Now that’s what I call a burn rate
Thursday, Jun 2, 2011 - Posted by Rich Miller
* The United Republican Fund issued a press release via the Illinois Review today…
Since 1934 the URF has been known as the United Republican Fund: an organization dedicated to electing conservative Republicans to office. Run by a volunteer board of business and civic leaders, the URF has fairly and efficiently raised and distributed millions of dollars to countless candidates, organizations, and projects.
This year the URF board of directors reorganized and expanded into three entities:
United to Restore Freedom (URF): a 501c3 not-for-profit organization dedicated to advancing conservative thought and ideas by educating and engaging policy makers, opinion leaders, and citizens on the URF LIFT principles of limited government, individual liberty, free markets, and traditional values.
United to Restore Freedom-Action (URF Action): a 501c4 membership organization formed to mobilize those citizens who subscribe to the URF LIFT principles; and are dedicated to changing our culture through grassroots civic action.
United Republican Fund (URF PAC): a connected, political action committee dedicated to helping elect conservative candidates who espouse the URF LIFT principles. URF PAC provides qualified candidates direct financial support while working independently to mobilize voters on their behalf.
* The press release piqued my curiosity, so I went over to the State Board of Elections’ website and looked up the group’s financials. The URF raised an impressive $505K during the last six months of 2010.
But the group only contributed about $40K to candidates while it racked up $487,592 in expenditures. Of those expenditures, almost $150,000 went to consultants alone. Most of the rest went to expenses for staging the Right Nation 2010 conference, including $75K for speakers, $95K for “event production” and “event videos” and $105K to rent the Sears Centre Arena in Hoffman Estates.
Whew.
As of the end of March, the group had just $276.37 on hand and $40,250 in debt. They’ve since raised $19K.
* Back to the press release…
Of course, the largest program run by URF is Right Nation. This year, they plan to take the event to new heights - building on last year’s unprecedented gathering, which drew nearly 6,000 attendees and coverage from over 50 media outlets. This year’s Right Nation 2011 celebrataion will take place over three days and will include a number of prominent national organizations and influential figures, including exciting activities never before seen at a political event in the Midwest.
I sure hope they learned some lessons from last year’s event. It looks like they spent way, way, way too much on overhead.
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Indiana governor mocks Emanuel, Illinois
Thursday, Jun 2, 2011 - Posted by Rich Miller
* From WLS Radio…
Daniels told WLS Radio’s The Don and Roma Show, that while Mayor Rahm Emanuel wants a casino to stop Chicagoans from gambling in Hammond, Indiana, Emanuel should have other concerns.
“What he ought to worry more about is the stampede of businesses leaving Illinois. You know your traffic gal Wendy left out one traffic hazard, you stand near the state line now you might get hit by a moving van,” Daniels said Thursday.
“We are talking and signing up businesses left and right. The gambling revenue, I mean, pays a few of our bills but you don’t build a strong state on casinos. You build it on factories and new business startups and you know, places that provide really high paying jobs,” Daniels said.
Daniels also claimed he “never raised” taxes, which is simply not true. He did raise taxes. And if our state tax rates were as high as Indiana’s we’d have a huge surplus to pay off all those back bills. Not to mention that Indiana also allows local income taxes. Listen to the whole thing…
Thoughts?
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*** UPDATE - 3:52 pm *** The government’s cross-examination has finally begun.
* Could he be cross-examined today? That’ll be fun. By the way, if you have a BlackBerry and can’t access the feed, try clicking here. Otherwise, read on. To get us started, I’ll post Natasha Korecki’s stories from yesterday afternoon…
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Question of the day
Thursday, Jun 2, 2011 - Posted by Rich Miller
* Who do you think were the biggest winners and losers of the spring legislative session? Explain, and try to provide examples of both. Thanks.
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*** UPDATE 1 *** I talked to Sen. Tim Bivins this morning. Bivins saw the fracas and says he say Sen. Jacobs make “what looked like a fist” and then heard a “thud” as Sen. McCarter was “knocked backward.” Bivins then helped separate the two and got a “huge bruise” in the process when he accidentally slammed into a desk.
Sen. Syverson saw something different…
State Sen. Dave Syverson, R-Rockford, said he saw the exchange.
“He (Jacobs) pushed him or poked him in some way,” Syverson said.
Sen. Bivins sits next to McCarter, however, so he probably had the better view. Syverson sits one row behind McCarter and to one side.
*** UPDATE 2 *** Sen. Matt Murphy sits next to Bivins. Murphy told me he saw Jacobs “punch” McCarter. However, Murphy said, “I don’t know whether it was his open hand or a closed fist.”
*** UPDATE 3 *** Hmm. An interesting statement from Joe Dominguez, Senate Sergeant-At-Arms…
The Senate Sergeant-At-Arms is charged with preserving the rules of decorum and orderly behavior in the Senate chamber. While incidents of disorderly conduct are rare, they are not tolerated on the Senate floor.
On Tuesday, immediately following the alleged confrontation between Senator Mike Jacobs and Senator Kyle McCarter, I approached Senator McCarter to inquire whether he wished to file a complaint. Senator McCarter responded that he did not. [Emphasis added]
Joe is top notch, by the way.
[ *** End Of Updates *** ]
* Sen. Kyle McCarter says he will ask the Sangamon County State’s Attorney to file a criminal complaint against Sen. Mike Jacobs. McCarter says Jacobs punched him in the chest with his fist…
State Sen. Kyle McCarter said Wednesday he wants charges filed against a fellow senator he accused of punching him following a contentious, end-of-session debate over a rate hike for utilities.
“I plan on pressing charges against Sen. Jacobs,” McCarter said. […]
McCarter said Sen. Darin LaHood, R-Peoria, and Sen. Tim Bivins, R-Dixon, pulled Jacobs away. Bivins served as Lee County sheriff for 20 years. “Sen. Bivins and Sen. LaHood have given statements to the Capitol police, verifying what happened,” McCarter said.
* From a Tribune editorial…
McCarter observed aloud [during a Senate floor debate on the ComEd bill] that Jacobs, chairman of the Senate Energy Committee and sponsor of a controversial utility-backed bill, is the son of former Sen. Denny Jacobs, a ComEd lobbyist. The 150-page bill came up for a vote in the last hours of the session after a six-minute committee hearing, McCarter said.
Jacobs’ statesmanlike response was to walk across the aisle and punch McCarter in the chest. He accused McCarter of attacking his family and violating Senate rules about civil debate. […]
Jacobs said his constituents are aware of the relationship and can make up their own minds about whether he has a conflict of interest. Give us a break. A lawmaker who carries the water on a bill pushed by his lobbyist father is going to hear about it, over and over. Better get used to defending yourself with something besides your fists.
* Legislators engaging in fisticuffs on the floor is a rare event, but not unheard of…
The last time two lawmakers got into a similar public confrontation on the floor of either legislative chamber came when former state Rep. Bill Black (R-Danville) got into a shoving match with former Rep. Terry Parke (R-Hoffman Estates) in a 1992 school-funding dispute.
Even President Barack Obama was involved in shoving match with another legislator, former Sen. Rickey Hendon (D-Chicago). That altercation came during former Gov. George Ryan’s stint in office and occurred in the rear of the Senate chamber out of public view, Hendon wrote.
I was in the House press box when Parke shoved Black, and I was in the Senate box when the altercation began between Obama and Hendon. From Hendon’s book…

Nobody in either of those fights pressed any sort of charges. What do you think about McCarter’s announced move?
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* Will County types are not happy with the new congressional map…
The map drawn and approved by Democrats in the state legislature creates congressional districts that look like floodplains stretching out from Lake Michigan, starting in relatively small sections of Chicago before stretching over vast tracts of land in the suburbs and across farm fields.
“It’s the most blatant example of gerrymandering I’ve ever seen,” said Will County Republican Party Chairman Richard Kavanagh, one of a chorus of Republicans likely to raise ever louder complaints of the remap that would reduce their numbers in Congress.
But the map does something else, Kavanagh said.
“It gives Chicago control over Will County and brings Cook County politics into Will County,” he said.
* But, in a way, they kinda brought it on themselves…
U.S. Rep. Jesse Jackson Jr. (D-Chicago) picked up territory throughout eastern Will County where he supports construction of an airport outside Peotone. The strategic move gives him more credibility on the project because he can no longer be criticized for engaging on an issue outside his district. Jackson’s opponents during election time often urged him to mind his own district, not the airport. Now he can do both.
It wasn’t just Jackson’s political opponents who told him to mind his own business. Will County leaders did the same. So, now the airport is his business.
Oops.
* Meanwhile, Lynn Sweet talked to US Rep. Steve Israel (D-N.Y.), the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee chairman, and came up with these district rankings…
† Eight safe Democratic seats: 1. Bobby Rush; 2. Jesse Jackson Jr.; 3. Dan Lipinski; 4. Luis Gutierrez; 5. Mike Quigley; 7. Danny Davis; 9. Jan Schakowsky, and 12. Jerry Costello.
† Five competitive or swing seats: 8. Considered open, now held by Walsh; 10. Dold; 11. Open; 13. Tim Johnson; 17. Schilling.
† Five Republican lean to GOP safe: 6. Peter Roskam; 14. Hultgren; 15. John Shimkus; 16. Don Manzullo; 18. Aaron Schock.
Rep. Judy Biggert (R-Ill.) left homeless in the Democratic map, may run from the open 11th; Kinzinger is likely to head to the Manzullo district; Walsh may switch to the 14th.
* Politico has the DC mood…
Both in Springfield and in Washington, the GOP reaction to the grim reality of the state’s new congressional map is downright funereal, with some Republicans shaking their heads and marveling at the evil genius behind a gerrymander that could end up costing the GOP as many as five House seats.
* And Crain’s reports on GOP opposition…
A group of Republican business leaders and former members of Congress from Illinois is gearing up to challenge the state Legislature’s new congressional redistricting map, which heavily favors Democrats.
Led by former U.S. House Speaker J. Dennis Hastert and former U.S. Rep. Thomas Ewing, fundraising by the Committee for a Fair and Balanced Map has been quietly under way for months, anticipating that Republicans would not fare well in a process steered by a Democratic-controlled Legislature and a Democratic governor. […]
“Now that we’ve got a map that’s not fair, it will probably take off,” said Ronald Gidwitz, a Chicago investor and former CEO of Helene Curtis Industries Inc., who has contributed to the committee but is not otherwise involved.
Others on the committee are former Rockford Congresswoman and Labor Secretary Lynn Martin, North Star Investments President Alexander “Sandy” Stuart of Lake Forest and Don Wilson, CEO of DRW Trading Group, a derivatives trading firm in Chicago. Also involved is Mayer Brown LLP partner Ty Fahner, who represented Illinois GOP members of Congress in redistricting litigation 10 years ago and a decade before that.
* And freshman Adam Kinzinger is picking up some support for a bid against fellow Republican Don Manzullo…
According to published reports and indications from two northern Illinois Republican leaders, Kinzinger, R-Manteno, may now be in the early planning stages of organizing a re-election campaign in the newly-drawn 16th Congressional District — territory now represented by U.S. Rep. Don Manzullo, R-Rockford.
Even though Kinzinger placed his name on a blanket statement the Illinois Republican Congressional delegation issued Friday condemning the new boundaries, the freshman legislator has yet to make any official public comment regarding the Democratic-drawn maps. […]
Susan Thornton, La Salle County Republican Central Committee chairwoman, told The Times last week she remains optimistic about the upcoming boundary changes on the local level for Kinzinger.
“Adam’s numbers were very strong in last November’s elections and I think voters in new and expanded areas of the 16th will find him well-equipped to represent them in both the rural counties and up north through Rockford,” said Thornton.
*** UPDATE 1 *** From the Champaign News-Gazette…
Republican state Rep. Jason Barickman will announce Thursday that he is running for a seat in the Illinois Senate from the new 53rd district, according to an announcement from his office.
Barickman, a lawyer and chairman of the Champaign County Republican Party, currently represents the 105th District in the Illinois House of Representatives.
He has scheduled announcements Thursday in five communities within the new 53rd District: Bloomington-Normal, Paxton, Watseka, Pontiac and Eureka.
Under the newly drawn Illinois House and Senate legislative maps, Barickman would be running in the same district that includes current state Sen. Shane Cultra, a Republican from Iroquois County. Cultra has not yet announced his intentions, but Barickman’s office indicated he will run whatever Cultra decides.
*** UPDATE 2 *** From the Peoria Pundit…
I’ve just head from a very reliable source that State Sen. Dave Koehler, D-Peoria, will run for Congress in the 17th District. He would face freshman U.S. Rep. Bobby Schilling, R-Colona. Schilling, a Tea Party candidate, defeated Phil Hare in 2010.
“You will not see Koehler make the same mistakes Hare made,” my source said. “Hare shot from the hip too often, Koehler is more in control of his emotions.”
Koehler says he’s talked to a number of people, so that’s why the word is getting out. He said he’ll make an announcement in the next several days.
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A fight for relevance
Thursday, Jun 2, 2011 - Posted by Rich Miller
* No governor likes to be ignored or treated as if he was irrelevant. Pat Quinn is no exception. But that’s just what the General Assembly did to him all spring. I’ve been writing about Quinn being cut out of much of the process since the end of March when I asked Speaker Madigan about it. But it eventually became so obvious that even Chicago reporters started writing about this problem in recent days. Gov. Quinn tried hard to dispel that notion during his press conference yesterday.
* For instance, on the ComEd bill, Gov. Quinn sounded a whole lot like a spurned Rod Blagojevich…
Quinn repeated his vow to veto legislation that would allow Commonwealth Edison to raise its rates to invest in its power grid — coming down on the side of consumers rather than lobbyists in “three-piece suits and fancy shoes.”
* Quinn wanted to delay a billion dollars in payments to local governments, but that didn’t survive the process…
The state budget lawmakers have sent to Gov. Pat Quinn doesn’t touch the 6 percent of income taxes that are sent to local mayors for their own budgets.
* The budget spent about $2 billion less than the unbalanced budget Quinn proposed in February…
“I don’t think anyone who looks at it would say they would be happy with the investment in education. I mention early childhood, scholarships for students who are needy who have the ability to do college work, very disappointed in the fact that they cut funding for kindergarten through 12th grade in our grammar schools and our high schools. That’s no way to build a better Illinois,” the governor said.
“And I will tell legislators of both parties and both houses how I feel about education and how I think the public feels. They didn’t get the job done properly there. It’s incomplete, and I think we need to keep working with them,” Quinn said.
* Quinn didn’t elaborate about whether that would mean a special summer session (a la Blagojevich) or not. But Speaker Madigan controls that fate…
At the last minute, [Senate] Democrats added about $430 million in operations spending to a capital bill. The money would restore money cut from general state aid to schools and the Monetary Award Program for college scholarships and provide additional funds to a couple of dozen human services programs.
The House refused to consider the bill before adjourning. Instead, House Speaker Michael Madigan, D-Chicago, said he wanted a conference committee of representatives and senators to work out a solution over the summer.
…Adding… It was early in the morning when I posted this, so I just agreed with something that I actually knew was not true. I knew that Madigan passed a non-concurrence motion. Heck, I told subscribers about it. That bill is in the Senate now.
* The governor pointed to one area of concern…
He voiced particular concern about the proposed cuts to early childhood education. “You don’t get to be a 3-year-old two years in a row. And I’ve told the leaders of the Legislature that we have work to do when it comes to early childhood education,” Quinn said.
There’s hope by many legislators that money will be added back in the fall or (more likely) in January if state revenues pick up.
* Now, on to gaming expansion…
“I have told the legislators over and over again the people of Illinois do not want an excessive gambling bill that’s top heavy, and I think I reflect the public sentiment on that,” Quinn said.
“In Chicago, I have said I can see if it’s properly done, an opportunity for a gambling casino. But once the General Assembly got this subject, both House and Senate, it got more and more top heavy. Well my job is to make sure the people of Illinois come first, not the gamblers, not the insiders,” the governors told reporters in his Statehouse office.
* The governor seemed to admit that even Mayor Emanuel ignored him on this topic…
Quinn also revealed that about 10 days ago he had a conversation with Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel “about the general subject of a casino in Chicago.” The governor said he told the new mayor, who was a vital force in winning support for the gambling package, that “we can’t have an excessive gaming bill in Illinois, that I thought the public wasn’t for that.”
* The mayor told a different story, however…
“In my conversations with him he sees the strengths,” Emanuel said.
There could be an amendatory veto on the bill, but there might not be enough votes in both chambers to sustain such a move.
And as subscribers were told yesterday morning, Quinn won’t even get the bill until Senate President John Cullerton takes a procedural brick off it…
Sen. Dave Syverson, R-Rockford, said a procedural maneuver by Senate President John Cullerton, D-Chicago, to move for reconsideration of the bill, actually protects it and works to Rockford’s benefit.
Syverson said the motion to reconsider means Cullerton can control when the bill is forwarded to the governor.
“It’s probably good news from a Rockford standpoint,” Syverson said. “This way he can control it until he has a chance to negotiate and talk to the governor about it.”
* The best way for a governor to flex his muscles and prove his relevancy is through vetoes, and the ComEd bill isn’t the only bill that’s heading for the chopping block…
Although the governor has not officially decided on Senate Bill 178, State Rep. Chapin Rose said Governor Pat Quinn made his decision on the House floor Tuesday night.
A group of the bill’s supporters approached Gov. Quinn Tuesday, Rose said, and asked him to strongly consider passing the bill.
The bill would allow Health Alliance and other health insurance providers to stay with their customers for two more years.
* Quinn vetoed this project during the spring, so the GA revamped it and sent it to him again…
In the waning hours of the state’s legislative session, lawmakers on Wednesday sent Gov. Pat Quinn a revamped bill that could pave the way for construction of a $3-billion synthetic gas plant on Chicago’s South Side.
Mr. Quinn in March vetoed a previous version that would have forced the state’s natural gas ratepayers to shoulder the higher costs of the gas the plant would produce. But Leucadia National Corp., the New York-based conglomerate developing the facility, agreed to consumer protections that limit rate increases and spread the burden of higher prices to businesses that buy gas from non-utility providers. […]
Unlike the version Mr. Quinn vetoed, the current bill would cap the rate increase at 2%. The earlier bill would have exempted customers of alternative gas suppliers, but this one includes them.
* Listen to the governor’s press conference in two parts…
* Roundup…
* Quinn Critiques Legislation
* Budget would cut $171 million from public schools
* Quinn: Lawmakers didn’t get job done on budget
* Hospitals may sustain blow instead of knockout
* Editorial: An ‘excessive’ but needed casino bill
* Cities look forward with new casinos
* Quinn murky on plans for gaming expansion
* Chicago’s casino bet - Gamble could raise millions of dollars, but questions leave experts wondering about the price
* Elgin may lobby Quinn against gambling expansion
* Gambling’s expansion gets a poor reception - No Peoria area lawmakers voted for bill that many officials say will draw business away from East Peoria casino
* Mayor urges Danville residents to back casino with Quinn
* Casino means 1,000 ‘full-time, good-paying jobs’
* Brown: More gambling, more scandals? You can bet on it
* Chicago coal-to-gas plant closer to reality after Illinois legislators OK 2 bills
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Note to blog readers
Thursday, Jun 2, 2011 - Posted by Rich Miller
* I checked my website’s usage stats this morning and found that we had near-record traffic on May 31st, the last day of session. Unique visits and page-views were almost equal to the day Rod Blagojevich was arrested, which still holds the all-time record. We actually used more bandwidth on Tuesday than we consumed on RRB’s arrest day, so that’s a new record. And Sunday’s traffic in all categories was higher than any previous Sunday ever recorded here.
The idea is not to make this the biggest website in the world, of course. We’ll never be that. The object is to make this place the focal point of Illinois political life. The combination of the in-depth posts, the timely and comprehensive automated news feeds, the ultra-superior commenters and the breaking news reporting have all contributed to the success of this endeavor.
I simply can’t thank you enough.
* And now that I have your attention, how about taking a quick moment and writing a check for the “Southern Illinois Together” flood relief effort? Many of our fellow Illinoisans are still hurting down there, and they could use your help.
The fundraiser is this Saturday at the Black Diamond Warehouse in Marion (2400 Black Diamond Drive). Tickets are $25 in advance and $30 at the door. They’ll have free food and wine samples, and both a silent and a live auction.
I’m planning to be there, but you don’t have to attend the fundraiser to contribute. Just write a check for whatever you can afford and make it payable to the Poshard Foundation. Make sure to put “Flood Victims” in your check’s memo line. Here’s the mailing address…
Poshard Foundation
700 Logan College Dr.
Carterville, IL 62918
This is a prime opportunity to use the community we’ve created here to do some good. Please help if you can. Thanks.
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