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“If the health department closes our entire office down, how are we going to do early voting or anything for that matter?”

Monday, Aug 17, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Center Square

Green County Clerk Debbie Banghart’s entire staff was sent home.

The county health department ordered a two-week quarantine for all of them after learning one of her employees had contracted COVID-19.

“We still have a lot of preparation to do for this election and, right now, I’m not even allowed to step foot in my office,” she said. “At night. After hours or anything.”

On a call with Illinois Congressman Rodney Davis, Banghart asked fellow clerks and elections officials about a potential nightmare scenario this fall.

“What happens if all of my employees are quarantined at home? If the health department closes our entire office down, how are we going to do early voting or anything for that matter?”

Davis said the issue is a real threat to the November General Election.

“Imagine, you’ve got 9,000 registered voters in Green County. Some of our counties have hundreds of thousands,” he said.

More than two dozen employees of Cook County Clerk Karen Yarborough’s office have contracted COVID-19 since March, according to reports from her office and the Chicago Sun-Times.

It’s a nightmare scenario, for sure. The state may need to set up some sort of roving crew that can pitch in if the worst happens in some of these counties.

  32 Comments      


Question of the day

Monday, Aug 17, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Gov. Jim Thompson went down the giant slide to open the Illinois State Fair every year. Here are a few photos that my pal John Amdor found online when I came up empty…

* I asked the Department of Agriculture if they had any pics of Thompson on the slide. They sent me these from the State Fair Museum…

Big Jim loved the state fair and he loved that goofy giant slide. And since he passed away during what would’ve been the 2020 Illinois State Fair, there’s some talk among his family and friends of having a celebration of his life during next year’s fair and maybe asking the governor to set aside a special day.

* The Question: Preferred activities during Jim Thompson Day?

  31 Comments      


Weekend protest roundup

Monday, Aug 17, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Chicago Police Superintendent David Brown today…


* After watching several videos, it’s not hard to see that at least some protesters were indeed itching for a fight…


* But this is from an NBC5 video of the situation on LaSalle St

That looks like classic kettling

“Kettling needs to stop,” [Ald. Andre Vasquez] tweeted Saturday night, alongside a video showing officers appearing to surround protesters. Vasquez echoed critics of the tactic in adding, “It is what creates the tension. It’s what made things escalate the night of the first riots and it continues to.”

History

In 2012 the City of Chicago agreed to a $6.2 million class-action settlement over the mass arrest of protesters and passersby kettled during a massive protest marking the start of the 2003 invasion of Iraq.

* CPD claims it offered people an opportunity to leave…


But…


* Sunday press release…

Below is a statement from elected officials on Mayor Lori Lightfoot and the Chicago Police Department’s crackdown on young protestors in the loop on Saturday evening.

The elected officials signing on to the statement at this time are: State Senator Robert Peters, State Senator Celina Villanueva, State Representative Lakesia Collins, State Representative Theresa Mah, Alderman Byron Sigcho-Lopez, Alderwoman Rossana Rodriguez Sanchez, Alderman Andre Vasquez, Alderman Carlos Ramirez-Rosa, Alderwoman Jeanette Taylor, and Cook County Commissioner Brandon Johnson.

“Chicagoans have been told that it is necessary to spend 40% of the Chicago budget on police in order to prevent violence and promote public safety. Yet this weekend, just 24 hours after a 12-year-old boy was shot and at the same time as another shooting was taking place on the south side, Mayor Lightfoot and Superintendent Brown stationed thousands of officers downtown, where they kettled, pepper sprayed, and beat demonstrators–some of them as young as 17 years old.

“We once again condemn Mayor Lightfoot and Superintendent Brown for their use of police force against these demonstrators on Saturday night, and for the continued escalation of surveillance, violence, and detention of protestors. We question the logic of spending police dollars on social media surveillance, pepper spray, and riot gear to beat teenagers while the directives of the federal consent decree go unmet and the murder clearance rate remains abysmally low.

“We are wholeheartedly with the protestors who have taken to the streets to demand a future free of violence. Many of these young people are themselves anti-violence activists who, like too many other Black and Latinx Chicagoans, have lost friends and family to gun violence. It is their right to protest, and it is our responsibility to listen. We encourage Mayor Lightfoot and Superintendent Brown to do the same.”

Follow-up today…

Since this statement was released, the Chicago Police Department has continued to escalate its surveillance, abuse, and propaganda efforts:

They have made the frankly ridiculous argument that officers with guns, helmets, bulletproof vests, batons, riot gear, and pepper spray were threatened by teenagers with umbrellas and skateboards.

Somehow, they did not have ANY body camera footage of the latest shooting of a civilian last weekend, but they were able to immediately release selectively edited footage of Saturday’s protests in an attempt to justify their use of force despite firsthand footage showing officers beating an unarmed Black youth as he lies on the ground.

They have been condemned by legal observers for publishing the pictures, full names, and locations of those arrested on Saturday

* Tribune

Chicago police released a video Sunday afternoon saying it showed outside agitators in rain ponchos and umbrellas instigated the violence Saturday, but organizers pushed back on the narrative.

“They come out with a gun and a baton and pepper spray and Mace and they get mad about some water bottles? They get mad at umbrellas?” Kamil said.

CPD video…


The use of umbrellas is a tactic devised by anti-government demonstrators in Hong Kong

In Hong Kong, umbrellas are more than just protection from rain or glaring sunshine. They have become tools for expression, privacy and self-defense—and that’s made them a staple of the anti-government demonstrations that have rocked the city over the past three months.

Ponchos also protect demonstrators from gas attacks and water is used to flush eyes after demonstrators are hit with pepper spray, or to hydrate during the heat, or, as the cops rightly note, to hurl the bottles at the police.

* CBS 2

Elena Chamorro, 18, of Lakeview, was charged with one felony count of aggravated battery to a peace officer and one misdemeanor count of mob action. Chamorro was arrested at 7:03 p.m. Saturday in the 0-99 block of East Randolph Street after police said she battered a uniformed deputy chief of police during the protest.

CPD posted Chamorro’s home address online. If you click here and here (language alert), you can watch video of the alleged altercation. Seems like the white shirt more than held his own. And the protester was a very determined person.

* Meanwhile

A family is raising money online to try to rebuild after their salon was damaged by people looting last week.

China McNeil opened ChiHair Imports about five years ago but has been in the hair business for more than 20 years. The salon, 674 N. Dearborn St., sells hair extensions and wigs.

The shop was among those targeted last week by people looting in the Loop and surrounding areas. The unrest began after police shot a 20-year-old man in Englewood, though those arrested for the thefts did not mention a connection to the shooting in court, the Tribune reported.

The fundraiser for ChiHair Imports was started by the owner’s daughter, who wrote on GoFundMe her mother had “lost everything she has worked for in one day.” The campaign has raised more than $6,000 so far, but the family-owned salon is trying to get at least $10,000 to rebuild.

McNeil’s daughter expressed solidarity with protesters condemning the killing of Black people at the hands of police, but said “in these moments of solidarity however, businesses have been destroyed.”

They’re almost to their $10K goal. Click here to donate.

* Some additional coverage…

* Blame game for weekend downtown melee pits mayor and CPD against activists

* Accusations fly between police and protesters one day after violent clash injured dozens

* At Tense Downtown Protest, Police ‘Kettle’ Activists — And Aldermen Have Questions

  28 Comments      


Hearing officer recommends that Willie Wilson’s name be included on the ballot

Monday, Aug 17, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Illinois State Board of Elections Hearing Examiner David Herman

This matter commenced when Doris J. Turner (hereinafter “Objector”) timely filed her “Objector’s Petition” with the State Board of Elections. Objector’s Petition is based solely on the United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit reversing the Order entered in Libertarian Party of Illinois v. Pritzker, 20 CV 2112. In the Libertarian case, the District Court for the Northern District of Illinois entered a Preliminary Injunction on April 23, 2020 reducing the required minimum number of signatures for candidates nominated by any new political party, as defined by 10 ILCS 5/10-2, and for any independent candidates, as defined in 10 ILCS 5/10-3, to 10% of the statutory minimum established by the Illinois Election Code. Objector admits in her Petition that the Candidate filed a total number of signatures greater than the 10% threshold established by the Order entered by the Northern District. Objector argues that should the United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit reverse the Order entered by the Northern District, then the Candidate’s Nomination Papers are invalid in that they contain less than the 25,000 signatures required by the Illinois Election Code. […]

While the Hearing Examiner has reviewed those filings, the Hearing Examiner will not make a ruling as to the merits of the Motion to Dismiss because the United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit has not yet acted.

At the time of this Recommendation, the Seventh Circuit has not ruled on the validity of the Preliminary Injunction entered by the District Court for the Northern District of Illinois. Therefore, there is no basis to reach the merits, if any, of Objector’s Petition. Wherefore, the Hearing Examiner recommends that the Illinois State Board of Elections DOES place the Candidate’s name on the ballot for the office of United States Senator for the State of Illinois because the Candidate has filed a total number of signatures meeting the 10% threshold established by the Preliminary Injunction Order entered by the Northern District of Illinois.

Conclusion

The Hearing Examiner recommends that Candidate’s name BE PLACED on the ballot as a candidate for the office of United States Senator for the State of Illinois at the November 3, 2020 election.

The board will meet Friday and likely issue its ruling at that time.

  1 Comment      


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Monday, Aug 17, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

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1,773 new cases, 12 additional deaths, 1,544 people in the hospital, 4.2 percent positivity rate

Monday, Aug 17, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Press release…

The Illinois Department of Public Health (IDPH) today announced 1,773 new confirmed cases of coronavirus disease (COVID-19) in Illinois, including 12 additional confirmed deaths.

    - Cook County: 1 male 60s, 1 male 80s
    - Jefferson County: 1 female 70s, 1 female 80s
    - Jo Daviess County: 1 male 80s
    - LaSalle County: 2 female 90s, 1 male 90s
    - McLean County: 1 female 60s
    - Rock Island County: 1 female 100+
    - Wabash County: 1 female 60s
    - Winnebago County: 1 female 90s

Currently, IDPH is reporting a total of 207,854 cases, including 7,756 deaths, in 102 counties in Illinois. The age of cases ranges from younger than one to older than 100 years. Within the past 24 hours, laboratories have reported 38,246 specimens for a total of 3,405,097. The preliminary seven-day statewide positivity for cases as a percent of total test from August 10 – August 16 is 4.2%. As of last night, 1,544 people in Illinois were reported to be in the hospital with COVID-19. Of those, 340 patients were in the ICU and 126 patients with COVID-19 were on ventilators.

Following guidance from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, IDPH is now reporting both confirmed and probable cases and deaths on its website. Reporting probable cases will help show the potential burden of COVID-19 illness and efficacy of population-based non-pharmaceutical interventions. IDPH will update these data once a week.

*All data are provisional and will change. In order to rapidly report COVID-19 information to the public, data are being reported in real-time. Information is constantly being entered into an electronic system and the number of cases and deaths can change as additional information is gathered. For health questions about COVID-19, call the hotline at 1-800-889-3931 or email dph.sick@illinois.gov.

* Sunday

The Illinois Department of Public Health (IDPH) today announced 1,562 new confirmed cases of coronavirus disease (COVID-19) in Illinois, including 18 additional confirmed deaths.

    Cook County: 1 female 30s, 1 female 60s, 1 male 60s, 1 female 70s, 2 males 70s, 3 males 80s
    Kankakee County: 1 male 70s
    LaSalle County: 1 female 70s
    McHenry County: 1 female 90s
    Morgan County: 1 female 60s, 1 female 100+
    Rock Island County: 1 female 90s
    Will County: 1 male 60s, 1 female 80s, 1 female 90s

Currently, IDPH is reporting a total of 206,081 cases, including 7,744 deaths, in 102 counties in Illinois. The age of cases ranges from younger than one to older than 100 years. Within the past 24 hours, laboratories have reported 37,089 specimens for a total of 3,366,851. The preliminary seven-day statewide positivity for cases as a percent of total test from August 9 – August 15 is 4.1%. As of last night, 1,581 people in Illinois were reported to be in the hospital with COVID-19. Of those, 345 patients were in the ICU and 116 patients with COVID-19 were on ventilators.

* Saturday

The Illinois Department of Public Health (IDPH) today announced 1,828 new confirmed cases of coronavirus disease (COVID-19) in Illinois, including 5 additional confirmed deaths.

    Cook County: 1 male 80s
    DuPage County: 1 female 90s
    Iroquois County: 1 male 70s
    LaSalle County: 1 female 90s
    Rock Island County: 1 female 80s

Currently, IDPH is reporting a total of 204,519 cases, including 7,726 deaths, in 102 counties in Illinois. The age of cases ranges from younger than one to older than 100 years. Within the past 24 hours, laboratories have reported 44,414 specimens for a total of 3,329,762. The preliminary seven-day statewide positivity for cases as a percent of total test from August 8 – August 14 is 4.0%. As of last night, 1,538 people in Illinois were reported to be in the hospital with COVID-19. Of those, 330 patients were in the ICU and 127 patients with COVID-19 were on ventilators.

  2 Comments      


*** UPDATED x2 *** Republicans blast Pritzker for trying to lift Shakman decree

Monday, Aug 17, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Press release…

In a recent court filing, Governor Pritzker is seeking to vacate a set of court decrees that seek to prevent politically motivated hiring, as well as politically motivated firings or other punishments against public employees known as the Shakman decrees. Against the backdrop of one of the largest patronage scandals in the history of the state involving House Speaker Michael Madigan and ComEd, State Representatives Tim Butler (R-Springfield), Deanne Mazzochi (R-Elmhurst) and Grant Wehrli (R-Naperville) held a press conference questioning Pritzker’s move.

“This year we’ve seen federal authorities indict and secure guilty pleas from Democratic members of the General Assembly for bribery and fraud,” said Rep. Mazzochi. “ComEd admitted to multiple pay-to-play schemes to bribe the most powerful politician in the state, Mike Madigan, and his cabal of loyal minions. I caught Pritzker’s administration using state funds to hire his campaign worker through a no-bid vendor contract. And now Pritzker demands that the courts get rid of prohibitions designed to stop government employee political machines? Now is not the time to make corrupt government easier.”

The Shakman decrees consist of three federal court orders issued as a result of a class-action lawsuit filed by Michael Shakman against the Democratic Organization of Cook County. The decrees, issued in 1972, 1979 and 1983, prohibit politically motivated firings, demotions, transfers or other punishments of government employees. It is also unlawful to take any political factor into account when hiring public employees, except for positions such as policymaking. These decrees are binding on more than 40 offices statewide, including the Governor’s office.

“While Speaker Madigan is embroiled in one of the worst patronage hiring schemes in the history of our state, why is Gov. Pritzker trying to remove a system that prevents patronage hiring and firing in government? It makes no sense,” said Rep. Butler. “We should be taking steps to strengthen the law against patronage. If the Governor would stop trying to go it alone and work with the General Assembly, we could be doing that right now.”

Despite the Governor’s push to vacate the decrees, the court-appointed monitor for the state’s hiring practices, Noelle Brennan, reported earlier this year that Pritzker’s administration still has not completed a comprehensive employment plan to address the issues protected by the decrees. In fact, she said the administration began restricting communication between her staff and state agencies.

“This is a step in the wrong direction taking place at the wrong time,” said Rep. Wehrli. “We are continually hearing of new instances where people in high positions of public trust are abusing that trust and providing their friends with jobs. If Governor Pritzker is truly interested in raising the ethical bar for public officials in Illinois, rather than trying to vacate the decree he should be seeking to expand it.”

During the press conference, the representatives noted that this latest revelation gives even more credence to Republican calls for a special session to address the state’s ethics laws and the scandal surrounding Speaker Madigan and ComEd.

Um, what does the Shakman decree have to do with a private company’s hiring?

I mean, this move by the governor doesn’t sit 100 percent well with me, but that’s kind of a stretch.

Then again, voters don’t do nuance.

* This is from the governor’s filing

First, the State has reformed its employment practices to unquestionably pass constitutional muster. The State has instituted a durable solution to prevent future patronage employment practices. It has a comprehensive “exempt list” – approved by the Plaintiffs, the Special Master, and the Court – which the Court identified as the central infirmity of the State’s prior employment practices when Plaintiffs sought supplemental relief in 2014 and 2016. addition, the State, by statute, has instituted an independent oversight structure in the Office of Executive Inspector General, which has within it a dedicated Hiring and Employment Monitoring Division – comprised of ten professionals with expertise and experience in monitoring the State’s employment practices to prevent and uncover political and other forms of discrimination, misconduct, and inefficiency.

In addition, the Special Master exhaustively has monitored the State’s employment policies and practices for the past six years, and has filed 350 pages of detailed reports describing her work and her findings. Those reports acknowledge the State’s “significant progress,” e.g., Dkt. 6565 at 1, and do not identify a single patronage violation during that timeframe – let alone the kind of widespread illegal policies or practices to justify continued systemic intervention.

Second, during the protracted life of the decree, this case has become unmoored from the Constitution. Article III confines courts to cases and controversies involving individual federal rights. To ensure the presence of a case and controversy, Article III requires, as an irreducible constitutional minimum, an injury that is fairly traceable to the defendant’s allegedly unlawful conduct, and that is likely to be redressed by the requested relief. E.g., Lujan v. Defenders of Wildlife, 504 U.S. 555, 560-61 (1992). Plaintiffs are two private lawyers who, regardless of how they came to be litigants in 1969, now in no respects satisfy this constitutional minimum. They simply are not affected, let alone injured, by the State’s employment policies – they are not State employees and have no desire to become State employees.

*** UPDATE 1 *** Jordan Abudayyeh at the governor’s office…

During six years of oversight by the Special Master, the State has not been subject to even one finding of a violation of the consent decree. Additionally, the State has instituted effective safeguards to ensure ongoing compliance. The case should not continue to be litigated just because these legislators do not understand the basic facts. It’s clear the House GOP never bothered to read the court filing that they are criticizing or learn anything about the Shakman case. When it comes to the State, the Shakman case is not “a set of court decrees that seek to prevent politically motivated hiring” as the GOP erroneously claims. The State is a party to only the 1972 decree, which does not apply at all to State hiring or private hiring. The State moved to vacate because it has achieved the specific requirements of the decree and taken the steps required by the Court.

Background…

Even if there was a shred of truth to any one of the allegations in the House GOP release, what they are claiming has absolutely nothing to do with the Shakman case. It is nonsense to try to link these allegations to the Shakman case.

Political hiring is governed by the Rutan case, which is separate from the 1972 Shakman consent decree. The State, like all governments, must continue to comply fully with the requirements of Rutan.

As one of many clear examples of how little the House GOP members understand this case, the State is not, and has never been, subject to 1979 and 1983 decrees.

*** UPDATE 2 *** Eleni Demertzis with the House Republicans…

While Shakman and Rutan are two separate cases, they are intertwined in that both cases involve political influence in employment decisions. One involved seeking donations for keeping their jobs or avoiding disciplinary while the other dealt with hiring and firings due to political affiliation. In both instances, politics come into play when deciding what course of action to take. To remove one protection against political influence in state employment decisions at a time when a state-regulated company admitted in an official federal court document to hiring associates of an extremely high level legislative official in return for legislative action that has an estimated value of at least $150 million, is extremely short-sighted and ignores the unethical actions of Democratic state officials. It is naïve to think that just because ComEd was a private entity hiring associates of a state official, that it does not or would not happen with a governmental entity. If the Governor wants to call for the special session on ethics that we have been calling for, we can work together in a bipartisan nature to clean up the state and restore faith in our government. Otherwise, removing a protection from political influence in state employment decision-making will just further re-enforce to our constituents that it’s business as usual in spite of all the federal indictments.

  24 Comments      


A new twist on the state’s teacher shortage

Monday, Aug 17, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Center Square

Illinois is dealing with a shortage of teachers, and now the possibility of educators retiring rather than going back into the classroom during the COVID-19 pandemic.

The Illinois State Board of Education reports of the state’s 850 school districts, over 500 will be offering in-class instruction this fall. That involves over 600,000 students.

Rocky Joyner, an actuary with the Segal Consulting firm, said in-class instruction raises many questions in terms of liability.

“Will COVID be a teaching disability that is automatic, or that has started in some states, will there be laws adopted that limit employer liability for their employees that have been exposed to COVID?” said Joyner.

The question arises if there is a surge in teacher retirements, who will replace them? Illinois had the 8th highest decrease in students entering education programs in college. Dan Doonan, executive director of the National Institute on Retirement, said states may have to take action to replenish the pool.

“Young people are no longer looking to go into education at the rate they used to, and it looks like some states are responding by opening up more alternative pathways to become certified,” Doonan said.

Not to mention signing up for a job that could physically harm you for life right now or even get you killed probably isn’t a great selling point for recruiters.

…Adding… From Alan Mather, the president of the Golden Apple Foundation…

Hey Rich,

I saw your post about the teacher shortage on Capitol Fax and wanted to share my perspective as a former teacher and principal, and from my current work as President of Golden Apple.

First, we can’t relent on resolving the teacher crisis in Illinois because it’s hurting students across the state who need our help the most. Fortunately, we have a Governor and many members of the legislature, such as State Sen. Andy Manar, who recognize this and took action before the pandemic to provide additional state funding for our very successful state-wide Scholars program as well as our new Accelerators program, which focuses on resolving teacher shortages facing southern, western and central Illinois by recruiting college seniors and career changers not currently on a teaching path. And, the demand for these programs is significant, demonstrating that there is indeed interest in choosing teaching as a career - for example, in year one of the Accelerators program, 300 individuals applied for 50 available seats.

The key to helping those who want to pursue a career in teaching includes removing logistical and cost barriers that exist for them and for many that include mentoring necessary to keep people in teaching. We address these challenges in our programs and are hopeful that we will add hundreds more teachers to our classrooms over the next few years.

Teach Golden,
Alan

  26 Comments      


*** UPDATED x1 *** Republican legislative candidate denounced as “shameful” by opponent for touting Blagojevich appearance

Monday, Aug 17, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* McCullagh is running against Meg Loughran Cappel in the district currently held by Democratic state Sen. Jennifer Bertino-Tarrant…


* From May 9th

“All lives are essential, everything about our businesses is essential,” Shorewood resident and Republican candidate for state senate in the 49th district Tom McCullagh said during a speech to the crowd at a rally to support safely reopening Illinois businesses and industries during the coronavirus pandemic at Mason Square along Route 34 in Oswego Saturday. “We live in a state where every single person in it is corrupt, if you’re in the legislature,” McCullagh said.

* August 5th

Republican state Senate candidate Thomas McCullagh isn’t buying Gov. J.B. Pritzker’s stated reasons for threatening to move several counties backward in the fight to safeguard the state from COVID-19.

“I firmly believe he’s trying to show the worst impact of COVID that he can so he can get the federal bailout he wants to address all the state’s other problems, like pensions,” McCullagh told the Will County Gazette. “He’s trying to politicize the moment by using people’s suffering to get the bailout that he wants.”

* From his Democratic opponent Meg Loughran Cappel…

This speaks for itself. It is shameful that anyone, let alone an office-seeker, would share a stage with felon Rod Blagojevich after he tried leveraging our state’s highest office for personal gain.

* From Senate Republican Leader Bill Brady’s office…

“We were not involved in this event. I support President Trump and I support Tom McCullagh.

*** UPDATE *** ILGOP is not amused…


  42 Comments      


Because… Madigan!

Monday, Aug 17, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Never tweet…

* But the Tribune has a pretty good look at this week’s “virtual” Democratic National Convention

For the 182 Illinois delegates and 13 alternates, the social event will be attended virtually by the state party on a nightly basis before the two-hour national prime-time festivities. There will be no raucous nightly parties, no lunches paid for by special interest groups and no morning breakfast rallies where guest speakers and surrogates from the national campaign aim to put the state’s delegates in a rallying mood. […]

Perhaps no one is breathing a bigger sigh of relief that the convention will be a virtual one than embattled Illinois House Speaker Michael Madigan, who undoubtedly would have been the focus of four days of intense media scrutiny. […]

It is the right atmosphere for Illinois delegates at an in-person convention to organize around, said Carol Ronen, a former North Side state senator and one of three members of the 36-member Democratic State Central Committee to call on Madigan to exit his various state and party roles.

“There’d be little groups forming together. More people agreeing with me then are coming forward,” Ronen, a longtime convention delegate, said in picturing what discussions about Madigan would look like.

I’m not sure she’s right about people necessarily agreeing with her in particular, but they’d definitely be huddling about the future.

* Lynn Sweet

For the first time in the history of the nation, the spreading COVID-19 pandemic is forcing the Democratic and Republican 2020 presidential nominating conventions to be mainly virtual. Instead of a party on convention eve in Milwaukee, 116 Illinois Democrats huddled together on Zoom for almost 90 minutes.

The inscrutable, scandalized Democratic Party of Illinois Chairman Michael Madigan, also the Illinois House speaker, spoke for all of 18 seconds, or 47 words, using 21 of them to introduce party executive director Mary Morrissey, who moderated the session. […]

Madigan, who spoke from his Southwest Side 13th Ward headquarters, gets an unearned dividend from a virtual convention — no morning in-person Illinois delegation breakfast meetings where reporters would be working the room to find out if more Democrats wanted him to step down from his leadership roles because of the unfolding Commonwealth Edison scandal.

With Madigan barricaded behind a Zoom moat, diminishing overt local political drama, the welcome reception focused on defeating Trump in the next 79 days.

* WBEZ’s piece was even highlighted by the ILGOP…

Illinois Republican Party Chairman Tim Schneider today issued the following statement as blasting Governor JB Pritzker for participating in Mike Madigan’s convention of corruption and for remaining silent on whether State Sen. Terry Link should step down:

“Every Democrat who participates in a convention chaired by a man under criminal investigation for bribery is complicit in his corruption. Corruption starts at the top – and Governor Pritzker is knee deep in Madigan’s corruption. Pritzker remains silent on whether State Sen. Terry Link should resign, too. The Governor will be held accountable for pledging allegiance to Chairman Madigan and his convention of corruption.”

From WBEZ this morning:

    “Illinois Democrats Meet Virtually For DNC As Corruption Questions Surround Their Chairman”

    “Even though they’re meeting remotely, Illinois Democrats are facing a lot of questions about the future of their leader due to a sprawling corruption investigation.”

    “For Illinois Democrats, the convention arrives as the chairman of the state party, Michael Madigan, is facing calls from inside his own party to step aside. Those calls have been coming for the past month after Commonwealth Edison admitted it handed out jobs and contracts to gain favor with Madigan, who is also the longest-serving House Speaker of any chamber in the country.”

    “Will Democrats address the investigation into Madigan this week?”

The party didn’t bother to link to the story in their press release, so click here.

  9 Comments      


IDPH mobile testing unit heads to Clay County

Monday, Aug 17, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Clay County Health Department’s Facebook page last night

We are still working this evening on 5 new cases of COVID-19. All are from different households - none of them have had known exposure - all are recovering at home in isolation. Demographics for these individuals are as follows:

    1 male in his 20’s
    1 male in his 30’s
    1 female in her 50’s
    1 female in her 60’s
    1 female in her 80’s

The IDPH Drive-Through Mobile Covid Testing Unit will be at Beyond the Bell (former Flora Bank and Trust) on Monday, August 17 from 9 a.m. - 5 p.m. No appointment is necessary. No payment is necessary. Bring your insurance card.

Keep your comments respectful, please

  25 Comments      


It was a good day

Monday, Aug 17, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* My weekly syndicated newspaper column

Tuesday, August 11th, was probably the best day, professionally, that Gov. J.B. Pritzker has had in quite a while.

The Joint Committee on Administrative Rules has been a source of legislative frustration for the governor all year. He didn’t quite seem to grasp how best to work its process-dominated membership and he was handed a major defeat back in May when JCAR members in both parties turned thumbs down on a sweeping plan to impose fines and even jail time on violators of Pritzker’s COVID-19 executive orders.

Pritzker’s general counsel Ann Spillane spent hours explaining to and negotiating with JCAR members the myriad details in the administration’s latest attempt at enforcing some of the governor’s executive orders on mask-wearing and gathering sizes. Spillane testified on behalf of the emergency rule that Tuesday, and she and her final product drew praise from members on both sides of the aisle, though some said they had “agreed to disagree.”

Enlisting organized labor and medical and public health leaders to help put public and private pressure on JCAR wasn’t a bad idea, either. And rather than relying on legislative leaders to put the arm on fellow Democrats, the governor himself got directly involved and called individual members of the committee.

The administration worked it hard and worked it well and it all paid off when it cleared the panel and took effect. The new administrative rule is far better than Pritzker’s attempt in May and also better than the draft released just a week earlier. That’s how things are supposed to work.

As the administration’s top lawyer, Spillane, who served former Attorney General Lisa Madigan as chief of staff, has also been heavily involved with the numerous court battles over Pritzker’s executive orders.

And the governor had a banner day at the Illinois Supreme Court that Tuesday as well. Pritzker had asked the day before that the state’s top court step in and put a stop to the charade in Clay County, where a judge had issued rulings on behalf of Rep. Darren Bailey (R-Xenia) that Will County Circuit Judge John Anderson recently wrote were “bereft of any meaningful legal analysis.”

Clay County Judge Michael McHaney was planning a hearing on Friday, Aug. 14, to decide whether to hold Pritzker in contempt for continuing to issue executive orders in defiance of McHaney’s rulings and perhaps throw the governor in jail. On Monday, the governor asked the Supreme Court to intervene on McHaney’s “unenforceable and nonappealable partial summary judgment order,” stay the contempt hearing and take up the case itself.

On Tuesday, the Supreme Court issued a stay on the contempt hearing and then, later in the day, decided not to take up the case. The state’s high court instead acted on its own to consolidate Bailey’s case with others that it had already shifted to Sangamon County at the governor’s behest. The court also ordered that another Clay County case filed by Bailey’s attorney over the administration’s school reopening guidance (including a face mask mandate) be consolidated with similar cases in Sangamon County.

The Supreme Court justices obviously had seen enough of Clay County’s show trials and finally stepped in to stop a county judge from attempting to dictate to the state. The media-friendly legal maneuverings will likely continue, but at least they’ll now happen on a level judicial playing field (unless another avenue is found).

There were some who believed Ann Spillane should’ve cashed out in the private sector after Lisa Madigan retired. Spillane wanted to continue her public service career, however, and Pritzker is darned lucky to have her, especially during this unforeseen pandemic.

Meanwhile, the Republican leadership here has managed to put themselves on the side of outliers like Rep. Bailey. House Republican Leader Jim Durkin, for one, publicly opposed Pritzker’s emergency rule on masks, though national and regional public opinion polls have revealed strong support for requiring face-coverings.

And that public support likely will continue because mask mandates appear to be working. Lincoln, Nebraska, has dramatically lowered its daily case count and positivity rate after imposing a mask mandate just a few weeks ago. It worked so well that Omaha’s city council unanimously approved a similar mandate last Tuesday night over opposition from the state’s governor.

Some business groups opposed Pritzker’s mask rule, and the cash-strapped House Republicans need every bit of help they can get in a year that’s not looking good for their party here. So I suppose it was a decent short-term decision. But that’s going to be a difficult position to defend in some of their suburban battlegrounds.

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