Cue Lisa Madigan
Thursday, Jun 10, 2010 - Posted by Rich Miller
* Gov. Quinn said today that he won’t veto the state budget…
Quinn’s apparent intention to sign the budget comes after Rep. Jack Franks, D-Marengo, called for Quinn to reject the spending plan lawmakers approved last month. Franks voted against the budget and has said lawmakers should return to Springfield and come up with a comprehensive solution.
“We’re not going to do that,” Quinn said of Franks’ veto request.
Quinn added that it’s clear lawmakers have no desire to make tough choices when it comes to the state’s money situation.
“Members of the General Assembly don’t want to make any cuts, they don’t want to do anything about revenue,” Quinn said. “They basically have decided that only the governor can make those decisions and we’re going to have to do it for them. I’m disappointed in them, I think they’ve in many cases avoiding doing what they should do, but it’s time to act.”
When he does so, the attorney general ought to step in because this budget is so blatantly unbalanced that even Speaker Madigan flatly admitted it.
* The governor also called on the Senate President today to pass the pension borrowing bill without Republican votes. Apparently, the governor is having no luck persuading any Republicans to go along. That’s strange. Check out his comments from just two days ago…
The governor says he thinks he has lined up “three or four” Republicans to vote for it, but he didn’t name names.
If he had that many GOP votes, Cullerton would call the Senate back in a flash.
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In which I disagree
Thursday, Jun 10, 2010 - Posted by Rich Miller
* When your original budget is based on more than a billion dollars in cuts to education, you shouldn’t be surprised when you get called on it…
A mother of three angrily confronted Gov. Pat Quinn following an afternoon news conference, accusing him of not doing enough to stop teacher layoffs and prevent classroom sizes from growing.
Quinn was greeting children at John H. Kinzie Elementary School on the city’s South Side when he was approached by Diane Sajdak, who volunteers at the school her three children attend. Sajdak shouted at Quinn, telling him budget cuts could force the school to layoff more than a dozen teachers and inflate class sizes to the point where children won’t adequately learn.
“You’re not doing a good job,” Sajdak yelled. “We’re getting rid of 14 of our teachers, we’ve got 42 kids in a class, that’s ridiculous! How are they going to learn?”
Quinn appeared flustered by the confrontation, responding, “that’s not me.”
Yes, it is you, governor.
* Congressman Peter Roskam told Fox Business’ Stuart Varney yesterday that Illinois had a $500 million bill backlog two years ago and now it’s over $5 billion. That’s pretty much true. But check out the graph below. Fiscal Year 2008 is in purple and Fiscal Year 2009, which began in July of 2008, is in green. The original document from the comptroller’s office is here, and click the pic for a larger image…
Notice that as the economy crashed during the summer, fall and winter of 2008, the state’s unpaid balances also crashed. The unpaid balances eased substantially that December because the state took out a cash-flow loan.
* I’ve never met him, but I’ve been a fan of James Krohe, Jr. for years. The guy knows how to turn a phrase, but he’s way off on the Stratton Building’s serious problems…
Several rationales have been offered for this curious priority. Rep. Rich Brauer, the Petersburg Republican, told the SJ-R that the building is “just way past its prime.” True, the Stratton at 56 years is old before its time. But the Illinois Statehouse is 80 years older than that, and in the pink. Buildings can live happily for decades past their primes if well-tended. The Stratton’s problems – single-pane windows with failing gaskets, inadequate insulation and fireproofing and poor lighting – are common in structures its age. The only reason they are life-threatening to this one is that the State of Illinois is as incompetent a landlord as it is a teacher or investment fund manager.
You can’t change a recessed lightbulb in that building without a hazmat team. The ceilings are full of asbestos. That, itself, is enough of a hazard to warrant massive repairs or knocking it down.
* I wouldn’t bet on this…
[Mark Kirk and Alexi Giannoulias] are running out of things to criticize about each other, but they still have five months to go
There’s more out there. Bet on it.
* Until I see the polling data myself, I wouldn’t bet on this, either…
Democrats maintain voters won’t associate Quinn, who was lieutenant governor to Blagojevich, with his flamboyant predecessor.
“When the Blagojevich scandal broke, the very first thing out of Pat Quinn’s mouth was, ‘I have not spoken to this guy in over a year,’” Nathan Daschle, executive director of the Democratic Governors Association (DGA), said on a conference call Wednesday. “There is no real relationship between Blagojevich and Pat Quinn.”
Daschle said the DGA’s polling confirms that assumption. “The trial is not going to hurt Pat Quinn,” he said.
* Perhaps if he wasn’t reportedly hiring winos and junkies to circulate his petitions, Scott Lee Cohen wouldn’t be complaining now.
The Forrest Claypool campaign responded to Cohen’s complaints today…
“Notice how we are not spending time complaining while we can still be collecting signatures.”
Exactly.
* And a roundup…
* State lawmaker won’t run again, saying he needs to make more money: Southwest Side Democratic state Rep. Kevin Joyce said today he will not seek re-election this fall because his family is growing and he needs to make more money. Joyce, who has served in the House since 2003, said the decision was made after he and his wife, Krista, learned they have an eighth child due in September. The couple’s oldest child is 14 and preparing to enter high school.
* STAR Bond opposition make last push to stop Governor’s signature
* Mayor’s letter urges governor to veto STAR
* Mount Vernon asks Quinn to add it to STAR bill
* Quinn trumpets support of recall
* Quinn’s visit to Danville presages gubernatorial campaign
* Jeb Bush fund-raising in Illinois for Bill Brady governor campaign
* Schilling hopes to take advantage of anti-incumbent fervor in 17th District race
* Schoenburg: Shimkus’ Scripture passages on Twitter raise questions
* Illinois Pension Database
* Governor flies in to sign bills
* Community Colleges Can Now Borrow More
* Quinn doubles the amount community colleges can borrow
* Daily Eastern News: Governor encourages students
* Quinn attends 75th annual boys state
* How much energy do state buildings use?
* Most states skip bans on employer credit checks
* Debt settlement association opposes Illinois bill
* Judy Erwin: New principal prep law will create visionary leaders focused on students
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Question of the day
Thursday, Jun 10, 2010 - Posted by Rich Miller
* The photo is of Gov. Pat Quinn on the right and Indiana Gov. Mitch Daniels - the man who loves to hate on Illinois - on the left. The photo was taken yesterday during the Illiana Expressway press conference…
* The Question: Caption?
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Kirk’s woes continue
Thursday, Jun 10, 2010 - Posted by Rich Miller
* The Sun-Times picks up on the Mark Kirk “partisan political activity” story…
In yet another embarrassing revelation for GOP Senate candidate Mark Kirk, a document from the Department of Defense has surfaced showing military officials expressed “concerns arising from his partisan political activities during his last two tours of active duty.”
Kirk, a commander in the U.S. Navy reserves, needed a “waiver” to become — in his words — the first congressman to be deployed to an “imminent danger” area since World War II when he was deployed to Afghanistan in 2008 and again last year.
Because of the officials’ concerns about his previous “partisan political activities,” they required him to write out an “acknowledgement of limitations required for all candidates on active duty,” which he did. The waiver was granted. […]
The Kirk campaign issued a statement Wednesday night asserting that Kirk never violated any Defense Department rules, and vowing to find out what “political operatives” gained access to his “confidential records.” […]
Kirk’s statement said the Obama administration changed the original language of the waiver, inserting concerns about his “partisan political activities.”
The AP hasn’t yet picked it up. Instead, they’re still running that “balancing” story about how an item on Alexi Giannoulias’ campaign website didn’t match with a factual item on his state website.
* The Tribune’s Steven Chapman has a devastating column on Kirk’s problems…
The congressman has never been one to minimize his talents. Once, in a candidate debate, he responded to a question about immigration reform by announcing grandly, “I could answer that question in Spanish, since I attended Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico.” Kirk finds himself amazing and expects you to agree. […]
Kirk was notable for avoiding any hint of ethical scandal, but his very distance from the usual muck may have led him astray. He was not satisfied being smarter and better than your run-of-the-mill Illinois politician. He had to make himself out to be a combination of Superman and Beaver Cleaver.
But voters are not expecting greatness or nobility from their senator. They only ask the political gods to send someone who isn’t an embarrassment.
The political gods have given their answer to that prayer: Ha. Ha. Ha.
Oof.
* Lake Zurich Courier columnist Randy Blaser also lays into Kirk…
Over the last 10 years, I’ve heard Mark Kirk talk about his service in the Navy many times, and he always left me with the impression that he was in the thick of things, flying dangerous missions at the point of the spear.
Apparently, he wasn’t.
I can’t say it any better than my teenage son, who thinks about serving his country one day in uniform. “He’s either a liar or an idiot,” he said after reading the Kirk revelations, “and they don’t let idiots be officers in the U.S. Navy.”
Let me add, however, that both sure find a home in the U.S. Congress.
* The Pantagraph piles on…
There is something particularly unsavory about embellishing one’s military record as opposed to, say, claiming to have been the third-grade spelling bee champ. It is an insult to those who have served in the military and been in harm’s way.
What makes politicians think they won’t get caught in such misstatements? What makes them think voters aren’t entitled to the pure, unvarnished truth?
* Last July, I heaped mountains of praise on Kirk’s official campaign kickoff, saying it “couldn’t have been better.” At one point in the post, I wrote that his handling of the cap and trade issue was “first class.” Little did I know. Here is that Kirk response, which is from a Chuck Sweeny column…
Kirk told me Monday he has been inundated with e-mails from Republicans unhappy with his cap-and-trade vote. So, why did he vote yes?
“We’ve sent three armies to the Middle East and I’ve fought in two of them. As combat veterans, we get to ask, ‘Are we going to still being doing this 20 years from now?’ So I’ve been in favor of anything that gets us to energy independence,” said Kirk, an intelligence commander in the Naval Reserve who was deployed in December to Afghanistan.
He “fought” in two armies in the Middle East? Man, were we ever snookered.
* Also worth reading…
* Kirk Lashes Out, Once Again: So how did the Kirk campaign respond? You guessed it: They again attempted to deflect attention on to his Democratic opponents.
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Poll: Brady leads Quinn 47-36
Thursday, Jun 10, 2010 - Posted by Rich Miller
* According to Rasmussen, Bill Brady’s position is improving, probably because of a decent amount of TV ads run by Brady and the Republican Governors Association. However, the 4-point movement since the last poll in April is within (just barely) the poll’s margin of error. Numbers in brackets are from previous Rasmussen polls taken on April 28, April 5 and March 8…
Brady: 47% [45%, 45%, 47%]
Quinn: 36% [38%, 38%, 37%]
Some Other Candidate 8% [5%, 7%, 6%]
Not sure 10% [11%, 10%, 9%]
From the pollster…
Despite Brady’s narrow primary win, he now has the support of 80% of Republican voters. By comparison, Quinn who also narrowly defeated a primary challenger gets just 60% of Democratic votes. Voters not affiliated with either party prefer the Republican by better than two-to-one.
As I told subscribers months ago, this race is closer than the toplines make it appear for that very reason. Quinn will eventually heal the primary’s wounds, particularly when he begins to define Brady. If Quinn was getting 80 percent of the Democratic vote right now, this thing would be within single digits. Quinn’s big problem, however, is that his intensity of support is so low among his own base, as those Rasmussen (and other pollsters’) results clearly show.
* Favorables for Quinn…
Very favorable 12%
Somewhat favorable 30%
Somewhat unfavorable 24%
Very unfavorable 28%
Not sure 6%
Favorables for Brady…
Very favorable 14%
Somewhat favorable 33%
Somewhat unfavorable 18%
Very unfavorable 15%
Not sure 21%
Lots more not sure about Brady than about Quinn, which is predictable. Also, Brady’s very faves and very unfaves are equal, while Quinn’s very unfaves are well more than twice his very faves. Not good for the incumbent.
* Quinn also doesn’t exactly inspire confidence…
How confident are you that Governor Pat Quinn will make the right choices when it comes to cutting state spending?
8% Very confident
29% Somewhat confident
29% Not very confident
31% Not at all confident
4% Not sure
And his job approval numbers haven’t moved much…
How would you rate the job Pat Quinn has been doing as Governor… do you strongly approve, somewhat approve, somewhat disapprove, or strongly disapprove of the job he’s been doing?
8% Strongly approve
34% Somewhat approve
23% Somewhat disapprove
34% Strongly disapprove
1% Not sure
* Methodology…
The survey of 500 Likely Voters in Illinois was conducted on June 7, 2010 by Rasmussen Reports. The margin of sampling error is +/-4.5 percentage points with a 95% level of confidence.
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*** UPDATE 1 *** If you’re not reading the Sun-Times’ Blago Blog, you’re just not informed…
Rod Blagojevich, Tony Rezko, Chris Kelly and Lon Monk used code names for themselves “when talking about the four of us making money,” Monk said — “1, 2, 3, 4.”
Monk said in 2007 or 2008, when he and Blagojevich were alone in Blago’s office, they discussed an FBI investigation.
Blagojevich told Monk not to ever talk about the “1, 2, 3, 4″ reference.
Monk on the stand silently mimicked Blagojevich’s actions, putting up his fingers one at a time, then running a single finger across his throat.
Blagojevich is clearly upset, unsettled in his chair. He leaned forward and stared right at Monk. But at Monk’s gesture, Blagojevich sat back hard in his chair and appeared to mutter something.
*** UPDATE 2 *** Barack Obama killed two birds with one stone, according to Lon Monk’s testimony today…
Monk told the court that Blagojevich told him he had made a deal with then-Illinois Senate President Emil Jones not to call a vote on a proposed ethics bill that would have limited campaign contributions to the governor. Monk said that Blagojevich felt the bill wasn’t fair, as it only targeted the state’s executive branch, and was also concerned that its specific restrictions would greatly hinder Blagojevich’s fundraising.
Jones had the power to stymie the ethics bill by not calling it for a vote. In exchange for Jones’ cooperation, Monk testified, Blagojevich told Monk that he had promised to appoint Jones to Barack Obama’s U.S. Senate seat if Obama won the presidency. Monk said he was “surprised.”
However, Monk said that John Harris, Blagojevich’s chief of staff, told him that Obama had called Jones and urged him to call the bill. Ultimately Jones did, and the state Senate voted to override Blagojevich’s amendatory veto. The bill passed and became law on January 1, 2009.
[ *** End of Updates *** ]
* Judge Zagel is running a tight ship…
Prosecutor Reid Schar started the morning by complaining that Blagojevich was gesturing inappropriately to people in the courtroom. Schar said jurors were distracted by his gesturing.
He said Blagojevich made it “audibly clear in his displeasure continuously looking over, gesturing to people in the pews.”
Schar said it was “not proper decorum. It’s clearly distracting.”
Blagojevich, sitting down, frowned.
Zagel told him to stop. “By and large it’s for their own benefit,” he said.
* The defendant’s wife will have to leave for a bit…
Patti #Blagojevich is told she has to leave court during some Monk testimony. that’s b/c Patti will testify for defense later.
* Mark Brown sees a gaping hole in Lon Monk’s testimony…
Reluctant or not, Monk is an essential part of the government’s case — a co-conspirator who puts Blagojevich in the room when the alleged insider schemes to make money off state government were first hatched.
But the nagging problem I see is that there were only four people total in that room.
One of them — Christopher Kelly — is dead, a suicide victim who had no interest in being the one to corroborate Monk’s story. Another, Tony Rezko, is not expected to be a prosecution witness because he has a credibility gap that probably makes anything he’d have to say useless, his penchant for deception a matter of detailed public record.
Without Rezko, that seems to make it Monk’s word against Blago’s because, again as far as I know, there’s no paper trail to help prove the governor was in on the plotting. […]
The various ideas were supposed to produce hundreds of thousands of dollars for the four men to divide equally, but Monk and Blagojevich wouldn’t get their share until after Blagojevich left office.
Monk says Blagojevich attended these meetings on how to use his position to make money, paid attention to the discussion, and that it was understood that he would have to “take certain actions as governor to help the plans.” But he says no specific actions were ever discussed.
It’s not that I have a hard time believing this really happened. It’s just that I have a hard time seeing how the government proves it. At best, maybe it makes some of the other crimes of which Blagojevich is accused easier to understand.
* And Ted Cox chronicles the scene outside…
It’s not a media circus surrounding the Blagojevich corruption trial so much as it’s a carnival midway with freaks, geeks and barkers all trying to attract attention.
Go read the whole thing.
* Roundup…
* Former Blagojevich Aide To Resume Testimony
* Monk has his say in court at Blago trial
* Lon Monk Testifies of Plans to Turn State Power to Cash
* Longtime friend outlines Blagojevich’s role in hatching allegedly illicit deals
* Blagojevich Aide Talks About Emanuel, Bear Stearns
* Blagojevich trial: Former top aide Monk takes stand
* Former Blago Aide: What We Did Was Wrong
* Blagojevich conspiracy began in 2003, Monk testifies
* Betrayed by a Friend
* Former Staff Member Bob Arya Talks About the Blagojevich Trial
* A tattoo tribute to Blagojevich
* Sneed: Rod’s biographer: Book ‘em
* The Governor and the Columnist
* Constable: Finally under the spotlight he craves, Blago tries to slip into shadows
* Every day, a sideshow before the Blagojevich trial starts
* Kass: Democrats not only party in trough with Blago
* Former Wheaton couple follows Blagojevich
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Morning Shorts
Thursday, Jun 10, 2010 - Posted by Rich Miller
* Illinois foreclosures still among nation’s highest
Foreclosures in Illinois during May put the state at the dubious position of No. 8 nationwide after it posted a 38 percent increase compared to a year ago, according to a report released today by RealtyTrac Inc., an Irvine, Calif.-based research firm.
* Aldermen approve South Side steel mill redevelopment
Aldermen endorsed a proposal by a development group including Chicago-based McCaffery Interests to build condominiums, apartments and a million square feet of retail space on the northern 77 acres of the 400-acre former U.S. Steel South Works site near 79th Street east of U.S. 41. The site has been empty since the plant closed in 1992.
* Sweeny: Officials gear up for pitch to land Navistar facility
* Caterpillar’s new CEO Oberhelman will add chairman title
* Deere investing $100 million to modernize Waterloo foundry
* Unit 5 to rehire half of their laid-off teachers
* [Springfield] Urban League releases 200 employees; expected to return in fall* Roanoke families remind tornado victims to keep ‘perspective’
* EPA and Daley to make Chicago River splash
Mr. Daley, of course, a few days ago urged EPA chiefs to go jump in Washington’s Potomac River if they want to engage in water sports. The comment came after the agency filed a letter saying Chicago could do better curbing pollution and ought to make our fair waterway suitable for swimming.
* City Council approves 2 percent raises for Chicago police
* City Council honors off-duty officer killed outside parents’ home
* Alleged Torture Victim Expected to Testify Against Burge
* Former police detective testifies against Burge
* Burge witness tells of hearing screams, seeing injuries
* Witness: Burge thought suspect beatings ‘funny’
* Ald. Burke proposes drop-side crib ban
* Chicago stores will have to post child car seat guidelines
* Salmonella outbreak expands to 24 Ill. counties
The health department urges people who got sick after eating at Subway restaurants on or after May 10 to contact their health care provider or local health department.
* Woman in wheelchair killed by Metra train
* Former housing commissioner was active in Jewish affairs
Mrs. Perlman, 98, died of natural causes Thursday, June 3, in hospice care at Weiss Memorial Hospital, said her daughter, Midge Perlman Shafton.
* Tribune: Now deliver
n a 13-3 vote, the board handed permanent control of the county’s health system to the independent panel that has been running the system for about two years.
That’s great news for taxpayers and all those patients, many of them impoverished, who depend on the health system. This panel has been effective and efficient, two words not normally associated with the county’s system, long a patronage paradise for county pols and their cronies.
* Mayors seeing red over county cameras
The Cook County B oard’s approval of the contract last week supported a 2007 ordinance to establish a program for red light cameras on county roads. That ordinance included a list of 30 potential intersections throughout the county - eight in the Southland - to receive the cameras for a pilot program, but the county never discussed the plan with the municipalities.
In Tinley Park, where there are also red light cameras at some busy intersections, the sentiment was echoed.
“We should have had some discussion with the county to see if it was justified and if Tinley Park needed that camera,” Police Chief Michael O’Connell said.
That list, to boot, was rife with errors, misidentifying the location of several intersections. The most glaring of which put Lake-Cook and McHenry roads in Hickory Hills when it is actually about 40 miles north in Buffalo Grove.
* Suburbs’ recourse over red-light cameras remains murky
* Red-light camera plan pits Cook County against suburbs
* County board could give yellow light on cameras
The proposed amendment, sponsored by suburban commissioners Larry Suffredin, Timothy Schneider and Gregg Goslin, would allow suburbs to exclude themselves from the plan to install the cameras at intersections along county-maintained roads, Goslin said.
* Chicago Heights service fee slashed
The community service fee, which is assessed every two months, is being cut from $51 per household to $38.24.
Senior citizens will go from paying $25.50 to $19.12 every two months.
City officials said the fee, which is assessed through water bills, helps generate about $2 million and helps pay for police, fire and other city services.
* Downers Grove water rates set to rise
* Daily Herald: One suburb’s relentless fight against violence
Hanover Park, in reacting to four murders inside two weeks just a year ago, instead set forth to establish a major shift in the way it polices its citizenry in order to establish greater trust, a greater intelligence network and better contact with kids who could choose the wrong path.
What it all boils down to is that Hanover Park police have pledged to get to know the people in the community.
* Evanston Moves Forward With Baggy Pants Rule
* Rockford City Market may sell downtown plan, too
* State’s nonpayment threatens Rock Island County probation system
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