Marching orders . . . 
It was a Rahm reach-out.
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Sneed has learned Mayor Rahm Emanuel, who cut his teeth watching his mother as a young civil rights activist, decided to use his voice to facilitate the Rev. Michael Pfleger’s anti-violence march Saturday morning down the Dan Ryan Expy.
“I made a few phone calls,” Emanuel said in an exclusive interview with Sneed.
That included one to Gov. Bruce Rauner, who got on board with a game plan that initially aggravated Pfleger but then didn’t play out as envisioned — enabling the South Side priest to accomplish his goal of shutting down all inbound lanes of the expressway.
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Emanuel also told Sneed he enlisted the help of Cardinal Blase Cupich.
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In Sneed’s final analysis, the mayor was the go-between who wanted the march to go off safely and Pfleger emerged victorious, leaving Rauner irate.
Here’s the inside story of how it all went down:
The shocker: On Friday morning, Emanuel stunned the news media and Pfleger when he announced he supported allowing the protesters to march on the Dan Ryan.
“I almost fell over,” Pfleger told Sneed.
It also appeared the mayor was bucking the wishes of his own police department and the Illinois State Police, who had asked Pfleger not to do it.
“Look, we were in need of a way to declare our independence from violence,” said the mayor. “What better time to do it then a time when we celebrate our own nation’s independence. . . . But when the police superintendent [Eddie Johnson] told me we had a problem and asked me to call the governor because the state police were balking, I did.
“I just figured there had to be a common-sense way to do this and figure it out,” Emanuel told Sneed before the march. “The state police are in charge of the state’s expressway safety. They were against the protest due to safety concerns.
“So I called Bruce [Rauner],” Emanuel said. “I strongly felt there had to be a way NOT to disrupt the Dan Ryan Expressway and to allow Father Pfleger and the others to march.
“Then I reached out to the cardinal, Cardinal Cupich — and told him I needed his voice in this. He was going to issue a statement.”
Cupich did so on Friday evening, encouraging young protesters “to be bold and undaunted.”
“Look, I felt everyone had a voice in this,” said Emanuel. “So we got together to find a way nobody loses . . . so that the people can march — and keep the Dan Ryan open at the same time.
“This was also because of Mike [Pfleger] and his continual commitment to anti-violence. This isn’t his first act of protest. He works his commitment to non-violence 24/7.”
The change in plans: At the start of the march at 10:18 a.m. Saturday, protesters were routed along the right side of the expressway as traffic passed in the left two lanes. This was the compromise plan that Emanuel had brokered — and it aggravated Pfleger, who wanted police to shut down all inbound lanes.
Pfleger ended up getting his wish, though. Given the number of people flooding the expressway, state police eventually ordered the full shutdown of the inbound lanes, enabling Pfleger, the Rev. Jesse Jackson and the thousands who joined them to accomplish their shutdown goal.
Rauner’s rage: The governor took to Twitter, blasting Emanuel for the full shutdown — even though state police apparently made that call, as they control the expressway. “I’m disappointed in the mayor. There was an agreement in place. I am calling on the mayor to take swift and decisive action to put an end to this kind of chaos. I will work with him in good faith and urge him to do his job so that the people of Chicago feel safe.”
Rahm’s Twitter retort: “It was a peaceful protest. Delete your account.”