Politics | Rod Blagojevich Obama Steered Clear of Blago for Years President-elect kept his hands clean; guv was classic machine pol By Gabriel Winant Posted Dec 12, 2008 8:03 AM CST Copied In this Dec. 2, 2008, file photo, President-elect Barack Obama, right, greets Illinois Gov. Rob Blagojevich, left, at the Bipartisan meeting of the National Governor's Association in Philadelphia. (AP Photo) Rising through Illinois politics, Barack Obama learned to recognize a crook when he saw one, so he kept a healthy distance from Rod Blagojevich, writes Eli Saslow in the Washington Post. At the convention, Obama disappointed Blagojevich by giving nearly every other Illinois official a speaking slot. Says a mentor, “You don't get through Chicago like Barack Obama did unless you know how to avoid people like that.” Blagojevich and Obama haven’t spoken for more than a year. Both were intensely ambitious local pols, and quickly found reasons to become leery of each other. Each failed to endorse the other at key points in their careers. “The governor didn't offer his support, and to be honest, we didn't really ask for it,” says Obama’s Senate campaign manager. Read These Next For these factory workers, an unexpected windfall. A request to turn off football game ends in a murder-suicide. Toll from UPS plane crash rises to 15 after a Christmas Day death. Edited version of It's a Wonderful Life has viewers perplexed. Report an error