This just in…
Wednesday, Jul 11, 2007 - Posted by Rich Miller
* 3:53 pm - Rep. Harry Ostermqn just said he will not be calling Sen Kotowski’s SB1007 until he has the votes.
Gov Blagojevich has called a special sessiob today to take up the bill. The measure would require 71 votes to pass unless the effectice date is changed.
But Osterman pointed out that changing the effective date so that it would require only 60 votes means that it won’t take effect until next June, so there is no need to rush.
Osterman also said that the top priority of the Legislature now should be the budget.
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Question of the day
Wednesday, Jul 11, 2007 - Posted by Rich Miller
Last Saturday, I asked you what you thought Speaker Madigan’s “end game” was.
Today, I want to know what you think Governor Blagojevich’s “end game” is. In other words, what are his ultimate goals this session?
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The “new” gambit
Wednesday, Jul 11, 2007 - Posted by Rich Miller
* So, what’s this all about?
Blagojevich also suggested cutting Republicans out of the budget-making process by delaying the effective date of his proposals to provide near-universal health insurance and to dramatically increase education funding. By pushing back the effective date to June 1, 2008, legislation on those issues would need a simple majority to pass, rather than a three-fifths’ majority. Democrats control the House and Senate and, in theory, would be able to pass that legislation without any help from Republicans.
* Bethany Carson fleshes it out a bit more…
Sen. Carol Ronen, a Chicago Democrat and Blagojevich point person in her chamber, stood with the governor after the meeting and said Republicans wouldn’t be needed because a simple majority of Democrats could enact new revenue ideas that would make money available just in time for the programs to start in 2008.
But that assumes at least 30 Democrats in the Senate and 60 Democrats in the House would support anywhere from $1 billion to $3 billion in new revenue. That’s not guaranteed.
It’s “not guaranteed” because the Senate has yet to pass any item on the governor’s agenda except the casino bill, which has zero chance of attaining even a 60-vote majority in the House for various reasons.
Until the Senate stands up and does something, this is an empty gesture, designed solely to put Madigan on the spot. I’ll have a bit more on this in the subscriber-only section later this morning.
More somewhat related stuff, compiled by Paul…
* Blagojevich: Madigan is sole obstacle to spending increase
* Thorny questions distract governor
* Sen. Lauzen: C’mon gov, cut the nonsense, make a deal
* Rep. Lang: County Club Hills will win right to contend for casino
* Governor may take trip to India
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The ethics game
Wednesday, Jul 11, 2007 - Posted by Rich Miller
* The pressure is increasing on Senate President Emil Jones to “do something” about not only allegations of improprieties about himself, but also about the ethics situation in the state…
[Jones’ relatives] have been the beneficiaries of a ton of financial good fortune in the last few years, thanks in no small measure to the taxpayers of Illinois. That includes his wife, Dr. Lorrie Jones, who in 2005 was promoted by the Blagojevich administration to state mental health chief and given a $70,000 raise, taking her annual salary to $186,000. It includes his son Emil III, who recently got a new state job and salary bump from the state Commerce Department, and is now making $57,360. And most prominently of all, it includes Jones’ stepson, John Sterling, who has gotten tens of millions of dollars in city, county and state computer technology contracts.
It was just this week that WMAQ-Channel 5 and the Sun-Times discovered an additional $11 million in contracts and subcontracts given to Sterling through city, county and state governments. That’s in addition to the $45 million no-bid deal he received from City Colleges. And in addition to an additional $55 million he had already been paid by City Colleges. […]
State Sen. James Meeks, a fellow Chicago Democrat, suggests a different approach, telling McKinney on Monday, “If I was him, I’d ask all of them, ‘Who’s doing business?’ ” Meeks went on to say, “For the legislative leaders to not want to face these stories or deal with hints of impropriety, they can handle it in one of two ways. They can disclose all of the business their family members have, or they can choose not to know anything about business their families have. If they choose not to know, when stories come out, there are people who won’t believe them. And it’s their choice.” […]
In response to our most recent report, Jones told the Sun-Times he might soften his stance in opposition to legislation that would put the names of subcontractors on the Internet. That bill, sponsored by a Republican, Sen. Christine Radogno of Lemont, has been deader than a doornail, locked up in the Rules Committee, which the Senate president controls. But late Tuesday, it sure looked like Jones would try instead to pull a legislative end run, tacking a thus far unseen “ethics” amendment on another bill instead.
* That “end run” is most likely connected to Rep. Fritchey’s ethics bill, which received some more attention yesterday….
Rep. John Fritchey, D-Chicago, said the governor should call a special session about ethics legislation that Fritchey sponsored earlier this year. House Bill 1 is meant to end “pay-to-play politics” in Illinois by banning campaign contributions from most state contractors.
The measure sailed through the House on a 116-0 vote in April but never emerged from the Senate Rules Committee, which is the first stop for all bills that reach the Senate.
“Governor, you and you alone have the power to put years of public cynicism and distrust in state government to rest in a matter of minutes,” Fritchey said on the House floor. “You now have the opportunity to send one of two messages to the people of Illinois: You can call a special session on House Bill 1 and help restore public confidence in state government, or you could do nothing and tell them to expect more business as usual.”
The idea might be for the Senate to pass its own ethics bill, which would specifically be designed to be unacceptable to the House. It’s the usual game.
* By the way, one aspect of Fritchey’s call for a special session that was ignored yesterday was Comptroller Dan Hynes’ support of the idea. From a Fritchey press release…
State Comptroller Dan Hynes, who initiated the legislation, has joined in the calling for the special session, stating, “This overtime session provides us with an opportunity to do something we should have done long ago, to end pay-to-play politics and to help restore confidence in our elected officials.”
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Gun day
Wednesday, Jul 11, 2007 - Posted by Rich Miller
* Today is supposed to be “Gun Day” at the Illinois Statehouse. The governor has called a special session (Number 8, if you’re keeping track) on Sen. Dan Kotowski’s SB 1007 “as well as the impact of assault weapon violence on the State’s health care expenditures and general fiscal health.” Download it here.
As I’ve told you before, this is all a bunch of hype. The bill doesn’t have enough votes to pass the House, but Blagojevich wants to use the special session to further paint Speaker Michael Madigan as a “right wing Republican.”
Fortunately, most reporters have seen through this, including the Tribune’s editorial board…
Even when Rod Blagojevich is right, he’s wrong.
Blagojevich held a press conference Monday to push for a state bill that would ban the sale and possession of firearm magazines that hold more than 10 rounds of ammunition. It’s a good bill. This page supported it back in May.
The governor’s news conference, though, looked to all the world like a stunt. As did his proclamation Tuesday calling a special session of the legislature Wednesday to hear the gun bill.
Go read the whole thing.
* More, from the Post-Dispatch…
Lawmakers on both sides of the gun-control issue immediately dismissed the order as a diversionary tactic to draw attention away from Blagojevich’s failure to forge an agreement on a state budget almost two weeks into the new fiscal year.
“We should be focused on the budget right now. That’s the priority of this state, every member of the House and the Senate,” said state Rep. Harry Osterman, D-Chicago, the sponsor of the measure that prompted Blagojevich’s call for today’s special session. The legislation would ban high-capacity ammunition clips.
The gun bill passed the Senate earlier this year. But Osterman said he knows he doesn’t have enough votes in the House to pass it, and so doesn’t plan to call it for a vote today. Asked why the Legislature should convene in special session to discuss it, he said: “Talk to the governor.”
* And this is a good point that legislators need to keep repeating because I, too, wonder whether the governor will force a government shutdown and blame it on Madigan and his “right wing Republican” allies…
“It makes you wonder if he’s attempting to throw this into a government shutdown so he can attempt to demonize people even more,” said state Rep. Roger Eddy, R-Hutsonville. “If he keeps this up and we have a government shutdown, there will be one person responsible, and it’s the person who didn’t keep the focus.”
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Chill, please
Wednesday, Jul 11, 2007 - Posted by Rich Miller
* Yet another editorial board puts Gov. Blagojevich on the psychiatrist’s couch…
Rod Blagojevich is going bonkers. That’s one explanation for the often counterproductive, sometimes bizarro behavior that’s been coming out of the governor’s office for months now. […]
Maybe Blagojevich just has a severe case of attention deficit disorder. Maybe he bores easily. Maybe he craves conflict to keep the creative juices flowing. Whatever, it’s not working. What’s that they say about doing the same thing repeatedly while expecting a different result?
Look, the governor is not insane. Detached from some harsh political realities? Perhaps. Too eager for a fight? Definitely. But not insane.
* And then we have stuff like this…
Tensions are high in Springfield, and a suburban lawmaker got caught up in it Tuesday when she called Democratic Gov. Rod Blagojevich a “blithering idiot.”
Longtime Republican state Rep. Rosemary Mulligan of Des Plaines said she forgot to put her hand over her House desk microphone and accidentally uttered the put-down meant only for a staff member’s ears.
“It was my fault. I shouldn’t have said it,” Mulligan told the Daily Herald.
But she didn’t exactly back away from the remark either.
“Do I think he’s a blithering idiot? Yeah. Do I think he knows anything about the budget? No,” Mulligan said. “It really is demeaning to be down here with this guy because he does things that make you lose your cool.”
Yes, he certainly “does things that make you lose your cool,” as Rep. Mulligan noted. But falling for it means you’re playing his game.
Calling him insane, or demanding his impeachment is far goofier than anything he’s said so far this year. Everyone needs to cool out a bit.
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Congressional stuff
Wednesday, Jul 11, 2007 - Posted by Rich Miller
* Congressman Ray LaHood has finally accepted reality…
U.S. Rep. Ray LaHood is not going to apply for the Bradley University presidential post and will seek an eighth term in Congress instead.
“People like the job I’m doing,” he said Tuesday, explaining his decision. “They like to have me as their congressman . . . People like the job I’m doing. That’s certainly some of the feedback I got.”
LaHood released a short statement outlining his decision just shy of one week after the Journal Star ran a story in which sources familiar with Bradley’s presidential search indicated that finalists were being interviewed, and LaHood was not one of them.
“I have based this decision on the information I have heard from these community leaders and people familiar with the search process,” the statement read. “I have not based this decision on media reports regarding the search nor on reports of potential finalists for the job.”
Yeah. OK.
* Money report from the 10th CD…
[GOP Congressman Mark Kirk] will report raising $616,000 from April through June, likely one of the highest totals in the nation. The four-term lawmaker from Highland Park had $1.1 million on hand to start the month.
On the Democratic side, newcomer Jay Footlik is showing off early fund-raising prowess. His campaign told the Daily Herald on Monday that he’s raised $286,000 in the four weeks he’s been in the race, nearly all of it in June. He had about $270,000 on hand.
Footlik, who recently moved back to the district in Vernon Hills, is taking on Wilmette’s Dan Seals in the Feb. 5 Democratic primary. Seals came within about 5 percentage points of upsetting Kirk last November. His campaign manager said Monday that Seals had $264,808 on hand after raising $250,073 this spring.
* I have a couple of more results from that poll I told you about yesterday in Denny Hastert’s district.
The initial head-to-head results between Hastert and Democrat Bill Foster were 53-26. But after several postive “push” questions about Foster, the poll has him leading Hastert 43-40. Take it for what you will.
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Morning Shorts
Wednesday, Jul 11, 2007 - Posted by Paul Richardson
* Illinoize: Rod Blagojevich facts
* Excerpts from recent Illinois editorials
* Simpsons’ fans nix Illinois’ capital idea; more here and here
* Animal Farm: Clinton catches Obama in Illinois?
* Tribune Editorial: A report card for health care
Illinois is moving on a long-mulled effort to create a report card for hospitals. Officials here can look to the Pennsylvania report for a primer on how to do it right. You don’t have to paw through stacks of arcane figures or undertake an extended safari into the darkest corners of some obscure Web site. It’s all there in plain English. If people need help understanding it, they can ask their doctor or their insurance rep to help interpret the results. The basic aim: To help people make smart, cost-conscious choices when it comes to medical care so that they’re not spending money for nothing.
* President White: U of I provides foundation for the whole state
* Prosecutors get talk, not raises; more here
* Outsider to run Cook Co. juvy center?
* Stroger hints at possible county tax increase; more here
* Chicago top cop must ’shake up’ the status quo
“This administration continues to want to move police officers around after the murders happen. We need to prevent crime — not react to it,” said Ald. Ricardo Munoz (22nd), pointing to the 25 Chicago Public School students gunned down this year.
“This administration has been unwilling to even talk about beat deployment. … We need somebody who will at least talk about. It has to be someone who’s willing to take on the administration.”
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