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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      


Lisa Madigan: No pension for Ryan

Tuesday, Sep 12, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

I thought we were going to see an opinion on a different topic today, which is what the earlier notification was about. But, hey, we take what we can get.

Attorney General Lisa Madigan today issued an opinion in response to the September 6, 2006 request from the General Assembly Retirement System for guidance regarding whether former Governor George Ryan’s felony convictions result in a forfeiture of his pension benefits under the Illinois Pension Code.

Madigan’s opinion concludes that Ryan has forfeited all of his public pension benefits because his felony convictions arose out of and in connection with his service as a state official. Madigan further advises the General Assembly Retirement System that it may suspend Ryan’s pension benefits as of the date of his criminal sentencing

“Former Governor Ryan’s extensive and reprehensible criminal conduct was directly and inherently related to his official duties as state officer,” Madigan stated. “In my opinion, the criminal conduct in which he engaged for over a decade as a state official is precisely the type of misconduct and breach of public trust that the felony forfeiture provision of the Pension Code is designed to discourage. Consequently, I have concluded that Ryan’s felony convictions clearly require the forfeiture of all of his pension benefits.”

The entire opinion can be found on this page.

  28 Comments      


Green Party candidate invited to participate in debate - Updated x1

Tuesday, Sep 12, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

[I accidentally deleted this post. All the comments are gone. I’m really sorry. But here it is again.]

[UPDATE: I’ve rebuilt the comments for the post.]

I just got off the phone with James Bennett, the editor of the Southern Illinoisan. The SI is sponsoring a gubernatorial debate on September 26th and Bennett and other sponsors have said before that if any candidate scored at least 5 percent in an independent poll that they would be invited.

As you know, the Tribune poll has the Green Party’s Rich Whitney at 6 percent so Whitney was invited to participate this morning.

No word yet on the Blagojevich campaign response. Mr. Bennett said he hadn’t heard back from them yet. I’ll fire off an e-mail in a few minutes.
The governor previously indicated that he was opposed to inviting Whitney, and at least one other debate sponsor had strongly hinted that he feared Blagojevich would pull out of his debate if Whitney was invited.

UPDATE: I just talked to Mike Lawrence, whose Southern Illinois University’s Paul Simon Public Policy Institute is also a co-sponsor. Mike stressed that neither of the two major party candidates have formally agreed to the debate in writing, although there has been plenty of interest.

I got the feeling that if Gov. Blagojevich nixes the Whitney idea, the invitation could be withdrawn.

Stay tuned…

  23 Comments      


It’s things like this that can tube a campaign

Tuesday, Sep 12, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

The Brady Campaign to Prevent Gun Violence takes a whack at Topinka.

Commenting on remarks made by gubernatorial candidate Judy Baar Topinka last week in Champaign, Ill., Englewood resident Deanna Woods issued the following statement:

“My niece, Siretha White, died in March from assault weapons fire at the birthday party I hosted for her at my house in Englewood, Ill. Siretha would have been 11.

“She was dancing in the living room with the other children. When we heard the gunshots, I threw myself on top of some of the other young people, and the bullets kept coming and coming.

“Now, I hear that Judy Baar Topinka, who wants to be Governor, is joking about Governor Blagojevich wanting to ban these weapons from our neighborhood. She said ‘we will take him out with my little rolling pin known as the assault weapon. I will prove to him, indeed, it is an assault weapon.’

“Mrs. Topinka, a rolling pin is not an assault weapon. I know the difference. I bore witness.”

As I told you before, this is what Topinka said.

“To our College Republicans, our county chairmen, to all of you in business and industry who have stuck it out through these miserable four years under Rod Blagojevich, let me tell you, not only is help coming, I’m the sword of justice and I’m going to cut him to pieces. We will take him out with my little rolling pin known as the assault weapon. I will prove to him, indeed, it is an assault weapon.”

  69 Comments      


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Tuesday, Sep 12, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Not minding their P’s and Q’s

Tuesday, Sep 12, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

This isn’t exactly indictment-worthy, but third party candidates need to remember that the laws apply to them, too.

Green Party governor hopeful Rich Whitney’s campaign manager at times uses a public university’s computer system to help run Whitney’s third-party bid, something a leading ethical watchdog said is a clear violation of state law.

State ethics laws forbid the use of taxpayer-supported, government resources for political use. “A public university is an arm of government,” said Cindi Canary, director of the Illinois Campaign for Political Reform. Still, Whitney campaign manager Jennifer Rose’s Southern Illinois University e-mail has been used for campaign purposes ranging from contacting reporters to helping track turnout at Green Party events. Whitney, a Carbondale lawyer, will appear on the statewide ballot along side Democratic Gov. Rod Blagojevich and Republican nominee Judy Baar Topinka.

Rose said Monday night she was unaware there was a problem.”In no way did I think that I was doing anything wrong or something that violated ethics, but I will certainly check on it immediately,” she said. […]

Rose recently used the SIU e-mail account to send a message to the Daily Herald complaining that Whitney wasn’t included in a story about how the George Ryan scandal could affect this year’s governor’s race.

  24 Comments      


Question of the day

Tuesday, Sep 12, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

Rate the state politics coverage by your local media outlets, print and electronic. Is it enough? Too much? Well-informed? Clueless? Explain.

  17 Comments      


Fallout continues - Updated x1

Tuesday, Sep 12, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

Eric Zorn thinks the check scandal could resonate with voters. I agree.

Whatever legal judgments are ultimately made about this situation, right now this is looking a lot like Blagojevich’s “cash-from-janitors” moment.

In the trial of former Gov. George Ryan, you may remember, testimony was that he used to accept cash gifts every Christmas from low-paid custodians and clerical workers in his office. He wasn’t charged with this unseemly pocket-stuffing, but it was such an easy-to-understand and fundamentally offensive act of arrogant greed that it came to define his character in the public mind.

Allegations about hinky contracts, leases and job connections can be hard to follow and riddled with he-said, she-said accounts of dealings unfamiliar to most of us.

My Big Fat Birthday Gift, in contrast, is a story we can all understand: The governor accepted a substantial check in his daughter’s name from the family of a newly hired state employee who was married to his best friend.

It’s still early, but the explanations we’ve heard to date from Blagojevich and the Ascaridises are explanations that anyone who has ever given or received a gift can test against his own experience:

And the State Journal-Register’s editorial page makes an excellent point by noting that the governor may have violated his own ethics rules.

Actually, what is outrageous is that Blagojevich would be willing to accept a $1,500 check within days of providing the check writer’s wife a $45,000-per-year job. Remember that ethics training that thousands of state employees recently rushed through? One section dealt with the state gift ban. “As a state employee, neither you, your spouse nor any member of your immediate family can ordinarily accept a gift of any value from someone who wants the state or a state employee to take or not take an official action.” See how important it is to slow down and read everything?

If it turns out that rule was violated in this case, the $1,500 check could end up being the most expensive birthday present anyone ever accepted.

UPDATE: From a Joe Birkett press release:

…”Rod Blagojevich has an obligation to explain this troubling revelation by coming forward personally and explaining the details of the transaction. He needs to stop hiding behind spokespeople and lawyers.”

Birkett also called for Blagojevich to:

•Produce the check to show when it was written and into which account it was deposited.

•Detail other “birthday” gifts given to that same daughter by Mike Ascaridis, the check writer, to see if the $1,500 was out of the ordinary.

•Explain his conversations with Ascaridis about the $1,500 check.

•Detail other gifts he has accepted as governor - many of which he only recently acknowledged receiving after he was questioned by the FBI in 2005.

  41 Comments      


Tribune: 45-33-6

Tuesday, Sep 12, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

[Bumped up for discussion purposes.]

The new Tribune poll is out. Blagojevich leads Topinka 45-33, with the Green Party’s Rich Whitney scoring 6 percentage points. 600 likely voters were survyed between Thursday and Sunday. Topinka’s first TV ads of the season went up last Wednesday.

Topinka leads slightly among independents, 36-34, Blagojevich leads among women 45-34. 40 percent of all voters view Topinka unfavorably, compared to 29 percent who view her favorably. Voters were split evenly among the two top contenders and “neither of them” when asked who would do a better job of cleaning up corruption.

A total of 56 percent of the voters surveyed also said they thought Blagojevich had not kept his 2002 campaign promise to end government corruption, while only one in five thought he had lived up to his vow. Democrats were almost equally split on the question while nearly 70 percent of independent voters thought the incumbent had failed to keep his word. […]

Blagojevich also was viewed as the more effective leader to Topinka, 43 percent to 25 percent.

The gap between Blagojevich and Topinka narrowed when voters were asked who would do a better job of handling state finances–39 percent for the Democrat and 36 percent for the Republican. Asked who was more honest and trustworthy, 33 percent said Blagojevich and 27 percent sided with Topinka.

Majorities of voters also rejected both of the major candidates’ proposals to pump more money into schools. Fifty-four percent opposed Topinka’s plan for a land-based Chicago casino and expanded gambling at current casinos to raise revenue, while 62 percent disapproved of Blagojevich’s plan to sell or lease the state lottery to private investors.

With Whitney at 6, the winner only needs 47 percent plus one vote to win.

I’m still putting this together, but you can view other recent statewide polling here.

The Rasmussen poll is still behind the firewall, but here’s an interesting story from the pollster that shows just how difficult it will be for Topinka.

The number of Americans calling themselves Republican has fallen to its lowest level in more than two-and-a-half years. Just 31.9% of American adults now say they’re affiliated with the GOP. That’s down from 37.2% in October 2004 and 34.5% at the beginning of 2006. […]

The number of Democrats has grown slightly, from 36.1% at the beginning of the year to 37.3% now.

Those who claim to be unaffiliated have increased to 30.8% this month. That’s the highest total recorded since Rasmussen Reports began releasing this data in January 2004.

Add it all together and the Democrats have their biggest net advantage—more than five percentage points—since January 2004. In the first month of 2006, the Democrats’ advantage was just 1.6 percentage points. Last month, 32.8% of adults said they were Republicans and 36.8% identified themselves as Democrats.

The results are from tracking surveys of 15,000 voters per month. The margin of error is said to be “smaller than a percentage point.”

Also, here’s are some crucial excerpts from my syndicated newspaper column, which is about the Post-Dispatch poll:

And considering that the poll found that 20 percent of blacks say they were undecided, there’s a very good chance that Blagojevich is probably at 50 precent right now anyway since almost all of those undecided black voters will end up on Blagojevich’s side (blacks are about 15 percent of the state’s population, so 20 percent undecided would be 3 percent of the total population, and 47 plus three equals 50). This tracks with a July SurveyUSA poll, which found that 25 percent of black voters were either undecided or wanting another unnamed candidate. […]

Almost a third, 29 percent, said they weren’t aware of the yearlong federal investigations into the governor’s office. That will likely change, as Topinka’s TV advertising begins in earnest.

Just 9 percent believed “corruption” was the most important issue in the race — one point ahead of “lowering gas prices” and two points ahead of “immigration.” Topinka’s ad campaign will have to change a lot of minds if she hopes to win.

  44 Comments      


The key to Weller’s fate

Tuesday, Sep 12, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

Kristen McQueary takes on a subject that has perplexed many an outside observer over the years. How does Jerry Weller keep annhilating his opponents? First, she lays out some of the problems he faces this year.

His father-in-law, Efrain Rios Montt, is a former Guatemalan dictator for whom an arrest warrant was issued in July on charges of genocide, torture, illegal arrest and terrorism for a 1980s insurgency he orchestrated (with the support of the Reagan administration). […]

Weller’s campaign fund includes contributions from the interests of the now-indicted Jack Abramoff, the under-scrutiny Brent Wilkes and a telecommunications giant, Jeffrey Prosser, whom political bloggers label an international phone sex operator.

His address is largely a mystery. Does Weller actually live in the 11th District? Between flights to Washington, D.C., and Guatemala where his wife serves as a prominent government leader, he consistently faces questions about his residency. Reports filed with the U.S. House clerk show he owns two lots in Nicaragua; sold a home in Morris and lived in an apartment above the garage; owns a condo in Chicago; and, according to his campaign, built a larger home in Morris recently.

But then she runs through the counter-arguments and writes this key paragraph.

He manages to balance just the right mix of political prowess to keep bombshell stories from soiling his lapel. He brushes off criticism as political pettiness. He meets the needs of his district just enough to sustain a presence. And he raises money like a skilled Vegas gambler, ready at any moment to unleash a torrent of negative publicity about an opponent in the weeks leading up to Election Day.

She concludes that the trending Democratic Will County will be the key battleground if there is to be a race at all. Read the whole thing.

  11 Comments      


Morning shorts

Tuesday, Sep 12, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Zinga goofs on airline profiling - Campaign manager blames his ‘poor briefing’

* SoS Ghost payroll scheme alleged. More here.

* Quote of the week: “People have laughed at me for years.” - Ald. Burt Natarus.

* I’m not sure if this is even on the air yet, or if it is whether there are any serious points behind it, but here is Christine Radogno’s TV ad, with a hat tip towards IlliniPundit.

* Ex-gov Walker: Ryan got a ’soft sentence’

* “Based on a statewide estimate, approximately 570,000 or about 11 percent of Illinois voters, don’t have a photo ID. This is consistent with other states. where estimates range from 5 percent to as high as 14 percent.”

* Coleman denies gifts got her to back consultant

* Judicial hellhole’ freezes over - Class actions halt after federal law, Illinois courts curb forum shopping

* Um, Denny? Either learn the words or turn off the mic?

  11 Comments      


Bean mail

Monday, Sep 11, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

This new mailer by Congresswoman Melissa Blean slams her Republican opponent for opposing embryonic stem cell research. Click the preview pics to see each of the three pages. (Many thanks to a reader for scanning the mailer and sending it to me.)

  45 Comments      


Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Rep. Schock’s new TV ad; ILCV Endorsements

Monday, Sep 11, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

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This just in… Daley vetoes ‘big-box’ ordinance - Updated x3

Monday, Sep 11, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

The Sun-Times fills us in.

Infuriating organized labor and delighting business leaders, Mayor Daley today vetoed an ordinance that would have required Wal-Mart and other “big-box” retailers to pay employees a “living wage” of at least $13-an-hour in wages and benefits by 2010.

“I return herewith, without my approval, an ordinance passed by the City Council on July 26, 2006,” Daley said in his first-ever veto message. “I understand and share a desire to ensure that everyone who works in the City of Chicago earns a decent wage. But I do not believe that this ordinance, well-intentioned as it may be, would achieve that end. Rather, I believe it would drive jobs and businesses from our city, penalizing neighborhoods that need additional economic activity the most. In light of this, I believe it is my duty to veto this ordinance.” […]

Ald. Manny Flores (1st), one of 35 aldermen who voted for the big-box ordinance, is in China and is not expected to attend the Council meeting. That means the mayor needs only one big-box supporter to change sides to sustain his veto.

Your thoughts?

UPDATE: Also today…

Two aldermen said Monday they have introduced a measure to repeal Chicago’s ban on foie gras.

Both Ald. Bernard Stone (50th) and Ald. Burton Natarus (42d) originally voted in favor of the foie gras legislation, but they said they have had second thoughts.

Chicago has become a “laughingstock” because of its prohibition of the delicacy made from the livers of geese and ducks, Stone said.

UPDATE 2: From a Congressman Jesse Jackson, Jr. press release:

“Mayor Daley stands with President Bush and the Republican-led Congress against incrementally raising the minimum wage. I support a living wage on principle and as a human right. I also believe that it is impossible to support a living wage and say that the richest corporations in the world can’t pay it.

“After 17 years of no jobs for the urban core of our city, Mayor Daley vetoed a livable wage ordinance. In other words, he has joined the corporations’ exploitation of the most desperate by offering them either low-wages or no-wages, offering them a big-box or no-box.

“I suggest that the Mayor give up his $200,000+ job for six months and try living on the salary that the Chicago City Council passed. Richard M. Daley is the mayor of the ‘city that works,’ and now the mayor of the city that works for lower wages.”

UPDATE 3: From Tony Peraica’s campaign:

“Mayor Daley did the right thing for Chicago today when he vetoed the so-called ‘Big Box’ ordinance. In doing so, he’s struck a mortal blow at a piece of legislation that would kill tens of thousands of new jobs.

“But now the City Council must vote to uphold that veto. And I challenge my opponent, Alderman Todd Stroger, to reverse course and stand with the Mayor to ensure this job-killing legislation is put to bed once and for all.

“In a city known for its political deal-making, here’s a deal I’ll offer Todd Stroger: go ahead and do the right thing by voting to uphold the Mayor’s veto, and I won’t criticize you for flip-flopping on this issue or ‘voting for it before you voted against it’. For a change, Todd, you can do the right thing at no political cost to yourself. When was the last time you were made an offer like that?

“Todd Stroger was wrong when he cast his vote back in July in support of this legislation. I said then that major corporations would put a hold on their plans to expand into Chicago, and tens of thousands of jobs would be lost - from the very neighborhoods that need them most. Todd went ahead and voted for it anyway…

  70 Comments      


A tangled web, or an innocent gift? - Updated x6

Monday, Sep 11, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

[Comments are now closed on this post. Thanks for all the discussion! Go here instead.]

[This has been bumped up to the top because people want to talk about it so much.]

One of the keys to remember when reading Sunday’s Tribune story is that Rod Blagojevich had never reported any sort of gift from this family until the FBI started asking questions. Another key point is that Mrs. Ascaridis claims she didn’t even know that a large check had been written to the governor’s daughter.

The FBI is investigating allegations by the wife of Gov. Rod Blagojevich’s former campaign treasurer that her state job may have come in return for a $1,500 personal check her husband wrote to one of Blagojevich’s children.

The inquiry is the first public indication that Blagojevich and his personal finances are under federal scrutiny as part of a sweeping criminal probe of political hiring in his administration.

The governor’s office released a statement Friday saying the check was a gift for his daughter’s 7th birthday from the governor’s best friend and any suggestion otherwise is “simply ludicrous.” […]

Beverly Ascaridis, who has already been identified in an internal state probe as receiving special treatment to get her job, confirmed federal agents interviewed her and her husband in recent weeks about the check. It was dated within two weeks after she began her $45,000-a-year job as a state parks administrator in August 2003, according to Ascaridis and sources familiar with the investigation.

Not specifically mentioned in the story is that Michael Ascaridis was paid $5,000 by the governor’s campaign fund in 2003, the same year the alleged birthday check was written. All told, the campaign fuund has paid Ascaridis $11,900, although $400 of that appears to be reimbursements.

It seems clear that Mrs. Ascaridis was clouted into her job.

Beverly Ascaridis’ name was among more than 1,000 job applicants identified by the inspector general’s report as being channeled through a special office that took hiring recommendations from the governor’s office, state lawmakers and Democratic county chairman, the newspaper reported.

Her job with the Illinois Department of Natural Resources first was located in Whiteside County, near the Iowa border and more than 100 miles from her Chicago home, the newspaper reported.

But the job was moved to DuPage County a little more than a month after Ascaridis took the post.

The inspector general found that officials were able to get around laws that give preference to veterans in hiring by filling jobs in counties with fewer veteran job applicants, then transferring the jobs elsewhere once they were given to a favored applicant.

Mrs. Ascaridis told the Tribune she didn’t even know where Whiteside County is.

Also not mentioned in the story is that Michael Ascaridis apparently got his own government job through political connections. Ascaridis’ name appears on Mayor Daley’s “clout list.” His sponsor is not listed.

The fact that Ascaridis works for the City of Chicago and is not some big bucks player makes that $1500 birthday gift to a little girl’s “college fund” all the more strange, and even more suspect when you remember that it wasn’t even reported on the governor’s statement of economic interests until after Blagojevich was interviewed by the FBI.

Here’s a reminder of some of the context.

Weeks after he was interviewed by federal agents last year as part of a corruption investigation, Gov. Rod Blagojevich filed a rare revision to one of his ethics disclosures to include more personal gifts.

The move raises parallels to changes made by Blagojevich’s predecessor, convicted felon George Ryan, who amended his ethics statements after being questioned by federal prosecutors.

“In light of where these federal investigations of the Blagojevich administration are, it goes beyond curious. It’s worrisome,” said Jay Stewart, executive director of the watchdog Better Government Association, who added the Blagojevich and Ryan situations are not completely analogous.

Ascaridis was also Blagojevich’s campaign treasurer when he was in Congress.

I’ll open comments on Monday, but you can post them now if you wish and they’ll appear tomorrow morning. Comments are now open.

Also, to those who say it’s no big deal, here’s a walk down memory lane to show how the feds can twist just about anything…

Collins ran through benefits he said flowed between Ryan and Warner during Ryan’s years as secretary of state and governor. He said Warner got $3 million worth of lobbying money and lease deals after Ryan steered contracts to him. Collins listed the loans, gifts, insurance adjustment and other benefits that flowed from Warner to Ryan and various Ryan family members in return.

It was “the community bank of Larry Warner for the Ryan family,” Collins said.

Collins said Warner paid the cost of a wedding band for one of Ryan’s daughters. The daughter, sitting in the front row, started to tear up as Collins talked about it. […]

Warner paid for the band as a gift to Ryan’s daughter, whom he cared about, the defense has said.

UPDATE: The governor will be at Holy Name Cathedral Monday morning for the 9-11 remembrance ceremony, so maybe reporters can get him to answer some questions about this.

UPDATE 2: Remember this?

The auction began with the sale of Tari Rogganbuck’s Rabbit Pen Trio. Fred and Jill Nessler, Larry and Ann Breon and Lyle and Cathy Flack purchased the Bonfield girl’s rabbits for $3,750 and then gave them to the governor’s seven year-old daughter, Amy.

As I recall, and as a friend reminded me, the governor refused the rabbits, saying it would be unethical for Amy to accept them.

UPDATE 3: The Daily Herald has more.

But on Saturday, [Mrs.] Ascaridis released a statement saying her comments had been mischaracterized, she had been misquoted, and that she believed the Blagojeviches are “good people.” […]

Michael Ascaridis released a statement through his lawyer, Democratic campaign donor Joseph A. Power, that contradicted the his wife’s anti-Blagojevich statements reported in the Tribune.

“My wife, Beverly, and I categorically deny that there was any quid pro quo regarding any gift to Amy and my wife’s job. To suggest otherwise is insulting to me, my wife, as well as Amy and Rod,” he said in a statement released Saturday.

If the Tribune has a tape, now would be a good time to release it.

UPDATE 4: From Eric Zorn’s site:

Statement from Abby Ottenhoff, spokeswoman for Blagojevich: The Governor and Mike Ascaridis have been best friends for over 40 years, beginning when the Governor was 8 years old. Because Mike and Beverly do not have children, they are particularly close to the Governor’s children. Mike and Beverly give gifts for birthdays, Christmas, and christenings to Amy and Annie. The Governor and First Lady take the Ascaridis’ out for dinner. The Governor regularly takes Mike to Cubs games, especially during the Cubs’ playoff run in 2003, when the Governor, Mike and Amy attended game after game together. When Mike and Beverly were married, the Governor and the First Lady gave them a check. In other words, their relationship is just like the relationship of close friends all across the world. Like a lot of parents, the Governor and the First Lady set up a mutual fund to help pay for college for their daughters – and that’s been dutifully reported. And yes, Beverly Ascaridis was qualified for her job, and by all accounts she’s done the job well.

Statement from Michael Ascardis (via Joseph Power): I have known Rod Blagojevich for over 40 years. We attended the same grammar school and Lane Tech High school along with his brother, Robert. Rod and Robert are my best friends. I do not have any children other than a grown stepson, so I treat Rod’s daughter, Amy, as my own. I had given Amy various gifts since she was born 10 years ago. I gave her a birthday gift for a college fund because of my relationship with Amy and a life long friendship with the Blagojevich family. I have also given gifts to Robert’s son, Alex, for his graduation from high school and college out of friendship. I graduated from DePaul University with a degree in finance and from Northeastern University with a degree in accounting. Although I do not have any children, I understand the importance of college funds for minors. My gifts to Amy throughout her life were done out of a lifelong friendship. My wife, Beverly, and I categorically deny that there was any quid pro quo regarding any gift to Amy and my wife’s job. To suggest otherwise is insulting to me (and), my wife as well as Amy and Rod.

Statement of Beverly Ascardis (Via Joseph Power): My husband and I have known the Blagojevich family for years. Our gift to Amy was not in any way connected to my job. We gave other gifts to Amy and Annie over the years for their birthdays, Christmas and other occasions. My husband Mike and the Governor are like brothers who could not have a closer relationship. If I have made any statements out of anger, I regret it. (This statement also contained a dispute over the accuracy of the Tribune story referenced above; that dispute is hashed out in the story itself)

UPDATE 5: Abby says she was qualified, but this is from the Tribune story:

[Mrs. Ascaridis] was identified as among more than two dozen applicants who were given a break when their failing grades were not recorded.

UPDATE 6: Notice this quote.

Like a lot of parents, the Governor and the First Lady set up a mutual fund to help pay for college for their daughters – and that’s been dutifully reported.

But was the check deposited into that account?

[Comments are now closed on this post. Go here instead.]

  181 Comments      


Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Geo; Murphy; Predictions; Prussing; TV; Target feed (Use all CAPS in password)

Monday, Sep 11, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Question of the day

Monday, Sep 11, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

Sorry for the delay this morning.

Here’s the setup:

It would seem that after spending an estimated $8 million buying media coverage in 2006 — $4.5 million during the primary election alone — Gov. Rod Blagojevich should have his bases covered. However, the campaign has not spent one dollar on online advertising yet, a sign that the Illinois governor may be missing an important aspect of proven Internet campaigning, several experts say. […]

Of the estimated $1.75 billion spent on political advertising in 2004, only about $15 million, or less than one percent, was spent for online advertising, according to TNS Media Intelligence. In comparison, retail companies now spend nearly 10 percent of their ad budgets online and are increasing that share every year because they get a good response, Jagoda said. She estimates that political campaigns are at least six years behind retailers when it comes to understanding how to use online ads.

“So far campaigns have placed online ads on political sites such as the New York Times’s editorial pages but that’s all wrong. If they wanted to reach a bigger but targeted audience they could try to advertise where people actually go, such as on Yahoo or weather.com,” Jagoda said.

And now the question: Are you surprised that neither candidate has run Internet ads yet? Should they? Explain.

  21 Comments      


Medicaid debated

Monday, Sep 11, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

The Medicaid debate between the two candidates continues with two thoughtful pieces. The first is an editorial from the Post-Dispatch.

But the deal also would carry risks for Illinois taxpayers. If Ms. Topinka can’t cut spending as she anticipates — if, for example, a softening economy allows more people to qualify for Medicaid, or some of the changes she plans don’t produce the savings she hopes — state taxpayers would be on the hook for an even larger share of Medicaid costs. That, or Medicaid eligibility would have to be slashed, and thousands of people would lose coverage.

Ms. Topinka plans to get savings using tactics applied in Missouri by Gov. Matt Blunt, such as stepped-up enforcement to catch people fraudulently applying for Medicaid and asset tests for some health care programs. Those changes produced savings in Missouri, but far short of what was predicted.

Ms. Topinka also wants to increase the number of Illinois Medicaid patients in managed care. That’s probably not a bad idea; with just 9.6 percent enrolled, Illinois ranks 48th of 50 states. But managed care is no magic bullet, even in the private sector. Medicaid patients are sicker and have more chronic illness than those with private insurance.

Finally, Ms. Topinka wants to reduce the number of Medicaid babies born prematurely or with complications. About one-third of the births paid for by Illinois Medicaid fit that profile. Getting the number down is a worthy goal, but it has proven difficult. Ms. Topinka says she’ll do it by creating a database to link pregnant Medicaid patients with resources available through the federal Women, Infants and Children program. That may make some difference, but not much and not soon.

In the real world, saving money means spending less than we do now. That’s rarely true in health care, and it wouldn’t be true with Ms. Topinka’s plan.

And here’s one from Crain’s.

The governor wants to spotlight his signature All Kids health care program, which hinges on savings from Medicaid. Ms. Topinka — running as a fiscal reformer — hopes to wring $2.3 billion in savings from the Medicaid system by requiring most of the state’s 2.1 million Medicaid recipients to enroll in health maintenance organizations (HMOs).

Ms. Topinka’s savings estimate is 53% higher than a figure cited in a report last year — a study Ms. Topinka has used as a model. A campaign spokesman says the higher estimate assumes a more aggressive rollout of the HMO system than recommended by the Lewin Group, a state-funded consultancy.

A mandatory HMO model would face fierce opposition from hospitals and doctors, who fear disruption of the entrenched funding system that dictates the flow of federal Medicaid dollars would mean less reimbursement for them.

“The financial underpinnings of the state’s Medicaid program would be jeopardized,” says Elena Butkus, vice-president of finance at the Illinois Hospital Assn.”

  5 Comments      


Controversy over school construction continues

Monday, Sep 11, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

The governor’s decision while on a quasi campaign trip to release $1.9 million to repair a downstate school has created a furor in the usual quarters.

Lawmakers and school administrators have called on Gov. Rod Blagojevich to release more than $148.5 million for school construction that was originally promised more than five years ago.

Blagojevich sparked controversy last week by promising $1.9 million to repair aging parts of Carterville High School, while 24 other school districts deemed the neediest in 2001 still have not been helped. […]

Some of the school districts have fronted the money to begin construction and are awaiting reimbursement from the state. Others are running up against deadlines to raise local money needed for the projects.[…]

The Blagojevich administration blasted Republican lawmakers, who organized the press conference, for repeatedly voting against a public works program it claims would have funded school construction. “The hypocrisy is overwhelming,” said Rebecca Rausch, a Blagojevich spokeswoma

This Kankakee Daily Journal story was typical of the response.

Gov. Rod Blagojevich’s recent comment that he wants to shake up the state’s school construction priority list has two area superintendents wondering when they’ll see the money they’ve been promised for years.

“We still need the money, our taxpayers were promised the money and they deserve to get the money,” said Manteno Superintendent Dawn Russert.

Manteno and the Bradley Elementary School District are waiting on $2 million state grants. The districts are among 24 that have been on the state’s construction priority list since 2002 but have gone without because lawmakers haven’t approved a capital budget.

Russert and Bradley Superintendent Scott Goselin joined other superintendents and a handful of Republican lawmakers for a news conference in Springfield Friday asking Blagojevich to honor the priority list.

  4 Comments      


Congressional round-up

Monday, Sep 11, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Let’s start the round-up with this Washington Post story:

Republicans are planning to spend the vast majority of their sizable financial war chest over the final 60 days of the campaign attacking Democratic House and Senate candidates over personal issues and local controversies, GOP officials said.

The National Republican Congressional Committee, which this year dispatched a half-dozen operatives to comb through tax, court and other records looking for damaging information on Democratic candidates, plans to spend more than 90 percent of its $50 million-plus advertising budget on what officials described as negative ads.

The hope is that a vigorous effort to “define” opponents, in the parlance of GOP operatives, can help Republicans shift the midterm debate away from Iraq and limit losses this fall. The first round of attacks includes an ad that labeled a Democratic candidate in Wisconsin “Dr. Millionaire” and noted that he has sued 80 patients.

“Opposition research is power,” said Rep. Thomas M. Reynolds (N.Y.), the NRCC chairman. “Opposition research is the key to defining untested opponents.”

The Republican National Committee, meanwhile, has enlisted veteran party strategist Terry Nelson to run a campaign that will coordinate with Senate Republicans on ads that similarly will rely on the best of the worst that researchers have dug up on Democrats. The first ad run by the new RNC effort criticizes Ohio Rep. Sherrod Brown (D) for voting against proposals designed to toughen border protection and deport illegal immigrants.

* And here’s a Tribune story from last week that I missed:

Conventional political wisdom suggests that most voters don’t pay much attention to campaigns until the fall, but that hasn’t stopped the two candidates vying to replace retiring U.S. Rep. Henry Hyde in the 6th Congressional District from already giving constituents an earful.

Democrat Tammy Duckworth has revved up the robocalls, leaving recorded messages for voters about her support of embryonic stem cell research and her opponent Peter Roskam’s opposition to it. Republicans have been jamming mailboxes for Roskam, hammering Duckworth on taxes and immigration.

The intensity will only increase as the campaigns spend millions of dollars rolling out television ads, VIP fundraising appearances, phone calls, mailers and lawn signs, trying to find any advantage in one of most hotly contested congressional campaigns in the country.

* Incumbent Democrat Melissa Bean says she won’t participate in any more candidate forums with her opponents.

* Roskam and Duckworth spar over O’Hare.

The skies over the 6th Congressional District are far from friendly when it comes to the scuffle between Democrat Tammy Duckworth and Republican Peter Roskam.

So it’s no surprise the two who are seeking the seat being vacated by U.S. Rep. Henry Hyde would differ on Chicago’s controversial expansion plan at O’Hare International Airport.

Roskam, a state senator from Wheaton, calls the proposal wrongheaded. He argues that homes and landmarks in Bensenville and industry in Elk Grove Village will be destroyed. […]

Hoffman Estates resident Duckworth, a National Guard pilot who flew in Iraq, considers expansion a fait accompli. “It’s going to happen,” she said.

  4 Comments      


Morning shorts - UPDATED

Monday, Sep 11, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Christi Parsons says goodbye to Springfield. We’ll miss her and wish her well in DC.

* Teachers union endorses Blagojevich

* “Unionized drug treatment counselors at Sheridan Correctional Center have returned to work from a three-month-long strike, but how long they’ll be there remains in question.”

* Governor hopefuls vow to gain trust - All 3 candidates say they have right plan

* Schoenburg: Good luck sorting out claims, counterclaims in ads

* Editorial: The governor’s energy gamble

* Giannoulias unveils ethics plan; Rutherford criticizes White

* Hometown Residents Sympathetic To Former Governor

* Former Gov. Thompson Speaks Out In Support Of Ryan

* Former Governor Jim Thompson: Ryan ‘a broken man’

UPDATES:

* Effective Or Creepy? Politicians Jump To myspace

* Group lashes out at Jackson Jr. - Possible mayoral bid raises controversy in his House district [fixed link]

* Schools may not need tax OK

* Blagojevich inquiry has parallels to Ryan case

  6 Comments      


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