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READER COMMENTS CLOSED FOR THE WEEKEND

Friday, Sep 22, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

Actually, you can continue to comment, but your sage ramblings won’t show up on the blog until Monday morning.

Meanwhile, our group blog Illinoize is in charge.

Below the Illinoize feed are the YouTube items we’ve been featuring today from the Governor’s Thursday press conference. I bumped them to the top at the request of a good pal.

Video 1 from Governor Blagojevich’s Thursday press availability:


Video 2 from the governor’s Thursday press availability:


Brief excerpt: Gov. Blagojevich has serious difficulty answering questions on “the check” …


Another brief excerpt: Gov. Blagojevich spars with the Chicago Tribune reporter who broke the “check” story in the first place …


Scroll down for lots more.

Also, I never did post what the Illinois Times wrote about the blog this week.

For those in the Land of Lincoln with a political sweet tooth, Miller’s blog is like a candy store, chockfull of tasty morsels of news from every corner of the state — with a few nuts sprinkled in. Arguably the most important site for Illinois political observers, the Capitol Fax blog is more of a news portal than traditional Web logs in which you mainly “hear” the site’s author. On “your Illinois news radar,” the voice of Capitol Fax publisher and Illinois Times columnist Rich Miller is but a faint blip. Miller is humble — during this spring’s gubernatorial primaries he turned down an invitation to predict the outcomes, saying that prognosticators set themselves up to look like fools — and for that reason we think Capitol Fax is a shoo-in for next year’s award, as well.

  1 Comment      


Debate outlines stark differences

Friday, Sep 22, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

It would be impossible to claim that these candidates are indistinguishable.

Sixth Congressional District candidates Peter Roskam and Tammy Duckworth disagreed on literally every issue during their first debate today.

Whether it was war, immigration, taxes, stem cells or Social Security, Republican state senator Roskam and Democratic Army veteran Tammy Duckworth had little common ground and weren’t afraid to mix it up, either.

“Neither one of us are the shy, retiring type,” said Hoffman Estates’ Duckworth during the debate co-sponsored by WBBM-AM radio and the Daily Herald.

Roskam took Duckworth to task for what he says is a “cut and run” strategy on Iraq of wanting to start bringing back U.S. troops as their Iraqi counterparts are trained. But Duckworth fired right back that Roskam essentially supports giving the Bush administration a blank check on the war.

  18 Comments      


Friday, Sep 22, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

I don’t often do these sorts of things, but a very special fundraiser will be held this Sunday evening at Foyd’s to honor the late Dr. Catherine Speedie.

You can click on the pic below for a larger image. I’ll be there and if you’re in Springfield I hope you will, too.

benefitfloyds

  Comments Off      


John G steps down

Friday, Sep 22, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

This development has been expected for a while now.

Long-time Rock Island County Democratic party leader John Gianulis will retire from his position in Gov. Rod Blagojevich’s administration to focus entirely on his duties with the county organization.

Mr. Gianulis, who was considered instrumental in electing Gov. Rod Blagojevich in 2002, informed the governor Monday that he would retire as deputy director of intergovernmental relations and personnel effective Sept. 30.

He said his retirement is not linked to a federal investigation of the governor’s administration. Mr. Gianulis was questioned by attorneys for the Illinois Inspector General earlier this year, before the investigation into Gov. Blagojevich’s hiring practices was taken over by the U.S. Attorney’s office in Chicago.

The grind of heading the county Democratic party and working in Springfield, and traveling between the Quad-Cities and the capital, was too much, he said.

I don’t doubt that. But resigning in the middle of a _storm will always raise more questions than can be answered.

Also, as a commenter just pointed out, the governor’s office didn’t comment on John G’s retirement.

The reason I highlighted that last point is because I had heard his retirement party is at the governor’s mansion.

…And here’s the statement from the guv’s office:

John began in state government in 1961, left in 1981 and returned in January 2003. He’s had a long career that he can be proud of and we wish him nothing but the best.

I’ll bet he does.

  25 Comments      


Brutal *** Updated x1 ***

Friday, Sep 22, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

As OneMan points out, the exchange beginning at 2:12 in video one is really something to see.

Reporter: Do you write that kind of check to anybody? Do you, yourself, give anybody $1500?

Governor: Over the years, yes I have.

Reporter: At one time, do you give someone, a seven or eight-year-old $1500?

Governor: You’re asking me to, to uh, you’re asking me a question have I, have I what?

Reporter: Have you yourself, you have said you exchanged gifts, do you yourself write a check to a friend, or a niece, nephew for $1500 when they’re seven or eight years old?

Just go see it. The dramatic pauses, the anger in the reporter’s voice, the silence from the other scribes as she interrogates the governor is a dramatic sight to behold.

[The clip below is only the above exchange.]


*** UPDATE *** Tribune reporter John Chase broke the infamous “check story” a couple of weeks ago. Go to 3:08 in video two and see a testy governor try to give Chase the brush-off by pointing out that Beverly Ascaridis claims the Trib fabricated and botched the story.

For those of you who don’t remember, Ascaridis released a statement after the Trib’s first Sunday edition hit the street claiming she was misquoted and never said some of the things that the Tribune reported. The Tribune stood by its story.

Chase breaks in as the governor was claiming the check probably came in an envelope for his other daughter’s christening, contrary to his original story.

Chase: This is a birthday gift for Amy right?

Governor: They’re gonna ask me questions. I want to answer questions.

Chase: I want to make sure…

Governor: She’s questioning your facts, so you should get your facts right. She has raised questions about your facts and your integrity.

Man, that’s a dangerous game to play. No way did Chase make up that story. No way.

As I wrote in this morning’s Capitol Fax, the Tribune should release the tape of the interview with Mrs. Ascaridis. Let’s get the cards on the table.

[The clip below is only the above exchange.]


  122 Comments      


Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Probes; 2 percent reserve; Geo; Judges; Syverson; Lake; Granberg; Target feed (Use all CAPS in password) *** Updated x1 ***

Friday, Sep 22, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

This post is password protected. To view it please enter your password below:

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Question of the day

Friday, Sep 22, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

How did you first get interested in politics?

  73 Comments      


Baksheesh

Friday, Sep 22, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

[Bumped up for discussion purposes.]

This Sun-Times story tracks nicely with my Sun-Times column. First the story

The feds are investigating two New York political fund-raising trips made by Gov. Blagojevich to see if East Coast donors were illegally nudged ahead in line for state business, sources told the Chicago Sun-Times.

This is the first indication the government is zeroing in on face-to-face discussions Blagojevich had with donors as it probes alleged corruption in his administration and the Teachers’ Retirement System of Illinois.

A source familiar with the investigation said the feds are looking at three law firms placed on a preferred list of outside lawyers that TRS could hire. The three firms have donated more than $120,000 to the governor, including donations that came at the New York events.

“They were admitted to a very exclusive club, and one case could make you millions,” the source said.

Read the whole thing. If this story is right, then the governor is in a lot more legal trouble than most people thought. Also, keep in mind that both of those New York trips were financed by Stu Levine, who is expected to plead guily about a week before the November election.

Now, a small excerpt from my column.

My wife is an Assyrian Christian born and raised in Iraq. Over there, they have a word for that check. “Baksheesh.” It’s more than a tip, but not quite a bribe.

  40 Comments      


Not a good day for the guv *** Updated x1 ***

Friday, Sep 22, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

Let’s see… where to begin? The beauty of covering Gov. Blagojevich is that there’s always something. Always.

The guv dissed the Tribune’s John Chase during his press conference yesterday and the Trib story piled it on high.

Gov. Rod Blagojevich acknowledged Thursday he helped get a state job for a friend whose husband wrote a $1,500 check to the governor’s daughter, but said it was “ludicrous” to suggest the job and gift were connected.

Blagojevich also offered a new, contradictory explanation for the check in his first detailed comments since the Tribune reported two weeks ago that the FBI is investigating the woman’s allegation that the gift may have come in return for her job. […]

“And (I) suggested to my chief of staff to see if he can find something that fits her qualifications,” Blagojevich said. “That’s all I know.”

I noticed last night when watching the full video that he didn’t say the word “I” when he talked about passing along her name to Lon Monk. Anyway, back to the story.

But on Thursday, the governor said he wasn’t sure what the money was for and suggested it could have been a christening present for his youngest child, Annie, who was born in April 2003.

The christening was in Springfield, and I believe if memory serves it was during the legislative session. So if the check was written in August or September (the guv mentioned September yesterday) then it wasn’t for a christening.. Memory did not serve. The christening was in August.

The Trib also has a separate story entitled “Key statements in controversy.”

Reporter: What account did the check go in?

Blagojevich: We disclose all of that. And the disclosures show that all of the kids’ money for college goes into a mutual fund for college.

The Tribune then tossed in an editorial for good measure, “Pay for play(time).”

Even if everyone accepts that the Ascaridises are so fond of the Blagojevich children that they wanted to give about two weeks of Beverly’s pay to the little ones, there are loads of other questions about this.

- The job was located in Whiteside County, 130 miles from the Ascaridis home in Chicago. But it was transferred to DuPage County shortly after Ascaridis got it. “I don’t even know where Whiteside County is,” Beverly Ascaridis told the Tribune. Who profited from that sleight of hand? The people of the state or the governor’s buddy?

- Did a military veteran lose out because of this deal? The state inspector general has reported that the Blagojevich administration has gotten around state rules that give hiring preference to veterans by hiring people in rural counties, where few veterans apply for jobs, and then moving the jobs elsewhere. (Whiteside County has about 60,000 people.)

- Why did Blagojevich file a 2003 ethics statement, then amend it in 2005 to include Michael and Beverly Ascaridis as having given gifts of more than $500?

And the Sun-Times editorial page jabbed the guv for yet another atrocious auditor general report.

If Gov. Blagojevich is counting on making his prescription drug program part of his re-election plank, he should reconsider. A report from Illinois Auditor General William Holland shows the drug program, as well as the governor’s efforts to buy flu shots in 2004, may not be anything to brag about. Both of the programs broke federal laws, the report concludes. Both had significant management lapses. Both failed to meet expectations. Neither is a good example of government at work.

The Ascaridis story and the ISaveRX stories are connected. On Wednesday, the governor defiantly vowed to continue violating federal drug importation laws. Yesterday, he claimed Topinka’s campaign was violating a minor state election law and said something to the effect of “it’s the law.”

I sometimes think that the man has no self-awareness at all.

*** UPDATE *** If you go to the 1:22 mark in video one, the governor says this:

“Now, let me be clear, the law is the law. The law, L-A-W, requires full disclosures on campaign finance reports.”

  19 Comments      


The full Monty

Friday, Sep 22, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

[Bumped up for discussion purposes.]

The Topinka campaign uploaded video to YouTube of the governor’s Thursday press conference. Part one is here. Part two is here.

In watching the videos, I think the lesson here is never leave the impression with Chicago political reporters that you’re ignoring them, disrespecting them or dodging them. Only Daley can get away with that.

While we’re talking about raw video, the complete debate at the Tribune Towers between Todd Stroger and Tony Peraica can be found here

  30 Comments      


Raid details emerge

Friday, Sep 22, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

First the city, then the state and then Cook County. Most of Illinois is now under federal receivership.

Let’s start with the Sun-Times:

FBI agents raided at least seven Cook County offices Thursday morning looking for evidence that officials were illegally doctoring tests or otherwise cheating to give government jobs and promotions to politically connected applicants. […]

FBI agents also appeared at Stroger Hospital, Oak Forest Hospital, the downtown Cook County Forest Preserve offices, Provident Hospital, Cermak Hospital and the Cook County Juvenile Detention Center to serve subpoenas for records.

The subpoena served on the Forest Preserve District requested information on employees whose hires were supposed to be free from political influence, said spokesman Steve Mayberry.

County attorney Laura Lechowicz Felicione said the other subpoenas and the search warrant served on the Human Resources Department sought the same information, though she refused to provide copies.

And the Tribune:

The investigation, quietly under way since late last year, burst dramatically into public view Thursday morning. The flurry of activity indicated that federal prosecutors are now taking a hard look at clout and hiring in Cook County, even as they are investigating state hiring by the Blagojevich administration and city hiring by the Daley administration.
[…]

The subpoenas seek documents related to “non-exempt” jobs, Steele said. Under a court order known as the Shakman decree, those positions are supposed to be filled on the basis of qualifications, not political influence.

  11 Comments      


Morning shorts

Friday, Sep 22, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

* “The Illinois Department of Transportation’s claim that cost overruns on a Chicago expressway won’t hurt downstate projects is being met with skepticism.”

* “Rep. Jesse Jackson Jr. (D-Ill.), a potential mayoral candidate, on Thursday called the plan to build an Olympic stadium in Washington Park a political ploy, criticizing Mayor Richard Daley for what he said has been Daley’s long wait to help the South Side.”

* Krol: Voters will judge these episodes from Roskam’s past

* “While they say they support a locally pitched plan to give high school students more time to meet state testing standards, Illinois State Board of Education members don’t have the funding for it.”

* “A pair of forums involving the two hopefuls in the 10th Congressional District are set, but only one will be open to the public.”

* A walk down memory lane: “When Illinois’ new Republican Governor,Richard Ogilvie, went to Wrigley Field last week for the Chicago Cubs’ opening game, some brisk applause greeted him. ‘If I’d showed up there a week earlier,’ he observed, ‘they’d probably have thrown beer cans at me.’”

* Most labor leaders back Blagojevich

* A campaign contributor explains why he gives.

* “Lake County Clerk Willard Helander said incorrectly worded tax-rate increase questions will remain on the Nov. 7 ballot, despite calls for their removal.”

  1 Comment      


« NEWER POSTS PREVIOUS POSTS »
* Reader comments closed for the weekend
* Republicans denied TRO in bid to be appointed to ballot
* Isabel’s afternoon roundup
* It’s almost a law
* Credit Unions: A Smart Financial Choice for Illinois Consumers
* Was the CTU lobby day over-hyped?
* 'Re-renters' tax in the budget mix?
* It’s just a bill
* Open thread
* Isabel’s morning briefing
* Get The Facts On The Illinois Prescription Drug Board
* SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today's edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)
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