READER COMMENTS CLOSED FOR THE WEEKEND
Friday, Aug 11, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller UPDATE: I couldn’t help myself. I had to post this. The pressure must be getting to him. Gov. Rod Blagojevich lashed out at the Springfield press corps Friday, repeatedly calling them “sharks” while comparing himself to Abraham Lincoln. The governor has almost never showed any sort wear and tear before. He’s a boxer and he knows that if you in any way reveal that you’re hurt, you’re half way to losing. —————————————————————————————————— There are some pretty interesting stories coming up this weekend, so make sure you check the news feeds if you’re near a computer. I’ll see you Monday. Here’s the Illinoize feed:
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Forward, forever forward, no matter what
Friday, Aug 11, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller I doubt very much that we have heard the last of this. The state Board of Elections agreed Friday with a hearing officer that an advisory referendum on gay marriage doesn’t have enough signatures to be on the November ballot. Does anyone else see the irony in a potential court challenge? Forget about the merits for a moment. Gay marriage opponents are worried that an activist judge will find some reason to overturn state law and allow gays to wed. Yet by filing a lawsuit, aren’t they hoping that an activist judge will overturn long established law and allow their measure onto the ballot?
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Bad, good, bad (Or “Good, bad, good”)
Friday, Aug 11, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller The new AP-Ipsos poll has terrible news for Republicans. More sobering for the GOP are the number of voters who backed Bush in 2004 who are ready to vote Democratic in the fall’s congressional elections - 19 percent. These one-time Bush voters are more likely to be female, self-described moderates, low- to middle-income and from the Northeast and Midwest. […] But a GOP survey highlights some things that many media polls miss. [A] new GOP survey shows that Republican base voters stand ready to jam the November polls to return their team to Congress. A three-page-survey memo obtained by Washington Whispers reveals that despite reports of some dissatisfaction with the economy, the war, and President Bush, 81 percent of Republican voters are “almost certain” to vote and an additional 14 percent say they are “very likely.” It goes without saying that they’ll vote Republican: By a margin of 84 percent to 6 percent, they will pull the GOP toggle switch in the voting booth. And here is something you don’t hear very often: 88 percent of Republicans approve of how the prez is handling his job. What’s it all mean? Analysts say that GOP voters are ready to dig in and play defense against the charges Democrats are tossing at Republican candidates. However, SurveyUSA’s latest Illinois tracker shows the president’s job performance rating is down to 68 percent approval by lllinois Republicans. 30 percent of local GOPs disapprove of his performance. Let’s do our best to keep the comments strictly Illinois-related, shall we? Thanks. UPDATE:Congressional Quarterly has changed its ratings on two Illinois congressional districts to reflect a “stronger Democratic breeze.†Illinois 6
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Friday, Aug 11, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Question of the day
Friday, Aug 11, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller It’s Friday, so let’s lighten things up a bit. Do you plan on attending the State Fair this year? If so, what are you most looking forward to seeing or doing? If not, you can comment on my latest Sun-Times column. The Illinois State Fair always produces some fun political stories, and this year will be no different. […] There’s more to this story, so you should read the whole thing. You should also subscribe to the Capitol Fax because I found out some stuff after I wrote the column. UPDATE: Some of these new attractions look pretty darned cool. From a press release: · Hometown Pride: Located inside Gate 2 on the Illinois State Fairgrounds, Hometown Pride is an opportunity for communities across Illinois to showcase the best their city has to offer to thousands of guests from across the state and the Midwest. Every day, the history, industry and tourism information for a different city will be featured. Some of the cities include Decatur, Champaign, Quincy, Effingham, Kankakee, Jacksonville, Galesburg, Bloomington. I love the Fair.
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Blagojevich’s doomed defense
Friday, Aug 11, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller As I told Capitol Fax readers this morning, the governor is basically using Robert Sorich’s failed defense strategy by attacking these two whistleblowers. First, the set-up: Gov. Blagojevich’s office aimed Thursday to tighten a noose around two former state personnel workers cooperating with federal authorities in a probe of his administration’s hiring practices, alleging in a new legal filing they’re responsible for giving thousands of politically connected applicants special treatment in state jobs. The Tribune brings it home. Joseph Gagliardo and Gregory James, acting as attorneys for the administration, said there was nothing wrong with the governor’s office recommending or referring certain applicants for jobs. One of Sorich’s claims was that he never ordered anyone to hire applicants. As Daley’s patronage chief, Sorich merely recommended job candidates to the city’s various personnel directors. Mayor Daley’s patronage office worked behind the scenes to place clout-backed candidates into city jobs by slipping lists of future “hires” to a personnel director, a key witness in the hiring scandal testified Tuesday. […] The Sorich defense didn’t work against testimony from people like Falcon, and I seriously doubt that this Blagojevich move will succeed. From all I can gather, there was also “intense” pressure on state personnel directors to go along with “recommendations” from the governor’s office. Meanwhile, Krol looks at the impact any indictments could have on the governor’s race. UPDATE: I should add that the governor’s move may or may not succeed at the Civil Service Commission. I meant whether the tactic succeeds or not with the feds. I would bet big bucks that what they’re hoping for here is a win at the Commission so they can claim before the election that the governor and his people have been “exonerated” and that the real corruption was perpetrated by two “bad apples.” That might work in the short term. I’m talking about long term.
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Another over-hyped project backfires on taxpayers
Friday, Aug 11, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller We now know how much we have to pay the other side, but I wonder how much the state spent defending this thing? A federal judge has ruled that state government owes more than $500,000 to the video-game industry for legal fees it incurred in successfully battling an Illinois law meant to keep minors away from violent or sexually explicit video games. The governor not only pushed the bill, he created a website and made a big national splash with the issue. $500K is a small price to pay. The last discernable update on the site is December of last year, when the governor vowed to appeal the ruling that overturned the law (that top link, by the way, goes directly to the governor’s state website). You can read the judge’s decision here (pdf file). A Blagojevich spokesman said the cash spent on the lawsuit was worth it. “I think it is worth it,” Cardenas said of the ordered payment. “I mean, we’re looking at a bigger issue here, which is protecting children from exposure to violent and sexually explicit video games.”
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Chamber ad for Bean deemed “misleading”
Friday, Aug 11, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller Apparently, the Chamber couldn’t just come out and say they were backing Bean because of CAFTA, so they came up with this. A $400,000 television advertising campaign supporting the re-election of northwest suburban U.S. Rep. Melissa Bean (D-Ill.) has been branded as misleading by FactCheck.org, a non-partisan consumer advocacy group. You can read the analysis here. Consider this an 8th District open thread.
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Morning shorts
Friday, Aug 11, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller · Security remains tight at airports as terror plot foiled · Tribe denies having plan to build a bingo parlor - DeKalb County stops construction at farm owned by Potawatomi · “Against the backdrop of a federal corruption investigation and a looming election battle, Gov. Rod Blagojevich opened the 154th Illinois State Fair Thursday.” · Statehouse To Run On Wind (Not Hot Air) · Boisterous activists demonstrated in City Hall Thursday to support a new ordinance requiring higher wages for workers in “big-box” stores, even as Mayor Richard Daley gathered more support for a possible veto. · “State Treasurer Judy Baar Topinka was practically glaring Wednesday at the doors of the Madison County Courthouse as she promised to push for judicial reform if elected governor in November.” · Union talks set in prison strike. More here. · Grand American’s new Downstate digs right on target · Arlington track safe, expert says · Governor Teaches a Preschool Lesson · Another bogus mainstream media story on Lieberman’s website crash. I have 400GB per month and don’t pay nearly that sort of dough. But the AP just took their word for it: “The campaign spends about $100 to $150 a month on Web hosting services with MyHostCamp, said Dan Geary, who administers the site for the campaign. Geary said that MyHostCamp, which is owned by a friend of Geary’s, gave the site more than enough bandwidth — 200 gigabytes a month — to handle a crush of visitors.”
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