McCarter alleges deal for Clarke
Wednesday, Apr 18, 2012 - Posted by Rich Miller
* State Sen. Kyle McCarter (R-Lebanon) says he fears the fix is in for Jerry Clarke…
Johnson announced on April 5, about two weeks after he won the 13th Congressional District primary election, that he would not run for a seventh term in Congress. Clarke said that day that he was interested in replacing Johnson and that he had already begun calling the county chairmen who will make the appointment.
“It’s not right. This is not right,” said state Sen. Kyle McCarter, R-Lebanon, who told a Republican luncheon gathering in Bloomington that he is interested in the congressional seat. “You know what’s really insulting about this? It didn’t just happen. There was talk of this happening a year ago, and it’s a real insult to the people. Like I said, their vote was taken away from them.
“I think we’re used to politics as usual. The politics as usual is that you manipulate the system to put certain people in positions of power. That’s not the way it ought to be. The people should decide who is going to be speaking for them. Remember, this power that (politicians) have, they don’t own it. It’s only borrowed from the people who elect them. We forget that. But when you have people in back rooms who decide they are going to put in place who they want so that they can control them and they can control what happens in this country, that’s wrong.”
McCarter said the county chairmen should slow down the process to appoint Johnson’s replacement.
“We need to see who would represent the people best, not what person was decided in a back room deal who was going to get the job,” said the one-term state senator, who lives in the Illinois suburbs of St. Louis. “This heir-to-the-throne idea in politics, I don’t care what party you’re in, it’s wrong. It’s an injustice and it doesn’t work because ultimately, when you get that person in there, they don’t serve us well.”
* Meanwhile, the Trib has some campaign finance numbers for the primary…
Duckworth, whose allies include President Barack Obama’s top campaign adviser, David Axelrod, and Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel, spent nearly $1.4 million last year and in 2012 to capture the nomination. Reporting nearly $97,000 in debts, Duckworth began April with $259,975 in her campaign fund, records showed, but she also has national fundraising reach.
Another $1.2 million was spent in the new north suburban 10th District, where the Democratic primary came down to Brad Schneider, of Deerfield, defeating activist Ilya Sheyman, of Waukegan.
As the Democrats battled, first-term Republican Rep. Robert Dold, of Kenilworth, raised nearly $400,000 in March and has a campaign war chest of more than $1.6 million. Schneider, who put $150,000 of his own money into his bid, began the month with $226,000 in his campaign bank account.
And $1 million was spent in the new South Side and southwest suburban 2nd District, where Rep. Jesse Jackson Jr., of Chicago, easily survived a primary battle against former one-term Rep. Debbie Halvorson, of Crete,. Almost $850,000 was spent in March, records showed. […]
The state’s lone Republican incumbent-versus-incumbent battle between Kinzinger, of Manteno, and Manzullo, of Leaf River, was the second-most expensive campaign battle based on spending this year at almost $1.9 million.
* And Joe Walsh hit the Tea Party circuit…
On Saturday, Walsh participated in Huntley’s third annual Tax Day rally, and told supporters there that, when it comes to the fall election, “If we don’t get this right, we may lose this thing we call America,” Patch reports.
“We don’t have an election to win. We don’t have a few elections to win. We have a country to save,” Walsh said Saturday before a crowd of some 60 Tea Party supporters.
The colorful congressman went on to tout the white RV — emblazoned with the words “It’s Time! You Ready?” and “Let’s Take Back America — You In?” — as the vehicle he will use to travel during his 8th Congressional District campaign against Democrat Tammy Duckworth. NBC Chicago notes that the vehicle, a 1984 Fleetwood Pace Arrow, was purchased for $7,500 in Madison, Wis. Walsh unveiled the RV in a YouTube video that went live Saturday.
On Sunday, Walsh turned up at the Tax Day rally in Rockford where “dozens” of Tea Party members gathered at Sinnissippi Park to see Walsh and U.S. Rep. Bobby Schilling, who is being challenged in the 17th District downstate by Democratic challenger Cheri Bustos, speak, WIFR reports.
Attendance appeared pretty light, eh?
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Scott Walker caption contest!
Wednesday, Apr 18, 2012 - Posted by Rich Miller
* A Gov. Scott Walker roundup…
* Our Opinion: Walker’s tactics not applicable to Illinois
* Our View: A stalking Walker
* Our View: Land of Lincoln has a lot going for it over Wisconsin
* IL Gov.: Don’t follow Walker’s ‘prescriptions‘
* Union members protest Walker appearance
* Scott Walker Visits Springfield, Compares Self to Lincoln
* Wisconsin Gov. Walker getting mixed reaction in visits here
* Walker talks unions, budgets in IL visit ahead of recall
*Hundreds of union workers protest Walker in IL
* Wisconsin governor uses Illinois as argument against recall
* ILGOP Chair: Wisconsin on right track
* Suburban business leaders impressed with Wisconsin governor
* Wisconsin Gov. Walker says Illinois should confront union issues
* And the caption contest photo…
I’ll purchase the winner a non-Wisconsin beer.
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Burying the lede
Wednesday, Apr 18, 2012 - Posted by Rich Miller
* Speaker Madigan again voiced support yesterday for shifting employer pension payments away from the state and onto universities and suburban and Downstate schools…
“If you look at the current (state pension) payment, 78 percent of the payment goes to two systems where the members never worked for the state of Illinois,” Madigan said, referring to the Teachers Retirement System and State University Retirement System. “There’s got to be a sharing of the cost.”
Downstate school districts fear that shifting pension costs to them will force serious cutbacks in other areas, including education programs.
* But I’m pretty sure this part is new…
[Rep. Elaine Nekritz], Madigan’s representative on a working group trying to control pension costs, said that if overall pension costs can be reduced, the expense to school districts may be 1 percent to 1.5 percent of their payrolls. She said many districts should be able to absorb that cost.
Man, they’re going to have to make a whole lot of cuts to get costs down to such a low percentage of payroll.
…Adding… Speaking of pensions, Speaker Madigan’s constitutional amendment to require a three-fifths vote before pension benefits could be increased apparently wouldn’t have stopped any pension sweetener in the past…
Henry Bayer, executive director of AFSCME Council 31, says a review of pension votes over the years shows none of them were close.
“If this amendment had been in the (Illinois) Constitution, those benefits would have passed with those votes. Thankfully, it would not have prevented those benefits from taking effect.”
* Check out the last two sentences…
Local legislators and economic development officials agree enterprise zones are a valuable tool to attract and retain business.
The zones are in jeopardy of expiring unless the Illinois General Assembly acts.
State Sen. Darin LaHood, R-Dunlap, said something dire concerning enterprise zones just may come up. LaHood said he is supportive, but hears Illinois Speaker of the House Michael Madigan is not.
“In the Senate, I think, it will pass by a large majority,” LaHood said. “There could be a problem in the House. I’ve heard Madigan wants to let them all expire and then turn it into a lottery.”
I hadn’t heard that one, but interesting.
* And this is an SJ-R Tweet posted during Chamber of Commerce CEO Doug Whitley’s introduction of Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker yesterday…
Wow. Whitley just said Quinn has “socialist tendencies.”
But nobody actually covered the over the top quote except for Illinois Issues’ blog…
Even our governor, who as most all of you know, has had very liberal tendencies, very socialist tendencies for years. Even some might say radical tendencies.
Um, OK. Wow.
But Whitley did go on to say this…
A month ago [Quinn] stood up and gave a budget message that was not too much different than what you and I and the Illinois chamber would like to hear our chief executive officer talk about.”
…Adding… Chris Wetterich explains why the quote wasn’t used…
I asked Whitley about the “socialist tendencies” charge after Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker’s speech, but it got whacked from the story I filed. He claimed he was trying to compliment Quinn, however backhandedly it may have been.
“What I was saying is that I think Governor Quinn has grown in this job,” Whitley said. “I think he’s saying things today that I did not anticipate or would not have anticipated him to say five or 10 years ago. He’s talking about jobs. He’s going to plant openings. He’s trying to change the fiscal and budgetary issues of the state, which I don’t think he was particularly conscious of in his prior roles. It’s not the same Pat Quinn that was in the peanut gallery for years.”
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* From WLS Radio…
Governor Pat Quinn plans to reveal recommendations for reforming Medicaid Wednesday, and it could contain some bitter medicine. A bi-partisan working group of lawmakers has been trying to find ways to cut $2.7 billion from the health care system for low-income individuals and families. Among the proposals under consideration are eliminating some benefits like chiropractor visits, and putting limits on things like glasses, dentures and even adult diapers.
Also being considered is dropping some people from coverage and cutting help for seniors in paying for prescriptions. Governor Quinn says something has to be done in this legislative session. He said, “Members of the legislature should be prepared to cancel their vacations in order to get this mission accomplished.”
As an alternative to some of those cuts, and to reducing reimbursement rates to doctors and hospitals, Quinn’s office has floated the idea of a new one-dollar-a-pack tax on cigarettes. The cigarette tax, though, is meeting resistance.
The governor threatened to call a summer session to deal with Medicaid during his budget address, and I don’t think he’s being too unreasonable, either (even though I’m really hoping to attend all three White Sox vs. Cardinals games in June). They can kick the pension can down the road until January, when the GA can use its huge pile of lame ducks to pad the roll calls. But a Medicaid fix really should be done this spring. Reducing the program’s costs and finding new funding for a total of $2.7 billion is gonna be horrific, but it’ll be a whole lot easier than doing it half way through the fiscal year.
* But whatever the governor proposes, he won’t have the last word…
State Rep. Patti Bellock, a Hinsdale Republican that’s part of the team of lawmakers trying to come up with Medicaid fixes, says it’s important to remember that Quinn’s proposals for fixes to both the Illinois Medicaid and pensions systems shouldn’t be considered final.
After all, she says, look at the budget Quinn proposed earlier this year. He puts out an outline. Then lawmakers do their own thing, tweaking - or overhauling - from there.
“I don’t think anything will be set in stone until May 31,” Bellock told us today.
That’s lawmakers’ budget deadline, and some skeptics wonder if even that’s too ambitious a date for such major changes in state policy.
*** UPDATE *** The task force won’t give up, but won’t make the deadine…
A bipartisan group tasked with finding ways to cut $2.7 billion from Illinois’ Medicaid budget hasn’t accomplished its mission.
Gov. Pat Quinn’s deadline required the two Democrats and two Republicans to come up with a plan this week, but they’ve only agreed on about $1.4 billion in cuts.
The committee worked for months on ways to reform the health insurance program for nearly 3 million poor and disabled Illinoisans. But they disagreed on potential ideas including rate cuts to providers and a potential $1-a-pack cigarette tax increase.
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Quote of the day
Wednesday, Apr 18, 2012 - Posted by Rich Miller
* Gov. Pat Quinn, when asked about state financial help for the Chicago Cubs’ Wrigley Field…
“Let’s be serious. We just talked about Medicaid and we have a budget we have to pass, we have to deal with pension stabilization, those issues are far, far higher on the priority list,” Quinn said Thursday.
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A few House members embrace indicted pol
Wednesday, Apr 18, 2012 - Posted by Rich Miller
* As you already know, indicted state Rep. Derrick Smith (D-Chicago) was back on the job yesterday. Some colleagues gave him an initially warm welcome…
Smith — who was indicted last week by a federal grand jury on a bribery charge — spent part of Tuesday’s session in his seat, where a few colleagues approached with hands extended. Later, a smiling Smith worked the Democratic side of the aisle.
“I greeted him because he’s here to represent the people who elected him,” said Rep. La Shawn Ford (D-Chicago). “I just told him God bless him. He’s got some challenging days ahead of him.”
ABC7’s video is here.
* Rep. Will Davis is on the House Special Investigating Committee which is looking at whether there is enough evidence to begin disciplinary proceedings against Rep. Smith. So these comments are somewhat unusual…
Democratic Representative Will Davis, also from Cook County, says it’s a good thing Smith is back to work. He spoke with Smith on his first day back to session.
DAVIS “We didn’t talk about anything in particular, certainly asked him how he was doing considering everything that’s been going on with him, said he was doing fine. As far as him coming back, certainly I see no challenges with him coming back, he’s still a member of the General Assembly. He still has duties and responsibilities to the constituents.”
Yes, he’s their colleague, but it really sends a horrible message to the public at large when a guy caught on tape allegedly accepting a $7,000 bribe is embraced.
* You gotta wonder what’s going to happen when Smith presents a bill. He picked up sponsorship of SB3555, which is backed by Secretary State Jesse White, Smith’s political godfather and former employer. The bill passed the Senate 55-0, but that’s still gonna be one odd debate. The measure has been assigned to the House Executive Committee, but hasn’t yet been posted for a hearing.
* And subscribers knew about this demand by Rep. Jack Franks last week…
“I am going to make it very clear that Representative Smith is innocent until proven guilty,” said Rep. Jack Franks, (D) McHenry.
But Rep. Franks wants limits placed on Smith’s legislative duties.
“I’ve asked the speaker to suspend Rep. Smith from any committee work pending the outcome either of the federal indictment and trial, or whether he pleads or not pleads,” said Franks.
Your thoughts on suspending Smith from his committee assignments?
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