Quote of the week
Monday, Apr 11, 2005 - Posted by Rich Miller
“Ronald Reagan said the Soviet Union was the focus of evil during the cold war. I believe that the judiciary is the focus of evil in our society today.”
- Alan Keyes, speaking at the recent “Confronting the Judicial War on Faith” conference.
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Attention, all posse members
Monday, Apr 11, 2005 - Posted by Rich Miller
Check that last e-mail I sent you.
You have to log on with my username and password. Both are included in my last e-mail.
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Gay rights diluted?
Monday, Apr 11, 2005 - Posted by Rich Miller
The House just passed an amendment that would, opponents say, greatly reduce the protections for gays and lesbians in Illinois that were won earlier this year. More in the Capitol Fax tomorrow.
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COMMENTS RESTORED!
Monday, Apr 11, 2005 - Posted by Rich Miller
Good news! I’ve deputized a handful fistful of posse members and am now able to restore the comment function.
The posse is under orders to shoot to kill, so to speak. They are to err on the side of godlike retribution. When in doubt, they’ll delete. So let’s try to be relatively civil to each other here.
Comment away
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“49th in the nation”
Monday, Apr 11, 2005 - Posted by Rich Miller
The art of using statistics.
It may be lonely at the top, but when it comes to education funding, Arizona has plenty of company at the bottom. Or so they say. At last count, more than half a dozen states claimed to be 49th in education funding:
“The political reality is that (Florida) lawmakers are cheap and entirely too satisfied with education spending that ranks 49th of the 50 states.” St. Petersburg Times editorial, Oct. 15, 2004.
·”Illinois ranks 49th in the nation in the proportion of state school funding it provides, caucus officials said.” Chicago Tribune, Aug. 13, 2004.
“Tennessee . . . ranks 49th out of 50 states in per-pupil spending.” Amy Ritchart, the Leaf Chronicle, Oct. 17, 2004.
Add to that list, Idaho, Louisiana, Pennsylvania, Utah and, of course, Arizona.
Who’s right depends partly on what you include in education funding. For example, Census Bureau rankings include certain capital outlays. The National Education Association’s “Rankings and Estimates” and Education Week’s “Quality Counts” exclude such funding.
Arizona’s ranking also changes considerably depending on how you define education funding. For instance, the Census Bureau ranks Arizona anywhere from 18th to 51st on 20 funding measures. Such variety makes it possible to pick and choose a state’s ranking and then put it under an ominous “education funding” headline.
The complexity of state public-school finance systems makes it hard to know what’s being spent and easy for people to believe their state is 49th. A 2004 Educational Testing Service poll found that nearly one in two Americans thinks per-student funding averages less than $5,000. However, U.S. Department of Education figures put average state spending closer to $9,000.
Read the whole thing. Pretty good stuff.
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You gotta be kidding me
Monday, Apr 11, 2005 - Posted by Rich Miller
I find this difficult to believe. Nobody’s ever done any poll-watching in Aurora?
Chicago-style election tactics make Aurora debut
Poll watchers: People bused in from as far away as Windy City
By Ed Fanselow STAFF WRITER
AURORA — Voters here got a taste of big-league politics Tuesday, courtesy of Democratic and Republican poll watchers bused in from as far away as Chicago to get out the vote for their parties’ respective mayoral candidates.
Although recruited partisan poll watchers have been used for decades in places like Chicago and Cicero, Tuesday marked the first time such tactics have made their way west to Aurora, local political observers said.
“In all my years, I’ve never seen this,” said Charles Bolwin, a longtime Republican precinct committeeman on Aurora’s far East Side and a former DuPage County election judge. “I couldn’t believe it when I saw it.”
Is Aurora really that backwater? Poll-watchers have been used for decades, and not just in Chicago or (shiver) Cicero. DuPage County uses them, Sangamon County uses them. The list of places that have never used poll-watchers would be much, much shorter.
I would also assume that both the Democrats and the Republicans used poll-watchers in the highly targeted 2002 House race that was based in Aurora. If they didn’t, they were fools.
I can understand how locals might be wary of imported workers, but that happens so much in legislative races - going back at least 20 years - that I don’t see it as an issue any longer.
And if this is, indeed, the first time that poll-watchers have been used in Aurora, all I can say is, “Welcome to the 19th Century.”
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Falling on deaf ears
Monday, Apr 11, 2005 - Posted by Rich Miller
The Cross Blog comes down hard against an appeal of a recent court ruling:
Listen….I’m totally a ‘Root, Root, Root for the Hometeam kinda guy’, but if our party is to rebuild we need to get past stuff like this.
In the waning days of his administration, Ryan took care of 60 friends and allies, giving them state jobs and changing the rules so they would have only 60 days’ probation instead of four to six months as the previous rules stated. The hirings came 61 days before Ryan turned the office over to Blagojevich.
I know that he did nothing new and he was just ‘taking care of his friends’, but we need to be the party of ethics.
Let’s not let Blagorgeous raise the ’spector of George Ryan’ any longer. We need to move on. Don’t think for a minute that this won’t be in Rod’s poltical ‘pocket’….
“When George Ryan stuffed the Government with his cronies, I swept them clean!”
I can hear it now.
It’s time to Move the Party Forward.
But it doesn’t look like they’ll get their wish. The lawyer for the plaintiffs, John Kerley, told the Tribune that he would appeal.
Kerley said that he would appeal Friday’s decision to the Illinois Supreme Court and that he expects his clients to hold their jobs while the court considers the appeal.
By the time a final decision on the case is made, Kerley pointed out, the employees may have less than a year left in their four-year terms.
Almost without a doubt, this case is gonna get dragged into the campaign season.
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(The following is a paid advertisement.)
Strong protections for military personnel has earned the support of the Navy-Marine Corp Relief Society Great Lakes for the Monsignor Egan Payday Loan Reform Act (HB 1100).
According to a study by the National Consumer Law Center, military personnel are attractive prey to unscrupulous lenders. HB 1100 incorporates “best practices” of the Community Financial Services Association which include: banning garnishment of military pay, deferring collection action for military personnel deployed to combat zones, prohibiting the contacting of commanding officers to collect debts, and a requirement to honor any repayment plan negotiated with the consumer or through military counselors or other third party credit counselors.
In addition to these current CFSA best practices, HB 1100 prohibits any payday loan facility from locating within one mile of any State of Illinois or United States military base or installation.
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Another spam-related death
Monday, Apr 11, 2005 - Posted by Rich Miller
Rep. Chapin Rose is flooded with spam. From an e-mail last week:
Dear Friend,
I am very sorry, but do to the inordinate amount of spam related materials hitting my inbox, I am no longer able to publish my email address. In its place, constituents of the 110th district may go to http://www.chapinrose.com/contact and complete an online constituent service form. Upon submission, this form will be immediately reviewed by my staff. Please note that in order for the form to work properly you must accurately submit your zip code indicating residency within one of the five counties served by the 110th legislative district. […]
Thanks again and please visit www.chapinrose.com.
Sincerely,
Chapin Rose State Representative
I received this e-mail because he’s on my e-mail subscription list. I hope he gives me his new address soon.
And, Chapin, it’s “due,” not “do.”
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Poll results
Monday, Apr 11, 2005 - Posted by Rich Miller
As promised in today’s Capitol Fax, here is most of the poll that was released last week by SEIU and the Center for Tax and Budget Accountability.
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Question of the day
Monday, Apr 11, 2005 - Posted by Rich Miller
What do you think of this?
Voters would be able to cast ballots up to three weeks before Election Day under a measure, designed to boost turnout and make voting more convenient, that passed the Illinois Senate with no opposition Friday.
Pre-Election Day absentee balloting has long been allowed in Illinois, but the measure goes well beyond that. It would authorize in-person early voting to begin the third Saturday before general or primary elections, and extend through the Thursday before Election Day.
The measure, approved on a 57-0 vote, now goes to the House.
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Drug dealers battling judge?
Monday, Apr 11, 2005 - Posted by Rich Miller
Is a judge under legal attack because of efforts by drug dealers? Sen. Chris Lauzen thinks so.
A state panel is “siding with criminals” in its complaint against Kane County Judge James Doyle, according to state Sen. Chris Lauzen, who has launched a petition drive demanding to know how much money is being spent prosecuting the case.
The 20-count complaint was filed in February by the Illinois Judicial Inquiry Board accusing Doyle of violating defendants’ constitutional rights and intimidating others involved with the county’s drug court program. […]
The complaint accuses Doyle, formerly presiding judge of the Kane County Drug Rehabilitation Court, of violating defendants’ rights and other actions that were “prejudicial to the administration of justice and conduct that brought the judicial office into disrepute.” His attorneys filed a response to the state panel’s complaint this week, denying the allegations. […]
A letter Lauzen has sent to local newspapers urges people to sign a petition to reprimand the JIB. His letter states the JIB is “spending tens, maybe hundreds of thousands of dollars of your taxpayer money to side with convicted drug criminals and just five of their attorneys in trying to destroy Doyle and his work.” […]
“The question is, it is possible that some drug criminals would be willing to lie in Kane County about a judge’s conduct,” he said.
Anyone know anything else about this?
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Rockford analysis
Monday, Apr 11, 2005 - Posted by Rich Miller
Chuck Sweeny has a very good analysis of the Rockford mayoral race.
By 2001, the local economy was tanking and the anti-Democrat vote mushroomed to 61 percent. That year, Democrat Doug Scott was elected mayor with just 37 percent of the vote. Independent Morrissey got 26 percent; Republican Dennis Johnson got 35 percent.
Scott didn’t understand this trend toward removing the ruling Democratic machine that had been in place in one form or another since 1973, when school principal and 1st Ward Ald. Bob McGaw became the first Democratic mayor in modern times.
Scott never tried to win over enough Morrissey or Johnson voters to earn re-election. Scott insisted that managing basic city services well during a recession and the July 5, 2003, windstorm was a darned good job.
People didn’t think good management was good enough in 2001; they didn’t think so last week, windstorm or not. But the Illinois Re-publican Party, stung by its collapse in 2004, was in no position to help Rockford GOP’ers bankroll a mayoral candidate, and the local party is in nearly as bad shape. The party couldn’t field a candidate until the last minute.
So, this year’s race amounted to a rematch between Scott and Morrissey, but this time with a weak Republican nominee who lacked her own party’s support — Gloria Cardenas Cudia managed just 4 percent of the vote. […]
Morrissey’s message
Morrissey added GOP voters to his liberal, yuppie base by promising progressive conservative change. Isn’t that an oxymoron? Not really.
Morrissey offered progressive activism on jobs, neighborhood revitalization, downtown development and education. He promised to crusade for better housing and safer streets for the city’s poor.
But he also declared a conservative, pro-business doctrine to grow the tax base and was solidly against casino gambling. That was a smart position to take. A Chicago newspaper poll last year found that two-thirds of Illinoisans oppose more gambling.
Morrissey’s Roman Catholicism also was front-and-center: schooled at Holy Family, Boylan High, Notre Dame. Sicilian mom, Irish dad. That appealed to social conservatives.
Read the whole thing.
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