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This just in… Burris will be seated

Monday, Jan 12, 2009 - Posted by Rich Miller

* 3:47 PM - No surprise

Senate Democratic leaders today cleared the way for Roland Burris to be seated as a senator from Illinois, after more than a weeklong spectacle surrounding the state’s corruption scandal and the questioning of Mr. Burris’s credentials.

After Mr. Burris’s lawyers hand-carried an additional document bearing a state seal, a statement attesting to the appointment and a mass-produced signature of the secretary of State, Jesse White, along with the governor’s original papers, Senate leaders Harry Reid and Dick Durbin bestowed the senator-designate title on him in a joint release:

The Secretary of the Senate has determined that the new credentials presented today on behalf of Mr. Burris now satisfy Senate Rules and validate his appointment to the vacant Illinois Senate seat. In addition, as we requested, Mr. Burris has provided sworn testimony before the Illinois House Committee on Impeachment regarding the circumstances of his appointment.

“We have spoken to Mr. Burris to let him know that he is now the Senator-designate from Illinois and as such, will be accorded all the rights and privileges of a Senator-elect.

“Accordingly, barring objections from Senate Republicans, we expect Senator-designee Burris to be sworn in and formally seated later this week. We are working with him and the office of the Vice President to determine the date and time of the swearing-in.

“As we had outlined to Mr. Burris, a path needed to be followed that respects the rules of the Senate. We committed to Mr. Burris that once those requirements were satisfied, we would be able to proceed. We are pleased that everything is now in order, we congratulate Senator-designee Burris on his appointment and we look forward to working with him in the 111th Congress.”

  74 Comments      


Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Impeachment guide; Madigan/Cross; Osterman; Jackson; Davis; Capital bill (use all caps in password)

Monday, Jan 12, 2009 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Question of the day

Monday, Jan 12, 2009 - Posted by Rich Miller

* What is your biggest fear and your biggest hope about a likely Pat Quinn governorship? Explain fully, and please answer both parts of this question. Thanks.

  76 Comments      


May be only a matter of time before Burris is seated

Monday, Jan 12, 2009 - Posted by Rich Miller

* You had to figure this was gonna happen sooner or later. Turns out, it’s sooner

U.S. Sen. Dick Durbin (D-Ill.) said Sunday it was likely that former Illinois Atty. Gen. Roland Burris would be seated as the state’s newest senator this week after a legal review of new paperwork regarding the Senate appointment.

The review Monday by Senate legal counsel marks the latest twist in the on-again, off-again seating of Burris, who was appointed by Gov. Rod Blagojevich three weeks after the now-impeached Illinois governor was arrested on federal corruption charges that include allegations he attempted to sell the Senate seat vacated by President-elect Barack Obama. While it appeared the Senate was closer Sunday to seating Burris, there are potential hitches.

Senate Democrats spent about 30 minutes discussing Burris’ situation in a closed-door meeting Sunday that resulted in Obama’s chief economic adviser, Larry Summers, cooling his heels in a Senate hallway waiting to discuss the president-elect’s economic recovery package.

“This thing changes by the day,” Durbin said, explaining why he and his colleagues spent such a long time discussing the matter.

* This sort of thing won’t help Burris’ chances in 2010

Just days after Gov. Rod Blagojevich accepted his party’s nod for re-election in 2006, a letter arrived at state Treasurer Judy Baar Topinka’s office seeking thousands of pages of documents Blagojevich could use as ammunition against her in their upcoming campaign.

The letter was signed by Roland Burris.

It was one of several requests Burris made to the treasurer’s office in 2006, a campaign practice known as opposition research in which candidates use public documents to question their opponents’ records.

* Did you happen to catch SNL? I didn’t, either, but here’s the Burris clip…


* Related…

* Commentary: Issue is Blagojevich, not Burris

* Durbin: Legal Maneuver may Get Burris Into Senate

* Burris may breeze into Senate

* Senate aide: New development ‘could’ allow Burris seating

* Would-be senator offers 1st glimpse of his agenda

* Durbin hopes deal near on seating Burris in Senate

* Burris to stay in Chicago as attys head to D.C.

* Burris Lawyers Back in Washington

* Race politics in the past? Not quite yet

* Burris’ tombstone already completed, listing his accomplishments

* Wayne and Garth, meet Rod and Roland

  46 Comments      


Man up and go away

Monday, Jan 12, 2009 - Posted by Rich Miller

* My syndicated newspaper column

Gov. Rod Blagojevich was pure defiance last week after the House voted 114 to 1 to impeach him.

Blagojevich said he expected the impeachment because the House has been fighting him tooth and nail ever since he was re-elected in 2006. A statement his office released a day earlier predicted smoother sailing in the Senate.

“It was a foregone conclusion,” the governor said about the impeachment.

“When the case moves to the Senate, an actual judge will preside over the hearings, and the governor believes the outcome will be much different,” his office’s official statement read.

The outcome of last week’s impeachment vote was, indeed, a “foregone conclusion.” But not because the proceedings were based on a purely political war, as the governor claimed, but because of the depth and breadth of the governor’s own official malfeasance. This has been coming for a very long time, and the governor knows it. I’m not the only one who warned him what could happen if he didn’t straighten out his act.

And the man is delusional if he truly believes the outcome will be any different in the Senate. There will be an “actual judge” presiding during his trial, and he will have a few more rights than he did during the impeachment process. But if the governor really thinks he can find the 20 senators he’ll need to block his removal from office next month, then he should be locked in a rubber room.

Voting to spare Blagojevich from the fate he so richly deserves would be an inexcusable, unforgivable mega-sin with consequences that nobody ever could escape.

Blagojevich’s statements essentially were reruns of everything we’ve heard from him for the past six years. The House is to blame for all the world’s ills. The Senate will save him. He is an heroic figure who did nothing wrong.

The House was never the real problem. House Speaker Michael Madigan has battled with every governor he’s served with, but he always found a way to cut a deal at the end of the day - until Blagojevich came along. Madigan, in fact, appears awfully darn prescient now.

And governor, I’ve got news for you: Senate President Emil Jones is retiring this week. Your comrade in arms will not be around to save your neck when your Senate trial begins as he has done so many times in the past.

And that presiding judge? The Senate will be able to override all of his decisions. Plus, Illinois Supreme Court Chief Justice Thomas Fitzgerald was a criminal courts judge for decades. He knows a crook when he sees one.

You really have to wonder what the governor is thinking here. Come February when he’s removed from office, all those hoops the U.S. Attorney must navigate when attempting to investigate and indict a sitting governor will disappear. No longer will Patrick Fitzgerald have to check in with Washington, D.C., whenever he wants to make a move against Blagojevich because the governor will be a private citizen by then.

If Blagojevich thinks he’s being manhandled by Fitzgerald now, just wait until Fitz’s restraints are removed.

Also, when elected officials offer to plead guilty and resign their offices, the U.S. attorney has to take that into consideration.

Any leverage Blagojevich might have to reduce his sentence to a length that will allow him to serve at a halfway decent minimum security prison will undoubtedly vanish if he’s removed from office before he cops a plea.

Frankly, conviction is almost as certain as the governor’s removal. Former Gov. George Ryan is serving essentially a life sentence for some dinky little crimes in comparison to this governor’s alleged lawlessness. Plus, the feds didn’t have thousands of surveillance tapes on George like they do with Rod. As Hawk Harrelson would say: “He gone.”

Then there’s Patti Blagojevich, who is likely behind Fitzgerald’s “Door Number Two.” Offering to resign now and throwing himself at the mercy of the system might spare the governor’s wife from imprisonment.

Does Rod Blagojevich really want his much-hated father-in-law Dick Mell to raise his children?

Cut your best deal and resign, governor. Spare the state and your family from this tragicomic circus. Man up and go away.

* Three cheers for the Sun-Times

One of the charges the governor faces involves his stalling $8 million in funding for children’s specialty doctors across the state. The reason for the delay, according to prosecutors: to try to squeeze a $50,000 contribution from Patrick Magoon, chief executive officer of Children’s Memorial Hospital, which led efforts to get that funding.

Now — even in the wake of his Dec. 9 arrest — Blagojevich hasn’t lifted the virtual brick he placed on the $8 million prosecutors say his administration dangled in front of Magoon to get him to give to the governor’s campaign fund. And the anger the governor is facing for that appears to be growing.

* More revelations

Michael Vondra — construction magnate and asphalt kingpin — is working on a new business deal with BP, the gasoline behemoth. And he wanted Gov. Blagojevich to help him out with state environmental regulators.

Vondra and the governor talked about the deal last Oct. 6 in the governor’s North Side campaign office — not knowing federal agents were eavesdropping.

Afterward, Blagojevich decided to hit Vondra up for money — $100,000 to be raised before the state’s new campaign-finance rules kicked in the first of this year.

These allegations are part of the criminal complaint against Blagojevich, but they’ve drawn little attention because federal authorities concealed Vondra’s identity in court records.

* And, finally, ignore this fear-mongering

Senate planners hope that the trial will begin Jan. 26, and Cullerton pointed to the Clinton trial lasting three weeks as a potential length of Blagojevich’s day in political court. A source familiar with the situation said that might be too ambitious a start date. Blagojevich’s defense team may ask for weeks or months to prepare, and all of the prosecution and defense witnesses could stretch the trial out longer, the source said.

That’s just wrong. Subscribe to find out why.

* Related…

* Some state legislators and healthcare advocates have started pressing scandal-plagued Gov. Rod Blagojevich to immediately release $8 million in state reimbursements for children’s specialty doctors that he allegedly used to seek a campaign contribution.

* Madigan: Bill wouldn’t have stopped Blagojevich

* Analysis: Blagojevich faces tough trial in Senate

* Daley: Impeachment a ’sad day’ in Illinois

* Schoenburg: Governor’s absence from Capitol part of ‘totality’

* Blagojevich frames impeachment as him against the House

* Blagojevich to swear in Senate, then members start his trial

* How Will Blagojevich Defend Himself in Court?

* Blago on One of His Favorite Presidents: Richard Nixon

* Gov. Rod Blagojevich can even embarrass Cubs: If a huge Cubs fan holds the highest public office in the state, then there’s a decent chance it’s going to end in spectacularly bad fashion.

* Quotations of Gov. Blagojevich

* Conrad Black: Chicago’s Torquemada claims another victim

* In trial of gov, Senate must put fairness first

* Tribune editorial: That Durbin ‘election’

  29 Comments      


No slating in the 5th

Monday, Jan 12, 2009 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Despite what some had predicted, the 5th Congressional District special election will not feature a slated candidate

None of the five candidates seeking to succeed former Congressman Rahm Emanuel could muster a majority of support at a Democratic slating meeting [Saturday]. That meas the March 3 primary will be an open one with no party endorsed candidate. State Rep. John Fritchey (D-Chicago) came closest, but could not quite reach the 50 percent (plus one) benchmark.

* Details

Ald. Patrick O’Connor (40th), Mayor Daley’s unofficial floor leader, had said as late as Friday night that he had close to enough votes to wrap up the endorsement, and he had pleaded with his fellow committeemen not to “shirk their responsibility” by declaring an “open primary.” That’s what backers of State Rep. John Fritchey, D-Chicago, had sought .

Luckily for O’Connor, they did not grant his wish because when the votes came in, Fritchey got about three times as many as O’Connor, though not enough to hit the 50 percent-plus-1 mark. […]

Fritchey got 61,529 of the 62,883-plus-1 votes it would have taken to be slated. O’Connor got a mere 22,901. Committeemen backing an open primary cast another 41,341 votes. […]

Questions emerged after the slating about whether Mell offered to give Schulter increased say in Fritchey’s state house replacement if he would back Fritchey, whose district is partially in Schulter’s ward. Schulter denied cutting a deal to get another one of his guys a statehouse seat, saying he already has a good state rep, Greg Harris, who represents the other half of hs ward.

* This isn’t quite true…

State Sen. James DeLeo (D-Chicago) quickly called for the endorsement session, ostensibly to try to winnow a growing field of candidates.

The endorsement session was called when it was because they wanted to do it before the candidate filing period began today. Some wanted to “winnow” the field, but others didn’t.

* And I just don’t see O’Connor working very hard if he does stay in, knowing his background as I do…

O’Connor vowed to continue his campaign despite the setback and the public neutrality of Mayor Richard Daley, whose backing he also has sought.

* Related…

* No candidate endorsed to replace Emanuel

* Dems won’t slate candidate in Emanuel seat primary

* Tom Geoghegan: Why I’m running

* Dr. Victor Forys Responds to Attacks by Career Springfield Politician

  46 Comments      


Caption contest!

Monday, Jan 12, 2009 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Keep it clean, please…

  110 Comments      


Morning Shorts

Monday, Jan 12, 2009 - Posted by Mike Murray

* Collins on Quinn

One thing I will say about (Lt. Gov.) Pat Quinn , from a distance, is, he’s a lousy campaign fundraiser. And that..gives me some sense of respect for him…..former U.S. Atty. Patrick Collins on “Chicago Tonight,” 1-7-09

* Bill Foster, salaries, and food banks plus Sunday Shorts

* Opinion: Inspector general law ripe for reform

* IDOT move not immediately affected

Area lawmakers said the Illinois House vote to impeach Gov. Rod Blagojevich will have no effect on the state’s plans to move 150 traffic safety jobs to southern Illinois.

* Why the Mayor Is Mad

Mayor Daley is spitting mad. Furious over Chicago Sun-Times/NBC5 News reports on a clout-heavy deal to buy site of the venerable Chicago Christian Industrial League, relocate the charity’s homeless shelter and replace it with pricey condos. As a tragic consequence, a century-old mission may now go bankrupt at a time when its services are needed most.

I’d argue that taxpayers should be raining down wrath on City Hall instead, but you be the judge.

* 25 schools set for shakeup

* City wants its money back

* Parking meters that take coins are on the way out in Chicago

With rates increasing, high-tech upgrades coming as private firm replaces old pole-mounted meters

* Hey, seniors: Sign up for those free rides

* Pain at the pumps, part two

* ComEd powers up its fleet of cars

* Safety council: Ban cell phones while driving

* Preserve Health Coverage for Illinois’ Working Families

* Illinois Poverty News Weekly

* Mike North’s new direction

  2 Comments      


Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today’s edition of Capitol Fax

Monday, Jan 12, 2009 - Posted by Rich Miller

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