This just in…
Tuesday, Jul 8, 2008 - Posted by Rich Miller
* 1:15 pm - Nobody is completely sure whether this is true or not, so the lead-in is more than a little misleading…
On the eve of the General Assemby’s special session in Springfield, two prominent Illinoisans who helped draft a 31 billion dollar capital spending plan are pleading for its passage.
WBBM’s Regine Schlesinger reports that otherwise, Illinois stands to lose 9-billion dollars in federal money.
The story (which gets the size of the capital bill wrong) appears to be based solely on a press release sent out by the governor’s office late this morning…
…[Hastert and Poshard] stressed that further delays in passage of a comprehensive capital bill could jeopardize nearly $9 billion in federal funds dedicated to infrastructure projects in the state.
Over the past two weeks, several members of Congress have warned about the accelerated depletion of the federal Highway Trust Fund, which contains matching funds for statewide infrastructure enhancements. Due to the recent decrease in federal gas tax revenues, current projections estimate that the fund will empty in 2009 with a $1-3 billion deficit.
At an April 2 Surface Transportation Hearing, Congressman John Olver, Chairman of the House Appropriations Transportation, Housing and Urban Development Subcommittee said, “…the most immediate challenge the Congress will face is the solvency of the Highway Trust Fund. The Highway Trust fund will go broke in fiscal year 2009 and the future viability of federal transportation financing is in doubt.”
The question I’ve been asking without receiving a satisfactory response lately is if the money isn’t going to be in the Highway Trust Fund anyway, how does Illinois get its share even if the General Assembly approves a funding bill tomorrow?
* 3:14 pm - From a press release…
11th Congressional District candidate Marty Ozinga announced Wednesday that his campaign had raised over $800,000 in the 2nd Quarter of 2008, his first fundraising quarter as a candidate.
As a demonstration of his commitment to the campaign, Ozinga donated $70,000 to his own cause in early April, pushing his total receipts for the quarter over $870,000. […]
Ozinga was overwhelmed by the strong showing of grassroots support. He received about 1,000 contributions, and nearly 60% of them were for $250 or less.
Well under 10% of Ozinga’s total came from PACs. By contrast, nearly half of his opponent’s total through March 2008 has come from PACs.
Ozinga is running against Democratic state Sen. Debbie Halvorson. The Dems had already penciled this one in as a win, but she looks to be in for a big rumble.
48 Comments
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Question of the day
Tuesday, Jul 8, 2008 - Posted by Rich Miller
* The setup, from a column by Suburban Life Publications news editor Jerry Moore…
State Rep. Bob Biggins, R-41st District, of Elmhurst is the latest elected official caught in a legal quandary. He was charged May 28 with driving under the influence, improper lane use and not having proof of insurance.
After his arrest, Biggins released a statement: “I made a serious lapse in judgment and sincerely apologize to my family and those I represent who may be disappointed today. I take full responsibility for my actions and will face any and all legal consequences.” […]
This creates a conflict of interest for lawmakers in Biggins’ position. In their official capacity, they help maintain social order by enacting laws to keep people safe. But as the focus of criminal charges, they undermine people’s trust in government. How can we have faith in the legislative system when those we put in charge of it can’t seem to follow their rules?
If Biggins was driving while drunk, he should resign his seat in the Illinois House of Representatives.
* The question: Do you agree with Moore’s logic that legislators who drive while intoxicated should resign their House or Senate seats? Explain, and try to stay on topic, please. This isn’t necessarily about Biggins’ particular situation or about any other legislator on your hate list. Thanks.
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Brown: Is Reyes in the clear?
Tuesday, Jul 8, 2008 - Posted by Rich Miller
* Lots of people have called for HDO founder Victor Reyes’ head, but that may not happen. To his credit, Mark Brown - who used his column for years to excoriate Reyes and the HDO - takes a look at the future…
The highest-ranking HDO leader indicted was former Streets and Sanitation Commissioner Al Sanchez, who ran a political street army of perhaps 100 patronage workers for HDO. […]
Defense lawyer Tom Breen, who represents both [Victor Reyes] and Sanchez but represented Reyes first, says he would not have taken Sanchez as a client if he “thought there was any chance of any charges being brought against Victor Reyes.”
Others came to a similar conclusion when federal prosecutors raised no objection to Breen taking Sanchez’s case. Often under those circumstances, they will complain about a conflict of interest.
That’s a very good point. The feds never batted an eye about Breen’s representation. Onward…
Reyes left city employment in 2002, and it’s possible the statute of limitations has run out on any potential case against him, although Breen won’t make that assertion.
It’s not only possible that the statutes of limitation have expired, it’s probable.
…Adding… The Tribune has reported that Reyes left his city job in 2000. [Hat tip to a commenter]
More…
Some of us assumed Reyes did everything Sorich did and more, but obviously, the U.S. attorney’s office felt the evidence against him was weaker.
The difference between Reyes and Sorich is that Sorich altered records, falsified documents, etc. The patronage hiring was the same sort of thing, but the office under Reyes was far more careful about how they went about it.
Convincing the courts to make violations of the Shakman Decree a criminal offense was a whole lot simpler and cut and dried with Sorich because Sorich’s office got so sloppy. Now that the appellate court has upheld Sorich’s conviction, further prosecutions will be much easier. But, as Brown noted above, the statute of limitations has likely expired on Reyes.
I know that this post will make some heads explode, particularly among those who repeatedly blame “The evil Combine” for putting the “ill” in Illinois, but it may be time to face reality.
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* The reason for this funding holdup isn’t too difficult to figure out…
Two years after getting a campaign-year promise of cash from Gov. Rod Blagojevich, Carterville schools have finally received the money.
Blagojevich promised $1.9 million in state money to help repair Carterville High School in Southern Illinois.
But until recently, the district had received less than half of that amount, leaving officials to borrow money to fix the school.
Superintendent Tim Bleyer said he was “pretty worried” at times the district wouldn’t ever get the money. But it finally arrived last week.
“It is a relief,” Bleyer said.
When dealing with Blagojevich, one should always look first at the most crass political explanation possible. Carterville is represented in the House by Democratic Rep. John Bradley. a longtime Blagojevich nemesis.
That may not be the complete explanation, but it’s close enough. And it’s yet another reason why so many legislators refuse to trust the governor with the $34 billion capital plan. They know they’ll be jumping through endless politial hoops to get their project funding released, no matter how solemn or public the promises were.
It is interesting that they’re releasing the project money now, however. Bradley is under intense local fire for opposing the capital bill. This takes some heat off of him. The explanation for the reversal may have far more to do with Sen. Gary Forby’s reelection this fall than the Bradley grudge.
* And this piece shows how things are going in the House these days…
Southern Illinois University School of Medicine officials had hoped to open the SimmonsCooper Cancer Institute this summer.
But the Springfield facility — where a ribbon-cutting and dedication ceremony will take place Thursday — looks as if it won’t begin serving patients until late fall or early next year because the $895,000 needed to heat, cool, light and maintain the institute in its first year was cut from the state budget proposed for fiscal 2009.
The money, along with funding for initiatives at three other universities, was slashed by the Democratic-controlled House in May, apparently because they were sponsored by Republicans, said David Gross, SIU’s executive director for governmental and public affairs.
Last year, Speaker Madigan and Tom Cross were allies in the budget negotiations. Not so this year. Cross has broken with Madigan and his members voted against every version of the state budget that the House passed. So, the Repubs got cut. It’s mean and nasty all around, campers.
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Not so much
Tuesday, Jul 8, 2008 - Posted by Rich Miller
* The common practice in American journalism is to report the highest number available. If death estimates at a natural disaster are 15-40, the headline is sure to read: “As many as 40 feared dead.”
The problem with this practice, however, is that after a while journalistic shorthand often kicks in and the biggest number becomes the only one used. This phenomenon partly explains why we only ever see the highest estimate of the Fiscal Year 2009 budget deficit.
Anyway, this AP story follows the pattern. Can you spot it?
In a state where the government plans to spend $59 billion this year, it’s not a lot of money. But taxpayers can expect to cough up at least $80,000 for this week’s special legislative session.
Lawmakers will return to Springfield Wednesday and Thursday at the beck of Gov. Rod Blagojevich, who says they sent him a fiscal blueprint in which expenditures exceed revenues by $2 billion.
Like anyone on business, Illinois’ 118 representatives and 59 senators are entitled to reimbursement for their expenses.
It’s $129 per day for lodging and meals, for a total of $45,400.
And for hopping in the car and crossing the flat prairie to the capital, each gets 50.5 cents per mile. They’ll drive 60,260 miles and get $30,400 in taxpayer reimbursements, according to an analysis by The Associated Press.
The AP’s estimate assumes that all legislators will show up for the special session. Not gonna happen. Last year, several newspapers published daily cost estimates of the interminable overtime session which were based on perfect attendance. The number was far too high because attendance was never close to perfection.
* Now, on to the session itself. Finke has a pretty good roundup of opinion on why this week’s special session should be short…
THE COMING ELECTION: “The fact that there’s an election (Nov. 4) I think guarantees that they are going to do something and get out of town,” said Kent Redfield, a political scientist at the University of Illinois at Springfield. “The perception is that the mess of state government is the Democrats’ fault. It’s harder to make the case that more Democrats are better if there is a story day after day that there is no budget.” The issue cuts the same for Senate Democrats as House Democrats, Redfield said, giving Blagojevich no way to play one chamber against the other. […]
PAY RAISES: The House rejected 11 percent pay raises recommended by the Compensation Review Board, but the Senate hasn’t acted yet. Under the complicated rules of legislative pay raises, if the Senate meets in session four more days without rejecting the raises, they go into effect automatically. Senate President Emil Jones, D-Chicago, is believed to want the raise but not have it take effect until after the November election. […]
WEAKENED GOVERNOR/IMPEACHMENT: After Blagojevich called this week’s special session. Rep. Jack Franks, D-Woodstock, renewed his call for the House to investigate whether Blagojevich should be impeached. That call will grow louder if lawmakers are stuck in Springfield for another extended summer stay.
Redfield said the conviction of Blagojevich friend and fundraiser Antoin “Tony” Rezko and ongoing federal investigations into the administration leaves Blagojevich politically weaker than he was a year ago.
* And this is from Illinois Public Radio…
For the Governor, it’s a no win situation. If he signs the budget as passed, the state will have major money problems in coming months. Make the cuts, and he’s the bad guy once again. But the Governor sees another way out. He wants the House to pass plans that would bring in revenue from leasing the state’s lottery and shifting other money from dedicated accounts. But few expect the House will go along.
I doubt anybody thinks that the House will “go along,” even in the hermetically sealed governor’s bunker. If they do think that, then they’re more delusional than I imagined.
* Related…
* Special session by the numbers
* Per diem plans
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The smell of death at Gatehouse and Lee?
Tuesday, Jul 8, 2008 - Posted by Rich Miller
* There’s very bad news for some newspaper chains with Illinois properties…
Stock in one-time Wall Street darling GateHouse Media Inc. fell to an all-time low following a 14.1% price tumble Monday.
There were no announcements, regulatory filings, or analyst notes that might explain the drop of 35 cents to GateHouse’s (NYSE: GHS) close of $2.12. Coming into Monday’s session, the once high-flying stock had a 52-week trading range of $2.32 to $19.10. […]
Lee Enterprises Inc. (NYSE: LEE) closed at $3.15, off 11 cents, or 3.37. Its previous trading range had been $3.19 to $21.48.
* Gatehouse owns the State Journal-Register, the Rockford Register Star, the Peoria Journal Star and a whole bunch of other Illinois papers. Lee owns the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, Bloomington Pantagraph, the Southern Illinoisan and the Decatur Herald & Review, among others.
Advertising is tanking, partly due to the economy and the changing tastes of consumers as everything moves online and the slow-to-respond newspaper industry attempts to stay relevant. The skyrocketing cost of newsprint also has to be having an impact…
The price of paper stock, a daily publisher’s second-biggest expense after labor, has climbed 26 percent to a 12-year high of $700 a metric ton since October, pushed upwards by supplier consolidation rather than demand.
* After a meteoric rise and almost unprecedented expansion Gatehouse is slashing and burning almost everywhere, it seems. For instance, the mega chain has cut back some of its papers from six days a week to five and it’s done employee buyouts at the SJ-R and other papers. The company has a crushing longterm debt of more than $1.2 billion, yet it continues to pay out a generous dividend to stockholders - which may be the only attractive aspect of the stock…
GateHouse Media, Inc. (NYSE: GHS) announced [June 18, 2007] that its Board of Directors has declared a quarterly cash dividend on its common stock of $0.40 per share for the quarter ended June 30, 2007. The dividend is payable on July 16, 2007 to holders of record of GateHouse’s common stock on June 29, 2007. The newly announced dividend reflects an increase of 25% over the dividend at the time of the Company’s IPO and an increase of 8% over the prior quarter’s dividend.
* More…
In its most recent quarter, GateHouse lost $27 million, double its loss of the same quarter a year earlier. GateHouse, which mainly has papers in small (often monopoly) markets, was not expected to be hit as hard as companies owning big metro dailies. But it piled up too much debt making too many acquisitions.
In a similar fix is Iowa-based Lee Enterprises, which was supposed to feast on its collection of smaller papers with little competition. (One exception is San Diego’s North County Times, a Lee paper with lots of competition.) But Lee piled up a lot of debt to buy a big paper, the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, along with too many smaller ones. In its most recent quarter, Lee lost $713 million. In the quarter a year earlier, it had made $11.2 million. A year ago, the stock was above $20; now it’s around $4. The dividend yield is above 17 percent. Obviously, that won’t remain. “Lee Enterprises’ financial health is poor,” says analyst Tom Corbett of Morningstar, a stock-rating firm. “Lee has assumed a substantial debt load from its earlier acquisitions, and the company is closing in on the upper limits of its debt covenants.” (That is a polite way of saying that it could default on its debt.)
I don’t know what the answer is, but it’s not what they’re doing now.
[H/T: Billy Dennis]
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Morning Shorts
Tuesday, Jul 8, 2008 - Posted by Kevin Fanning
* Is Illinois lagging in technology growth?
For Illinois, the 21st place finish is the same the state received in the institute’s 2004 study. “We’re flatlining,” said Tom Churchwell, managing director of ARCH Development Partners, a venture capital firm in Chicago.
* Illinois to participate in new education program
* MetPier falling short
* Kirk Continues Torrid Fundraising Pace
Rep. Mark Kirk (R-Ill.), facing a highly-competitive re-election campaign, appears poised to again be one of the top Congressional fundraisers after announcing he raised $900,000 in the most recent fundraising quarter.
Kirk now has $2.85 million cash-on-hand – all of it which will be necessary to advertise in the expensive Chicago media market.
* 2006 rivals Rep. Mark Kirk and Dan Seals release campaign fundraising totals that hint at heated North Shore rematch
* The Cuba Syndrome: Mark Kirk and China/Cuba canard
* Schock’s dad testifies at tax-scheme trial
* 71-year-old campaign worker dies after walking Mundelein parade
* FEMA to aid Lake County flood victims
* Rain might halt Rock River’s retreat
* Smoking ban snuffs out cigarettes in stage play
* Ryan Keith to lead SJ-R Capitol bureau
* Amy Jacobson sues CBS 2 for airing bikini video
* Coen Brothers ‘Gospel’ Explored in New Book
Academy Award winners Joeland Ethan Coen are the subject of a new book to be published by Zondervan and written by award-winning Chicago Sun-Times columnist Cathleen Falsani.
* Aldermen rip Daley plan to license ‘expediters’
* City Council shies away from permit-expediter license idea
* City may let outside agencies rule on minority- or women-owned firms
Under the ordinance, the city’s chief procurement officer will be able to designate outside agencies, including the state and federal governments, as well as private groups, as a “certifying agency.” The city’s chief procurement officer would still be responsible for decisions that are made to certify, recertify or decertify.
* Illinois raking in millions from sale of personal data
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Question of the day
Monday, Jul 7, 2008 - Posted by Rich Miller
* The setup…
Count Katie Kauffman and Nick Territo among those happy about a 25-cent an hour increase in the state’s minimum wage.
Count Doug Knight and Rob Flesher among those not so happy.
The four are at opposite ends of the minimum wage debate. Kauffman and Territo work at minimum-wage jobs and can use the extra money. Knight and Flesher own businesses that must accommodate the higher wage into their budgets.
“This governor is costing people a lot of money,” said Knight, owner of Knight’s Action Park in Springfield. “We’re $1.90 ahead of (the federal) minimum wage. That’s a pretty good chunk of money.”
The state’s minimum wage was boosted 25 cents per hour on July 1st, to $7.75 per hour.
* Question: Is unilaterally increasing the state’s minimum wage a good thing or a bad thing? Explain.
106 Comments
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The invisible candidate? *** UPDATED x1 ***
Monday, Jul 7, 2008 - Posted by Rich Miller
* Greg Hinz calls GOP US Senate hopeful Steve Sauerberg the Invisible Man…
But none of it does any good unless someone is listening. And so far, the only one Mr. Sauerberg is giving a run for his money is the invisible man.
Mr. Sauerberg’s name appeared in major Illinois newspapers — all of them, collectively, from Carbondale to Chicago — a grand total of seven times in the months of May and June. One of the seven was in a letter to the editor.
If you have a Crain’s subscription, make sure to read the whole thing. If you don’t, sign up. Sauerberg has more problems than just a spokesman who is based in DC and spends more of his time on other projects than this election, but it’s still a fun read.
* Dick Durbin, meanwhile, hinted that he’s leaning in favor of a Constitutional Convention for Illinois…
“I wouldn’t rule it out. I think we ought to look at it honestly and decide whether there’s anything that needs to be done in our constitution that really addresses some of the problems we’re facing today and really, what breaks some of the gridlock we’ve seen in our state capital.”
* Related…
* 10 Questions for Debbie Halvorson
* We have momentum, Callahan says
* Bernard Schoenburg:18th Congressional District draws high-level attention
*** UPDATE *** Vic Roberts died…
Vic Roberts of Taylorville, a Green Party candidate for Congress, died over the weekend. He was 75.
Marla Washburn, step-daughter of Roberts, said in an e-mail that Roberts died in his sleep on Saturday.
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A look ahead at 2010
Monday, Jul 7, 2008 - Posted by Rich Miller
* This appeared in a downstate column over the weekend about possible gubernatorial contenders…
Chicago Mayor Richard Daley’s brother, Bill, also has popped up on the scene, but we’re guessing that’s more about the mayor toying with Gov. Rod Blagojevich.
That’s certainly a byproduct, but I’ve spent quite a bit of time talking to Bill Daley lately, and I think his reasons for floating his name right now are much more than just helping his brother tweak the governor.
* Lynn Sweet has more…
[Bill] Daley has been laying the groundwork for a 2010 bid, even asking some people to stay neutral until he decides if he wants to jump in. Daley’s main consultant is Obama’s chief strategist, David Axelrod, who also advises Mayor Daley.
I still doubt that Daley will pull the trigger, but he’s definitely doing his due diligence.
* Meanwhile, Jesse White confirms for the umpteenth time that he plans to run for reelection in 2010…
If Jesse White has his way, he will serve a record fourth term as Illinois secretary of state and celebrate his 80th birthday in office.
White, 74, told The Associated Press that he has no other interest politically than to continue in his present job, seek re-election in 2010 and complete 16 years as secretary of state.
I think the Southern Illinoisan reported this first about four years ago, but whatever.
* White also repeated his insistence that he’s not interested in being appointed to the US Senate if Barack Obama wins the presidency…
“I think my name would be at the top of the heap, but I don’t have an interest,” he said.
37 Comments
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The governor of Chicago *** UPDATED x1 ***
Monday, Jul 7, 2008 - Posted by Rich Miller
* Last week, you will recall, the governor held a press conference at a Chicago gas station to highlight his administration’s efforts at making sure that gas pumps are accurate.
The presser was a fiasco, as reporters ignored the gas pump story and instead focused on corruption allegations…
“You guys should get a life and focus on some other issues,” said Blagojevich, who grew increasingly irritated as reporters pelted him with questions after an unrelated news conference at a Chicago gas station.
* What nobody seemed to notice, however, is that the City of Chicago does all the gas pump inspecting within city limits. A spokesman for the state Department of Agriculture, which had a high-level representative at the guv’s presser, admitted this to me today.
To be fair, the state essentially oversees Chicago’s inspections, in the same way that the federal government oversees the state’s inspections of, say, meat processors.
But you’d think the governor would at least have done his little press conference at a gas station that is subjected to direct state oversight.
Then again, he rarely leaves the city, and he seems to know little about the actual operation of state government, so it’s probably not a huge surprise.
* John Patterson points out another little tidbit…
In the summer of 2001, Rod Blagojevich appeared at an Amoco station at Clark and LaSalle to launch his campaign for governor by complaining about gas selling for $1.99 and charge that the Republicans who’d run the state hadn’t done enough. He said a Blagojevich administration would do better.
Unfortunately for Blagojevich, Patterson has one of the best memories at the Statehouse.
*** UPDATE *** During last week’s press conference, Gov. Blagojevich was asked why he insisted on putting his name on everything, from tollway signs to leaflets touting AllKids, when he criticized George Ryan for doing the same sort of thing.
Blagojevich flatly denied that he had ever criticized Ryan for this and berated the reporter for even bringing it up. But back in 2003 Blagojevich caught some heat for handing out bumper stickers at the State Fair that featured the fair’s “United We Stand” theme as well as Blagojevich’s name. The bumper stickers were being paid for by the state, but the campaign eventually picked up the tab…
“The bottom line is this,” a top aide said initially, “the bumper stickers will be paid for out of the governor’s campaign fund. This is different from any other governor. This is departing from what other governors have done in the past. It’s not business as usual.”
* Related…
* Raw video of the governor’s press conference
* State Capitol Notebook: Blagojevich a ’sociopath’?
* Governor Gets Testy Over Reporter’s ‘Absurd’ Questions
* Gov. Blagojevich gets heated with reporters
* Will IDOT move be start of trend?
* Gov pardons 19 — some had been exonerated
* Fuel prices drive tough adjustments - Public, private sectors eye shorter workweeks, telecommuting to cut costs
42 Comments
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The upcoming special session
Monday, Jul 7, 2008 - Posted by Rich Miller
* My weekly syndicated newspaper column is about the upcoming special session…
Last month, Gov. Rod Blagojevich proclaimed the Illinois House absolutely, positively, without a doubt had to pass the Senate-approved pension obligation bond deal, a special funds sweep and the entire capital construction package or he’d have to slash the state budget right down to the bone. Much suffering would result, the governor warned, unless the House complied with every one of his directives.
Last week, while announcing yet another summertime special legislative session, Blagojevich quietly deleted the formerly all-important pension bond plan from his list of demands. The bond scheme would close a $400 million hole in what is supposed to be a horribly unbalanced budget. The governor also took several items off the budget-slashing table, including rape crisis centers and Amtrak.
In other words, Blagojevich simply reinforced the widespread Statehouse notion that he’s been bluffing all along about the budget’s dire straits.
For weeks now, journalists have reported with a straight face the governor’s claim that the state is facing an unmanageable $2 billion deficit. Editorial writers have expressed outrage at how the General Assembly apparently violated the state’s constitution by sending the governor an egregiously out-of-whack spending plan.
But last week, reporters only barely mentioned the governor dumped a $400 million revenue stream from his list of demands. Apparently, that $2 billion hole isn’t all that big or all that unmanageable.
* This omission is a real mystery to me. We’ve seen stories about restored funding for rape crisis centers and Amtrak, but almost nothing about how the governor blew a $400 million hole in the budget last week - a budget that he previously proclaimed was unacceptably out of balance.
Back to the column…
Why else would the governor abandon it so quickly?
The governor’s people say that after staff talked to a couple of dozen House members, they discovered there weren’t enough votes to pass the pension bond proposal during this week’s special session. But that still doesn’t explain the governor’s flip-flop. Why not propose another revenue source?
In reality, there aren’t enough votes to pass anything. After May 31, it takes a three-fifths majority to pass any legislation that has an immediate effective date. All those bills the governor wants approved have immediate effective dates. A new revenue source would also likely require an immediate effective date. Therefore, very little, if anything, can pass.
So why even bother calling legislators to Springfield for another special session if nothing can pass?
Blame.
The idea is to bring everybody back to town so the governor can once again pin the blame on his old enemy, House Speaker Michael Madigan, for all the trouble in the world.
He’s been laying it on thick lately, too. For instance, the governor now is claiming Madigan has a “secret plan” to increase taxes after the election. Madigan, the governor says, deliberately passed an unbalanced budget to increase the pressure for a post-election tax hike.
The governor’s bold accusations miss two points - both of which are often overlooked by most of the media.
1) The House passed three different versions of the state budget. The Senate approved just one of them, the so-called “Christmas Tree” budget that loaded up on all sorts of goodies. The other two House-approved budgets, which are far more balanced, were never called for a vote in the Senate.
At least two editorial boards failed to mention this fact over the weekend.
2) Senate President Emil Jones, like Madigan, is on record as supporting an income tax increase. A member of Jones’ own leadership team, Sen. John Cullerton, has said he plans to call an income tax increase bill for a vote after the November election.
Jones is Blagojevich’s last powerful ally, so you won’t hear the governor say an unkind word about the Senate president. If he loses Jones’ support, he loses his war with Madigan, and the war with Madigan is more important to the governor than anything else.
Finke had another interesting take on this relationship yesterday.
What the geniuses responsible for the governor’s miserable approval rating may not have reckoned, however, is the special session also could highlight Blagojevich’s political impotence.
This is the same governor, mind you, who tossed together a half-baked budget proposal at the last minute that was full of ideas that already had failed, then completely disengaged from the entire budget negotiating process until three weeks after the General Assembly adjourned.
And now, because of his lack of interest in governance, multiple federal investigations, rising calls for his impeachment and his lack of truthfulness on the budget deficit, he’s in a position of trying to force his will on a bunch of people who don’t care what he does.
* Related…
* Special session could be exercise in futility
* Illinois House to hold hearings on capital bill, lottery leasing
* Taxpayers on hook for special session costs
* We need more road money from Springfield
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Morning Shorts
Monday, Jul 7, 2008 - Posted by Kevin Fanning
* Public housing limbo
Thousands of families displaced. Hundreds of millions of dollars spent. Years behind schedule. What went wrong with Chicago’s grand experiment.
* County to breach levee to let out water
* Randolph County flood update
* Task Force Warns of Scams In the Wake of Recent Floods
* Itchy situation
“At this time, particularly with the amount of flood water that we have out in the region, we are seeing a significant increase in the number of floodwater mosquitoes within the area,” said George Balis, an entomologist with Roselle-based Clarke Mosquito Control. The company is contracted to operate Elgin’s and other suburban towns’ mosquito control programs.
* Flood victims survey damage, begin soggy cleanup
* Fox River, Chain O’ Lakes residents cope with piles of used sandbags
* Thick muck covers Hannibal armory floor
* Cleaning up Mississippi’s mess figures to be lengthy process
* The waiting game - Hundreds of inmates have been awaiting trial for years
* Killing the sales tax hike
Day after day, Cook County Board members who voted to raise the sales tax awaken to more headaches that will keep their dereliction of duty right where it belongs: in the forefront of furious voters’ minds.
Last week Fitch Ratings, an influential national firm, changed its outlook for some $3 billion in Cook County debt from “stable” to “negative.” That could portend a downgrading of the county’s bond rating, which would raise taxpayers’ cost to service that debt. Here’s a key Fitch sentence: “With the highest sales tax rate in the nation, the county faces political and economic pressure to provide tax relief for county residents.”
* Stroger administration hunkers down against press
* A great country Raising the flag . . .
Sneed hears Cook County Board President Todd Stroger, who proposed and rammed through a Cook County sales tax hike — and his buddy, commissioner Bill Beavers — just deferred acceptance of a $75,000 grant from the MacArthur Foundation, which was earmarked for affordable housing promotion!
* Synchronicity?
The Hispanic Democratic Organization filed papers this week shutting down its official campaign committee (which may not mean it doesn’t exist anymore in another form).
A few hours earlier, 12th Ward alderman George Cardenas, one of the last people elected with the help of the infamous group, filed paperwork showing a precipitous drop in fund-raising—from tens of thousands of dollars last year down to zilch so far in 2008.
* 10+ Blogging Politicians Who Still Don’t Say What They Mean
* Hundreds pay respect to slain Chicago police officer
* Fox River, Chain O’ Lakes residents cope with piles of used sandbags
* Miller: thecapitolfaxblog.com
* SJ-R: Death penalty cannot be reformed
* New program to help low-income families with high energy bills
* Barbed wire is on the way out in Illinois’ new juvenile justice system
* Trustees to consider repealing gun ban
* Updated 7/1: Village likely to lift gun ban after Supreme Court ruling
* Contest for Rockford mayor on back burner — for now
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