Cullerton holds pension borrowing until veto session
Thursday, Nov 4, 2010 - Posted by Rich Miller Posted by Barton Lorimor While we’re tracking the AP’s decision to call the gubernatorial election for Gov. Quinn, Senate President John Cullerton has decided not to call the pension borrowing bill until the veto session…
More from Lee…
…Adding…
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*** UPDATED 4x *** THIS JUST IN….AP ANALYSIS FINDS BRADY CANNOT WIN; BRADY WON’T CONCEDE
Thursday, Nov 4, 2010 - Posted by Rich Miller Posted by Barton Lorimor From the AP…
*** UPDATE 1x (4:23 p.m.) ***
It looks like Quinn has a half-percentage point lead on Brady, according to the AP’s figures. *** UPDATE 2x (4:55 p.m.) *** More from the AP…
…Adding…
*** UPDATED 3x (5:02 p.m.) *** *** UPDATED 4x (5:18 p.m.) *** Also, the absentee vote count in Jackson County turned it over to Brady this morning by 23 votes. That means Quinn’s county victories included Cook, St. Clair and Alexander.
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Clueless
Thursday, Nov 4, 2010 - Posted by Rich Miller * If Melissa Bean’s election results don’t show the rank stupidity of her campaign and the DCCC, then I don’t know what does. Even if she somehow manages to overcome her 553-vote deficit - and that’s doubtful - this never should’ve been close. Joe Walsh had tons of people in the field, marching in parades, knocking on doors. Bean didn’t. Bean made some bad votes for her district (health insurance, stimulus, etc.). She had always run as a conservative to moderate Democrat, but then she changed. Unfortunately for Bean, her district didn’t. * Bean also didn’t realize until it way was too late that she was in trouble, and she quickly tried to flood the airwaves with negative ads. By then, everybody else was already on the air with their ads. She was drowned out. And what did the DCCC do? Nothing. They could’ve weighed in late, but they didn’t. They probably thought she had it in the bag and was just being a typical whiner incumbent who always thinks she’s in trouble. Bean won her first two races with 52 and 51 percent, respectively. She behaved like a moderate in Congress. Then she clobbered her GOP opponent two years ago, so maybe she and the DCCC figured she was unbeatable and Bean could do whatever she wanted. But 2008 was a Democratic landslide, especially here in Illinois. This time, Illinoisans were clearly furious with the Democratic Congress, and they made those feeilings known. Just ask Phil Hare, Debbie Halvorson, Bill Foster, Dan Seals and Alexi Giannoulias. Bean apparently believed her own hype and thought she could sit on what she thought was her lead. Wave rules didn’t apply to her. And her campaign was clearly convinced that Joe Walsh’s numerous personal problems disqualified him in voters’ minds. Wrongo. * And then there was this…
Third party candidates aren’t viable in Illinois, but as Bill Brady found out the hard way, they can still do you in. Bean’s campaign and the DCCC’s non-involvement was a screwup from beginning to end. And the third party angle was just one of the bigger reasons behind it. * If anything, I now have a bit more respect for the We Ask America polling firm. While they didn’t get the final point spread right, they did have Walsh leading Bean in their last survey, and they showed the Green Party candidate getting over 5 percent. He ended up with 3, but that’s well within the margin of error. They were also the only public pollster to predict that Bob Dold would beat Dan Seals. They got the spread way wrong, but the end result was the same. They also had Hultgren over Foster. * Related…
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Question of the day
Thursday, Nov 4, 2010 - Posted by Rich Miller * The setup…
* The AP’s latest count has Quinn ahead of Brady by 19,514 votes. That’s down 47 votes from last night. * The Question: Should Brady concede today, or should he wait until the absentee votes are counted tomorrow, or should he wait a month until the ballot is certified? Explain.
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The ground game and Democratic and union turnout
Thursday, Nov 4, 2010 - Posted by Rich Miller * From the Democrats’ coordinated campaign…
There are a lot of Democrats in this state, and when they vote (and they almost always do) they make a big difference. From the exit polling… ![]() That’s a two-point drop in Democratic representation from 2006, and that led to some problems everywhere. But it could’ve been much worse. The ground game certainly helped keep this from being a total, complete Democratic disaster. Illinois election day voters also had a far higher opinion of the Democratic Party than they did the Republican Party… ![]() A 58 percent unfavorable for the GOP? Not great branding. And considering the beating the Democratic Party has taken in the media here, a 51 percent favorable is downright astounding. The result is also another indication that the Democratic Party did a better job of getting its people to the polls. And while David Miller probably didn’t have a chance against Topinka, the numbers suggest that he and Robin Kelly could’ve benefited from some coordinated campaign and/or state party help…
It would’ve also helped if Miller and Kelly had put together better campaigns on their own, of course. Nothing attracts campaign assistance like success. * And don’t forget the unions…
Quinn didn’t win a super-gigantic percentage of the union household vote, but it was enough… ![]() Unfortunately for the Democrats, however, union households are dropping. 32 percent told exit pollsters they lived in a union household four years ago. Still, if it wasn’t for that money the unions spent and the effort they put into the campaign, it would’ve been a much worse day for the Democrats. * Election day voters seemed more liberal than recent polls have suggested. For instance, every poll taken before the election had pluralities or even majorities of likely Illinois voters favoring repeal of the federal health care legislation. Not on election day… ![]() * Related…
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Suburbs, ideology and third partiers cost Brady dearly
Thursday, Nov 4, 2010 - Posted by Rich Miller * I am hearing this myself a lot these days from Republicans…
Personal PAC did a whole lot of mail, as did other groups. Gov. Pat Quinn doesn’t believe in direct mail, so they had to pick up the slack. * So, is this true? Well, Brady vastly outperformed Judy Baar Topinka’s 2006 numbers in the collars, but he underperformed Mark Kirk’s percentages… ![]() Kirk also did much better than Brady in suburban Cook County…
Kirk received almost 14,000 more votes than Brady in Chicago as well. * The fact that Kirk outperformed Brady in the suburbs and in the city is no huge surprise, since Kirk is a suburban moderate. But Brady’s campaign made the fatal error of thinking they could make up the difference Downstate. Check out these Downstate totals…
Brady simply did not concentrate enough time and effort on the suburbs. He was also never able to assuage suburban women that he wasn’t a wingnut, as Peter Fitzgerald was able to do in 1998. Brady wouldn’t send a moderate message and it cost him dearly…
* And for all you conservative folks who thought that Kirk wouldn’t play well Downstate, well, now you know how wrong you are. Brady only received 7 more votes than Kirk in his home county of McLean. And his margin over Quinn was 259 votes less than Kirk’s margin over Giannoulias. Why? Third party and independent candidates. Scott Lee Cohen spent big bucks and got 4 percent of the vote statewide. The other two third partiers received another 4 percent, for a total of 8 percent for the gubernatorial also-rans. In the US Senate race, the third party candidates received just 5 percent of the vote. That 3 percent was crucial. And it was more prominent in Chicago and the Cook suburbs, where third party and independent gubernatorial candidates received 8 percent while third party US Senate candiates received just 4 percent. The Brady campaign could never figure out how to deal with Cohen, and his 4 percent really hurt them in that close race. What happened was that some people who couldn’t stand to vote for Quinn took a look at Brady and decided they couldn’t be with him, either, so they went with Cohen. I’m not really sure what they could’ve done, but they didn’t do anything and that was yet another major mistake. * Now, there were other factors in this. Chicago’s turnout, for example. The superior Democratic ground game. Bigtime union involvement for Quinn. Etc. But Brady’s over-reliance on Downstate to carry the day and his refusal to spend more time and energy portraying himself as a moderate in the suburbs are both his fault. He couldn’t control the Democrats’ game. He could control his own. …Adding… These exit poll results pretty much say it all… ![]() Look at the difference in the female vote between the two candidates and the difference in how both genders voted for third party candidates. Brady was hurt both ways. * Related…
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Morning Shorts
Thursday, Nov 4, 2010 - Posted by Rich Miller * Creditors sue over Tribune deal, allege fraud in Zell’s buyout: A committee representing Tribune’s unsecured creditors filed two complaints targeting Tribune Chairman Sam Zell, the real estate mogul who engineered the buyout; other Tribune board members; former CEO Dennis FitzSimons and other former executives, accusing them of shirking their duties so they could line their own pockets. “This L.B.O. transaction is among the worst in American corporate history,” the complaint said, according to Reuters… The buyout was “tainted from start to finish,” one of the complaints contends. * Tony Rezko, ex-Blagojevich fundraiser, has status hearing * Fast harvest, but conditions dry statewide * DuPage prosecutor Joe Birkett named appellate judge * DuPage’s Birkett appointed to appellate court * Birkett appointed to Appellate Court * 4 Cook judges deemed unqualified by bar are retained by voters * Schools boss Huberman exiting early
* Chicago schools chief to leave post this month * Chicago Public Schools chief Huberman leaving end of Nov. * Huberman to leave Chicago Public Schools * Sun-Times: Huberman picks bad time to resign, but … * Civic Federation warns of hazards in Daley budget
* Police Supt. Weis revises minimum age restriction plan * Aldermen propose banning alcohol-caffeine drinks * Ban of caffeinated alcoholic drinks is on the table * Burke: Charge charities $10 per day to solicit donations on public way * Stroger still deciding if he will fight Oglesby’s unemployment claim * Stroger refuses to answer question onfinalists for watchdog post * Cabrera new City Colleges board chairman * Blue Island mayor on vote: ‘We got killed’ * Elgin officials get first look at 2011 budget * Buffalo Grove village president apologizes for mocking recalled trustee * Village president sorry for mocking opponent in a wig * Judge OKs case against Harvey mayor, detective * City, Naperville council struggle with wards decision * Geneva attorney is nominee for Kane state’s attorney * Perez claims Kane County Sheriff seat * Jockeying begins for Lake County Board chairmanship * Trail projects get $5M in funds * Antioch to see grant for new pool * Carpentersville OK’s Firearms School * Naperville eyes $10 mil tax rebate for hotel project * Nine communities express interest in FutureGen CO2 disposal site * R.I. Republicans: ‘This party is not dead in Rock Island County’ * 2 laid-off East Moline officers get their jobs back * Sangamon Co. voters reject sales tax hike for schools * Decatur Township votes to raise its tax levy 4.95 percent to collect additional $75,000 * Education sales tax squeaks to win * 183rd firefighters to be laid off next year * SIU Announces Closure Days * Fioretti: Cancer like getting ‘hit by train’ * Meeks to tour Southwest Side schools
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition
Thursday, Nov 4, 2010 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today’s edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)
Thursday, Nov 4, 2010 - Posted by Rich Miller
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The precincts are all in and Quinn leads by 19,561 votes
Thursday, Nov 4, 2010 - Posted by Rich Miller * With 11,209 of 11,209 precincts reporting, Gov. Pat Quinn leads Bill Brady by 19,561 votes. They still have to count absentees and provisionals. There may yet be some adjustments in precinct counts. But that’s a big margin to overcome. * Mark Brown…
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