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Monday, Sep 16, 2013 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Daley react

Monday, Sep 16, 2013 - Posted by Rich Miller

* From a press release…

Quinn Campaign’s Statement on Bill Daley’s Decision

CHICAGO - The Quinn for Illinois Campaign released the following statement on Bill Daley’s decision not to run in the 2014 primary election:

“We respect Bill Daley’s decision. A divisive primary would have only helped Republicans who want to take this state backwards and undo the important progress we have made.

“When Governor Pat Quinn took the oath of office, Illinois faced a triple crisis due to decades of corruption, fiscal mismanagement and the worst recession since the Great Depression.

“Under the Governor’s leadership, Illinois is making a comeback.

“From restoring integrity to state government with strong new ethics laws to working with our auto manufacturers to create thousands of new Illinois jobs, all the while making many hard but necessary decisions to balance the budget, Governor Quinn has never stopped fighting for working families.

“We have more work to do.

“The Governor will continue fighting for taxpayers to enact a comprehensive pension reform solution that will strengthen Illinois’ economic competitiveness.

“And when the time comes for voters to make their decision on Nov. 4 next year, we are confident they will recognize the difficult and important work the Governor has accomplished on their behalf.”

* From a press release…

Bruce Rauner Statement on Bill Daley Dropping Out of Governor’s Race

Republican candidate for governor Bruce Rauner issued the following statement in response to Democrat Bill Daley dropping out of the governor’s race:

“Pat Quinn is a master of machine politics, but that approach to governing has failed the people of Illinois. I’m the only candidate able to offer a clean break from the failed policies coming out of Springfield, and I can’t be bought by the government union bosses and special interests running the state. I can’t be intimidated, and I won’t back down until we bring back Illinois.”

  17 Comments      


Daley drops out

Monday, Sep 16, 2013 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Tribune

“One of the things I always thought in my career that I wanted to do, I thought I would be able to have that opportunity, I hoped, would be to run for office. And even though you’re around it for a long time, you really don’t get a sense of the enormity of it until you get into it,” Daley told the Tribune.

“But the last six weeks or so have been really tough on me, struggling with this. Is this really me? Is this really what I want to spend my next five to nine years doing? And is this the best thing for me to do at this stage of my life?” he said. […]

“There’s no doubt in my mind that Pat Quinn will not be the next governor of Illinois,” said Daley. “This governor is not that strong that somebody should fear running against him.”

  100 Comments      


All those years ago

Monday, Sep 16, 2013 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Fifty years ago the Beatles took a vacation before starting an American tour. John Lennon went to Paris. Ringo Starr and Paul McCartney headed to Greece. And George Harrison went to Benton, IL to visit his sister

Illinois State Historical Society executive director William Furry says Harrison’s obscurity allowed him to walk Benton’s streets, jam with local musicians, visit record stores and even camp in the Shawnee National Forest without being hassled by fans. Harrison also bought a guitar in Mount Vernon and sang “Happy Birthday” at a bocce ball club in Benton.

A radio station in nearby West Frankfort played many of the Beatles’ first recordings, and Harrison was interviewed by a local teenager in what has been said to be the first American question-and-answer session with a Beatle.

* Check this out

Louise Harrison wanted to promote The Beatles’ music with local radio stations.

She had previously been sent a copy of “From Me to You,” that she took to the WFRX-AM radio station in West Frankfort. Disc jockey Marcia Raubach played the song over the airwaves for the first time in the U.S. in June 1963.

When George Harrison visited his sister, the two hitchhiked to the West Frankfort radio station with a copy of “She Loves You,” which had been released the previous month in the United Kingdom. The single was also played by the station.

Can you imagine a Beatle hitchhiking in southern Illinois to promote a single?

Wow.

* Marilyn Lewis Dickey interviewed Harrison back then for her high school newspaper

I was editor of the BCHS newspaper, The Echo, during my senior year. My sister Jean had also been an Echo editor.

Louise Caldwell called me and asked if I would like to interview her brother, George Harrison, who was on “Holiday” from England.

She said he was in “a band.” Little did I know what that band was to become.

This was in the fall of 1963 before the Beatles were on Ed Sullivan in the spring. This “band” was not known in the States just yet.

I remember meeting Louise and her brother, George Harrison, on the front porch of the house. My first reaction was that I thought it strange that he had on socks with his sandals.

My next reaction was that his hair seemed long for the style at the time.

We went into the house and I asked him questions about his band and his impressions of the United States.

I don’t remember any of these answers! He then played a 45 rpm record of the band’s latest songs that were popular in England. Those songs were “She Loves Me” and “I Want to Hold your Hand”

You can find lots more details about his visit by clicking here.

* There was also a documentary made about his visit

* From a press release

Governor Pat Quinn has proclaimed Sept. 21 as “George Harrison Day” in Illinois to commemorate the late musical star’s two-week stay in southern Illinois 50 years ago, when The Beatles were poised to conquer pop culture and music history. Governor Quinn also urged citizens to attend the Sept. 21 historical marker dedication in Benton that will unveil a permanent reminder of Harrison’s southern Illinois activities as “The First Beatle in America.” Today’s announcement is part of Governor Quinn’s commitment to promote heritage tourism in Illinois.

“Many icons through history have Illinois connections, and we are recognizing one more with this proclamation,” Governor Quinn said. “George Harrison helped define a generation, and we encourage visitors to follow his footsteps throughout southern Illinois.”

The historical marker dedication, hosted by the Franklin County Historic Preservation Society and the Illinois State Historical Society, will be held in Benton’s Capitol Park on Saturday, Sept. 21 at 2 p.m. The event is free and open to the public. The marker will describe the regional exploits of a young British musician just months before he and his partners exploded into worldwide fame that is as strong today as it was in 1963.

  25 Comments      


Daley’s retort

Monday, Sep 16, 2013 - Posted by Rich Miller

* From a press release announcing the Illinois Democratic County Chairmen’s Association’s endorsement of Gov. Pat Quinn over the weekend…

“Four years ago the Illinois Democratic County Chairman’s Association remained neutral in the primary race for Governor. Now our Association enthusiastically and overwhelmingly endorses and supports Pat Quinn for election in the 2014 primary and general elections,” Pirtle continued.

County chairmen voted overwhelmingly to support the Governor. Chairmen from 79 of Illinois’ 102 counties voted in favor of Governor Quinn, who inherited a triple crisis caused by decades of corruption and fiscal mismanagement and the worst recession since the Great Depression.

Governor Quinn’s record includes enacting the largest capital construction program in state history supporting more than 400,000 jobs; the largest increase in health insurance coverage for people; and his work to help families who are facing foreclosure stay in their homes.

By contrast, millionaire bankers including Bill Daley - who served as Chairman of the Midwest Region for JPMorgan Chase from 2004-2010 and Head of Corporate Social Responsibility from 2007-2010 - helped create the recession.

Today’s latest win for Governor Quinn’s re-election bid served as the second recent failure for Mr. Daley. Mr. Daley tried but failed miserably to secure the endorsement of the Cook County Democratic Party, which overwhelmingly voted to support the Governor.

* Daley said he was “offended” by the governor’s jabs

“If I’m so bad about the Democratic values, I mean, you tell me why President Obama offered me the chief of staff or why Bill Clinton put me in his Cabinet,” Daley said in an appearance on WGN-AM 720.

“I take second place to no one who stands up for the Democratic values on behalf of the people that are working in this state — no one. Not Pat Quinn or anybody else,” he said. “And I just am offended by his sort of trying to get the ball on me and try to avoid the responsibility which he has.”

Offended or not, as I’ve told you before the polling shows the attack works

“Would you be more likely or less likely to vote for a Democratic gubernatorial candidate who ran a major bank that received federal bailout money, foreclosed on large numbers of Illinois homeowners, and engaged in predatory subprime mortgage lending?” voters were asked.

Unsurprisingly, that question moved the needle in a big way. According to the poll, a whopping 73 percent of Democrats were less likely to vote for the candidate.

Daley is gonna need a better comeback.

  62 Comments      


Question of the day

Monday, Sep 16, 2013 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Treasurer Dan Rutherford with his new running mate Steve Kim…

* The Question: Caption?

Also, bonus points for anyone who can explain to me two things: 1) What does Kim really bring to the ticket?; and 2) How is Kim the best person qualified to take over the governor’s job if, God forbid, something happens to Rutherford?

  79 Comments      


Charlie nails it

Monday, Sep 16, 2013 - Posted by Rich Miller

* From Charlie Wheeler’s latest Illinois Issues column

After watching Illinois government and politics for more than 40 years, one might reasonably assume that he or she has seen it all.

One — or at least this one — would be wrong. […]

On the other hand, the amazement was understandable to find out that Ty Fahner, president of the Civic Committee of the Commercial Club of Chicago, was claiming that he and his cohorts had been urging Wall Street agencies to downgrade the state’s credit ratings as a way to pressure lawmakers to slash pension benefits for current and retired public employees.

The story was broken in late July by Rich Miller on his capitolfax.com blog site, a must-read for anyone interested in what’s happening in state government and politics. Miller posted an Illinois Channel video of a Union League Club luncheon last March, at which Fahner said he and some of his Civic Committee colleagues contacted the rating agencies, saying, “How in the hell can you guys do this [maintain the state’s existing credit rating]? You are an enabler to let the state continue.”

Miller’s report drew calls for investigation from We Are One Illinois, a labor coalition working to protect public employee pensions but was ignored by virtually all the major media, save Illinois Public Radio.

Two weeks later, Fahner emailed Miller to say that he “misspoke,” and that no one connected with the Civic Committee had contacted the ratings agencies. […]

What morphed the story from simply “amazing” at what the super-rich might do to protect or enhance their fortunes to the higher level of “unbelievable,” though, is the fact that Fahner also is a current partner and former chairman of Mayer Brown, the Chicago law firm that two years ago won a lucrative contract to serve as the state’s bond counsel.

So in essence, a partner of the law firm advising Illinois on its borrowing — for which it’s already been paid more than $1 million in fees and expenses — was simultaneously stabbing the state in the back by trying to crash its credit rating.

Breath-taking perfidy, even for Illinois, but also a good reminder that one should never, ever say, “Now I’ve seen it all!”

Charlie was also on the latest edition of Illinois Public Radio’s “State Week” and chastised reporters for focusing on the “Statehouse doors” controversy and completely ignoring the Fahner story.

  28 Comments      


Prison brunches to save money, time

Monday, Sep 16, 2013 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Some state prisons are now serving two meals a day instead of three

Feeding prisoners is a lot of work — not only cooking and cleaning up, but moving inmates from cells or dorms over to the mess hall.

Illinois Department of Corrections spokesman Tom Shaer says at some prisons, breakfast is served at 4 a.m., which means moving inmates in the dark. […]

But the John Howard Association, an independent prison watchdog, cautions that in Ohio, a similar brunch program caused health problems among inmates who hadn’t eaten enough to property digest their medication.

An official with AFSCME, the union that represents prison guards, says brunch is OK as long as it’s properly staffed and there’s enough food to meet inmates’ dietary needs.

* Meanwhile, late Friday, IDOC’s Tom Shaer responded to a Thursday post about there being no more prison dogs…

In yesterday’s entry, you wrote as fact something that is not true and about which IDOC was not asked:

    Without those dogs, the guards have to do the cell and visitor searches on their own, so contraband could get by them.

This is incorrect. IDOC regularly uses dogs to search for contraband. As I’ve told other media, we have arrangements with local police and county sheriff departments for use of canines. The IDOC K-9 positions were eliminated because they weren’t necessary, as we still use dogs whenever we have a need.

—–Also, regarding this:

    *** UPDATE *** From AFSCME’s Anders Lindall in comments…

    Due to staff cuts, Tower One at Robinson is closed save for three approximately hourlong periods each day. Contrary to Shaer’s claim, frontline employees at Robinson report that Tower One is located just 200 yards from where the escape occurred and has a direct line of sight over the area.

This is incorrect. According to the Robinson CC Warden, two IDOC chiefs and a Lieutenant involved the search, no guard tower has direct line of sight to the normally unused area from which inmate work trustee Jared Carter walked away. As you know, Robinson is a minimum-security facility and Carter had clearance to be outside the walls, always supervised. There had not been a walk-away or other escape from Illinois prisons in years. Security at Robinson CC and throughout IDOC is effective, which is why we do not have these occurrences.

  23 Comments      


Today’s quote

Monday, Sep 16, 2013 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Jim Edgar asked an AP reporter a couple of questions about his story on GOP gubernatorial candidate Bruce Rauner

For a candidate seeking support, [Rauner] comes on strong and can sometimes give offense.

“Have you met him? Did you get to talk?” former Republican Gov. Jim Edgar asked sardonically. Edgar has — and didn’t.

Heh.

  13 Comments      


Brady to announce female running mate tomorrow

Monday, Sep 16, 2013 - Posted by Rich Miller

* From Sen. Bill Brady’s Twitter page


Any guesses about who she is?

  61 Comments      


Two sets of victims

Monday, Sep 16, 2013 - Posted by Rich Miller

* At first glance, I, like Eric Zorn, was somewhat puzzled about this story

Gov. Pat Quinn has asked the director of a state commission vetting allegations of police torture to step down amid complaints from victims’ families that the commission violated Illinois law by excluding them from the process.

Quinn said in a letter released Wednesday that he had asked David Thomas to resign from the Illinois Torture Inquiry and Relief Commission immediately, “and if he does not do so the commission should remove him.”

While the commission’s assignment to look for possibly torture-induced confessions was critical, “it is just as critical … to hear from the families of the murdered victims,” Quinn stated in the letter, which was addressed to Cook County State’s Attorney Anita Alvarez, who had written to the governor expressing concerns about the treatment of victims’ families.

* Zorn

What possible information, let alone relevant information, could the family members of crime victims have to offer a panel exploring the narrow and preliminary issue of whether the suspect or suspects in the related crime were tortured while in police custody?

How could it possibly be useful — never mind “critical” — to hear from them at such a stage in the review process? […]

(W)hat “input” could victims’ families possibly offer when it comes to legal determinations about investigatory/procedural matters to which they were not witnesses?

The alleged “victim” here is actually the person who may have been tortured. The original “victims” wouldn’t have any knowledge of that.

* But Chuck Goudie’s I-Team also jumped into the fray

“We are outraged and we think the people of Illinois would be outraged if they knew what we know,” said Joe Heinrich, murder victim’s brother.

What Joe Heinrich says he knows started precisely thirty years and two weeks ago, in 1983. His sister JoEllen Pueschel and her husband Dean were savagely killed in their West Rogers Park apartment. Son Ricky saw it. The then-11-year old was left for dead, but survived and testified against Jerry Mahaffey and his brother Reginald. Ricky is now 41 years old.

“Without question they are the ones who swung the bats, they are the ones who grabbed the gun, the ones who stabbed the knives. They are the ones who did unthinkable things to my mother,” said Rick Pueschel, attack survivor.

Murder-con Jerry Mahaffey claims he was tortured into confessing under the regime of notorious police commander Jon Burge. When Mahaffey asked the new Illinois torture commission to review his case, under state law, the victims’ family members were to be notified. But they never were.

* From the state law

The 2009 law establishing the commission states that in cases where evidence of torture is found, the director “shall use all due diligence to notify the victim and explain the inquiry process,” and notify victims of their “right to present his or her views and concerns throughout the … investigation.”

So, the commission screwed up and didn’t follow the law.

* Then again, Zorn quotes DePaul College of Law professor Len Cavise, a member of the commission

The work of the Commission has absolutely nothing to do with underlying guilt or innocence. We have no power whatsoever to retry the case or even to examine the weight of the evidence. Our statutory charge is solely to determine whether physical coercion led to a confession in the case. If we so find, the case is referred to the Chief Judge for further proceedings. At that point, our work is done. It is then up to the court to determine the relationship between the torture and the conviction…..

As much as we welcome the participation of the families of the victims of crime as well as the families of the victims of torture, most families have no personal knowledge as to whether or not the police tortured the defendant. I repeat we are only looking at torture, not the underlying case. The underlying case is an inquiry for the courts and we are not a court.

OK, I get all that, but state law is state law. I don’t remember the details, but I’m betting the bill was crafted in a way to make sure it could pass, and that meant making sure the original victims were notified. The commission dropped the ball.

It’s possible, even probable, that Burge and his thugs used torture to “frame” guilty men. While admittedly irrelevant to the commission’s mission, the original victims still have a right to be heard.

Your thoughts?

  21 Comments      


One battle almost over, others to begin

Monday, Sep 16, 2013 - Posted by Rich Miller

* My weekly syndicated newspaper column

Several members of the Illinois General Assembly’s special pension reform committee told me last week that they believed a final proposal would emerge within the next week to 10 days.

The conference committee has been working since June on a solution to the state’s nearly $100 billion long-term pension funding shortfall, after Gov. Pat Quinn urged members to find a way around the spring legislative session’s gridlock on the issue.

For the past several weeks, the committee, made up of three Democrats and two Republicans from each chamber, has been working on “tweaks” to ideas that they’ve discussed behind closed doors.

As I write this, there was no word on what the final proposal would look like, but there was real concern among Democrats I spoke with that the Republicans might decide not to go along. While the Republicans on the committee have strongly indicated they’re committed to finding a solution, three of the four GOP members are running for higher office — Sen. Bill Brady (governor), Rep. Jil Tracy (lieutenant governor) and Rep. Darlene Senger (U.S. House).

The Democrats fear that any strong objections from traditional Republican allies, particularly in big business, could spook those GOP members into opposition. And, as is usually the case with this sort of stuff, the chaos created by no solution could be more politically beneficial to the Republicans in next year’s election than getting this monster off the table now.

Despite their super-majority status in both chambers, it’ll be impossible for the Democrats to pass a reform bill without significant Republican assistance. Democratic members are just too closely allied with union interests.

Plus, as long as there is no pension reform proposal for Chicago (and none is on the horizon), Mayor Rahm Emanuel has little or no incentive to lobby his Democratic members to pass a bill and billions of dollars in budgetary reasons to quietly oppose it until he gets what he wants.

In the House, a majority of Republicans sided with the public employee unions last spring when they voted against Speaker Michael Madigan’s pension reform bill. That bill passed with just two votes above the bare majority, so there are few to spare.

And while Madigan (D-Chicago) probably has some votes in his back pocket that he can bring out to cushion the roll call a little more (depending on what Emanuel does, of course), it’s doubtful that any of the House Republican “no” votes will flip to “yes” once the compromise is unveiled.

That means that about all of the House Republicans who voted for the business-backed Madigan bill in May will have to vote for the pension reform committee’s report when it gets a vote, likely during the upcoming veto session.

Aside from the politics, there are some legitimate concerns being raised by Republicans about what they know of the proposal so far. They believe the savings assumptions are based on what they view as a too-low projection of the inflation rate.

Despite three straight decades of low inflation, there are those who insist that a wave of high inflation could return with a vengeance, blowing those savings projections out of the water.

Another concern is the back-loaded nature of the savings. About $94 billion of the $146 billion the bill is projected to save the state will occur between fiscal years 2045 and 2050. It’ll be tough to allow most of the income tax hike to expire in 2015 if more pension savings can’t be found upfront.

The details leaked out of the committee so far add up to a savings of $1.14 billion in fiscal 2015 — not nearly enough to ensure that crucial programs could be spared from the ax if most of the income tax increase goes away.

And make no mistake, achieving the expiration of the higher income tax is the reason behind much of the public demands by business groups for cutting the pension benefits of state workers, teachers and university employees.

About the only recourse the Democrats will have to prevent this from getting out of hand is to threaten to run the Senate-passed, labor-backed reform bill, that’s opposed by business, if Republicans refuse to go along with a compromise.

That possibility is already being floated. Such a vote would get the unions off the Democrats’ backs, and the GOP most certainly knows this.

The vote wouldn’t stop the demands for more reform, however, and the New York credit ratings agencies might not love it either. The Democrats clearly know this as well. So we could end up with a high-stakes game of “chicken” next month.

  61 Comments      


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