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Poshard adviser: “history is about to repeat itself”

Monday, Sep 25, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

Joe Novak was Glenn Poshard’s political consultant in 1998. He has no love for the current governor, partly because of his ongoing fight with the not-for-profit hospitals. Long story short, Novak believes the hospitals and Blagojevich are in bed together to protect the hospitals’ tax exemptions. Check his blog for more.

Anyway, he raised some money through a new PAC he created, North Fork Political Action Committee, and is airing $30,000 worth of radio ads in central and southern Illinois starting tomorrow.

The ad rips Gov. Blagojevich. Novak says he hopes to raise enough money to get the spot on Chicago radio by next week.

[audio:NFORK_01.mp3]

Here’s the script:

My name is Joe Novak.

I spent a year of my life trying to elect Glenn Poshard as Governor, because he was an honest and decent man.

Well, against a corrupt politician like George Ryan, honesty and decency never had a chance.

And we all know how that turned out.

Ryan’s going to jail like 70 of his cohorts have.

I can’t blame the voters though.

They didn’t know Ryan was corrupt, in part because a U.S. District Attorney made an unprecedented statement flatly denying that Ryan was a target.

Well, I’m worried that history is about to repeat itself.

It shouldn’t.

Numerous media outlets have made it clear that Governor Rod Blagojevich is Public Official A in a widespread investigation of the Blagojevich administration.

For the next four years, do you want a Governor who’s focused on the people’s business, or someone distracted by ongoing investigations, grand juries, possible indictments and convictions?

There’s an old saying—fool me once, shame on you, fool me twice, shame on me.

So what’s it going to be?

  50 Comments      


Community service message

Monday, Sep 25, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

Elma and Company is a music and dance show on Chicago cable access that has an interesting twist. It uses the fun to bring “positive messages and educational information to young people.”

This Wednesday, the show will attempt to encourage young people to register and vote. The following was taken from an email that I received from CAN TV:

Elma Lucas is in her 15th season of producing Elma and Company through CAN TV. This is a high energy show run by Elma with the skill of a veteran live TV producer. Years ago, Elma came to CAN TV, like many Chicago residents, with no experience doing television but with a vision for her program. Originally drawing youth from Cabrini Green, where she grew up, she has since expanded the program to include hundreds of budding hip hop artists, dancers, spoken word poets and others. […]

Politicians to appear: Secretary of State Jesse White, IL State Reps Esther Golar, Arthur Turner, John Fritchey, John D’Amico, Daniel Burke, Elga Jefferies, Monique Davis, Connie Howard, Maria Berrios; IL State Senators Ricky Hendon and Mattie Hunter; Aldermen Bernie Stone, Toni Preckwinkle, Ray Suarez, Ed Smith.

What a good idea.

  Comments Off      


The Stroger beat goes on

Monday, Sep 25, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

* The Tribune essentially endorsed Tony Peraica yesterday. After encouraging readers to watch the debate between the two men at a Trib endorsement session, the edit board writes:

After you see Stroger betray his lack of preparation on one huge county issue after another, after you see him repeatedly sidestep the urgent need to clean up and downsize this mismanaged mess, ask yourself: What more do we need? Do FBI agents have to button up our coats, hand us our mittens and drive us to the polls so we can demand decent government now? Are we so timid that we can’t take Cook County back from the ward bosses who rip us off? […]

As citizens, we can’t undo the making of a miserable county government. All we can do is decide who, if anyone, will now clean it up.

* Mark Brown did endorse him.

Have you had enough, yet? That’s Tony Peraica’s campaign slogan. He says he has been using it for a year and a half now. I probably didn’t pay much attention for the first year because I never would have expected to be in his corner. But you know what?

I’ve decided I have had enough. I’m voting for Peraica.

It’s not an easy fit. He’s a conservative Republican. I consider myself a liberal Democrat. […]

But we seem to have one important belief in common: the idea that Cook County government needs to be turned upside down and given a good shaking.

* Peraica launched his new TV ad yesterday.


Discuss.

  24 Comments      


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Monday, Sep 25, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Question of the day *** Updated x1 ***

Monday, Sep 25, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

Who will be the state’s top vote-getter this year? And with what percent?

*** UPDATE *** At least Stu Umholtz is realistic about his chances.

Umholtz, 47, of Pekin, admitted it would be an upset if he actually won. On a greater scale, he’s hoping this bid will win him the necessary name recognition for a run in 2010, when Madigan is rumored to run for governor.

  31 Comments      


Reform and Renewal roundup *** Updated x1 ***

Monday, Sep 25, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

* My statewide syndicated column poses a question right up front.

If you think Gov. Rod Blagojevich gets bad press now, imagine how harsh the coverage would be if we knew what he was hiding.

* Bernie Schoenburg covers the guv’s changing story about “the check.”

Once again, a governor who has to back up many of his promises with signed “memorandums of understanding” to get budget agreements, and who has a habit of making audiences laugh by telling them about a young girl who mistakes him for Chicago’s mayor - never telling the audiences that the story is fabricated and he considers it a joke - has a credibility problem.

We should be able to believe statements from the governor’s office. And, to be accurate, those statements should come from or be approved by the governor. But if he later contradicts a statement, does that mean he never approved it? And if he didn’t, who wrote it?

* Aaron Chambers writes about the governor’s disastrous press conference and puts it into perspective:

I’ll bet if you put Gov. Rod Blagojevich in an empty room by himself, he would come out with bruises.

He must be his own worst enemy. And each time he moves, he collides with himself.

The self-styled boxer is a one-man Fight Club. He throws a punch and it hits his face. He shuffles to avoid another and trips himself to the ground. […]

His performance in Chicago was so self-destructive that campaign workers for state Treasurer Judy Baar Topinka, the Republican trying to unseat him, posted footage of it on You Tube, the video-sharing Web site.

* Finke:

It’s expensive. It’s poorly run. It’s being shunned by its target audience. And it’s illegal.

Outside of that, Gov. ROD BLAGOJEVICH’s I-SaveRx drug program is something taxpayers can be proud of.

*** UPDATE *** I forgot to include Carol Marin’s column.

We need a voter guide to the November election. Not the glossy, colorful kind that civic groups and political parties hand out. We need a voter guide from the feds. We need to know before we go to the polls if, in fact, Gov. Blagojevich has a target on his back. […]

On Oct. 27, and then again on Nov. 1, Stuart Levine’s plea agreements will be made public in federal court. He’s the guy who was advising Cari on how to get pension business. […]

Looking for a voter guide for the coming election?

Consider Levine’s plea required reading.

  28 Comments      


Kass all but endorses Stufflebeam

Monday, Sep 25, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

I’m curious what you make of Kass’ latest column.

Stufflebeam. Stufflebeam of Illinois. Gov. Randall C. Stufflebeam.

Hmm. I endorse no one here, but there’s a musical quality to the name Stufflebeam. It’s melodiously attractive, and I think I know why.

Stufflebeam sounds nothing like Topinka or Blagojevich.

Stufflebeam, 46, of Belleville is a conservative write-in candidate for governor of Illinois. There are other write-ins, including one from the Green Party, but don’t they demand we ride bikes to work? I’d rather drive.

Go read the whole thing and then tell us what you think.

[Also, just to be clear, the Green Party is on the ballot this November. They’re not a write-in.]

  28 Comments      


Copley: 47-37-4-12 *** Updated x1 ***

Monday, Sep 25, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

Not a lot of surprises in the latest Copley poll. This is essentially the same result as every other poll except that goofy Sun-Times outlier.

Blagojevich’s support was strongest in Cook County, where 63 percent of respondents said they support him. He had 40 percent support in the traditionally Republican counties surrounding Cook and 36 percent through the rest of the state.

Topinka had her strongest showing in the counties around Cook with 49 percent. About 45 percent of downstate respondents said they support her, while she is the favored candidate of only 22 percent of Cook County voters.

Blagojevich also is more popular with women voters than Topinka. Blagojevich was preferred by 49 percent of female respondents and 45 percent of males. Topinka did better with men. The poll shows 39 percent of the male respondents support Topinka versus 35 percent of females.

Respondents who described themselves as independents - 27 percent of the survey sample - split almost evenly between the two candidates, with Blagojevich getting 36 percent to Topinka’s 38 percent.

* Meanwhile, Copley found that Alexi Giannoulias led Chris Radogno 38-26 with 35 percent undecided. Lisa Madigan was ahead of alleged candidate Stu Umholtz 64-22. Jesse White led Dan Rutherford 65-25. Dan Hynes showed just the slightest bit of weakness with his 51-22 lead over Carole Pankau.

* Copley also polled on ethics.

Asked whether they felt Topinka, the Republican state treasurer, has conducted herself ethically in office, 49 percent of registered voters polled last week replied that she has, while 25 percent said she has not.

By contrast, those polled were split evenly when asked if Topinka’s opponent in the Nov. 7 election, Democratic Gov. Rod Blagojevich, has been ethical - 41 percent said he has been, while another 41 percent said he has not.

The results indicate that “voters don’t have a lot of confidence in either candidate with respect to the ethical climate in Illinois,” said Robert Rich, director of the Institute of Government and Public Affairs at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. […]

When asked which candidate would do a better job of improving the ethical climate in state government, 37 percent of the respondents listed Blagojevich, while 34 percent named Topinka. Six percent favored Green Party candidate Rich Whitney, while 23 percent said that none would or that they didn’t know.

* School funding.

Asked if they thought public schools in Illinois are adequately funded, 61 percent said “no,” while only 30 percent said they think schools have enough money. Another 9 percent said they were not sure. […]

The poll asked voters if they would support an increase in the income or sales tax to boost state funding for schools “if it were paired with a partial, but not dollar for dollar, reduction of property taxes . . .” Statewide, 50 percent of respondents said they would support such an increase, while 38 percent were opposed. Another 12 percent were undecided. […]

Blagojevich has proposed selling the state lottery and using the proceeds to increase education funding. The Copley poll shows only 29 percent of respondents favor that idea, while 49 percent oppose it. Another 22 percent are undecided.

Topinka’s idea to put a casino in Chicago to generate additional gambling revenue for Illinois has more support, but still not from a majority of respondents. The poll shows that 46 percent of voters favor the casino idea, 40 percent oppose it and 14 percent are undecided. In Cook County, which includes Chicago, 53 percent support the casino and 38 percent oppose it. It is the only part of the state where more than half of the respondents supported a Chicago casino.

Voters also weren’t too thrilled with the idea of expanding the number of gaming positions at existing casinos, another part of Topinka’s plan. Only 35 percent of respondents said they support the idea, while 47 percent said they oppose it.

* Copley’s poll also found that most voters say they want the governor to live in Springfield.

A combined 63 percent of the respondents answered either “very important” or “somewhat important.” A combined 36 percent said the issue was either “not too important” or “not at all important.”

For whatever reason, Copley didn’t say how many voters thought the issue was just somewhat important, which might have undercut the story. Also, the Peoria Journal-Star gets the award for goofiest headline ever with its “Most voters say governor should live” entry on Sunday.

*** UPDATE *** I meant to put this into the original post and forgot. Topinka’s campaign statement, from a press release:

“At the mid-September point, this is the closest Governor’s race since 1990. Both poll results show Judy Baar Topinka has withstood the most massive assault of negative advertising in Illinois history and remains right on Rod Blagojevich’s heels,” said Topinka spokesman John McGovern.

  26 Comments      


Morning shorts

Monday, Sep 25, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Overtime payout shows understaffing in prisons

* “The Southern Illinois debate committee is no longer trying to facilitate a debate between Gov. Rod Blagojevich and challenger Judy Baar Topinka; however both campaigns have promised to continue negotiating a possible date to stage one in Southern Illinois.”

* Bennett: This debate needs to happen in Southern Illinois

* Steinberg: Maybe the good government phantasm is over. People vote their race, they vote their pocketbook, they vote for the guy with the best television commercial. We don’t seem to care about a little corruption or even a lot of corruption. We see that business is replete with back-scratching and assume government will be the same. Nobody seemed surprised that Henry Ford’s great-grandson, Bill Ford, was running the company, and not doing it well. Maybe the problem is that we journalists are taking our morality — like our fashion sense — from an out-of-date playbook. Maybe we make too big a deal out of this kind of thing.

* Washington: Are you wondering why Rod Blagojevich is riding high in the polls even as the federal investigations pile up? On Thursday 2,000 ladies lunched at the Hyatt Regency for the Chicago Foundation for Women’s annual benefit, and Blago was front and center. The governor made a big splash by doubling down on the foundation’s new anti-violence initiative. He made the surprise announcement that he was adding another million to a $1 million state grant spearheaded by state Sen. Carol Ronen. The money will support efforts to fight human trafficking, domestic violence, sexual assault, the sex trade and other forms of violence against women. The room went nuts.

* Madigan subpoenas hospital records

* Governor candidates tell how to improve area’s transportation. Gov. Blagojevich’s response. Treasurer Topinka’s response.

* “On the surface, Democratic Gov. Rod Blagojevich would seem to own the health-care issue as he runs for re-election.”

* Zorn: Where’s the old Pat Quinn?

* “Carterville High School is expected to receive within the next two weeks approximately $500,000 of the $1.9 million in funding promised earlier this month by Gov. Rod Blagojevich.”

* Campaigns provide valuable internships

  22 Comments      


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