Daley folds on casino
Wednesday, Apr 6, 2005 - Posted by Rich Miller Big news. Mayor Daley is shuffling the deck when it comes to new sources of revenue for the city. He says he will no longer push for a casino in Chicago. The mayor’s decision, if it holds, may breathe new life into the governor’s casino plan. The reason? It provides more money for the city. Still, it will probably have to be changed to pass.
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Get well soon
Wednesday, Apr 6, 2005 - Posted by Rich Miller Best wishes. House Speaker Dennis Hastert had kidney stone surgery at Bethesda Naval Hospital on Wednesday, the day he had been scheduled to leave for Pope John Paul II’s funeral. Also, Rep. Mike Boland was hospitalized this week after suffering a nasty virus. Best wishes to him, too.
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Good news
Wednesday, Apr 6, 2005 - Posted by Rich Miller The Illinois Republican Party has one of the best daily Illinois news wrap-ups in the bidness. Kinda like a free “Hotline” for Illinois. The bad news is you have to subscribe to an e-mail version (free), so not many people see it. The good news, which I’ve just heard, is that the party plans to put it online soon. I’ll let you know when it’s up.
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Booed?
Wednesday, Apr 6, 2005 - Posted by Rich Miller Click here for a very long thread over at IlliniBoard.com about the governor being booed at the post-final pep rally. (Hat tip to Illini Pundit for the link.)
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Monsignor Egan payday loan reform bill (HB 1100) shows government at its best
Wednesday, Apr 6, 2005 - Posted by Rich Miller (The following is a paid advertisement.) Since Monsignor John Egan sat with a parishioner in 1999 and heard how she was victimized by an unscrupulous payday lender, consumer advocates, community leaders and clergy have been fighting to regulate the industry. Year after year, they’ve fallen short of passing meaningful reform. But last year, the Community Financial Services Association, representing lenders in Illinois and across the nation, sat down with consumer advocates to craft a bill to regulate this industry for the first time. The industry came to understand the need for stable regulation to protect consumers. Consumers accepted the legitimate need for the product and financial realities of businesses. Legislators, like bill sponsor Rep. David Miller, never quit. Negotiations were tough, often acrimonious; both sides gave, and the result is legislation that will protect consumers and the industry. That’s government at its best.
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More local elections
Wednesday, Apr 6, 2005 - Posted by Rich Miller More local campaign news from the Tribune: Voters did some spring cleaning in mayoral elections in the south and southwest suburbs Tuesday, pushing out incumbents in Alsip, Bedford Park, Dixmoor and Oak Forest, among others, while holding on to them in more than two dozen other municipalities.
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Hale sentenced
Wednesday, Apr 6, 2005 - Posted by Rich Miller From the AP: CHICAGO — Avowed white supremacist Matthew Hale was sentenced to 40 years in prison Wednesday for trying to have a federal judge killed — the same judge whose husband and mother were murdered five weeks ago by a deranged man who had no connection to Hale.
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Question of the day
Wednesday, Apr 6, 2005 - Posted by Rich Miller What was the biggest surprise in yesterday’s election?
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Quote of the week
Wednesday, Apr 6, 2005 - Posted by Rich Miller From the Associated Press: “Orange is now my favorite color,†said Governor Rod Blagojevich, who declared April 5, 2005 to be Fighting Illini Day. Now that he’s so hot about the Illini, do you think he’ll answer questions about the chief?
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Thank you, drive through
Wednesday, Apr 6, 2005 - Posted by Rich Miller This is what happens when doctrinaire partisans try to predict political outcomes. [Regarding the Berwyn mayoral race] Virtually unnoticed in all the hoopla is the Republican candidate, Anthony Castrogiovanni. His campaign is invisible. But with a core of Republican voters behind him and the massive divisions within the Democrats, he has a chance to pull a really revolutionary upset and bring Berwyn into the Reagan Revolution. The only candidate without direct financial ties to the political status quo, he is Mr. Old Fashioned Natural. Castrogiovanni got 2.9 percent on Tuesday. (Link found via Google News, of all places.)
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