This just in… It’s still not going away
Tuesday, Jun 13, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller
A commenter talked about this letter earlier this week. From a press release.
The Jewish Political Alliance of Illinois (JPAI) today submitted 4700 signatures to Governor Rod. R. Blagojevich imploring the Governor to remove Claudette Marie Mohammed from the state Commission on Discrimination and Hate Crimes. All the signatures were gathered this past Sunday at the Greater Chicago Jewish Festival.
Mohammed refuses to repudiate vile comments that Nation of Islam head Louis Farrakhan spews regarding Jews, homosexuals, Arabs, Asians and many other segments of society. Mohammed says she “respects those who practice the true tenets of their faith†which is coded, hateful language toward so-called “false†Jews who Farrakhan, and Mohammed implicitly, believe, among other things, “are a synagogue of Satan.†Furthermore, Mohammed refers to Farrakhan’s comments as “alleged†anti-semitism.
“We collected the signatures to remind Governor Blagojevich that he will not get a free pass on this issue,†says Howard Handler, chairman of the Jewish Political Alliance of Illinois. “Governor Blagojevich appointed a hateful, anti-semite to a commission designed to eradicate hate; this is analogous to appointing a member of the Ku Klux Klan.†Handler concluded, “a significant portion of the Jewish community is disgusted with Blagojevich and is clear he will suffer politically in November.â€
The petitions were dropped off this morning at Governor Blagojevich’s Chicago campaign office at 1200 North Ashland, Suite 500. The Jewish Political Alliance of Illinois is a registered political organization which aims to further empower the Illinois Jewish community by participation in the political process; further information can be found at www.jpai.us. Further information on the Greater Chicago Jewish Festival can be found at www.jewishfestival.org; JPAI is not affiliated with the festival.
They’re a registered political committee, but they haven’t reported any fundraising yet. And Frank Avila is the group’s general counsel, whatever that means. Frank is kinda like Zelig - he pops up everywhere.
Still, that’s not an insignificant number ot of signatures to gather in one day.
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Question of the day
Tuesday, Jun 13, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller
First read my syndicated newspaper column.
Is Gov. Rod Blagojevich’s administration just as corrupt or even more corrupt than former Gov. George Ryan’s crew? A new poll finds a plurality of Illinoisans would answer “yes†to that question.
A poll by the Glengariff Group found that 43 percent of Illinoisans believe the Blagojevich administration is as corrupt or more corrupt than George Ryan’s government, while 41 percent said there is less corruption. The findings are surprising because Ryan was recently convicted of all charges in a federal criminal trial, while no officials of Blagojevich’s administration have even been indicted
Now look at the actual poll. (pdf file)
QUESTION: Is the corruption issue enough to unseat this governor? What else will it take? Specifics, please.
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Tollway allegations
Tuesday, Jun 13, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller
The I-Team looks at alleged Tollway corruption.
For weeks we have been hearing about the so-called “clout lists” kept by governor Rod Blagojevich. Hundreds of names of his friends, contributors and cronies who were said to be given special consideration for state jobs.
The ABC7 I-Team sat down with some former state workers who say they were terminated from their tollway jobs to make room for the politically well endowed.
They were career state employees…on the job for up to 25 years… at the Illinois Toll Highway Authority…an agency that is supposed to operate independent of the governor and the state general assembly. But in a round robin discussion, they told the I-Team that their longevity, seniority and overall job performance meant nothing once Rod Blagojevich was elected governor in 2002.
“I just couldn’t believe it, I was totally blindsided. I was at first in disbelief and in shock,” said Maria Besbekos.
Besbekos was fired after state officials told her the job she’d held for 15 and a half years was no longer necessary. “Safety inspections at various worksite locations, accident investigations of people that were injured on the job,” Besbekos said.
John Hegeler had been an engineer with the toll authority for 21 years when he was fired in 2003…having survived several new governors.
What makes you think this was politics? “From the day I started there, I could knock on the executive director’s door any time I wanted and talk to him about the smallest thing that I thought needed to be fixed. But when they started, it was all over,” Hegeler said.
This happened to you. Was your first thought, this is the governor at work? “Yes, I thought it was because I was shocked too,” said Jim Fragakis. Fragakis worked as an electrician with state toll authority for 25-years. He says his boss told him he was fired as part of a reform effort at the tollway authority. Fragakis contends that his termination may have had something to do with his refusal to give a $100-thousand dollar gift to a state vendor.
“There was a contractor that did some work and a political person called me and asked me to pay this contractor some extras, and I didn’t do it, and I think that had something to do with it,” Fragakis said.
Read the whole thing. And expect a lot more stories like this between now and election day. State workers always dish on their bosses during campaigns. But this particular boss is intensely unloved, so the dish will runneth over. [emphasis added]
UPDATE: I missed this op-ed by Abner Mikva in today’s Sun-Times. Mikva writes several paragraphs about the reforms implemented by the Blagojevich administration and then takes a whack at the media.
But you wouldn’t know it by reading or listening to the media. The emphasis there is on vague allegations that “some” employees have been hired improperly. There are “lists” of open positions that have gone through various persons in the governor’s office. But there are no specifics as to whether such positions are “exempt” or Rutan-covered, or evidence that people whose names may be on lists were actually treated differently than anyone else. Every administration has the right to fill certain positions with people they think will best help them implement their agenda. And for those positions where politics cannot be a factor in the selection of a candidate, there is no prohibition against anyone making recommendations for the jobs. There is, however, a very clear testing and interview process that must be used to select the best candidate. The newspaper stories over the past few weeks do not offer any evidence that those processes were violated.
In fact, most of the recent allegations seem to come from disgruntled ex-employees. No one has even checked as to whether the disgruntlement is about loss of the job or something fishy on the job. If there are credible charges of improper hiring, they should go to the inspector general, state law enforcement and the U.S. attorney’s office.
Vague allegations of improper employment practices tar and feather the whole state work force. We need state government workers who take pride in their reputations, in their work efforts, who get “psychic” income from their jobs, to make up for the gap between their pay scales and those of the private sector. We aren’t going to encourage those kinds of applicants if we don’t acknowledge reforms that are working and instead beat up on everybody who goes to work for the state of Illinois.
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It’s all one thing
Tuesday, Jun 13, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller
Congressman Bobby Rush snags some summer jobs.
Nearly 1,200 low-income teenagers and young adults in Chicago and around Illinois will be hired by the state this summer for jobs on neighborhood projects, with community groups and at museums, Gov. Blagojevich announced Monday.
Two hundred fifty of the jobs — part of the Summer Youth Works Project — will go to residents of violence-plagued Englewood. They will focus on sprucing up that area, including painting murals and building park benches.
“There are no factories in the area, or other places where kids can get jobs,” Blagojevich said during a news conference at an arts center in the South Side neighborhood. “We have to give kids a chance to work so they don’t end up in trouble.”
Englewood’s violence was spotlighted in March, when 10-year-old Siretha White and 14-year-old Starkesia Reed were murdered within days of each other. Those deaths prompted U.S. Rep. Bobby Rush to put together a “working group” that came up with corporate commitments that will cover 750 more summer jobs for Englewood youths, the congressman said. This is in addition to the state program, he said.
Not mentioned in any stories I’ve seen so far is that Rush endorsed Judy Baar Topinka four years ago. Topinka put Rush’s wife on the payroll. Giving him these patronage… um… summer jobs may trump that.
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“Mooch” Daley?
Tuesday, Jun 13, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller
Interesting.
Three times this year, federal prosecutors have questioned a high-ranking city official and prominent member of the 11th Ward Democratic Organization about Mayor Richard Daley’s brother, John Daley, it was revealed in court Monday.
Witness Christopher Kozicki, a former managing deputy in the Buildings Deparment, did not detail what prosecutors wanted to know about Cook County Commissioner John Daley as he testified in the trial of the mayor’s former patronage chief, Robert Sorich.
But Sorich’s attorney, Thomas Anthony Durkin, suggested to Kozicki that prosecutors “wanted to try to indict Mayor Daley and his brother John.” U.S. District Judge David Coar sustained prosecutors’ objections to that and similar questions. […]
John Daley’s name surfaced as prosecutors sought to treat Kozicki, whom they called to the stand, as a hostile witness. […]
Prosecutors suggested that Kozicki’s political allegiances colored his testimony. Assistant U.S. Atty. Philip Guentert asked Kozicki about those connections on the stand, particularly his work as secretary to the Democratic organization in the Daley family’s traditional 11th Ward power base. John Daley leads the 11th Ward Democratic Organization, whose members include Sorich and McCarthy, a co-defendant.
Kozicki acknowledged that, like Sorich, he used to drive John Daley from his home in the Bridgeport neighborhood to his office downtown.
“While you were working for John Daley, that was also one of your responsibilities?” Guentert asked.
“It was not a responsibility, but I did it,” Kozicki responded.
On cross-examination, Kozicki said he would give John Daley a ride whenever he asked and Kozicki happened to be leaving for work at the same time.
“John Daley’s kind of a mooch in that regard?” Durkin asked.
“Yes,” Kozicki said.
Not sure what this means, but it’s never good when your name comes up during a federal criminal trial.
Meanwhile, Commissioner Daley made himself available yesterday.
Amid increased jockeying over replacing the ailing John Stroger, Cook County Commissioner John Daley said Monday he would consider serving as interim County Board president but said the post should go to an African-American in the fall.
The move by Daley, the brother of Mayor Richard Daley, underscored a behind-the-scenes effort to impose order in county government while various factions maneuver to get Stroger’s job if he is unable to return from a serious stroke three months ago.
Daley’s offer added a new twist to the political intrigue that has intensified as Stroger’s relatives and allies refuse to offer any details about his health, particularly since his latest return to the hospital last week.
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Airport rally draws big crowd
Tuesday, Jun 13, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller
They’re not just running TV ads. The pro-Peotone airport folks drew a thousand people to a rally last weekend.
A march and rally for Jobs and Justice drew a thousand participants from diverse backgrounds Sunday afternoon to Chicago Heights.
The march and rally, which included representation from Will, Cook and Kankakee counties, called for establishing a citizen drive and workshops for immigrants, as well as creating the Abraham Lincoln National Airport, said Rev. Lawrence Blackful, executive director of the South Suburban Action Conference, sponsor of the event.
The march urged Gov. Rod Blagojevich to sign a lease with the Abraham Lincoln National Airport Commission that would enable the group to build a third regional airport through a public-private partnership, Blackful said.
“It was a tremendous resounding message — the community enthusiastically encouraging the governor to sign a lease for the land to come through on his promise to build the Abraham Lincoln National Airport,” Blackful said.
Elected officials at the march and rally included U.S. Rep. Jesse Jackson Jr., D-Chicago; State Senate Majority Leader Debbie Halvorson, D-Crete; State Sen. Maggie Crotty, D-Oak Forest; and State Reps. George Scully, D-Flossmoor; David Miller, D-Dolton; Robin Kelly, D-Hazel Crest; and Will Davis, D-Harvey.
Interesting that Sen. Halvorson and Congressman Jackson were both present. Jackson is backing a third-party candidate against the Senate Majority Leader over her refusal to back his airport plan.
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Morning shorts
Tuesday, Jun 13, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller
· MJM to CTA: No
· Tribune: Frustrated by the lack of adequate capital funding from Springfield, Mayor Richard Daley plans to tap city coffers to pay for more than two dozen school construction projects, City Hall sources said Monday.
· Director sees success for All Kids program
· The Republican candidate for Illinois Comptroller says the incumbent is not doing his job.
· The Federal Aviation Administration is pushing for new restrictions that could prevent some planes from landing at Midway Airport in stormy weather.
· Crain’s: Illinois House Republican Leader Tom Cross is adding his weight to efforts to get Honda Motor Co., Inc., to locate its planned new Midwest production facility near Downstate Champaign.
· This drive-in debate is hot. I mean hot. And I’m not sure that I get it.
· The family of Illinois State Senator Peter Roskam will be reuniting Corpus Christi area Vietnam veteran Rueben Diaz with his lost Vietnam dog tag along with one of his fellow Vietnam veterans in a ceremony on Wednesday, June 21st 2006.
· Seriously. Let’s just invade. We don’t need to take the whole state. Just downtown - although pushing all the way to U-City would have its advantages (great restaurants and nightclubs). They’ll throw rose petals at our feet and welcome us as liberators. It’s a slam dunk operation. And the best part is Illinois will finally have a real National League team. Plus, they have at least four casinos that we could use to fund our schools. Hey, Rod, you could even sell the Arch! I’m telling you, it’s the perfect plan. Larry says our national guard could kick their national guard’s butt. Let’s do it now before we lose a big part of our air force!
· Praxair is moving to Cahokia. Illinois is paying almost a million dollars to relocate the company. Here’s a photo from the St. Louis Praxair explosion:
· Who was the only president since WWII who served in a state legislature?
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