Gidwitz backs Rauner
Wednesday, Jul 17, 2013 - Posted by Rich Miller
* This is a huge blow to Kirk Dillard’s campaign. Ron Gidwitz was fully behind Dillard in 2010, helped him raise money and is still owed almost $200,000 by Dillard’s campaign.
Gidwitz wasn’t a great gubernatorial candidate, but he’s a far better behind the scenes guy.
From a press release…
Republican candidate for governor Bruce Rauner announced today that Ron Gidwitz will join the campaign as Finance Chairman and Co-Chair of the campaign.
“I’ve said from the beginning that I believe Republicans should unite behind one candidate. We have an extraordinary opportunity to win the Governor’s race and transform the state. I know all the candidates extremely well and believe there’s a clear choice: Bruce Rauner,” Gidwitz said. “Bruce will energize Republicans and appeal to reform-minded Independents and Democrats because he knows we can cut government spending, create jobs, and take on a broken system in Springfield currently dominated by special interests.”
Gidwitz has long been one of the Illinois Republican Party’s top supporters and has deep ties in state GOP circles. He has spent the year working to unite Republicans around a gubernatorial candidate.
“Ron is tremendously respected in our Party and has been a long time leader. I am honored to have his support,” said Bruce Rauner. “Ron’s backing is a great boost to our efforts and will help grow our campaign’s momentum. Illinoisans are ready to shake up Springfield, and there is no doubt we can win.”
Gidwitz joins Elizabeth Christie and Jim Schultz as Co-Chairs of a campaign that already includes supporters like Anne and Ken Griffin, Mike Keiser, Jack Roeser, John Rowe, Dick Uihlein, and dozens of other important community and business leaders.
Dillard said earlier this week that he was upset that the business community was refusing to coalesce behind a single candidate. Well, it sure is beginning to. And that candidate ain’t Dillard.
…Adding… Bernie…
Dillard’s campaign filings show he still owes $250,000 from his 2010 effort, mostly to Ron Gidwitz. Gidwitz, himself a 2006 candidate for the GOP nomination for governor, was Dillard’s campaign chairman in 2010 and is former CEO of Helene Curtis.
Dillard said he does not have to pay back Gidwitz.
Maybe he will now.
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Ugly matter ends for Kirk
Wednesday, Jul 17, 2013 - Posted by Rich Miller
* Tribune…
The Federal Election Commission has dismissed accusations by Sen. Mark Kirk’s ex-wife that he broke a series of campaign finance laws during his 2010 Senate race.
Kimberly Vertolli filed a complaint with the commission in 2011 against Kirk and others alleging they improperly hid payments to Kirk’s then-girlfriend and converted campaign funds for personal use.
Vertolli claimed the Kirk campaign paid Dodie McCracken through another company working for the campaign. Since the money was not paid directly to McCracken, her name does not appear in Kirk’s public reports outlining what he spent on the campaign.
In a letter to Vertolli on Tuesday, the election commission brushed aside each one of her allegations against Kirk, his Senate campaign, McCracken and Robert Vail Jr., owner of a Wilmette-based ad firm, The Patterson Group.
The commission agreed with Kirk’s position that money paid to McCracken did not have to be disclosed because she was a subcontractor to the Patterson Group.
Fury, scorned, etc. At least it’s over now.
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*** UPDATED x2 - Video *** Today’s quote
Wednesday, Jul 17, 2013 - Posted by Rich Miller
* From the Twitters…
*** UPDATE *** Video of the exchange is here…
View more videos at: http://nbcchicago.com.
Off-topic begins at about the 5 minute mark.
It’s pretty obvious that the Kass comment was a joke. Everybody laughed.
*** UPDATE 2 *** From WLS’ Bill Cameron…
When asked why it’s acceptible for the speaker and the attorney general to come from the same family, but not the speaker and the governor, Madigan said, “It sounds to me like you’ve been reading too much John Kass. Do you have an original question?”
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Question of the day
Wednesday, Jul 17, 2013 - Posted by Rich Miller
* Bruce Rauner’s repeated refusal to offer up any specifics continues…
Republican gubernatorial candidate Bruce Rauner says his goals for changing Illinois government now include installing term limits.
Later, though, while talking to reporters, Rauner declined to offer specifics, saying “we don’t have details on it yet,” but that an announcement was forthcoming.
* Kudos to Tom Kacich for writing this…
The 53-year-old venture capitalist said he was glad to see Attorney General Lisa Madigan decline to run for the Democratic nomination for governor.
“Her family is part of the corruption in the state. The voters don’t want concentrated power. They don’t want family dynasties,” he said. “We’ve got the same thing developing with the whole Daley-Emanuel machine. I am vehemently against (Democrat William) Daley being governor because Chicago already has that corruption and that patronage and the problems.”
Rauner, however, has contributed $200,000 to the campaign of Mayor Richard M. Daley and has supported Mayor Rahm Emanuel.
* The Question: Bruce Rauner is to specifics as _____ is to _____?
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* From Rep. Elaine Nekritz’s spokesman…
The two subcommittees of five members of the House-Senate pension conference committee are scheduled to meet privately this Friday afternoon. I am told some incomplete actuarial numbers have been submitted to the conferees and they will be discussing those and next steps at their meetings.
* Meanwhile…
GOP House lawmakers are calling for the legislature to be in constant special session until a pension fix is approved.
Despite the absence of a bill from the legislative conference committee charged with crafting legislation, which is still waiting on actuarial data, State Reps. Ron Sandack (R-Downers Grove), Dennis Reboletti (R-Elmhurst) and other GOP legislators will hold a press conference in Addison’s town hall on Wednesday morning to demand that Governor Pat Quinn call a special session each day until the legislature passes a comprehensive pension reform bill.
“All legislators have voted on some form of pension reform over the last five months, there is no reason not to call us back to Springfield,” said Sandack. “Wasting $17 million a day on a political stunt is unacceptable. Governor Quinn cutting pay for legislators is grandstanding and meaningless if we are not called back to session.”
The $17 million to which Sandack is referring is the amount that used to be added daily to the state’s unfunded pension liability, but that amount was revised substantially downward several weeks ago by the Quinn Administration to $5 million.
One political stunt deserves another, I suppose.
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Latino advice for gubernatorial candidates
Wednesday, Jul 17, 2013 - Posted by Rich Miller
* Martin Torres with the Latino Policy Forum has some advice for Illinois gubernatorial candidates…
1) Diversify your campaign’s brain trust
You can’t build bridges without any infrastructure. Hiring part-time consultants and recruiting well-known campaign surrogates can be an effective strategy, but don’t stop there. Hire Latino campaign staff to fill visible, prominent positions within your campaign and establish a Latino advisory committee. Incorporating diverse talent within your campaign’s brain trust will send a signal to everyone that your campaign takes this segment of the electorate seriously.
More importantly, Latino staff and advisors can provide valuable perspectives on how to address specific Latino audiences, offer feedback on how policy statements will be received by the Latino community, and connect you with people you will go on to forge relationships with throughout the election. They can also be used to make sure that your web content, print materials, and Spanish-language radio and TV ads strike the right chord with Latino voters. At the very least, diversifying your campaign’s inner circle will indicate to voters and civic leaders that your administration will be inclusive if your candidate prevails in 2014.
2) Be specific as to how your administration will address issues of concern to Latino residents
Latino voters want to know how they fit into your vision of a better, stronger, more prosperous Illinois. Successful candidates will apply a Latino perspective to the overarching issues all voters care about. So when your campaign is talking about economic development, please explain how Latino business owners will benefit from your proposals. When your campaign talks education, please discuss how your reform agenda will help meet the needs of Illinois’ largest growing student population. And when it articulates how to get Illinois out of debt, please outline how your package of tax changes, spending choices, and government reforms are going to affect Latino children, families, and workers. Your campaign doesn’t have to carve out a Latino-centric explanation for everything, but it’s reasonable to expect some specific, data-driven responses from candidates who want to earn the trust of Latino voters.
3) Make plans to visit Latino voters outside of Cook County
This sounds obvious, but your campaign might feel pretty good about its standing with the Latino electorate after successful pit stops in Little Village, Humboldt Park, and Cicero. Don’t be fooled: Roughly 40 percent of Latino residents live outside of Cook County. In fact, during the last decade, the Latino population grew by more than 60,000 in both Kane and Will Counties and by nearly 50,000 in Lake County. Before your campaign stops in these areas, do your homework. Find out when Latino residents started settling in large cities like Elgin and smaller villages like Carpentersville. That will help your campaign better understand the historic dynamics of the population, shed light on what’s fueled population growth over time, and give you some insight into what’s needed from a public policy perspective to contribute to the well-being of Latino families as you move forward.
Your thoughts on this list? Also, do you have any other advice?
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Fundraising reports
Wednesday, Jul 17, 2013 - Posted by Rich Miller
* The Tribune looks at contributions raised during the second quarter by both Gov. Pat Quinn and Bill Daley…
One-third of the $1 million the governor raised during the second quarter this year came from political action committees. Quinn received about $267,000 from organized labor PACs. Six donations alone, from political funds representing union engineers, painters, carpenters, machinists, laborers and pipefitters totaled $211,200, records showed.
The flurry of money left Quinn with $2.3 million to take on Daley, the former White House chief of staff and U.S. commerce secretary who is the son and brother of two former Chicago mayors.
But Daley is doing pretty well raising money. In just 19 days last month, the challenger was able to tap a national network of donors to raise nearly $800,000. The total included $100,000 of Daley’s own money. Daley entered July with $794,000, and in the first two weeks of the month has raised another $52,300 in big-money donations.
Among Daley’s largest donors was Boeing, which gave Daley $25,000 at the end of June. Five company officials, including its chief financial officer, Gregory Smith, added $13,800 this month. Also among Daley’s donors was New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg, who gave the individual maximum of $5,300. Bloomberg’s gun-control super PAC could get involved in the contest for governor on Daley’s behalf.
* Tom Kacich looks at Sen. Michael Frerichs’ cash…
All his money doesn’t make him invincible, but the $647,188 that state Sen. Mike Frerichs has available for a state treasurer race puts him in a better position than most other Democrats who have been looking at the job.
The Champaign Democrat’s campaign fortune is significantly greater than that held by the two Democrats who already had indicated interest in the race: Michael Cabonargi of Chicago, a member of the Cook County Board of Review, and Jason Ervin, a Chicago alderman. […]
[But] Frerichs said that Cabonargi, who has $400,897 in his campaign fund, emailed supporters last week to say that he isn’t running for a statewide office. […]
That leaves Ervin, whose most recent campaign disclosure report shows he had just $10,098 on hand, as well as $9,545 in campaign debt. […]
By a way of comparison, Frerichs’ nearly $650,000 campaign fund is more flush than the $400,241 that Republican Rutherford had in his campaign account four years ago as he was beginning the race for treasurer.
It’s also far more than any of the reported Republican candidates for treasurer next year have on hand. Sen. Darin LaHood of Peoria has $138,294, while former DuPage County Board Chairman Robert Schillerstrom has $39,727 and DuPage County Auditor Bob Grogan reported just $19,000.
* LaHood will soon get a boost from Newt Gingrich…
Newt Gingrich will be in north Peoria next week for State Senator Darin LaHood’s annual Sizzle and Swizzle fundraiser on July 25th at Brewers Distributing. The buzz is that Senator LaHood may be raising funds for a statewide bid in 2014 - possibly and most likely, State Treasurer. LaHood staffed for Treasurer Dan Rutherford before being elected to the State Senate.
“It’s such an honor to have Speaker Gingrich in Peoria to support me,” said Senator LaHood. “He is one of the most thoughtful and passionate voices for job creation policies and economic recovery solutions for our country. He is a transformational leader and I am honored to welcome him to Peoria.”
* The upcoming comptroller’s race was looked at by Kurt Erickson…
Simon entered July with $272,000 in her campaign account. She raised $191,000 during the most recent fundraising quarter, mostly from more than 500 small donors.
Her largest contributions, totaling $5,300 each, came from a retired Wittenberg University political science professor and his wife. Simon is a 1983 graduate of the Ohio school.
Topinka has $805,000 in her campaign account after raising $149,000 in the most recent quarter.
[Democratic Will County Auditor Duffy Blackburn] has $25,300 in his account. He has raised about $24,000 in the past three months
* And Kirk Dillard said he wouldn’t raise money for a while if elected…
Dillard pledged that if elected he would eschew raising any money for his campaign fund in the first 2½ years of his term, in order to devote himself full time to governing.
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*** LIVE COVERAGE *** Metra allegations hearing
Wednesday, Jul 17, 2013 - Posted by Rich Miller
* ABC7 has live coverage of today’s RTA hearing over allegations made by Metra’s former CEO that he was dismissed because he had “not acceded to requests for unlawful politically-motivated employment actions.” Click here for the live feed. WGN also has a live feed here.
* Sun-Times…
Former Metra CEO Alex Clifford testified Wednesday that after he wrote a memo saying House Speaker Michael Madigan’s office asked him to raise the pay of a Madigan campaign worker and hire another friend, Metra officials worked to oust him.
The memo “sparked a desire…to have me leave sooner rather than later,” Clifford told the RTA board, which has financial oversight over Metra.Clifford said that in February this year Metra Board Chairman Brad O’Halloran told him O’Halloran was going to have to get a meeting with Madigan to see what damage Clifford’s rebuffing of Madigan’s wishes would have on the agency’s funding.
“I wanted to stay working at Metra,” Clifford said earlier in the hearing. “This has been a long, difficult process.”
Clifford said he was “really steaming” when he heard he may not have the votes from the Metra board to stay on the job after he refused to go along with requests from powerful politicians.
* Tribune…
Shortly before Metra CEO Alex Clifford’s patronage complaints against House Speaker Michael Madigan pushed the agency into severance negotiations, Madigan asked Gov. Pat Quinn’s administration to hire the supporter at the heart of Clifford’s allegation.
The Quinn administration — which has sharply criticized Metra’s handling of Clifford’s departure — granted the speaker’s request for Patrick Ward, a labor relations specialist and longtime foot soldier in Madigan’s political army. Officials said Ward now is working in a newly tailored Chicago-based job that took over the duties of a state worker whose job had been based in Winnebago County.
The state revealed that Ward was the only person interviewed for the $70,000-a-year job.
The Quinn administration said the governor did not know about the hiring until Friday.
* And here’s a ScribbleLive feed…
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Keith Taylor
Wednesday, Jul 17, 2013 - Posted by Rich Miller
* Keith Taylor was laid to rest yesterday after a tough battle with cancer. Keith was former Comptroller Dan Hynes’ chief of staff and a heck of a good guy. Hynes gave the eulogy at Keith’s Springfield funeral and he asked that I run a condensed version here. I was more than happy to oblige…
Thank you for this opportunity to honor my dear friend Keith Taylor. There is something so unfair about the events of these past few months. Unfair that a man who had such boundless energy died so young. That a man who enjoyed life so much had to suffer through his final few months.
I don’t think anyone in this church has met, or will meet, someone as unique and multi-faceted as Keith Taylor. He was an original blend of so many differing traits: a smart, genuine, loving, inquisitive, devoted, loyal, hard-working practical joker. Keith was anything but one-dimensional.
First and foremost, he was an historian and a scholar — but not just of U.S. or world history. He was a scholar of U.S. Presidents, famous wars and battles, professional baseball and football legends and championship teams, Kentucky Derby winners, rock and roll bands, Illinois high school basketball, and of course, Illinois government and politics. There was never a time that Keith wasn’t reading at least three different books, usually on totally divergent, and often totally obscure, topics. Retiring presidents have to form commissions to create their libraries, Keith’s is already built — there must be two or three thousand books at their home on Clearview.
Keith was a public servant. He believed that government was good, and that working for government was an honor. He didn’t get into politics for power or prestige or self-advancement. He did it because he wanted to believe in something. He had no tolerance for demagogues or phonies, and had no desire to spend time with back-slappers and opportunists. He was very decisive because he trusted his instincts, and his motives were always pure and direct.
Keith was a leader and a mentor. During my campaigns and while serving in office, I was extremely lucky to have had an incredibly talented group of young staff members — many of them are here today. Each and every one of them was shaped, molded and mentored by Keith. He tried to instill in them the values that he believed were important in the workplace and especially in government:
Number One: Work hard. The way to get ahead is to be the first person at the office in the morning and the last one to leave at night.
Number Two: You must start at the bottom and work your way up. There’s no room for prima donnas and no job is beneath you.
Number Three: Be loyal. Period. Keith believed in loyalty and would stay true to the bitter end.
Keith was revered in the office. He never once screamed at a staff member, yet people feared letting him down. They just didn’t want to disappoint him.
Keith was by far the most brilliant strategist of downstate Democratic politics Illinois has ever seen. Part of this goes back to his being a scholar. Keith was somewhat of a savant when it came to demographics and county election returns. He could tell you without hesitating what percentage of the vote Mike Howlett got in Alexander County in 1976 or which Democrats were able to win Adams County in the last two decades. On election night, Keith could look at a sampling of eight downstate counties with only 20% of the returns in, and he could tell you right then and there whether the election was won or lost. He had an encyclopedic knowledge of downstate legislators, county chairmen and precinct committeemen, as well as little factoids about each and every county and county seat.
Last week, when I got the call that Keith had passed, I was talking to my brother Matt about everything we all had been through together and what a special guy Keith was. My last comment to Matt was: “It’s the end of an era ….. because they just don’t make ‘em like him anymore”. And it’s really true. Keith came from that old school of politics that rested firmly on things like respect, loyalty and honor — things that have slowly faded away over the last decade of Illinois politics.
There will never be anyone like Keith Taylor. But we will remember him. And we will aspire to be like him. And we are all better for having known him.
* Keith was a huge Beatles fan, so this one’s for him…
Pools of sorrow waves of joy
are drifting through my open mind
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