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Diversion(ary?)

Thursday, Jul 20, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

So, I finally got home from Detroit and discovered that the electricity was out. Big storms last night, eh?

Let’s see, what else is going on? Some guy named Ahnold is providing $150 million in California state loans for stem cell research, while Gov. Rod Blagojevich, never one to miss out on an opportunity, diverts $5 million in state funds for the research, bypassing the General Assembly again.

Gov. Rod Blagojevich today again used his executive power to spend millions of state dollars on stem-cell research despite repeated objections from state legislators.

The governor announced he’s directing $5 million to the research from within the current state budget. The money will come from a spending line used for administrative expenses within the state Department of Healthcare and Family Services, Blagojevich said. […]

State lawmakers have voted down stem-cell funding before over ideological differences and this spring did not take up the governor’s proposal for $100 million in funding over five years. Blagojevich says he won’t let a lack of legislative support stop him.

UPDATE: Apparently, nobody cares about this minor technicality.

The legislative, executive and judicial branches are separate. No branch shall exercise powers properly belonging to another. […]

The legislative power is vested in a General Assembly consisting of a Senate and a House of Representatives,
elected by the electors from 59 Legislative Districts and 118 Representative Districts. […]

The General Assembly by law shall make appropriations for all expenditures of public funds by the State.

  66 Comments      


Question of the day

Thursday, Jul 20, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

I’m in Detroit at the moment. Came in last night for the White Sox game. I thought I’d try blogging with my Treo instead of lugging my laptop. Big mistake. So, this will be it until later this afteroon. Thankfully, there isn’t much in the papers at the moment.

But maybe I missed something, so point us to stories in comments and blog your thoughts about them.

  51 Comments      


This just in… Steele to complete John Stroger’s term

Wednesday, Jul 19, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

On the first ballot, even.

Cook County commissioners on their first ballot this morning chose Bobbie Steele as the interim board president. All 11 democratic commissioners voted for Steele while the five Republicans voted for Carl Hansen.

Commissioner Forrest Claypool, who lost the Democratic primary for the Cook County Board nomination, was also nominated for the interim post, but when it became clear that Steele had the votes, Claypool switched to back Steele and Mike Quigley also voted for Steele.

Immediately after the vote, the Republicans changed their votes to make it unanimous for Steele.

  31 Comments      


Trib live-blogs another immigration rally

Wednesday, Jul 19, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

So far, it looks like they’re doing a good job. Monitor the rally’s progress here. But as I pointed out below, turnout isn’t expected to be huge this time, mainly because most of the big groups that helped put together the last rallies sat this one out..

By 9 a.m., the appointed time to start gathering at Union Park, it was becoming apparent that the turnout would be dramatically less than the previous two marches.

Where tens of thousands of demonstrators filled the park in March and May, only about 150 stood quietly there Wednesday morning. Most of them clustered around a podium set up by the “El Pistolero” radio show, which in the past has rallied demonstrators.

  14 Comments      


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Wednesday, Jul 19, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Guv Poll; Poshard; Winkel; Target News Feed (use all CAPS in password)

Wednesday, Jul 19, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Question of the day

Wednesday, Jul 19, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

What’s your favorite political joke?

And, please, keep it clean. Those who violate this request will find themselves banished.

Now that the scolding is out of the way, try to have fun.

UPDATE: C’mon people, most of these jokes are lame. You can do better!

  61 Comments      


Franks at the bat

Wednesday, Jul 19, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

The folks who run Gov. Blagojevich’s office tried to throw Rep. Jack Franks under a big bus a while back. Big mistake. Ever since then, Franks has whacked the governor on the shins every chance he could get. This week was no exception.

A suburban lawmaker is asking the Illinois attorney general to investigate how a California company that employs the sister of one of Gov. Rod Blagojevich’s top political aides ended up with a multimillion-dollar state contract.

In a letter sent Tuesday, Woodstock Democrat Rep. Jack Franks says more details are needed to ensure taxpayer dollars have been spent wisely. “I believe that we need additional information because of the administration’s murky answer over whether the contract was competitively bid and how the process was conducted,” Franks says in the letter. […]

According to state officials, only two companies - PacifiCare and United Healthcare - sought the $100 million contract, and they were in the process of merging. The contract was to administer a state senior prescription drug program. Franks’ request was spurred by a recent Daily Herald report revealing that Lon Monk’s sister Nancy is a vice president at PacifiCare.

  38 Comments      


That Toddlin’ county

Wednesday, Jul 19, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

As expected….

With a little bit of grumbling, and a lot of posturing, the coronation of Todd Stroger went off without a hitch Tuesday as the Cook County Democratic Party nominated him to take his father’s place on the November ballot in the county board president race.

Well, maybe a slight hitch.

Moreover, some suburban committeemen, including Joan Brennan of Elk Grove Township, successfully objected to making the vote for Todd Stroger unanimous with a second ballot — a move the party sometimes does as a show of unity once the candidate is chosen.

Hard feelings, eh?

Meanwhile, do you get the feeling that Burt is losing it?

Ald. Burton Natarus (42nd) was shouted down at the Democratic Party meeting to choose a new Cook County Board president candidate Tuesday afternoon for a strange and racially-insensitive remark about the post office.

“The delivery of the United States mail stinks,” he said. “Of all the places in the United States where Afro-Americans have an opportunity with benefits and with good pay to do a job, it’s the postal service. They have a lock on it. And that’s fine. I’m for it. I’m for it. They can have it. I want them to have it. But I want service.”

Natarus was explaining his vote for Stroger by blaming Congressman Danny Davis, who sits on a postal committee in Washington, for poor mail service.

The Sun-Times has more goofy quotes from the committeeman’s meeting. Here’s 30th Ward Committeeman Michael Wojcik:

…And I urge you not to do as some of our colleagues originally suggested, that we were trying to throw the baby out with the bath water. You want to throw the baby out with the bath water, don’t vote for Todd Stroger. You’ll throw the baby out with the bath water. That baby is my children, your children, the people in the neighborhood. And I’m proud of that.”

And after scolding the Democrats for choosing Todd Stroger, Mark Brown had this to say today:

The most obvious way to make Democrats, who form a sizable majority in Cook County, to look before they leap [towards Tony Peraica] is to focus attention on social issues such as abortion, gun control and gay rights… a liberal Democrat looking at his [Peraica’s] conservative record is going to think twice before giving him a vote.

Also, if you thought Peraica was enthusiastic to the point of delusional, Brown has this tidbit:

A few weeks ago, Peraica told me he’d get 20 percent of the African-American vote. I bet him he wouldn’t get more than 5 percent. While many African-American voters undoubtedly share in the dissatisfaction over the Stroger situation, I can’t see many of them opting for Peraica.

And Carol Marin has another scoop.

Has somebody been frantically padding the payroll of Cook County government since President John Stroger’s stroke in March?

You gotta wonder.

According to a couple of printouts I’ve seen for pay periods June 11, 2006, to July 8, 2006, it looks to me like the cash-strapped county has in just four weeks added 408 new employees. Everything from janitors, clerks and student administrative aides to laundry workers, law clerks and doctors.

And there’s more:

According to county payroll reports, in early 2005, Cook County government had 25,060 employees. Just one year later, in early 2006, even BEFORE John Stroger’s stroke, that number had shot up to 27,292. An increase of more than 2,000 workers.

And the Trib had this at the bottom of their story today:

Unlike the anticipated outcome of Tuesday’s meeting, no one is forecasting the result of the County Board’s meeting on Wednesday. The 16 remaining commissioners will select an interim board president from among themselves to fill John Stroger’s term, which expires Dec. 4.

The Cook County state’s attorney’s office has ruled that the winner must receive a majority of the votes of those casting ballots. If all 16 commissioners vote, the winner would need nine. However, if any commissioners are absent or choose to vote “present,” the number of votes needed to win would be reduced.

At least five commissioners, Democrats Claypool, Steele, Earlean Collins and Joseph Mario Moreno and Republican Carl Hansen, are seeking the job. At least on a first ballot, the board’s five Republicans are expected to vote for Hansen, a 32-year veteran who lost in the March primary.

Several Republicans have said that they would likely support Claypool in subsequent votes. They have sided with Claypool in the past few years in blocking taxes pushed by John Stroger.

  30 Comments      


Morning shorts

Wednesday, Jul 19, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

· “Immigrant activists will take to Chicago streets Wednesday for the third time in four months for another march to urge Congress to enact more lenient immigration laws.” But turnout may be lighter. More info here.

· Blagojevich, other governors call for action on stem cells

· Smith : Politicians deserve a break [via The Thicket]

· New Web site shows where movie cameras rolled in Illinois

· If you lose, you get death

· New base will keep big rigs rolling, add jobs

· Sound familiar? “Kentucky Gov. Ernie Flethcer’s patronage hiring scandal is well documented. But his lawyers are trying an innovative defense of his alleged improprieties: Everybody else was doing it.”

  3 Comments      


It’s official… Todd Stroger to appear on ballot

Tuesday, Jul 18, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

From the AP:

Cook County Democrats on Tuesday chose Chicago Alderman Todd Stroger to replace his ailing father on the November ballot for county board president.

The Democrats met Tuesday in Chicago to consider two candidates — Todd Stroger and U.S. Rep. Danny Davis– to fill the spot on the ballot left by retiring Cook County Board President John Stroger, who’s been recovering from the stroke he suffered a week before the March primary.

Both Todd Stroger and Davis had numerous Democrat leaders speak on their behalf during a nearly two-hour meeting of the Cook County Democratic Party’s Central Committee, but members overwhelmingly voted for the younger Stroger.

UPDATE: Tribune:

Stroger and U.S. Rep. Danny Davis (D-Ill.) were the only two candidates placed in nomination in a stifling, crowded third-floor room at the Hotel Allegro downtown, the longtime meeting place of county Democrats.

Stroger got 77 percent of the weighted vote of Chicago ward and suburban Cook County commissioners. Davis got 23 percent.

Stroger told committeemen of his background as a legislator and an alderman and said he has “a genuine passion for county government” and would not use the position as a “stepping stone” for a higher office.

UPDATE: CBS2:

On Monday, Davis said his plan had been to tell the committeemen something he said they need to hear. Specifically, that their arrogant, back-room maneuvering in recent weeks has hurt the entire ticket.

“It’s going to be difficult to get the kind of turnout that we’re looking for November. And Rod Blagojevich could be in serious difficulty,” Davis said. […]

“Some people say that Todd Stroger is not entitled to his job because of his name,” said Illinois State Rep. Lou Lang (D-Skokie). “That’s garbage.”

UPDATE: Zorn, on whether voters will cross over:

40 percent is best that a Republican candidate has done in a Cook County Board president’s race since the 1960s.

  70 Comments      


Question of the day

Tuesday, Jul 18, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

This is adapted from a question suggested in yesterday’s QOTD:

How would you clean up Illinois politics? Specifics, please.

  58 Comments      


Ouch

Tuesday, Jul 18, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

The Belleville News-Democrat editorializes on allegations brought by the former director of the Illinois Historic Presevation Agency that he was pressured to fire Republican employees and promote the wife of a Democratic legislator.

Blagojevich told the Chicago Tribune that the suit is without basis: “I have a one-word answer for you: absurd. Here’s another word: ridiculous, ludicrous. Ludicrous. It’s just ridiculous.”

That’s three words.

It is absurd to think Blagojevich would have sent one of his lieutenants to Crossland with a chart with the Republican workers’ names crossed off with red Xs. This is the governor who was going to keep politics out of hiring, not escalate it.

It is ridiculous to think Crossland would be forced to resign because he pointed out financial irregularities involving a lawmaker’s spouse. An audit eventually determined that McKenzie, the site supervisor of the Cahokia courthouse, improperly handled donations. She also was paid 1,327.5 hours over overtime in a 51-month period — overtime approved after the fact. By comparison, supervisors at four other sites received between 30 and 464 hours during the same period, according to the audit. […]

And it is ludicrous to think that Crossland would be pressured to create a higher-paying job for McKenzie at the same time she was being investigated.

More here.

  29 Comments      


Trucking company to create hub, 400 jobs

Tuesday, Jul 18, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

So much for the Republican contention that high state fees have caused trucking companies to flee Illinois.

North America’s largest trucking freight carrier will create a hub operation here that will eventually create 400 new jobs.

Company officials from Schneider National Inc. of Green Bay, Wis., will join state and federal officials at a news conference this morning to make the announcement.

The new 25,000-square-foot repair and service center will be located at the Gateway Commerce Center in Edwardsville.

Illinois Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity Director Jack Lavin is scheduled to speak at the grand opening in regards to the job creation resulting from Gov. Rod Blagojevich’s regional economic development program, Opportunity Returns.

A company spokesman declined to comment until after the news conference.

If it wasn’t for all the scandals, the governor’s race wouldn’t even be a contest.

  35 Comments      


Morning shorts

Tuesday, Jul 18, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

· A new state law promises free preschool to all kids. But can we really bring it off?

· Congressional fundraising roundup

· Comptroller candidate says more reporting needed

· Weller outpaces Pavich in cash

· Stufflebeam to run as write-in

· Illinois Civil Justice League restarts its blog

· Zorn: If governor `gets it,’ he’ll free Gindorf

· September 9th Declared Southern Illinois Bluegrass & BBQ Festival Day

  9 Comments      


The Stroger beat

Monday, Jul 17, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

Looks like the deal is almost cut.

Cook County Commissioner Bobbie Steele (D-Chicago) said today she is withdrawing her name from consideration as Democratic nominee for county board president in the November election.

“I’ve made this decision… in the interest of party unity,” Steele said at a West Side news conference.

Steele said she would focus her energy on winning the county board’s approval Wednesday to serve out John Stroger’s remaining four months in office. Stroger, 77, who suffered a serious stroke in March, is resigning at the end of the month.

Asked about her prospects of winning the interim post, Steele said, “You never count your chicks until they hatch.”

  25 Comments      


Question of the day

Monday, Jul 17, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

Once again, it’s time to suggest your own Question of the Day. What do you want answered by our very own Magic Eight Ball?

  61 Comments      


Not cricket

Monday, Jul 17, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

If what the Greens are saying is true, then the Dems are in for a world of hurt.

For weeks, the Green Party have been calling the objections raised by state Democrats to keep gubernatorial candidate Rich Whitney and the rest of the Green state wide ticket off the November ballot “frivolous.”

Seems the Greens might be on to something.

From preliminary investigations into the petition challenge, the Greens have found some interesting folks who the Democrats say are ineligible to sign Whitney’s petition - such as Southern Illinois University Chancellor Walter Wendler and Carbondale City Councilman Joel Fritzler, who are alleged to have invalid addresses.

The addresses of Whitney’s own campaign manager Jennifer Rose and Charlie Howe, a candidate for the District 115 state representative seat, are also being challenged by the Democrats.

Turns out they are all legitimate.

The Democrats even claim Rich Whitney’s and his running mate’s own signatures are not genuine.

  72 Comments      


Reform and renewal, Part 97,486

Monday, Jul 17, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

Buried deep in this AP story about how veterans groups and even House Majority Leader Barbara Flynn Currie are upset at Gov. Blagojevich for allegedly circumventing veterans preference in state hiring and not disclosing whether veterans were passed over for connected job applicants is this nugget:

The Associated Press reported recently that Bernard Ysursa Jr., a 34-year-old Belleville resident, competed against eight other applicants for business administrator at an East St. Louis prison. Corrections officials declared him the best candidate but designated him as an intern when they put him on the payroll in April 2003, saying he needed more experience.

A document newly obtained by the AP shows that the agency decided to make the position an internship before Ysursa interviewed — not after. The “personnel action request” signed by the Corrections Department’s interim director approved creating a trainee position for the business administrator on March 26, 2003, a full week before Ysursa’s interview. […]

Hiring Ysursa as an intern meant the administration did not have to give preference to any veterans or minorities on the list of applicants.

Meanwhile, the governor has now revamped political hiring procedures for at least the third time.

Gov. Rod Blagojevich’s top attorney has ordered state agency directors to stop taking requests for politically connected job applicants and said a new system was being established to ensure that such clout requests would be “processed and treated like any other application.” […]

“Each agency may have its own system of processing these requests and referrals, but in the interest of uniformity, and to insure the integrity of process, from this point forward, all personnel requests and referrals shall be directed” to a top official at the Department of Central Management Services, the state’s personnel and office management agency, Quinlan wrote.

“Accordingly, if someone contacts you (either in person, by telephone, mail or facsimile) regarding a personnel request or referral, you should not accept the request,” Quinlan’s memo said. “Rather, please politely inform the person making the request that, pursuant to the policies of the Governor’s Office, all such personnel requests must be directed to … CMS.”

The guy who wrote this letter, Blagojevich’s general counsel William Quinlan, is the same person who sent the memo to 15 state agencies a few weeks ago demanding all personnel records back to 2003.

And on a related note, my weekly newspaper column isn’t posted as I write this, but it should be soon.

“I’ve researched this pretty carefully,” confided a very high level Blagojevich administration official last spring over late night cocktails. “For any of this to be illegal, somebody has to profit. There has to be money involved.”

The official was responding to my questions about the swirling allegations of state contracts and jobs handed out to political insiders. Since there was no personal profit, nobody was in any serious legal danger, he claimed.

This month’s verdict in Robert Sorich’s trial, however, proved that person to be dead wrong.

It would be a big mistake to underestimate the significance of Robert Sorich’s conviction by a federal jury. Federal prosecutors never claimed that Sorich, Chicago Mayor Richard M. Daley’s former patronage chief, took so much as a dollar in illegal payments.

UPDATE: The AP has a Q&A on the burgeoning scandal. Here’s one interesting section:

Q: What are some specific examples?

A: Officials aren’t providing details, but The Associated Press has found, for instance, that one person was hired for a job in a small county with few veterans but was allowed to work in Chicago. If the hiring had been done in Chicago, veterans who applied would have had priority. The Blagojevich administration also hired the son of a campaign donor but called him an intern, which exempted him from the usual hiring procedures. In fact, the administration has hired scores of politically connected people as interns.

[Emphasis added]

  31 Comments      


Money

Monday, Jul 17, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

This cash on hand for Duckworth was somewhat of a surprise.

[Democratic congressional candidate Tammy] Duckworth’s campaign reported she had more than $900,000 in her campaign fund after raising $830,000 from April through June. She’s raised a total of $1.9 million since getting into the race last December, one of the top totals in the nation. Roskam’s camp said he will report having $1.3 million on hand through June in the finance reports due Saturday.

Congresswoman Bean is also doing well, but McSweeney is recovering.

Rep. Melissa Bean, D-10th, ended the quarter with a whopping $2.17 million warchest, compared to $471,000 for the GOP nominee, businessman David McSweeney. Mr. McSweeney did narrowly out-raise her in the recent three-month period, $604,000 to $548,000. Most of Mr. McSweeney’s funds earlier in the year had come from himself, but he said he has made no additional donations to himself since winning the March Republican primary. Ms. Bean, who voted to lower trade barriers with Central America, received substantial donations from big-business groups.

Seals isn’t doing too badly.

In the north suburban 10th District, Democrat Dan Seals reported raising $391,000 in the quarter, with $508,000 in cash on hand as of June 30.

But his opponent, Congressman Mark Kirk raised $672,062 and had $1,859,582 on hand.

Discuss.

  48 Comments      


Morning shorts

Monday, Jul 17, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

· “Republican candidates for governor could always count on support from former Gov. James R. Thompson, a GOP member who held the state’s highest office longer than anyone. But it’s apparently a different story in 2006.”

· Washington: Todd Stroger is keeping mum for a reason — he doesn’t have much to say.

· Now the docs are complaining about WalMart.

· No offense to a usually great blog, but how do you criticize two polling outfits right after you announce that a new poll is out for which you do not divulge the head-to-heads? Weirdest poll story in a long while. According to the post, Gov. Blagojevich’s latest poll has him ahead of Topinka by “double digits.” We know there were 604 likely voters questioned, we know the margin of error, we know 22 percent are undecided, but we aren’t told the actual results or even the point spread. Like I said. Weird.

· Actually, most of the bloggers complained that the guv was referencing a “little African-American girl” over and over in his retelling of the goofy story, not that he retold the goofy story. But it’s nice to be noticed.

· Judy Cellini denies politics played a role in director’s ouster. And the SJ-R has posted the lawsuit online. [pdf file]

· Editorial: Ethics law sounds good, but it leaves public in dark

· Laborers, politicians break ground on new union headquarters in Marion

· Web site highlights movie sets in Illinois

  12 Comments      


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