
Association.