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Tom Baldini was one of a kind

Phil Power

My old friend, Tom Baldini, used to talk about it, especially in recent years late in the evening when we both realized we were getting older.

“I’d crawl across the township on my knees,” he’d say, “to die on my feet and not from a stroke.” We’d agree and have a snort (Tom called it “a toddy for the body”) before he’d drive back home to Marquette from my cabin in the woods.

So when I heard last week that Tom had died of a massive stroke, I couldn’t wash away the strange mixture of feelings: Tears of sadness and regret for a friend cut down at 74, still in his prime; gratitude to a God of grace for helping him to a good way out; admiration for a guy who became an icon for the entire Upper Peninsula in his own lifetime.

Tom made Michigan great before it became a slogan. And his devotion to his region and it’s special culture, hard-bitten and soft at the same time, spread like lake-effect snow wherever he went.

His dad was a miner who worked underground most of his life and died young of black lung disease. Momma Baldini kept house in Negaunee and made sure her son, Tommy the altar boy, knew the difference between right and wrong and never lost his pride in the countless immigrant families like his, who worked hard and made a good life in the north woods.

What you saw in the arc of Tom’s life is the promise of America writ in large type.

High school and then college, followed by teaching countless kids in economics and government in the Marquette schools. “Oh, Mr. Baldini,” they’d all say, “he was the best teacher I ever had.” He rose high in the Marquette teachers’ union and in Democratic politics. Evenings, he’d watch Rep. Dominic Jacobetti, the sachem of the legislature and the boss of the U.P., as he sat under a bare light bulb upstairs in the Italian-American Club and listened to the faithful plead for help.

He caught on big when Jim Blanchard was elected in 1982 and some of us persuaded the new governor he needed somebody who could be trusted and who knew the U.P. like the back of his hand. Tom became special assistant for the U.P., and nothing significant happened up there without Tom’s say-so.

And when Bill Clinton became president, Tom was appointed co-chairman of the International Joint Commission, the international treaty organization that resolves boundary, fish and every other kind of dispute between the U. S. and Canada. And when Blanchard was later appointed American ambassador to Canada, here were a former governor from southeastern Michigan and a former altar boy from the U.P. running our foreign policy with our largest trading partner.

But it didn’t end there. Bart Stupak, the former Michigan State Police trooper who was working as a lawyer in Escanaba, got elected to Congress in 1992. Later, he needed somebody he could trust to manage things in one of the largest congressional districts in America, and, sure enough, he picked Tom to do it.

In 2003, Baldini was appointed by Stupak to be his district director and retired from federal service in 2010.

And somewhere along the way, Tom got a job as the assistant superintendent for Finance and Personnel for the Marquette Area Public Schools, just where he used to quarrel with the teachers’ union. He taught government as an adjunct professor at Northern Michigan University and was appointed by then-Gov. Jennifer Granholm to the Board of Trustees at Michigan Tech University, the largely unknown but very fine university in Houghton.

And then he decided to come back to his roots and ran successfully for the Marquette City Commission, becoming mayor in 2014. He came out to see me that summer, pleased as punch with his new campaign button. “It’s Time For Tom,” it said, and when I got news of his passing. it occurred to me that it’s been time for Tom for much of his life.

In my mind, if there is one thing that stands out about Tom, it’s his absolute trustworthiness. Governors knew it. Members of congress knew it, just as did the international civil servants he worked with. His political allies — and his opponents, too — knew it. And his legion of friends knew it, and relished it every single time they saw him.

Teacher. Politician. International civil servant. Adjunct professor. Union leader. Trusted aide to the powerful. Civil leader. A guy who never forgot his roots and nourished the soil that rooted him in good place.

They don’t make many like that any more. And those that knew and loved him gained more by the experience than they ever could have imagined.

I could go on and on, but something just got in my eyes and it’s making it hard to see the page I’m writing on.

Editor’s note: Former newspaper publisher Phil Power is a long-observant of Michigan politics and economics, who also served as a regent of the University of Michigan. He founded the Center for Michigan, a nonpartisan, nonprofit organization that publishes Bridge Magazine, a free online journal with more than one million readers annually. He welcomes your comments at ppower@thecenterformichigan.net.

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