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Friday, Aug 4, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Question of the day

Friday, Aug 4, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

It’s Friday, so let’s have a caption contest instead.

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“Protect marriage” referendum hits another roadblock

Friday, Aug 4, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

When you don’t have the facts on your side (or in this case, signatures) , you argue the law. That didn’t work either.

From a Protect Marriage Initiative press release:

Yesterday we received word that United States District Court Judge Elaine B. Bucklo (a Clinton appointee) had ruled against our complaint that the Illinois election code for advisory referenda (such as the Protect Marriage Illinois referendum) is unconstitutionally burdensome to Illnois citizens–thus infringing on their right to petition their government.

We think Judge’ Bucklo’s decision was rushed and shallow. So, with the help of our good friends at the Alliance Defense Fund, we are appealing it. Our appeal was filed today.

Judge Bucklo disregarded our First Amendment claims and therefore did not agree with our contention that the referendum rules as applied by the State Board of Election (SBE) were unfair and unreasonable. Basically, she acquiesced to a very low standard when it comes to the state upholding citizens’ rights to petition their government. The advisory referendum rules are incredibly arcane and complicated: eight Illinois cities are their own election jurisdiction (treated separately from Illinois’ 102 counties), which led to thousands of PMI signatures being disqualified or not submitted to the SBE.

It’s not looking good for Peter LaBarbera’s people.

  49 Comments      


I wondered how long this would take

Friday, Aug 4, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

Whether it’s a legitimate question or irrelevant red herring, this is still an interesting development.

In attempting to keep control of a key suburban congressional seat, Republicans are trying to make Gov. Rod Blagojevich’s ethics issues a factor.

This week, Republican Peter Roskam sent a letter to Democrat Tammy Duckworth asking her to publicly say if she supports Blagojevich, a Chicago Democrat who’s come under federal scrutiny for his administration’s hiring and contracting practices.

“Throughout this campaign, you have repeatedly brought up the issue of ethics on the campaign trail. Many times, you have issued a press release on any scandal related to the Republican Party,” Roskam said in the Aug. 2 letter addressed to Duckworth. “Yet, you have been noticeably silent on corruption when it involves the Democratic Party and high-ranking leaders who have been instrumental in your campaign.” […]

In a letter back to Roskam, Duckworth says she supports Blagojevich’s re-election.

“But that does not mean that I give him, or anyone else, a pass on ethical behavior,” she said in the letter. “Should he or his administration be proven to have engaged in illegal or unethical actions, they should suffer the consequences.”

What do you think?

  25 Comments      


Voice of the people

Friday, Aug 4, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

This letter to the editor in the Kankakee Daily Journal should win an award for the most bugaboos in one document. I’ve highlighted them for your ease of use. [ALNAC, by the way is the commission that will run the Peotone area airport]

ALNAC and the foreign company that will finance and operate the airport would destroy Beecher and the surrounding area by their decision that if a passenger airport won’t fly, they are going to make it a cargo airport. This means most flights will be made at night. ALNAC has decided to extend the runway from 10,000 to 12,000 feet to accommodate the new Airbus 380.

This airplane can fly directly from China to Beecher, with more Chinese and other foreign products to undercut U.S. products. It weighs in at 1-1/4 million pounds, takes 82,000 gallons of jet fuel, has 190,000 horsepower and has no pollution devices — like all other aircraft.

The plane will take off and land on an east-west runway — right over the new houses in the Hunters Chase subdivision. I have checked with the NTSB (National Transportation Safety Board) and found that 80 percent of the major airports have had crashes on approach and departures in the past 40 years. There is only ONE runway planned at Peotone airport.

You need to have some understanding about jet fuel. It is a hydrocarbon like auto gasoline. However, it has an additive package that is so toxic it has to be registered with the EPA. A jet engine is only 37 percent efficient — the rest is toxic waste

The case to build this airport is that it is going to create jobs. If the politicians would send the millions of illegal aliens back to where they came from, we would have plenty of jobs.

It looks to me like Jesse Jackson Jr. is like some of the rest of the politicians. They are selling or leasing our ports, roads, banks, shipyards, and businesses — even our airlines now — to foreigners. If I didn’t know better, I would think our country is bankrupt!

The national debt is accelerating past $9 trillion, our trade deficit is $60 billion and rising, the average credit card debt is $9,000, the state is stealing money from pension funds and companies are dropping pension funds altogether. Our economy is in a very precarious position.

The people who want us to have a global economy don’t tell you about the diseases that humans can get; diseases our crops are getting; other new critters that are killing our native trees, and jobs that are being lost to cheap foreign labor. Isn’t this too high a price for America to pay for globalization?

Dude, you forgot global warming and Islamofascism.

  10 Comments      


Morning shorts

Friday, Aug 4, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

· “Former Lt. Gov. Corinne Wood has just closed the books on her campaign fund, but an associate said Wednesday that does not mean the Lake Forest Republican is finished with politics or losing her second battle with breast cancer.”

· “Congressman Weller, being that it is an election year, he said that he would try to see if he could get us some funding for some of this stuff… No promises or anything, but it’s a start.”

· Topinka: Stop the bleeding at the state’s border

· Measure proposes veterans care at closed facility

· “White supremacist Matthew Hale, serving 40 years in a Colorado prison for plotting to kill a federal judge in Chicago, is suing his former attorney for malpractice.”

· Error causes spike in property tax bills

· Editorial: In a streamlining mood?

· Daley mocks Meeks over n-word

  6 Comments      


Roskam slams Duckworth on taxes

Thursday, Aug 3, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

From a press release:

Sixth District Congressional candidate Senator Peter Roskam called on his opponent to “come clean” on the issue of tax relief. Roskam stated that her position continues to be elusive and ever-changing. Roskam was joined by House Ways and Means Member Congressman Phil English (PA-3) who indicated that her reluctance to make permanent the tax relief means she “hasn’t ruled out a tax hike” on suburban families.

“I support providing immediate tax relief to suburban families and businesses by eliminating the death tax, marriage penalty tax and doubling the child tax credit,” said Peter Roskam.

“Tammy Duckworth hasn’t signed the “no new taxes” pledge because she wants to keep the door open to raising your taxes,” said Rep. English. “Campaigns are about issues, and Duckworth isn’t a real candidate if she doesn’t take positions on issues like taxes.”

Roskam campaign says that class-envy rhetoric by Duckworth doesn’t add up. According to the U.S. Department of Treasury, more than 119,000 children are eligible for the child tax credit in the Sixth Congressional District. A family of four with two children making $50,000 would see a 132% increase in their tax bill if the tax relief is not made permanent.

Below are a variety of statements by Duckworth on taxes.

• “She [Tammy Duckworth] said she has some problems with making the Bush tax cuts permanent” (Dec. 18, 2005, Daily Herald).
• “But ask Duckworth which of the Bush tax cuts she’d repeal and the answer isn’t as cut-and-dried” (March 16, 2006, Daily Herald).
• “Duckworth vows to fight tax cuts for the wealthy” (March 22, 2006, Daily Herald).
• “Duckworth said she ‘would seriously consider repealing part’ of the Bush tax cuts, which she said, ‘have caused our deficit to explode” (April 18, 2006, Chicago Tribune).

  13 Comments      


Guv says no Greens in debates

Thursday, Aug 3, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

The guv rules out allowing Green Party candidate Rich Whitney into the debates if Whitney makes it onto the ballot.

Gov. Rod Blagojevich said he is primed and ready to debate Republican challenger Judy Baar Topinka - just so long as there are no Greens on stage. Blagojevich said the upcoming fall debates should be left to the political professionals.

“I think the debates should be between the two major party candidates,” Blagojevich said. “I think it’s important for the major parties to focus on the issues, because the two major parties are the ones that are in a position to make the decisions for the people of Illinois.” […]

“We’re willing to debate anyone,” said John McGovern, spokesman for the Topinka campaign. “We believe it is up to the debate sponsors and organizers to determine who’s invited and who participates.”

UPDATE: Comments are now closed on this post because of suspected foul play by a Green Party supporter.

  101 Comments      


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Thursday, Aug 3, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Question of the day

Thursday, Aug 3, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

I don’t mind that some business group wants to sue over the state’s Sudan divestment bill. It’s still a free country.

A U.S. business trade group said on Wednesday it plans to file a lawsuit on Monday challenging Illinois’ law barring state investments in companies that do business with Sudan.

The National Foreign Trade Council, a group representing more than 300 companies that trade and invest overseas, said the lawsuit will be filed in U.S. District Court in Chicago along with a motion asking the court to stop the state from implementing the ban during the course of the lawsuit. […]

The law, the first to take effect in the United States, prohibits the state from investing in Sudan government bonds and bans investments of state and pension funds in companies that do business in or with Sudan. Pension funds were given 18 months to divest about $1 billion invested in such companies. The law took effect in late January.

But I’m not all that comfortable with the state’s pension boards joining the lawsuit.

Joining the council in the lawsuit will be five boards of Illinois public employee pension funds, according to a news advisory.

Today’s question is, do you think the Sudan divestment bill was a mistake or good public policy? Bonus points for commenting on the pension boards joining the lawsuit.

Divestment proponents have a website here. The Sun-Times had a good story on the issue last month.

  18 Comments      


Mo’ Money

Thursday, Aug 3, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

The governor makes a last-minute decision to give a pal’s business an extra million taxpayer bucks and the home crowd cheers wildly.

After years of planning and waiting baseball fans in Southern Illinois will finally get to sit at their own ballpark and take in a ball game.

The official announcement came during a new conference on Wednesday afternoon. And fans who’ve waited for years to hear the crack of the bat couldn’t be happier.

The St. Louis Post-Dispatch story wasn’t as gushing.

Gov. Rod Blagojevich brushed aside criticism Wednesday over millions of state dollars benefiting a new minor league ballpark owned by a Metro East political patron, and made a surprise announcement of another $1 million to help the baseball stadium.

His announcement coincided with word that an independent minor league expansion team would suit up at the stadium next year.

The new state funds, like the previous $3 million, will go to the city of Marion for infrastructure improvements to aid the project and the surrounding area. The park is the brainchild of prominent Metro East lawyer John Simmons, who along with his law firm has donated more than $1 million mostly to Democratic causes in recent years.

It’s even better than that.

What follows is an e-mail I received early this morning from a reporter who was at the event. [Emphasis added]

[The governor] claimed — at least twice, because I asked the question afterwards — that he just decided to do it while sitting at the groundbreaking.

That’s all well and good, but it jogged my memory of the story last week where two Republican lawmakers filed a FOIA request to get budget details. Weren’t they worried that he would start doling out $50,000,000 on the campaign trail? And…didn’t he basically start doing that yesterday?

Not quite. But one can’t help but wonder which budget line he plans to raid to get that million dollars.

This last-minute money decision does have precedent in southern Illinois. A while back he was roundly booed when he was introduced before an SIU Carbondale basketball game.

During the game, people who were there tell me, the governor asked around to see what he could do to cheer up the fans because he was scheduled to go onto the court at halftime. When he was told that his office was sitting on a grant for the school’s marching band, he decided to release the cash. One of his top aides reportedly suggested that he run the decision by his budget director first, but the governor testily brushed off the suggestion and made the grant announcment himself at midcourt, before spinning a ball on his finger.

The man is a natural campaigner. No doubt about that.

UPDATE: Check out the comments for a funny story from the aforementioned reporter.

  25 Comments      


I can relate

Thursday, Aug 3, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

Almost every homeowner loved the skyrocketing real estate values in Chicago - until the new assessments started rolling in.

Not even 15 minutes into the workshop on property taxes, a man in the back of the room could contain himself no longer. “We cannot continue to pay at this rate,” he proclaimed, his voice cracking as he interrupted a local alderman’s opening remarks.

More than 300 north-siders were crammed into the June 20 meeting sponsored by Cook County assessor James Houlihan. “We need change,” a woman exclaimed. “Yoo-hoo? Is anyone listening?”

Taxpayer discontent has been brewing since April, when the assessor’s office began sending out new north-side property assessments for the next threeyear period. “The pitchforks are out, the peasants are restless,” cracked one state rep. “I sense a revolt.”

How much of a revolt may depend on the sophistication of the peasantry. Assessments on the north side are up as much as 50 percent.

The north-side revulsion has not escaped Mayor Daley’s notice.

Chicago area homeowners could see their property tax bills “more than double” next year unless the Illinois General Assembly renews the 7 percent cap on annual assessment increases, Mayor Daley and Cook County Assessor Jim Houlihan warned Wednesday. […]

The state Senate voted last spring to renew the 7 percent cap. But the Madigan-led House voted it down after a state study found the cap shifted the tax burden from homeowners to businesses, landlords, renters and “hundreds of thousands of homeowners who are paying as much as 10 percent more.”

Daley and Houlihan have long disputed those findings, and now they’re sounding the alarm. Unless the cap is extended, property taxes will more than double for some homeowners next year when tax bills will reflect the reassessment now under way.

I’ll be curious to see if Topinka has any property tax relief in her yet-to-be announced education funding plan. The governor skipped over the issue in his school funding proposal.

That Topinka plan, by the way, was supposed to be released last month, but is still under refinement, according to the campaign. And the governor’s lottery sales plan? It’s kinda faded into the distance, hasn’t it?

  30 Comments      


Big box blowback

Thursday, Aug 3, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

Some people may be confused, since everything they heard had the big box wage plan being about that bad ol’ low-brow, working class favorite WalMart and not (gasp!) the middle-brow shopping class’ beloved Target.

Chicago’s controversial big- box ordinance has produced its first casualty: Target has pulled out of a 32-acre shopping mall at 119th and Marshfield and will likely cut and run from the North Side’s Wilson Yards project as well, city officials said Wednesday.

Target’s decision to follow through on its threat to avoid Chicago comes just one week after a bitterly divided City Council defied Daley by requiring retailing giants to pay their employees a “living wage” of at least $10 an hour and $3 in benefits by 2010. […]

[Ald. Carrie[ Austin was one of only 15 aldermen to vote against the big-box ordinance. She was devastated, but not surprised, when the letter arrived from Target. “My colleagues are saying, ‘Don’t worry. They’ll come.’ Well, mine just left,” Austin said. […]

On Wednesday, Daley was still holding his veto cards close to the vest. The mayor must decide by the next regularly scheduled City Council meeting on Sept. 13 whether to sign or veto the ordinance. To avoid an override, he would have to convince two aldermen to change sides.

From what I’ve been told, the big retailers have been freaked out by this ordinance and want to use Chicago to send a warning to everyone else who might contemplate legislation like this.

In the long term the ordinance may or may not make much difference, whether or not it survives a veto or a court challenge. In the short term, it’s gonna be a very hot, well publicized fight on both sides.

  31 Comments      


Go tell Jesse

Thursday, Aug 3, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

Send your complaints to Jesse White.

Illinois residents are getting a new tool for fighting government corruption: www.ReportItNow.net.

The Web site was created by Secretary of State Jesse White for people to report any problems in his office. White says accusations about other parts of government will be forwarded to the appropriate authorities.

Anonymous complaints are allowed, although White says it’s best if people give their names so that investigators can follow up and ask more questions. The reports will be kept confidential. Only the office’s inspector general will see the accusation.

This is probably at least partly a response to his opponent’s criticism that the office is not sufficiently high tech and accessible. And if my own experience is any indication, 99 percent of the “corruption” reported will be worthless info.

Still, one never knows exactly what will happen whenever a pressure valve like this is opened.

  19 Comments      


Yeah, right

Thursday, Aug 3, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

The Tribune tries following up on its recent one-day story about how city services were allegedly traded for votes in the 12th Ward three years ago.

Mayor Richard Daley contended Wednesday that city service requests never have been filled at election time to curry favor with voters for candidates he has supported.

Anyone running for office can claim to have had potholes filled or street lights repaired, Daley said. But asked if service ever has been provided as a political favor, he replied, “No. None whatsoever.” […]

“I ask people every day to call 311 whether I am a candidate or not,” Daley said. “And they can mention my name too—’The mayor told me to call.’ They do that all the time.

“I don’t care,” he said. “If there is a problem, get it fixed. If candidates are running, and they are calling, so be it. If elected officials are calling, I need everyone to call 311…. If there is a hole in the street and I don’t fix it, that is called [liability] when someone injures themselves.”

The mayor is just goading the media to follow up on this. The stories are out there and they are abundant. The question is whether the reporters will answer the call.

  16 Comments      


Morning shorts

Thursday, Aug 3, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

· UPDATE: This caption contest could get interesting.

· Paging Lisa Madigan: Community College allegedly donates taxpayer funds to PAC.

· Blagojevich veto surprises Southwest Illinois Development Authority

· Torture allegations stepped up - Lawyer for 2 alleged victims accuses Daley, Devine of obstructing probe

· Mitchell: Meeks to stop using n-word — but he’s asking for a tradeoff. Editorial: Schools concerns are legit, but Meeks’ gibes are not

· Brown: Chicago exporting homeless many miles from their home

· Stem Cell Calls Target Swing Voters - Some 6th District Homes Will Receive Recordings

· Online Papers Modestly Boost Newspaper Readership

· “Web sites like Amazon.com and MySpace.com may soon be inaccessible for many people using public terminals at American schools and libraries, thanks to the U.S. House of Representatives.” Actually, “Nearly any news site now permits these types of behaviors that the bill covers.”

· Transcript reveals no new detail on Evans’ health

· Some people really need to get over themselves, and maybe even clean up their own minds. Phallic? How about this?

  8 Comments      


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Wednesday, Aug 2, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Question of the day

Wednesday, Aug 2, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

How do you think the media has treated Gov. Rod Blagojevich so far? Has it been too hostile, not hostile enough or just about right?

Please use examples.

  48 Comments      


Charlie makes the case

Wednesday, Aug 2, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

I haven’t talked to a single person in the last week outside of the Topinka campaign who believes Judy Baar Topinka can win the governor’s race. Gov. Blagojevich’s boffo fundraising report has only reinforced that notion this week.

Charlie Johnston begs to differ. Johnston, a smart Republican political operator and a friend, writes at Illinoize that he is “a bit astonished”that the “Topinka can’t win” attitude has taken hold among pundits and bloggers.

Charlie begins by recounting the governor’s extremely early and very expensive TV ad campaign and goes from there.

What was really striking about that period was that Blagojevich could not coax his own numbers above 50%. What was also striking about it was that with several million dollars of effort, he only managed to push Topinka into the mid 30s, instead of annihilating her. For six weeks of sustained effort and millions of dollars spent, Blagojevich barely got the equivalent of a field goal - and that’s not a sign of strength.

In a one-on-one race, I am not a believer in early television. It is hugely expensive and produces results that are deceptive because they are transient and shallow. In a primary in Illinois, people don’t start paying serious attention until after New Year. In a general election they don’t start paying serious attention until after Labor Day. Horse-race numbers at that point start to mean something.

In a race where the incumbent has a huge war chest that dwarfs the challenger, one of the best tactics for the challenger is to horde their own money until after Labor Day while making every effort to goad the incumbent into spending as much of his own money before then as possible. Hmmm…that’s what Topinka has done thus far. Maybe it was an accident - or maybe it is sound strategy.

He also makes a point that most of us who follow this stuff closely always try to keep in mind.

You don’t need all the money in the world; just enough to clear the threshold that gets your message across. In a gubernatorial general election in this race, the first five million you raise is critical. If, after that, you raise another 50 million, it is not even half as meaningful as that first five - because that’s what gets you past the threshold.

There is one thing missing in all of this, though, and that’s the national Republican collapse. Charlie Cook wrote yesterday that the upcoming November election appears to be shaping up as “a very large tidal wave” for the Democrats. Whether the governor’s problems create a reverse impact here is the ultimate question.

If you knew that Barack Obama’s campaign had the goods on millionaire frontrunner Blair Hull and had already planned how best to use that devastating information would you have changed your mind about his chances three months before the US Senate primary? You didn’t know, of course, because it had to remain secret to be effective.

I really don’t know who will win this race, and I never have. I don’t know what sort of secret bombs each candidate plans to throw, and neither do the rest of us. Topinka’s problems with her right flank could be overcome with the corruption issue, but then again maybe not. There are a billion factors involved.

Anyway, your turn to discuss.

  64 Comments      


More on the governor’s “mystery debt”

Wednesday, Aug 2, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

The AP ran a pretty standard story on the subject.

Gov. Rod Blagojevich’s re-election campaign wouldn’t say Tuesday whether its huge legal bills during the first half of the year stem from criminal investigations of the administration’s hiring practices.

New documents show the law firm Winston & Strawn billed the campaign more than $687,000. At this point in the campaign four years ago, Blagojevich’s legal bills amounted to just $2,748.

Campaign spokesman Sheila Nix said the firm’s work includes routine election law, handling nuisance lawsuits and reviewing state hiring procedures to make sure they comply with the law.

Nix would not discuss whether it also includes responding to a federal probe of Blagojevich hiring practices or the similar state investigation recently shelved at the request of federal prosecutors.

The Tribune reminded us that before the governor’s campaign clammed up, it did discuss the fees back in February.

In February, when the campaign reported spending about $40,000 in legal fees, campaign aides acknowledged that the money in part covered legal work for the federal and state probes.

But the campaign now is not discussing the legal work, and on Tuesday, the governor’s office would not comment on whether Winston & Strawn was performing any legal services for the governor, his state agencies or his employees regarding the investigations.

Here’s a great quote:

“The money was spent to make sure we were doing everything right,” Nix said. “I’m not going into any more detail than that.”

The Daily Herald leads with the Ryan stuff.

Four years ago, Rod Blagojevich won the governor’s race with a strategy that largely relied on connecting his Republican rival to scandal-plagued Gov. George Ryan.

It now appears Blagojevich’s current Republican rival is trying to turn the tables on the Chicago Democrat, although possibly at her own peril.

But turns it back on Topinka.

The situation illustrates the political problems Topinka and almost any other Republican has in trying to play the “Ryan card” for political gain. Ryan, the former speaker of the Illinois House, lieutenant governor, secretary of state and one-term governor, was immensely popular within many political circles and helped numerous candidates before being tainted by scandal late in his tenure.

“That’s so hypocritical. She has so many connections to George Ryan,” said Blagojevich spokeswoman Sheila Nix.

And OneMan calculates that to spend $722,000 since December at $500 an hour works out to…

…on average about 206 partner hours a month or 6.8 hours a day for each day of a 31 day month.

  8 Comments      


Is it happening again?

Wednesday, Aug 2, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

Yikes?

Between them, the two men running for Southern Illinois’ open appellate court seat have raised more campaign cash so far this year than the candidates for the state Supreme Court in 2004 did in the same period.

And that Supreme Court showdown later shattered national records in what became a political arms race.

Considering that, and disclosures of higher-than-usual contributions to judicial contests in the Metro East, and this year’s elections look like something of a weather vane, a telltale sign of which way the wind is blowing on downstate courts, some observers and experts say.

“It’s a rematch of 2004 already,” said Cindi Canary, executive director of the Illinois Campaign for Political Reform. “I could see the appellate race alone becoming a multimillion-dollar contest real quick.”

A replay would require the big national groups stepping in. It would also require people like Democratic Party of Illinois Chairman Michael Madigan to make it a top priority. I don’t see things spiralilng that far out of control, but I should probably start paying much closer attention to this race. Your thoughts?

On a somewhat related note, the Madison County Record had an interesting little story yesterday entitled: Metro East plaintiff’s attorneys withholding financial support from governor.

  7 Comments      


Oy, part 162,410

Wednesday, Aug 2, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

The Sun-Times broke this story and today the editorial page follows up.

When a fired suburban deputy police chief can turn up as the No. 2 official in the State Toll Highway Authority inspector general’s office and no one seems to know how it happened, it’s time to ask a basic question: If not clout, then what?

When that same man is allowed to quietly resign from the toll job after breaking the law by allegedly posing as a State Police commander to intervene in a friend’s domestic violence situation, it’s appropriate to suspect there’s more going on here than a lucky break.

The fact is that the apparently illegal conduct by Anthony M. Martin Sr. was handled like a common-place personnel problem. Posing as a cop is a felony, yet Martin miraculously escaped prosecution. Worse yet, he allegedly pulled this hoax six weeks after the governor signed legislation toughening penalties for people who impersonate cops and firefighters. Had these details not come to light in a Sun-Times article, there’s a chance Martin could have popped up on another taxpayer-funded payroll. After all, he has connections. His wife is Zelda Whittler, the Cook County undersheriff, and his brother is a now-retired deputy State Police director.

Voters could be forgiven for thinking this sounds like a case of the exercise of clout to try to put someone above the law.

Also, the governor has repeatedly claimed that his inspectors general are referring all cases of alleged criminal behavior to law enforcement, but that doesn’t seem to have happened here.

  16 Comments      


Morning shorts

Wednesday, Aug 2, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

· Krol hits Roskam campaign staff problems

· “The Republican challenger in the race for state comptroller has a plan she says will speed up payments to hospitals and pharmacies for their care of low-income patients. Carole Pankau said today she would set up a separate account to receive federal reimbursement of state Medicaid expenditures.”

· “[Congressman Jesse Jackson, Jr.] said, ‘Listen, while everybody’s talking about mayor and everything else, we’re picking off state rep seats. We want to pick off aldermanic seats,’” Coconate said. “He said, ‘Now, in November, it’s a possibility. If Daley doesn’t run, I might run…I am not going to be the guinea pig to run against Daley.’”

· Utility yields to state, vows mercury cuts

· Daley fears `big-box’ tax loss - Change in revenue burden could affect property taxes, he hints

· Editorial: Digging out of a hellhole

· Letter: It is unfortunate that the presence of public officials at Boys State has declined.

· Marin: A word to Meeks: Words do matter

· Marion to join Frontier League in 2007

· Organization governor spurned contributed to his campaign

· Champaign American blogger calls it quits

· Is Hastert still man of the House?

· Democrat challenge has Greens seeing red

· The Kankakee Daily-Journal now has space for reader comments on its website. The state won’t block the paper. The state only blocks blogs. How unfair is that?

  11 Comments      


Maybe Thompson will become a Republican again

Tuesday, Aug 1, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

[Bumped to the top and updated twice thrice below.]

The fundraising totals are covered in another post. This “mystery debt” to Winston & Strawn needs its own space.

…the Democratic incumbent has headaches of his own, specifically a whopping $687,839 in legal fees that his spokeswoman declined to detail beyond saying that the “vast majority” goes toward “making sure we do everything right.” […]

But Blagojevich is facing other problems. He reported paying $151,816 to Winston & Strawn and owed the law firm run by former GOP Gov. Jim Thompson another $536,022. […]

Blagojevich spokeswoman Sheila Nix declined to say how much, if any, of the Winston & Strawn fees involved the investigations, saying “it’s a whole bunch of things,” including various lawsuits and “double-checking and triple-checking” fund-raising to ensure all laws are followed.

Excuse me, but that’s complete bull. Winston & Strawn charges a lot of money, but you don’t run up $722,000 in bills since December of 2005 just for “double-checking and triple-checking” fund-raising.

Turns out, the campaign had a different story for the Tribune.

A campaign spokeswoman said the debt represented charges the campaign is questioning, but she declined to say if any of the law firm’s work was related to state and federal investigations into hiring, contracting and fundraising in the administration. […]

Blagojevich campaign spokeswoman Sheila Nix declined to discuss the specific work Winston & Strawn did. Instead, she said the firm was retained to examine a variety of “systems,” including questions regarding fundraising. Still, she said, the campaign was contesting more than half a million dollars in fees the law firm billed and reported it as a debt.

Like I said in today’s Capitol Fax, a dispute over a few thousand dollars is one thing, but I cannot believe that there’s a disagreement over half million dollars in charges.

UPDATE: The plot thickens. The governor’s campaign originally reported a $687,839.59 debt to Winston & Strawn, then revised the report 14 minutes later to a $536,022 debt.

UPDATE 2: Topinka press release:

…State Treasurer Judy Baar Topinka and running mate Joe Birkett, the DuPage County State’s Attorney said Blagojevich owes the people of Illinois a straight answer about the nature of the legal bills and scope of the state and federal investigations his administration is engulfed in. […]

In addition, Topinka and Birkett also demanded that Blagojevich give an accounting on how much money state government under his watch has spent in legal fees since he took office defending against the corruption charges from federal and state subpoenas.

In the seven months from December 2005 through June this year, Blagojevich’s campaign has incurred legal fees of $722,000, a rate of nearly $1.5 million per year…

I think it’s reasonable to know how much the state has spent to defend the governor and his top staff. This story deserves much more play than it’s getting. The governor’s campaign spent a fortune on legal bills and he won’t say what it was for. It’s time for a little truth.

UPDATE 3: AP finally has a story up.

Spokeswoman Sheila Nix says the legal work includes compliance with election law, defending the campaign against nuisance lawsuits and reviewing state hiring procedures.

But Nix won’t say whether it also covers criminal matters related to a federal investigation.

All reasonable explanations, except that last part. They can’t have it both ways. You can’t explain what some of the expenses are for, but refuse to say what the rest is for.

Also, the reason for the discrepancy in Update 1 could be a simple math error on the part of the campaign. That’s the way it was described and it seems rational.

  68 Comments      


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Tuesday, Aug 1, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Question of the day

Tuesday, Aug 1, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

Both Chicago newspapers editorialized today in favor of a mayoral veto of the “big box” ordinance. Sun-Times:

In his 17 years on the job, Mayor Daley has never vetoed anything. For most of his tenure, of course, compliant aldermen simply did what he told them to do. But Daley’s power is waning, and the City Council has begun to show an independent streak. Unfortunately, aldermen have used their new-found independence unwisely, passing a living wage law for big-box retailers last week over the mayor’s objections. It received what appears to be a veto-proof majority, but we still think he should veto it.

Although the proposal is clearly aimed at Wal-Mart, it also covers Target, Sears, Home Depot and other stores that have more than 90,000 square feet of space and are owned by companies that do more than $1 billion in sales. It requires that workers in those stores be paid $13 an hour in wages and benefits by 2010.

Tribune:

The law is bad public policy and almost certainly violates equal protection grounds because of its discriminatory nature. It applies only to retailers with stores that are larger than 90,000 square feet and that do more than $1 billion in annual sales. Such stores generate $51 million in sales taxes for the city each year. […]

It will be strange if the mayor gives up on this. In the past, he has not been intimidated by the City Council. In 17 years as mayor, he hasn’t backed off of a fight when he thought he was doing the right thing for Chicago.

A veto of the big-box ordinance would be the right thing for Chicago.

Your turn.

  81 Comments      


Money

Tuesday, Aug 1, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

First, the AP gives us the raw numbers.

The governor brought in about $6.5 million in the first six months of 2006 and spent nearly $10 million, much of that on television advertisements promoting his re-election bid after easily winning the March Democratic primary, a campaign spokeswoman said Monday.

That left him with about $12.2 million in the bank as of June 30 — far more than the $1.5 million his Republican opponent, state treasurer Judy Baar Topinka, had on that date.

Topinka raised about $3.2 million in the first half of the year and spent more than $3 million of that to win a heated Republican primary against three other largely self-financed candidates, her campaign said Monday.

The Sun-Times adds this:

Since at least 1986, the gubernatorial candidate with the money edge at the mid-point of the election year won in November.

And this:

Like Topinka, all the other GOP candidates for statewide office were trailing their Democratic counterparts.

Illinois Attorney General Lisa Madigan had 50 times as much money as GOP challenger Stu Umholtz.

“We have a strategy, and we’re running a grass-roots campaign,” Umholtz said. “And I don’t think it takes obscene amounts of money to get elected.”

But the Trib has this:

Since June 30, Topinka has been the beneficiary of high-profile fundraisers headlined by President Bush and two prospective Republican presidential contenders, Sen. John McCain of Arizona and former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani. Those fundraisers and others are expected to generate an additional $2 million for Topinka.

  11 Comments      


The Stroger beat

Tuesday, Aug 1, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

Todd Stroger takes a small hit today.

Ald. Todd Stroger, the Democratic nominee for Cook County Board president, and the 8th Ward organization he represents have given almost $8,000 to a group that believes blacks should not be taxed and should not be involved in interracial relationships, and which supports the creation of a separate state for blacks.

Records show that since 2000, the Coalition for the Remembrance of the Honorable Elijah Muhammad (C.R.O.E.) has received $2,000 more from the campaign committee for Ald. Stroger’s father, longtime county Board President John Stroger. […]

The South Side group and its South Holland leader, Munir Muhammad, came under fire this year when critics blasted Gov. Blagojevich for issuing a proclamation honoring the group.

Muhammad, a fixture on cable public access stations, sits on the state Human Rights Commission and has sat on similar city and county boards.

Blagojevich was barely criticized for putting the popular Munir Muhammad on that commission, and Mayor Daley and plenty of others have given to that group, so we’ll see if Stroger gets equal treatment.

Meanwhile, the Tribune reports

In the contest for the Cook County Board presidency, reports showed Todd Stroger had $36,000 in cash at the end of June, only weeks before he was chosen to replace his ailing father, John Stroger, as the Democratic candidate. A spokesman for Todd Stroger said the campaign would not try to access hundreds of thousands of dollars in political funds controlled by his father.

Todd Stroger’s cash is well short of the $535,000 that Republican candidate Tony Peraica reported last week. Most of Peraica’s funds were in the form of loans to himself.

  9 Comments      


Morning shorts

Tuesday, Aug 1, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

Instead of our regular “Morning shorts” feature, here’s the news feed for the Illinois Campaign for Political Reform’s excellent blog roundup of yesterday’s campaign filings.

· UPDATE: OK, here’s one short I couldn’ pass up:

A close confidante of Congressman Jesse Jackson Jr. reveals Jackson will only run for mayor if Mayor Richard Daley does not seek re-election. […]

”He said, ‘Listen, while everybody’s talking about mayor and everything else, we’re picking off state rep seats. We want to pick off aldermanic seats,’” Coconate said. “He said, ‘Now, in November, it’s a possibility. If Daley doesn’t run, I might run…I am not going to be the guinea pig to run against Daley.’”

  10 Comments      


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