Monday morning wrap-up
Monday, Nov 8, 2004 - Posted by Rich Miller I need to hit the road for Springfield and I’m late, as usual, so this will be brief. The Sun-Times joins the call for a Chicago casino. We’re not going to get into the location-naming game here, but we think if a casino is going to be approved for the city, it should occupy a space where it can reach its full potential to bring in money and help relieve the economic crunch on the city and state. It’s estimated the city could rake in as much as $300 million a year from casinos, and the state as much as $700 million. And then jumps in all the way: We’re also in favor of adding slot machines at racetracks, to ease the bite horse racing takes from casino revenues. Gambling already takes place at racetracks, so allowing them slots won’t constitute an expansion of gambling. The Sun-Times even called for medical malpractice reform. A state cash source has dried up and the AP reports that some locals are crying foul. Cash from off-track betting parlors helped Bloomington buy a multimillion-dollar zoo exhibit, a replica of a South American rain forest with exotic birds and other animals. Grayville had been using its cut of OTB winnings to keep up its small park and swimming pool. The Tribune runs a veto session preview story that includes this: Perhaps the biggest obstacle to a robust veto session may be that distrust dies hard. Lingering ill will from the record-breaking 54-day summer overtime budget session may be a deterrent to far-reaching action. The Daily Herald’s session preview is here. Aaron Chambers’ Saturday column in the Rockford Register Star is a good read, as always. Alan Keyes may be independent, and he’s certainly provocative, but he was far from constructive when it came to advancing Illinois politics. I’ll do a couple of e-mail posts this afternoon, but I’m not sure how quickly they’ll update here. It’s a grand experiment, folks. Stay tuned.
|
Obama’s replacement named
Saturday, Nov 6, 2004 - Posted by Rich Miller Kwame Raoul was sworn in this afternoon to the state Senate. He replaces US Senate-elect Barack Obama, who resigned two days ago. Raoul was the near unanimous choice of the district’s Democratic committeemen. Raoul’s history of working with the community is said to be what put him over the top. Raoul ran against Alderman Toni Preckwinkle the last time around, making his choice all that more surprising. He was also not the first choice of Senate President Emil Jones, who backed Will Burns and who has often claimed some credit for Obama’s election to higher office. Raoul is an attorney with City Colleges of Chicago and is a former prosecutor.
|
Purple Map
Saturday, Nov 6, 2004 - Posted by Rich Miller Below is the Illinois presidential election results map that I inexpertly cropped from Robert J. Vanderbei’s national purple map. Here’s the explanation: Using County-by-County election return data from USA Today together with County boundary data from the US Census’ Tiger database we produced the following graphic depicting the results. Of course, blue is for the democrats, red is for the republicans, and green is for all other. Each county’s color is a mix of these three color components in proportion to the results for that county. ![]() By blowing it up, you appear to see more subtle details. ![]()
|
Saturday morning wrap-up
Saturday, Nov 6, 2004 - Posted by Rich Miller A few things that caught my eye. The Tribune has a story today that builds on my “extra” from yesterday about the line of people who want to replace state Sen. Barack Obama. At least eight candidates have submitted their names. They include Will D. Burns, a senior adviser to Illinois Senate President Emil Jones and a protege of Obama; Kwame Raoul, a senior staff attorney with City Colleges of Chicago; and Stephen Stern, former president of the Cook County Bar Association. Tom Roeser has quite a different take on the Illinois election than I do in my newspaper column. In Illinois, we have what I call the Judy Baar Topinka style of pandering. Ignoring the GOP’s national stand on defense of marriage (she plays her accordion eagerly at gay-rights rallies), her assaults on the political right are destructive to the party base. When her term as state GOP chairwoman ends, it is imperative her successor break with the past and support Bush’s positive social values. [Snip] I agree with much of what I didn’t include here (the CrossBlog has more), but the rest of the column is, well, I don’t really have to explain, do I? Talk amongst yourselves. Rumors have circulated for a few days that Alan Keyes might be hinting about staying in Illinois because he was up for Don and Roma’s morning gig on WLS radio. The two have been involved in a long contract disupte. Eric Zorn even mentioned the possibility in his blog. Thankfully, the duo renewed their contract yesterday. There’s an odd political fight brewing in Lake County. And retiring US Sen. Peter Fitzgerald paid a visit to a suburban school last week. The Southern Illinoisan has a story on upcoming medical malpractice reform legislation. The CrossBlog has thankfully returned to its pleasant self (flies, vinegar, honey, and all that), and even provided a killer link to a Wilco cover of “Don’t Fear the Reaper” (which is playing full blast on my Macputer as I write). And, the Grateful Dead has an amazing new box set.
|
« NEWER POSTS | PREVIOUS POSTS » |