On the morning of May 17, aides to Mayor Rahm Emanuel leaked word that he was furious about the “blatant hypocrisy.”

Out of the public view, though, Emanuel hasn’t been quite so turned off by the president’s enemies.

In contrast, President Obama posts logs of White House visitors and updates them regularly. That means it’s easier to find out who Emanuel was meeting with in the White House when he was the president’s chief of staff than to see who visited him on the fifth floor of Chicago’s City Hall.

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The mayor’s office didn’t respond to our request to discuss Emanuel’s schedule. But once again, we found that his days were loaded with rich guys, campaign donors, powerful contractors, union busters, charter-school supporters, City Hall insiders, aldermanic brownnosers, and other favor seekers.

For instance, on September 1 Emanuel met for an hour with Muneer Satter, a managing director at Goldman Sachs. Satter donated $190,000 last year to Restore Our Future, a Romney-affiliated PAC, and he’s sent tens of thousands more to top congressional Republicans fighting to slash federal programs and regulations. Yet Goldman Sachs isn’t averse to taking money from governments predominated by Democrats: the city of Chicago has hired the firm repeatedly for no-bid work as an adviser on bond issues, including a $600 million bond sale last month. In February the CTA picked the firm to advise it on “public-private partnerships” to help finance infrastructure.

We’d love to tell you why Griffin likes Emanuel so much or what they discussed during their meeting. But Griffin, through a spokesperson, declined to comment.

And his allies say he’s eager to meet with anyone who can bring jobs to Chicago. “Mayor Emanuel is intensely committed to improving our economy by providing jobs, training, and opportunity, and stabilizing our city’s finances,” says Michael Sacks, who runs Grosvenor Capital Management, a hedge fund firm, and informally serves as one of the mayor’s top advisers.

See our related story in which Mick Dumke and Ben Joravsky uncover 15 donors and insiders who got access to Rahm.

And in the interest of transparency—”hey, someone has to think about it”—here are the PDFed schedules his office sent us after a Freedom of Information Act petition:

  • »September
  • »September 8 (missing from the above)
  • »October 1-14
  • »October 15-31
  • »November