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This just in: City council fails to override “big box” veto - Updated x1

Wednesday, Sep 13, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

No surprise here.

Chicago’s City Council members today failed to override Mayor Richard Daley’s veto of the so-called “big-box'’ ordinance that would have required mega-retailers in the city to pay their workers higher wages.

The 31 to 18 decision was three votes short of the 34 votes needed to override the mayoral veto.

Ald. Joe Moore (49th), sponsor of the so-called Big Box Living Wage Ordinance, had introduced the measure to override Daley’s veto and vowed to fight on even if it failed. “I can assure you this issue will not go away,” Moore told the council.

At the next council meeting, he said, he will introduce a new measure that would be broader, applying to workers of companies with at least 1,000 employees.

UPDATE: From a press release. Statement from SEIU president Tom Balanoff on today’s Living Wage Ordinance veto override vote:

“The mayor and the aldermen had the power to set a higher standard for wages for the working people of this city. Instead they used their power to welcome wealthy corporations paying poverty wages into this city.

“This is a bad decision for Chicago’s working people. But we are not discouraged. Over these last few months, we have experienced real victories.

• We saw a city council willing to vote independently at least once on a crucial issue to the city’s working people.
• We saw the vast majority of Chicagoans affirm and then reaffirm their support for a living wage ordinance, even after corporations spent millions on a smear campaign against it.
• We saw Wal-Mart raise its starting pay by 6%.
• We saw thousands of every-day citizens in Chicago make phone calls, write letters, attend rallies and speak out in favor of a living wage.

“It’s not just SEIU or UFCW or organized labor for a living wage. There is a movement in this city for a living wage and it’s not going to stop until it wins.”

  19 Comments      


Privacy breach at the Department of Corrections - Updated x2

Wednesday, Sep 13, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

The Department of Corrections sent out a memo to employees this week warning them of a security breach involving private information.

For whatever reason, an IDOC report containing the names, salaries and Social Security numbers of employees was found at an “outside location,” according to the memo. The Department claims it is investigating and says it has no reason to expect that the info was “misused.”

A source within IDOC said yesterday that the State Police had been notified. They were being pretty tight lipped over there yesterday about what the heck this report was doing in the public realm.

I’m having some trouble with my FTP software, but when that’s fixed I’ll upload the entire memo.

Here it is. [pdf file]

UPDATE: AFSCME has more on its website.

UPDATE 2: AFSCME’s executive director Henry Bayer is accusing the department of not “taking all feasible steps to minimize employee losses.” A letter from Bayer to DOC Director Roger Walker is here. [pdf file]

  19 Comments      


Levine to plead guilty six days before election day

Wednesday, Sep 13, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

This is cutting it awful close.

A millionaire campaign contributor charged with swindling a medical school and masterminding a scheme to shake down hospitals for kickbacks indicated Wednesday that he plans to plead guilty.

Stuart Levine, 60, of suburban Highland Park, a former member of the Illinois Health Facilities Planning Board, plans to enter his guilty plea at a Nov. 1 hearing, defense attorney Jeffrey Steinback said.

Steinback told reporters after court he had “no idea” if Levine’s written plea agreement with prosecutors would provide enough detail about corruption in state government to have an impact on the upcoming election.

“It wasn’t my intention to set a date that would have any effect on the election whatsoever,” Steinback said. He said the reason for the date just days before the Nov. 7 election was “the convenience of the court.”

What a freakin’ nightmare that’s gonna be.

  34 Comments      


Numbers dump… plus, will the Greenie get dumped? - Updated x1

Wednesday, Sep 13, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

Rasmussen has finally moved its poll results out from behind the firewall - three days after Gov. Blagojevich’s campaign released the subscriber-only results. Anyway, as you’ll recall, Rasmussen had Blagojevich ahead of Topinka 48-36. Here’s the analysis:


Scandals aside, it would be tough to pick a winner if the candidates were to square off in a likeability contest—28% of respondents say they have a “very unfavorable” opinion of the governor and 25% say the same of his challenger. Overall, 49% have an unfavorable opinion of Blagojevich and 54% have an unfavorable opinion of Topinka.

Despite the negative sentiment about him, thoughts on the Governor’s job performance are mixed. Forty-eight percent (48%) of those surveyed approve of Blagojevich’s job performance and 50% disapprove.

A plurality of voters see both candidates as politically moderate. Forty-two percent (42%) see Blagojevich as moderate while 40% say he’s liberal. Topinka is seen as moderate by 39%; and conservative by 35%.

When asked who they trust more on matters relating to national security and Iraq, a slim plurality (47%) say the Democrats in Congress versus 44% who trust President Bush. The gap widens when it comes to the economy; 49% trust Congressional Democrats and 39% trust President Bush.

There was no mention of Green Party candidate Rich Whitney.

And speaking of Whitney, The Southern had a story today on Whitney’s possible appearance at a Carbondale debate later this month.

When contacted Tuesday Shelia Nix, campaign spokesperson for Blagojevich, declined to comment about the Whitney’s inclusion or if the governor still plans to participate.

The paper’s editor, James Bennett, had more in his blog.

Blagojevich’s spokesperson said the governor’s acceptance was based on a one-on-one-chance to debate Topinka.

Since neither campaign has signed off on the debate in writing, the debate committee has established a deadline of Tuesday, Sept. 19 for acceptance. […]

If Blagojevich debates Whitney, his advisers fear it will legitimize the Green Party’s campaign and make it tougher to defeat Topinka.

If Blagojevich declines the invitation to debate, he runs the risk of being accused of ignoring Southern Illinois, which has not hosted a debate in 20 years.

UPDATE: The state’s IIS Radio service had a report this afternoon on the Tribune poll. Click the play button.

[audio:poll.mp3]

  16 Comments      


Survey says…

Wednesday, Sep 13, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

From a press release:

The Illinois Campaign for Political Reform (ICPR) now allows voters to learn through its website (ilcampaign.org) where candidates stand on important campaign and government reform proposals.

“We asked a handful of direct questions about limiting campaign contributions, policing the campaign finance system, giving citizens more information about investigations of ethical conduct in state government, and other important reform proposals,” said Cindi Canary,
Director of ICPR. “Now, voters can learn what the candidates want to do to change the system.”

Nearly all of the statewide candidates, including the three gubernatorial candidates, answered the questions, but the majority of candidates for the General Assembly dodged the issues.

“Despite repeated requests over the past 8 months, only 89 of the 250 men and women running for election to the General Assembly were willing to tell us their positions,” Canary said. “Some of those running without any opposition told us they don’t feel any need to tell voters where they stand on these issues. Some incumbents even had the brass to say their record speaks for itself, when many of the issues have not
come before the General Assembly for debate or a vote.”

* Responses listed by candidate are here.

* Responses listing all candidates for the same office are here.

  8 Comments      


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Wednesday, Sep 13, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Question of the day

Wednesday, Sep 13, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

What is the most expensive gift you’ve ever received? Excluding your parents, but including other relatives, like brothers and sisters, and, of course, friends.

  39 Comments      


More bad news for the GOPs - Updated x1

Wednesday, Sep 13, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

[Updated and bumped up for discussion purposes.]

The Tribune releases more numbers.

The percentage of Illinois voters who call themselves Democrats is at its highest pre-election level in more than a decade, posing a problem for Republicans trying to win the governor’s mansion and key congressional seats, a Tribune/WGN-TV poll shows.

The poll found 43 percent of voters identified themselves as Democrats while a little more than a quarter of the voters identified themselves as Republicans. The 17 percentage point difference ranks among the most polarized partisan spreads in more than 16 years of Tribune surveys taken prior to an election day. […]

In 1996, 42 percent of Illinois voters identified themselves as Democrats in the October preceding the election while 27 percent aligned with Republicans—a 15 percentage point spread. Clinton ended up winning Illinois in 1996 with 54 percent of the vote and Democrats retook control of the Illinois House from Republicans after a two-year hiatus.[…]

But the most recent Tribune poll found that even in longtime Republican-leaning regions, the GOP no longer might have the upper hand. In the collar counties, 31 percent of voters aligned themselves with Republicans while 29 percent identified with Democrats. Outside the Chicago metropolitan region, voters split equally at 36 percent between Democrats and Republicans.

UPDATE: Yellow Dog Democrat combed through SurveyUSA’s crosstabs to check the percentages of Illinoisans identifying themselves as Democrats and Republicans against the Tribune’s latest poll. This is what he found:

Month - D/R
Feb- 40/25
March - 40/25
April - 42/24
May - 40/30
June - 46/24
July - 43/22
Aug - 45/23

  33 Comments      


Forecast: Racey - Updated x1

Wednesday, Sep 13, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

Back in July, Chicago Federation of Labor President Dennis Gannon threatened “World War III” if Mayor Daley vetoed the “big box” ordinance. Daley has now responded in kind.

Armed with the votes he needs to sustain his first veto, Mayor Daley accused organized labor on Tuesday of forcing the issue on a big-box minimum wage ordinance only after giant retailers started coming to impoverished black neighborhoods.

Implied, but not stated, by Daley on the eve of Wednesday’s City Council override vote was that union leaders somehow consider African Americans expendable. […]

“Not one mayor or alderman has ever been threatened in the suburban area. … Only on the West Side. Only on the South Side,” Daley told cheering supporters at 119th and Marshfield, vacant site of a Target store placed on hold after the City Council’s 35-to-14 vote in favor of the ordinance. […]

“We thought we had more collective strength here in the city than in the outlying areas,” Gannon said.

So, he takes a swipe at Gannon and plays the race card at the same time. Politically, this was a very adept move, considering that Daley faces at least two African-American opponents. Still, accusing organized labor of racism is more than just a little over the top.

And considering that Todd Stroger just played the race card himself, it looks like the coming fall and spring campaigns are gonna be truly nasty.

UPDATE: Right on cue, this e-mail just arrived from Tony Peraica’s campaign.

MEDIA ADVISORY: Peraica to Demand Investigation, Justice in the alleged racially-charged beating of a 77-year old man at Cook Core Center

Cook County Commissioner and reform candidate for Cook County Board President Tony Peraica will hold a press conference in front of the Core Center clinic across the street from Stroger Hospital to demand the following in response to the alleged beating of 77-year old man Augustin Sotomayer by a Cook County security guard while he waited to pick up his wife Manuela Sotomayer, a Cook County employee:

# The identification of the security guard accused of this horrendous beating
# The suspension of that security guard pending a full, independent investigation
# The dismissal of all charges pending against Mr. Sotomayer pending that full, independent investigation
# The return of the cell phone of a county employee who videotaped the incident on her cell phone (and whose cell phone was subsequently confiscated by police) for review by independent investigators

According to a Fox News report, Mr. Sotomayer was allegedly approached by a Cook County security guard asked “if he was a Mexican” asked if he “was legal” and then removed from his car by the Cook County security guard in question as Mr. Sotomayer reached for his wallet and thereafter beaten by the security guard in question.

Mr. Sotomayer is hospitalized at Stroger hospital with chest pains and puncture wounds. According the Fox News report, Mr. Sotomayer began driving again recently after suffering a stroke and heart attack in February of this year.

  33 Comments      


More check fallout - Updated x1

Wednesday, Sep 13, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

This move might possibly not be as desperate as it looks.

Democratic Gov. Rod Blagojevich, beset by questions about personal gifts from people he has appointed to state government positions, attempted on Tuesday to turn the issue on his election challenger, questioning why Republican Judy Baar Topinka’s own disclosure forms list no gifts of any kind.

Blagojevich’s campaign released a statement calling for an investigation to determine “whether Topinka actually received no gifts at all or if she is just ignoring disclosure laws.”

The statement came two days after a published report revealed that the husband of a woman Blagojevich had appointed to a state job gave a $1,500 check to Blagojevich’s young daughter as a gift, shortly after that appointment.

There could be a method to the seeming madness. [Emphasis added.]

Gov. Rod Blagojevich’s campaign on Tuesday offered fuller details behind gifts he has received while in office, with a spokeswoman saying that Blagojevich’s friends and family bought him meals and other items that may have exceeded $500 over the course of a single year.

The gifts, particularly the meals, came informally and could not be specifically quantified, campaign spokeswoman Sheila Nix said.

The governor’s office, meanwhile, declined again on Tuesday to provide further details of gifts Blagojevich has received while in office. In state economic interest forms, Blagojevich states that about a dozen people have provided gifts “of personal friendship” totaling more than $500 in a calendar year. That is the threshold at which state law requires the source of a gift to be identified.

Topinka denies that she ever got any $500 gifts.

But I wonder whether the governor’s campaign will now try to come up with evidence that Topinka has accepted multiple meals, etc. that total over $500.

Maybe I’m wrong, and if I am then that was one of the most ridiculously desperate press stunts ever.

Meanwhile, Carol Marin weighs in.

For the record, my kids have never gotten a $1,500 check for their birthdays from a single one of our friends. Not when they were little, not when they got bigger. Not once.

And we have very generous, good friends.

But fifteen hundred bucks is a sizable chunk of change to drop into a kid’s birthday card and, if that kid happens to be the 7-year-old daughter of Rod Blagojevich who ran for governor on the “I’m Not George Ryan” bandwagon, it’s staggeringly stupid.

And the Peoria Journal-Star ran an editorial yesterday that I missed.

Blagojevich has repeatedly denied any wrongdoing. He has not been charged. But the drumbeat of allegations keeps getting louder. From the investigation of his administration by U.S. Attorney Patrick Fitzgerald for “very serious allegations of endemic hiring fraud” to appointing his children’s baby-sitter to the Illinois Civil Service Commission to the governor’s predilection for giving state jobs and contracts to friends and contributors, well, it’s what one might call a pattern.

As such, Blagojevich will forgive voters who start connecting the dots, and who think the way business is done in Illinois government remains positively Ryan-esque.

UPDATE: I missed Higgins’ cartoon today. It’s about the check. Richard Roeper also led his column today with the controversy.

Let’s say you have a friend who makes $45,000 a year.

Your daughter turns 7. The friend and her husband give her a birthday gift.

It’s a check for $1,500.

Huh? Wouldn’t you think that was entirely, inappropriately too much?

Somebody making 45g’s a year takes home about $615 per week. That means this person would have to work for about 2-1/2 weeks to net $1,500. Even in a double-income household, that’s quite a chunk. How about the “Hannah Montana” soundtrack instead?

  13 Comments      


McSweeney comes out swinging - Updated x2

Wednesday, Sep 13, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

It has begun:

Republicans began rolling out their initial blitz aimed at Democratic U.S. Rep. Melissa Bean with a TV ad attacking her on health care and two mail pieces criticizing her on immigration and gas prices.

The National Republican Campaign Committee’s ad, airing only on cable, takes Barrington’s Bean to task for voting against a medical malpractice measure that would have capped pain-and-suffering damages and attorneys’ fees.

“Our health care system is on life support, and guess who doesn’t seem to care: Congresswoman Melissa Bean,” an announcer’s voice says as stock images of a heart monitor flat-lining play out. Republicans argue that lawsuit reform will lower rising health-care costs. […]

McSweeney mailed out his first two attack mail pieces early this week. Taking a page out of the national GOP playbook, McSweeney hits Bean on immigration, claiming she’s “straddling the fence.”

Anyone have these mailers?

Also, you can see video from the last candidate’s forum in the race on this page.

UPDATE: Thanks to a very good pal, I now have the two McSweeney mailers. Both are pdf files. Immigration and energy policy.

And check out the awful photos of Bean that McSweeney is using.

UPDATE 2: Apparently, that lousy photo came from Bean’s own site. lol

  14 Comments      


Morning shorts

Wednesday, Sep 13, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

* I knew this would happen sooner or later. “A Web site that compares Democratic Ald. Todd Stroger to the nerdy TV character “Urkel” and calls him “Toddler,” among other insults, is drawing fire from black leaders who say it’s racist and secretly being run by Republican operatives.”

* Topinka’s assault-weapon comment called flippant - news conference is planned for today

* Rutherford cites “pattern of impropriety” in White office

* ” House Speaker Dennis Hastert is hopeful that the recent sentencing of former Gov. George Ryan in a corruption scandal will not derail Illinois Republicans.” [Video at the page.]

* Madigan: End Ryan’s pension

Ryan, however, would be entitled to a “timely refund” of $235,500 withdrawn from his state and Kankakee County paychecks over 36 years in public service, Madigan concluded. Still, that’s far less than the $16,420 a month the 72-year-old Republican is getting now.

Ryan plans to dispute Madigan’s ruling if the General Assembly Retirement System agrees with it, said former Gov. Jim Thompson, a Ryan lawyer.

Ryan’s convictions, Thompson said, are linked only to Ryan’s service as secretary of state and governor, and therefore Ryan should be allowed to keep pension money he earned as a state legislator and lieutenant governor.

* Topinka backs new bridge

* Roskam gets Cabinet-level support - Commerce secretary stumps for hopeful

* Dan Webb named chairman of Winston & Strawn

* Dean. Emanuel Reach Deal

* McPier posts record operating profit last year

* IHSA sticks with 4 classes

  5 Comments      


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* Isabel’s afternoon roundup (Updated)
* Comptroller will stop sending “offset” payments to Dolton
* Stop Credit Card Chaos In Illinois!
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