“President Bush’s plan to address the growing health care crisis in our country is disappointing. The plan he outlined tonight would do nothing to help the 1.4 million uninsured Illinoisans finally get access to coverage they can afford. In fact, his plan would discourage employers from offering quality healthcare coverage, could increase the number of uninsured and would mostly benefit the rich. At a time when healthcare costs are rapidly increasing and millions of families across the country are struggling to afford medical insurance, the President’s plan could put healthcare even further beyond reach for millions of Americans. It’s clear that the task of finding ways to help the middle-class afford healthcare will be left up to the states.
“In Illinois, we’re already leading the way in expanding access to affordable healthcare for working families. We have expanded healthcare coverage to more than 500,000 people in just the last four years, and now every uninsured child in the State can get affordable health coverage. Soon we will announce plans for extending healthcare access to every Illinoisan. We would welcome more support for our efforts from the federal government, but not at the expense of important programs like Medicare and Medicaid.
“And while the President’s proposals to boost the use of renewable fuels and reduce reliance on petroleum are steps in the right direction, this Administration has provided little more than lip service when it comes to meaningful energy reform. Our country as a whole is no closer to energy independence now than it was a year ago when the President declared that Americans are addicted to oil.
“Here in Illinois, we’ve proposed an ambitious energy independence plan that calls for real fuel conservation and real investment in clean, renewable energy alternatives that protect consumers while significantly reducing greenhouse gases. We hope to see real leadership and investment from our federal government in technologies and strategies that will result in genuine energy independence.â€
Welcome Senator Durbin. WOOO HOOOO.
by Chamonix on Tue Jan 23, 2007 at 07:25:56 PM PST
Woo Hoo back at You.
by Dick Durbin on Tue Jan 23, 2007 at 08:02:29 PM PST
And, finally, did anyone else see Sen. Obama on TV last night? I caught him on CNN and MSNBC and his delivery seemed super-flat to me. It made me think that his attempt to move up the political ladder to the top rung has caused him to be too cautious, too hesitant to speak in his usual casual yet straightforward manner.
As I told you yesterday, a federal judge has ruled that the messages on “specialty license plates” in Illinois are covered under the 1st Amendment and can’t be regulated by government.
If this ruling stands, all it will take is 800 or so Illinoisans to sign up for the license plates and the secretary of state will have to make them.
So, what messages would you like to see on future specialty plates? Snark encouraged.
Late bonus question: Should Illinois do away with the specialty plates altogether? Explain.
*** UPDATE *** Zorn makes a good point. After quoting part of the judge’s decision…
(The state) argues that if the “Choose Life†message is permissible, than the state would also have to issue Ku Klux Klan or Nazi plates to avoid viewpoint discrimination. (But) the fact that speech or viewpoint is unpopular does not exempt it from First Amendment protection. Indeed, the First Amendment protects unpopular, even some hateful speech. The message conveyed by this proposed license plate is subject to First Amendment Protection.
…he writes:
In other words, this decision opens the door wide for what I’m calling “hate plates” — specialty license tags espousing any and all forms of bigotry or bile. More likely, though, we’ll see every manner of mainstream advocacy group on the right and the left wanting to use specialty plates to boost their causes and notions.
So, apparently, every ward boss in the city has my Social Security number. Fantastic.
Four Chicago residents filed lawsuits Monday alleging their privacy was violated because the Chicago Board of Election Commissioners accidentally released their Social Security numbers along with those of 1.3 million other city residents.
A database file containing the Social Security numbers and other personal data from registered voter files was distributed in late 2003 and early 2004 to about 100 political organizations run by the city’s aldermen and committeemen. About a half dozen copies were also released more recently.
Tom Leach, a spokesman for the board, said it was legal for the information to be released, but the Social Security information should have been deleted. He said the board plans to ask everyone who received copies of the records to return them.
Last fall the board was forced to patch a security flaw on its Web site that had made private voter information, including Social Security numbers and dates of birth for more than 780,000 registered voters, vulnerable to online theft.
They sure seem to be downplaying these idiotic mistakes.
In addition to commenting on the city election board’s blunder, let’s use this as a privacy law open thread. What penalties should be involved here? Is there any new legislation you’d like to see introduced?
Lou Lang proposes that the state take a look at Internet voting.
Internet voting has the potential to allow voters to cast their ballots from anywhere — from the office, the coffee shop or the living room in their slippers. This convenience holds the promise of attracting younger, tech-savvy voters to the polls and could also be a simpler alternative to absentee voting for citizens living abroad or serving in the military.
State Rep. Lou Lang, D-Skokie, has filed a bill calling for the state to study the idea, and possibly use Internet voting in Illinois elections as early as the 2010 gubernatorial race. […]
Michigan, as recently as 2004, allowed online voting in its Democratic presidential caucus. The result was the second-biggest caucus turnout ever of 164,000 votes, 46,000 of which were cast online. More importantly, there were no reports of security glitches, fraud or intimidation, according to Michigan Democratic Party spokesman Jason Moon.
Madison County Clerk Mark Von Nida worries about the privacy lost when voting is taken away from monitored polling places. “When you open up voting (by computer), you open up the possibility of people having to vote in front of their boss, or their union boss, just to prove that it’s done,” he said. “And of course, (the vote) would be (cast) in a way that’s how the person who coerced them wanted them to vote.”
Lang says that’s why he wants to study the issue first. Your thoughts?
AFSCME Council 31 Executive Director Henry Bayer is not impressed with the recent report on how to fix the state pension mess.
Imagine there was an employer who sent its employees notice each month that it had electronically transferred their pay to the bank account that they designated.
Imagine further that, in fact, the full deposit had never actually been made, that the entire amount to which the employee was entitled, legally and contractually, had never been sent.
And finally, imagine the problem was discovered — that some of the pay owed had never been received.What would your remedy be?
Well, if you’re the Civic Committee of the Commercial Club of Chicago, a group of self-appointed guardians of the public trust, you’d fix it by cutting the pay of the employees who had been shortchanged.
Go read the whole thing. It’s an interesting take.
Meanwhile, Bayer also had some harsh words for Gov. Blagojevich in Bernie Schoenburg’s recent column. During his inaugural address, Blagojevich said, “Four years ago, standing before you, I looked back and what I saw was a government that was failing our people, a bloated bureaucracy, costing taxpayers millions, for no purpose, no results.”
“I think it’s highly unfortunate that the governor chooses to use that rhetoric,” Bayer said in an interview at Springfield’s AFSCME headquarters last week.
“I know that in some circles, the rhetoric plays well, but it doesn’t jibe with the reality, and I think it’s a great disservice to the thousands of state employees who come to work every day and try to keep order in our prisons and care for the mentally ill and care for veterans and try to make sure that people who are applying for unemployment benefits get the benefits that they’re entitled to in a timely fashion - all of the things that state employees do and all the services they provide.”
“To denigrate them by saying, well, they didn’t used to work and they don’t work … it’s not true and it’s really time for that rhetoric to stop.”
*Chicago Board of Elections hit with lawsuit over Social Security number flap
* City slates 25 large commercial properties for tax review:
The Daley administration contends the aggressive filings have helped prevent local taxing districts from paying up to $63 million in refunds — and shifting $10 million in tax burden from those large businesses to average taxpayers.
* Mark Brown: A look at former mayoral aide Reyes private files
Meanwhile, Illinois Attorney General Lisa Madigan (D) is pushing for legislation that would require non-profit hospitals to list benefits they provide to their communities. A similar measure stalled last year, but Madigan’s office is now negotiating with Illinois hospitals to try to craft an agreement.
The crackpots who pushed this goofy rumor ought to be ashamed of themselves, but I’m not holding my breath.
Allegations that Sen. Barack Obama was educated in a radical Muslim school known as a “madrassa” are not accurate, according to CNN reporting.
Insight Magazine, which is owned by the same company as The Washington Times, reported on its Web site last week that associates of Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton, D-New York, had unearthed information the Illinois Democrat and likely presidential candidate attended a Muslim religious school known for teaching the most fundamentalist form of Islam. […]
But reporting by CNN in Jakarta, Indonesia and Washington, D.C., shows the allegations that Obama attended a madrassa to be false. CNN dispatched Senior International Correspondent John Vause to Jakarta to investigate. […]
“I came here to Barack Obama’s elementary school in Jakarta looking for what some are calling an Islamic madrassa … like the ones that teach hate and violence in Pakistan and Afghanistan,” Vause said on the “Situation Room” Monday. “I’ve been to those madrassas in Pakistan … this school is nothing like that.”
Go read the whole thing and learn something.
It’s past time that people stopped fervently believing and passing along as gospel the absolute worst rumors about politicians they don’t like.
One other thing. Some people ought to be fired at Insight and Fox News for this disgusting atrocity.
U.S. District Judge David Coar ruled Friday that Secretary of State Jesse White’s office violated the First Amendment when it refused to make license plates saying “Choose Life.’”
*** UPDATE *** The Choose Life IL people told me they’ll be posting a press release relatively soon on their website. It appears that just about everybody is in DC for the march today.
*** UPDATE 2 *** Jesse White spokesman Dave Druker: “We’re studying the opinion. We’re going to ask the Attorney general to appeal it… We don’t think we have the authority without legislative approval to create the license plates.”
*** UPDATE 3 *** You can download the opinionby clicking here [pdf file].
From the opinion:
…this court concludes that the privately-crafted and privately-funded message on specialty license plates constitutes private speech.
*** UPDATE 4 *** Also from the opinion:
Where the government voluntarily provides a forum for private expression, the government may not discriminate against some speakers because of their viewpoint. If the government is not expressing its own policy, it presumptively violates the First Amendment when it picks and chooses access to the forum on the basis of views expressed by the private speakers. […]
Defendant’s main argument is that the license plate message is state speech, and thus not subject to First Amendment protection. However, it has been determined that the added message of specialty license plates constitute private speech, and thus the First Amendment is implicated.
*** UPDATE 5 *** More from the opinion…
By its terms, the statute does not require enabling legislation before a new category of specialty license plates may be issued. […]
Defendant requires that the General Assembly must approve specialty plates. Defendant has required that legislation be introduced and approved by both chambers of the General Assembly, and signed into law by the Governor, in order to approve the specialty plates. These requirements for specialty plates are not included in the statute authorizing specialty plates… and there are no substantive criteria or guidelines for the approval of the specialty license plates by the General Assembly and the Governor.
Katie, bar the door.
*** UPDATE 6 *** Just to be clear, I don’t have a position one way or another on the Choose Life plates. But, as I noted in comments, if all specialty plates are now to be considered “private speech,” I’m wondering what sort of road we’re heading down.
I’m about as free speech as a person can get. But I do think that the state probably ought to control what goes on license plates. Then again, the ensuing craziness will undoubtedly be a lot of fun. So, perhaps I’m a bit torn.
*** UPDATE 7 *** The AP story is up, and it’s not quite right.
A federal judge today ordered the state of Illinois to offer license plates with the pro-adoption motto “Choose Life.”
A group called Choose Life Illinois, made up largely of adoption advocates, has been trying for several years to get legislative approval.
Jim has distributed literature in front of hospitals that perform abortions and in front of the home of one of the most active abortionists in the Chicago area. Jim and his associates have placed large posters, that show the truth of abortion, in such areas as the Daley Plaza, the Art Institute in Chicago, and Chicago area train stations. Jim is on the Board of the Caring Institute that has provided Pro Life advertising on television, and is an advisor to the Board of the abortion breast cancer link that provides well-documented research on the connection between abortion and breast cancer. He is President of Pro Life adoption that promotes specialty license plates in Illinois, and is a co-founder of Vote Life America, which provides politicians’ voting records on such subjects as abortion, stem cell research and homosexual marriage demands. Jim spent a week in Ireland supporting organizations that campaign to keep abortion illegal in that country, and has raised over $80,000 in the US to provide support for these organizations in Ireland.
Another leader of the group is Tom Brejcha, who runs the Thomas More Society.
Founded in 1997, the Thomas More Society, Pro-Life Law Center, is a nonprofit, public interest law firm based in Chicago and dedicated to fighting for the rights and dignity of all human life. The Society vigorously defends clients in state and federal courtrooms around the country, addressing vital issues across the pro-life spectrum, including pregnancy discrimination, end-of-life health care, the right of conscientious objection for medical workers, and freedom of speech for peaceable nonviolent protest.
Under the leadership of President and Chief Counsel Tom Brejcha, the Society champions the rights of pro-life activists — including in the United States Supreme Court, where we won two decisive victories in the past three years (2003, 8-1; 2006, 8-0).
Assisting Brejcha was DC law firm Robbins, Russel, Englert, Orseck & Untereiner, which has handled abortion-related cases.
U.S. Sen. Barack Obama (R-Ill.) gave Mayor Richard Daley a political boost today, endorsing the mayor for reelection to a sixth term in office.
“I travel around the country a lot, and I see a lot of cities,” Obama said. “I can honestly say I am always glad to be back home because I don’t think there is a city in America that has blossomed so much over the last couple of decades.” […]
The Daley administration has been beset by hiring and contracting scandals during the mayor’s current term, and Obama said that “I continue to be concerned” about City Hall corruption. But he asserted that Daley has taken action, including strengthening procurement rules and appointing a strong inspector general to produce a “cleaner government.”
“Ultimately, you want to look at the whole record…and I think the city has moved overall in a positive direction,” Obama said at a news conference at Daley’s downtown campaign headquarters.
In August 2005, Obama nearly ran into trouble with Daley when he hedged on whether he’d support the mayor for re-election in light of the corruption investigations at City Hall.
Asked then if he planned to support the mayor or if the corruption probes might have given him pause, the senator replied, “What’s happened — some of the reports I’ve seen in your newspaper, I think, give me huge pause.”
An hour later, he called the Sun-Times saying he wanted to clarify his remarks. Obama said the mayor was “obviously going through a rough patch right now.” But he also said Chicago has “never looked better” and that “significant progress has been made on a variety of fronts.” The senator said then it was “way premature” to talk about endorsements because the mayor had not yet announced his candidacy.
Daley didn’t hold a grudge against Obama. He reportedly concluded that the freshman senator had been trapped by a loaded question.
Meanwhile, my syndicated column this week takes a look at the Obamarama phenomenon, (and contains an unfortunate headline that I didn’t write).
This Obama phenomenon is not rational in any form. It is, in fact, almost completely irrational.
As the skeptics continually point out, average Obama supporters know very little about the man they adore. But I’ve noticed that the more exposure he gets, the more people swoon over him. In some ways he’s been able to accomplish on a fairly wide scale what JFK did with my Grandma at that union gathering in Chicago. Millions are personally smitten, and, at least for now, there’s no reasoning with them on this topic.
He’s inexperienced? That’s a good thing. He’s black in a nation that still has a lot of bigots? It won’t matter and actually may help. He’s politically untested? He’ll get all the seasoning he needs on the campaign trail. On and on it goes.
Washington, DC– The Hotline, National Journal Group’s daily political news and analysis service, announced today the addition of 4 new partners in its recently launched state political network, which now consists of 10 of the nation’s best state political websites. The Hotline Political Network, launched in October of 2006, provides readers with up to the minute state and local news in some of the most politically important states in the country, including the three earliest primary states: Iowa, New Hampshire, and South Carolina.
The Network, located on National Journal’s web site, will allow The Hotline’s influential readers to quickly access superior state and local coverage on top of the comprehensive, ground-breaking reporting on national politics they get from The Hotline.
“The Hotline has been bringing wisdom before it’s conventional to Washington readers for nearly 20 years and now with our ever-expanding Hotline Political Network, we’ll be bringing that same wisdom to every political community in the country, not just Washington, DC,” said Chuck Todd, Editor in Chief of The Hotline.
• Florida’s Sayfie Review
• Illinois’ Capitol Fax Blog
• Missouri’s johncombest.com
• New Hampshire’s News Links
• Texas’ Quorum Report
• Wisconsin’s WisPolitics
And the four new members added today include:
• Arizona’s AZ Political News
• Georgia’s Political & Policy Digest
• Iowa’s IowaPolitics
• South Carolina’s The Shot
The Hotline Political Network provides readers access to updated headlines from each of the Network member’s sites, as well as links to Hotline’s On Call and Blogometer and other select content from The Hotline, including columns from Chuck Todd, John Mercurio and Charlie Cook.
News from the Network is also regularly featured on Hotline’s On Call blog, which has established a loyal audience of readers and has been credited with breaking several key political news stories over the past months. On Call was first to report that former-Governor Mark Warner was not running for President, and was again first in reporting then-Senator Bill Frist’s decision not to enter the 2008 race. Last week, On Call was also credited with being the first to report the Democrats’ decision to choose Denver as its 2008 Convention host city. On Call can be found by clicking this link.
E-mail-only Capitol Fax subscribers didn’t receive their newsletter this morning because of a serious problem with AOL. We’re working on it. Fax recipients received their version without problems.
Sorry about this, but like I said we’re working on it. I’ll get it to you as soon as I possibly can.
*** UPDATE *** AOL has apparently fixed the problem and the e-mails have been sent. Sorry for the delay.
A Blagojevich administration personnel director, now part of a federal hiring probe, was accused by a subordinate of misconduct and creating a “culture of intimidation.”
The subordinate told state investigators that Robin Staggers, the deputy director for human resources at the Department of Children and Family Services, hired people without having specific jobs for them, pressured an underling to hire someone and increased the use of interns who didn’t have to go through normal employment procedures.
Christina Griffin, who was personnel manager under Staggers, made the statements in an interview with the state executive inspector general that are contained in a report obtained by The Associated Press.
The Blagojevich administration has previously confirmed that Staggers - along with two other Blagojevich aides - is being reviewed by federal prosecutors for potential “criminal wrongdoing.” Staggers, who now makes $92,500, was put on paid leave for three weeks in fall 2005, but administration lawyers who looked into hiring procedures said she should return to work.
Go read the whole thing before commenting, please.
Attorney General Lisa Madigan is not exactly popular with pro-choice groups right now.
Illinois Atty. Gen. Lisa Madigan said Friday that a long-dormant state law that prohibits minors from obtaining an abortion without notifying a parent is constitutional and should be enforced.
The General Assembly passed the notification law in 1995, but the American Civil Liberties Union of Illinois won a federal court order that has blocked it from taking effect for 12 years.
In court papers filed Friday, Madigan asked the federal court in Chicago to dissolve the long-standing court order and, in a statement, said she had little other choice. […]
Illinois is the only state in the region without a parental involvement law. Abortion opponents say that has caused minors to come to Illinois from neighboring states to obtain abortions, skirting their local laws.
The former conservative, pro-life state Rep. Cal Skinner takes note that the pro-choice Madigan has “taken action that will please pro-lifers.”
“It’s a sad day because our attorney general has gone to court and asked a judge to put in effect a very harmful statute,” said Lorie Chaiten, director of the state ACLU’s Reproductive Rights Project.
Chaiten says young women will be more likely to seek illegal abortions than to want to go through a court proceeding.
“It is a statute that makes it very difficult for young women to access reproductive health services,” she said. “This is the kind of law that every major medical organization, including the American Academy of Pediatrics, opposes.”
But, as Skinner has said before, the original law was full of holes.
This is definitely a “headline bill†without the substance which is promised.
But as I pointed out to subscribers this morning, there may be another story here. By taking over the lawsuit, Madigan could conceivably slow down implementation long enough to allow Rep. John Fritchey to pass his new bill that kills off the old law and substitutes a more pro-choice friendly alternative.
* Editorial: Fiscal Responsibility taking a beating in Springfield:
“Brady said the solution is for the state to stop creating any new programs and learn to live within its means. He thinks House Speaker Mike Madigan is ‘going to play hardball again’ as he did two years ago and try to bring the budget under control. As for Senate President Emil Jones, Brady said, ‘Emil doesn’t have a fiscally responsible bone in his body.’
Many provide some sort of review before the youthful offender’s name is added to the adult registry. Last spring, the General Assembly passed a bill to give Illinois judges that discretion, but Gov. Rod Blagojevich vetoed it, saying he couldn’t abide leniency toward any sex offender. He should think again.
* City loses vital voter information: “it will be difficult, if not impossible, for the Board of Elections to retrieve sensitive data physically scattered on more than 100 discs throughout the area.â€
* Health Insurance for all Illinoisans: “The 29-member panel will submit to the Legislature a final report that recommends expanding coverage to 89 percent of the state’s 1.7 million uninsured residents.â€
* Daley cousin quits job after breaking city residency requirement
* Cook County Treasurer proposes revenue increases with coupons and ads:
“Commissioner William Beavers said while other offices are ‘in the 19th century, Pappas is way beyond the 21st century. If everybody looked at her operations, I think we could save a lot of money.’”
* Duckworth encouraged by Vet developments: “Thanks to the governor’s leadership, our state is making sure our veterans get the care they bravely earned and deserve,” Duckworth said. “I would be very happy and content to live at any of our state’s veterans homes someday.”
The media dumped all over them and brazenly rooted for their NFC Championship opponents. Too many of their own fans, perhaps infected with fatalistic Cubitis, even refused to believe in their potential for triumph, ragging on the quarterback, dissing the defense, moaning about the management. And their owners had so little faith in their head coach that his pay is lower than any of his peers.
From a press release issued at 6:27 Friday evening.
Governor Rod R. Blagojevich today directed the Illinois Department of Financial and Professional Regulations (IDFPR) to immediately suspend the Illinois Predatory Lending Database Pilot Program, also known as HB 4050.
That would be Speaker Madigan’s pet program. The program that Madigan twisted every arm at the Statehouse to pass, and then kept at it even after the bill became law.
From Madigan’s spokesman, Steve Brown:
T: Interested Parties
F: Steve Brown
R: “welcome back predator’s campaign'’
To paraphrase a recent advertising campaign “what was he thinking.”
Our comment tonight is:
The governor has made a very regrettable mistake.
It is not surprising that he waited until after dark to erect the “Welcome Back” sign for the predators.
State Sen. Martin Sandoval (D-Chicago), the Senate sponsor of the law, said he was “disturbed and offended” that Blagojevich took action without consulting him or Madigan.
“The speaker and I know what’s best for our communities on the southwest side of Chicago,” Sandoval said.
Gerardo Cardenas, a spokesman for Blagojevich, said Saturday that the law allows the Department of Financial and Professional Regulation to designate the areas where the program will be applied. “By not designating any areas, which became effective as of last night, we are acting within the range of the law,” Cardenas said.
It’s been a pretty fun little week, but all good things must come to an end. If you must keep typing away, then by all means click yourself over to Illinoize.
Sports Illustrated depicts the Saints as miracle workers: “The Saints … will appear in their first conference championship to offer more salve to post-Katrina New Orleans.”
The San Antonio Express-News calls the team nothing less than “a beacon of hope for the Gulf South.” The paper, perhaps suggesting divine intervention on the side of the Saints, trots out a 77-year-old Roman Catholic priest to bluster: “This is not just good for the Saints. It’s good for the city of New Orleans.”
The New York Times, which usually is to sports coverage as I am to fashion critiques, insists that Saints’ success means nothing less than financial survival of the city via urban renewal: It quotes a Forbes editor as saying, “I think if they get to the Super Bowl, you’ll see a lot of talk of rebirth.” […]
Look, I’m sorry about Katrina. But are football fans and the rest of America so lunkheaded as to think New Orleans’ future rests on 60 minutes of football?
The AP is reporting that Obama’s campaign is wooing an important cog in Hillary Clinton’s New York machine. [Hat tip: Curry]
Just because New York’s former state comptroller is backing Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton doesn’t mean rival Sen. Barack Obama can’t call.
H. Carl McCall said Thursday that Obama is trying to make inroads on Clinton’s home turf, and he was among the Democrats to hear from Obama’s campaign. McCall ran for governor in 2002, the state’s first black candidate for governor from a major political party.
Who is Carl McCall? Well, he’s connected to Joe Cari and Stu Levine, two prominent players in Illinois corruption. Cari and McCall were managing directors for HealthPoint Partners, which made a full-on press in Illinois and California for pension fund investments in their firm. Levine was the power at the Illinois Teachers Retirement System board of directors.
HealthPoint Partners, a New York investment firm, held a fund-raiser for Blagojevich at the Harvard Club of New York City on Oct. 29, 2003. It was one of three money-raising events for the governor in New York that day, and his campaign stressed HealthPoint had nothing to do with the other two.
Two days later, TRS voted to invest $15 million with HealthPoint, following up on a $20 million investment it made with the firm in April 2003.
Former TRS board member Stuart Levine paid for the private plane that flew Blagojevich to New York, but Blagojevich flew home separately. Also aboard the flight there was prominent Chicago lawyer Joseph Cari, who at the time was a HealthPoint managing director.
Levine and Cari have since been indicted in the TRS corruption probe, and the Blagojevich campaign has returned or donated to charity the cost of the flight and all other contributions the two gave — nearly $20,000 total. The $3,500 HealthPoint spent on meals for the event also has been donated.
Levine’s juice in the Blagojevich administration was Tony Rezko. Rezko was scheduled to be on the New York flight with the governor and his pals, but mega Blagojevich fundraiser Chris Kelly went instead.
Remember that Joe Cari was the first person to describe to the feds a “fundraising scheme” involving Public Official A and two of his henchmen, since revealed to be Blagojevich, Kelly and Rezko. The scheme essentially involved using the teachers pension fund to raise campaign cash.
One of Carl McCall’s major political patrons was James A. Harmon, an international financier whom Clinton appointed chairman and president of the Export-Import Bank of the United States. Harmon also sat on the global advisory board of an outfit called J. E. Robert Companies, an asset and real-estate management company based in McLean, Virginia. Harmon’s daughter, Deborah, was president of the company.
J. E. Robert had solicited the teachers’ retirement board for an $85-million investment, and McCall phoned Levine on Harmon’s behalf. Here is where the fundraising scheme described by Cari allegedly came into play. Levine, Cari says in his plea agreement, was willing to use his sway on the teachers’ pension board to award $85 million to J. E. Robert if, in return, the company would hire a consultant of Levine’s choice (which turned out to be for 1 per-cent of the investment—$850,000). Cari claimed the consultant would then contribute some of the money he or she made (without doing any work) to certain political or charitable organizations “as directed by Levine.â€
A state pension fund has decided to postpone dropping minority-owned money manager Ariel Capital Management LLC for poor investment performance, after lobbying by two state senators and a former aide to Gov. Rod Blagojevich.
The Illinois State Board of Investment (ISBI), which had decided to terminate Ariel at the end of this month, voted last Friday to keep Ariel through the end of next year as a mutual fund investment option for self-directed state employee pension plans. […]
Top ISBI officials were contacted by state Sens. James Meeks and Don Trotter, both Chicago Democrats, and by Cheryle Jackson, who recently left the Blagojevich administration to become president of the Chicago Urban League, where two Ariel executives are directors.
One of the reasons McCall lost his 2002 race for New York governor were allegations like this:
During the gubernatorial campaign, Republicans unearthed letters McCall had written to executives of companies in which the fund was invested. These documents, written on official letterhead, sought jobs for three family members.
In the most egregious example, McCall wrote to Verizon executive Fred Salerno congratulating him on the merger of Bell Atlantic and NYNEX.
‘I am particularly pleased because New York’s Retirement Fund, which I manage, owns 3,833,300 shares of the combined companies,’ McCall wrote. ‘I hope you will keep me informed of your progress, and call me if I can help in any way. Under separate cover, I am sending the resume we discussed.’
Months later, McCall’s daughter was hired as a ‘specialist.’ She was terminated in early 2001 after improper personal use of a company credit card and later charged with larceny, according to the September 27, 2002 edition of the New York Post.
State Controller and gubernatorial candidate Steve Westly steered California’s giant pension system to invest in a fledgling venture capital fund whose politically connected partners helped him raise campaign cash.
Before Westly’s involvement, the pension board’s outside advisors had rejected the fund as ill-suited for its portfolio. After the investment was made, one of the partners became enmeshed in an unrelated pension-fund scandal in Illinois, pleading guilty to attempted extortion.
If Obama is gonna run as a breath of fresh air, then the campaign needs to vet their contacts a bit better. Or at least stop bragging to the press about them.
First, it was the Better Government Association, now it’s the infamous Judicial Watch. From a press release:
Judicial Watch, the public interest group that investigates and prosecutes government corruption, announced today that it has filed an open records lawsuit against the office of Governor Rod Blagojevich (D-Ill.), who is under federal investigation on several fronts, including corrupt hiring practices. Judicial Watch’s lawsuit, filed on Jan. 16, 2007 in the Cook County, Illinois Circuit Court, specifically seeks, among other documents, any and all grand jury subpoenas received by the governor’s office or any state agencies under the governor’s control. The subpoenas reportedly were issued by U.S. Attorney Patrick Fitzgerald’s office.
Attorney General Lisa Madigan has already said that the governor needs to fork over the information, which prompted the BGA’s lawsuit. Judicial Watch filed a FOIA last November for the information and was turned down.
“There is an air of lawlessness in how Governor Blagojevich is handling
this document request. He ought to listen to the advice of the state’s top legal officer and release these documents,” stated Judicial Watch President Tom Fitton. “The citizens of Illinois have a right to know the full details related to alleged corruption in the governor’s office.”
Also, the governor’s rationale for not handing over the subpoenas appears to be evolving.
Terry Mutchler, the public access counselor for Attorney General Lisa Madigan, wrote in a letter to the administration that without additional legal reasoning “the Office of the Governor and the agencies under his control cannot withhold Federal grand jury subpoenas in their possession and must release these documents.”
Abby Ottenhoff, a spokeswoman for Blagojevich, said the governor’s office had received viewpoints from the attorney general’s office that did not agree with Mutchler.
According to Anne Spillane, Madigan’s chief of staff, even though the governor’s office has not laid out the appropriate legal reasoning yet for withholding the documents, it is ongoing process.
Ottenhoff said U.S. Attorney Patrick Fitzgerald was “crystal clear” that the governor’s office should not disclose or discuss any subpoenas.
The State Board of Education is recommending an $801.6 million increase in school spending.
State aid to schoolchildren would jump by $355 per student next year–the largest increase in nearly a decade–under a recommendation Thursday from the Illinois State Board of Education.
In the first glimpse of what public schools might expect from the state next school year, the board proposed significant increases in a variety of programs, from special education to dropout prevention to preschool.
The proposed state aid per student would increase from $5,334 to $5,689, but…
The proposed figure for basic state aid falls short of the per-pupil amount recommended by the Education Funding Advisory Board, the state’s school finance advisers. The group recommended in 2005 that the state spend $6,405 per student. It is scheduled to update that recommendation this year.
* New AmerenCILCO bill broken down: “But what really annoys me about the bill is the sleazy attempt at making the rate hike more palatable by hiding it in a plethora of new rates and fees.â€
* Tribune: Challengers take share of spotlight from Daley
* Claypool Says Doctors Cheating The System Might Be Adding To Fiscal Woes: “It’s actually unconscionable that front line health care workers are being laid off when all these high-paid six-figure bureaucrats pushing paper around who happen to have political connections are not losing their jobâ€
* Public Defender’s Office Blast Stroger’s Budget Cuts
There’s another important benefit to passing this law. The ban would be effective on Jan. 1, 2008. That would shorten the excessively long grace period granted to Chicago restaurants with bars and freestanding taverns. As it stands now, they don’t have to clear the air until July of 2008–2 1/2 years after the City Council banned smoking in Chicago.
* Feared “Hole in the Wall†mobster dies in prison
* Buchwald’s Farewell Column, Written to Be Released at Death