McKenna wins
Saturday, Jan 15, 2005 - Posted by Rich Miller Andy McKenna is the new state GOP chair. My condolences to Mr. McKenna. Neither Jim Oberweis nor John Cox could even reportedly find anyone to nominate them. At the end, it was Jim Nalepa, Steve McGlynn and McKenna, with McKenna reportedly receiving 86 percent of the vote in the first round. Oberweis and Cox are rapidly becoming perennial candidates. Nalepa was supported by a few on the Right (which shows once again that those people are the automatic kiss of death) and McGlynn had some initial downstate support. McGlynn is a Metro East trial lawyer who supported the Alan Keyes ballot appointment, so he didn’t exactly fit the profile.
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Rogers Park’s “Broken Heart”
Saturday, Jan 15, 2005 - Posted by Rich Miller Hey, Alderman Moore, what’s with this? I found the link via Zorn, so the alderman should start worrying that Eric might do a newspaper column on this.
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A very bad week
Saturday, Jan 15, 2005 - Posted by Rich Miller This was not a good week for the governor. His top fundraiser and adviser was accused of trading appointments for contributions by his own father-in-law, he was taunted for flip-flopping on banning video games for minors, the Ford Heights landfill that he closed right after he closed his second cousin’s landfill was reopened by a judge, who said he didn’t have the authority to close it, Lisa Madigan’s investigation into his appointment and hiring practices is gearing up, and Mell’s apparently not backing down from a threatened lawsuit by Chris Kelly. Mell’s lawyer, Paul M. Levy, would not comment on whether the alderman intended to apologize and instead seemed primed for a legal fight — stating in a letter to Clifford that Mell said nothing defamatory because Kelly is a public figure immersed in a public controversy. If Kelly doesn’t file the suit, he’ll look guilty, no matter how much he vigorously protests his innocence. “If he doesn’t go to you, the media, in some fashion, whether it be in person or in writing, to acknowledge these remarks were baseless and not within his personal knowledge, then litigation for defamation will follow,” said Clifford, who has given the governor’s campaign $328,755. But even if he does file the suit, there are already problems brewing. Republicans pounced on Kelly and Clifford’s maneuver, accusing them of trying to steamroll Mell, who figures to be a pivotal witness in the Madigan-Devine inquiry. And if he files the suit and loses… oh, my.
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