Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Update to today’s edition
Monday, Nov 7, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Campaign notebook
Monday, Nov 7, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller * Illinois early vote totals…
* Chicago early vote totals…
Chicago is now up to 20 percent of the statewide total, which is about where it was in 2018. * False alarm…
…Adding… More…
* We talked about this story last week…
Bailey told reporters yesterday that he wouldn’t answer any questions about the matter because Corrigan was still a student at Bailey’s school. * New Illinois poll published on FiveThirtyEight has Pritzker up by 20… ![]() Caveat: That pollster had a not great 2020 cycle and is rated as B-. * From the Veep’s visit…
* Here we go…
…Adding… CD17’s Crystal Ball House rating was just moved from Tossup to Leans Republican. * Isabel’s roundup… * Crain’s | Conservative activist behind faux newspapers is done living in Illinois: “I no longer have a place in Chicago or Illinois,” Proft wrote in an email to Crain’s, “nor will I until and unless the political leadership changes and that new leadership reforms the way we fund schools and structure and fund public sector pensions and in so doing reduces the usurious property taxes Illinois families pay.” * Illinois Review | Kathy Salvi on the campaign trail gives three reasons to vote for her: Monday night, Kathy Salvi, 2022 Republican candidate for US Senate, gave a rousing speech at a rally in Lombard Monday night. Salvi gave three reasons Illinoisans should vote for her Tuesday: Economy, Crime and Education - all topics that are motivating voters to the polls. * Patch | Raoul Vs. Lawyer DeVore For Attorney General: Illinois Election 2022: As expected, Raoul and DeVore plan to take very different paths as Attorney General and have targeted their opponent’s philosophies of lawmaking on key issues facing Illinoisans. Perhaps, most notable is the controversial SAFE-T Act, the sweeping criminal justice reform package that was passed by lawmakers and that is set to go into effect on Jan. 1. Neither Raoul nor DeVore responded to multiple requests from Patch to complete a pre-election questionnaire dealing with issues facing Illinois voters in Tuesday’s general election. * Block Club Chicago | With Fewer Polling Places And Translators, Non-English Speaking Voters Could Be Discouraged, Advocates Say: Community organizers said they’ll do heavier lifting this election to help voters with language barriers cast ballots amid shakeups to the voting process. Nearly half of Chicago voters will have a different polling place for the election Nov. 8 than they did in the June primary, said Max Bever, Chicago Board of Election Commissioners spokesman. There will also be 97 fewer polling places citywide, and the board has struggled to hire poll workers, especially those who are bilingual, he said. * Pantagraph | Chilly, breezy Monday across central Illinois. What about Election Day?: Cooler today than Sunday, but near normal for this time of year. Seasonable temperatures tonight as well. What temperatures are expected for Election Day? Any chance of rain? Find out in our updated forecast video. * Shaw Local | Controversial mailer with SAFE-T Act concerns sent to DeKalb residents: Earlier this week, DeKalb resident Eric Petruchuis said he was angry when he learned his photo had been included in a publication circulating around town beneath a headline that read, “Under the SAFE-T Act, these suspects would be released into your neighborhood.” His photo was on a page with 15 other mugshots, along with full names and bullet points of the charges allegedly pending against them. No other details were published with the arrest photos. One problem, for Petruchuis at least, is it wasn’t accurate. While Petruchuis had been arrested in October, and spent a night in the DeKalb County Jail, the charges were dismissed the next day, according to court records and the DeKalb County state’s attorney’s office. * Patch | Election Day Blood Moon Last Total Lunar Eclipse Over IL Until 2025: The Election Day lunar eclipse will turn the moon an eerie red in the hours before polls open across Illinois on Tuesday. It’s the last total lunar eclipse until 2025, and that alone makes getting up early to see it worthwhile. Skies over Illinois should be partly cloudy on Tuesday during the height of eclipse activity when the moon takes on a reddish or coppery hue. If you’re not keen on watching the whole thing, the blood moon lasts from about 4:16 a.m. to 5:41 a.m. local time. * Telegraph | Haine, McRae criticize Julian, Huddleston on ‘pledges for votes’: The texts, from campaign workers for Julian and Huddleston, stated they would “uphold Illinois law which allows women to make their own healthcare choices with their doctor.” Neither Julian or Huddleston responded to a request for comment. Haine and McRae argued promising specific legal rulings during a campaign is unethical.
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Question of the day
Monday, Nov 7, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller * Press release…
* The Question: Should all election authorities in Illinois be mandated to offer a similar “vote anywhere” program? Explain.
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*** UPDATED x1 *** DeVore, Bailey close their campaigns on vax mandates
Monday, Nov 7, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller * Yesterday…
From the story…
* Dan Proft this morning…
Um, no. Darren Bailey’s running mate was on Proft’s show and said this about vaccinations…
The connection between vaccines and autism have been thoroughly debunked. * Today, Darren Bailey and Tom DeVore held a press conference to talk about the “revelations”…
DeVore eventually got the audience riled up and then stormed out of the press conference when Mary Ann Ahern asked a question about the Proft papers. *** UPDATE *** From the governor’s office…
…Adding… DeVore calls a reporter doing her job “disrespectful”…
Doesn’t he have the word “Freedom” tattoed on his arm? Must mean freedom from questions. …Adding… Capitol News Illinois…
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Shenanigans!
Monday, Nov 7, 2022 - Posted by Isabel Miller * ILGOP press release…
![]() ![]() Thoughts?
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A look at the attacks on the proposed constitutional amendment
Monday, Nov 7, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller * My weekly syndicated newspaper column…
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today’s edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)
Monday, Nov 7, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Video of the day
Monday, Nov 7, 2022 - Posted by Isabel Miller * I didn’t know Bailey could get down on the fiddle like that /s…
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Open thread
Monday, Nov 7, 2022 - Posted by Isabel Miller * One day left!
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Morning briefing
Monday, Nov 7, 2022 - Posted by Isabel Miller * The Lions handed the Packers their fifth straight loss last night…
* A roundup to start your day…
* Tribune | How an indicted state official who had volunteered for J.B. Pritzker became an issue in the attorney general race: A 2018 J.B. Pritzker campaign volunteer who was indicted last year for allegedly ripping off the Illinois State Police Merit Board is now at the center of a campaign tussle over whether she should face additional charges — a question that has roiled the Nov. 8 race for attorney general. * Sun-Times | Biden, in Joliet to bolster Rep. Lauren Underwood, calls Medicare, Social Security critics ‘idiots’: Referring to protesters outside the school, Biden, talking about Social Security and Medicare said: “I love those signs when I came in — ‘socialism.’ Give me a break. What idiots.” Democrats accuse Republicans of pursuing policies that would weaken the two programs that senior citizens depend on the most. Though this was an official event, the political appeals were clear, with House Republicans only needing a net gain of five seats to switch control of the chamber — which is why flipping even one Democratic seat in Illinois could have a major national impact. * Sun-Times | In final push, Kamala Harris frames election as fight for democracy and Republicans vow to ‘restore’ Illinois: Vice President Kamala Harris’ visit to Chicago comes a day after President Joe Biden campaigned for congressional Democrats in the suburbs, as the president, with his low approval ratings, has largely avoided some of the most competitive states. * ABC7 | Illinois candidates make final push on final day of early voting: Chicago Board of Elections officials will be at the early voting Super Site in the Loop Monday morning to give an update on turnout. Meanwhile, the sprint to the finish is underway in the campaign for Illinois governor. Republican candidate Darren Bailey joining several dozen supporters in the Loop Sunday night for a flag-draped rally. * Daily Herald | Are political ads more negative this year? Experts say no, there are just more of them: But is the tone and tenor of this election cycle’s negative campaigning especially heightened, or any different from the usual? Not necessarily, according to experts in the advertising and political science fields. There’s just more of it overall: on television, radio, glossy mailbox flyers, billboards and increasingly on social media. * WTTW | Advocates Look to Combat Election Disinformation Campaigns Targeting Latinos: According to Equis Research, 70% of Latinos use social media as a primary source of political and election news, where fact-checking in Spanish is often sparse. Young Latinos are more than twice as likely as the general population to use messaging apps like WhatsApp and Telegram, which also lack fact-checking. Jaime Dominguez, political science professor at Northwestern University, says social media entities should take responsibility for moderating disinformation on their platforms. * Center Square | Candidates hold rallies across Illinois ahead of election: It was a busy weekend of campaigning in Illinois ahead of Tuesday’s midterm election. On Friday, President Joe Biden arrived in Illinois to campaign for two incumbent Chicago-area Democratic members of Congress. Saturday at an event in Joliet, when talking about social security as a safety net for senior citizens, Biden addressed protesters. * Capitol News Illinois | Contextualizing cash bail’s end:Research from the Loyola University of Chicago’s Center for Criminal Justice examines how arrests in recent years would have been categorized under the Pretrial Fairness Act that ends cash bail beginning Jan. 1, 2023. * Tom Kacich | The million-dollar race for the 104th Illinois House District: But Rep. Mike Marron, a Republican from rural Fithian who is seeking a third House term, has a race with enough competition to make up for the others. Marron is being challenged for the third consecutive time by Cynthia Cunningham, a social-service worker from rural St. Joseph. * State Journal-Register | ‘Biased and defamatory:’ Fake, inaccurate newspapers target Dem officials, Illinois voters: Political mailers have been commonplace in election years, telling voters who or who not to support and where they stand on the issues. However, in recent weeks, a similar albeit alternative form of dissemination has occurred throughout Sangamon County in the lead-up to Election Day. * WCIA | Lawsuit alleges Champaign County election official mishandled ballots: Official says they are sample ballots: In the past 24 hours, a lawsuit was filed in Champaign County alleging a top election official mishandled official ballots, a judge ordered that official be removed from all of her Election Day duties, and that same judge scrapped the order, allowing the Champaign County Deputy Clerk to continue working for the office. * Tribune | Voters in some suburban areas will decide Tuesday whether to pay for expanded mental health services: Addison, Naperville, Lisle and Winfield townships in DuPage County; Schaumburg and Wheeling townships in Cook County; Vernon Township in Lake County; and all of Will County will hold referendums on whether to establish property tax levies to fund services for mental health, developmental disabilities and addiction. * Post-Tribune | Franciscan Health Hammond closing its ER by end of the year, leaving Lake County’s largest city with no hospital: After a century of having a hospital in its limits, the City of Hammond will no longer have emergency care services as Franciscan Hammond will close its operations there by the end of the year. * WCIA | Springfield Clinic ‘not optimistic’ about deal with Blue Cross Blue Shield: A year after Blue Cross Blue Shield of Illinois (BCBSIL) kicked Springfield Clinic, along with its 450 doctors and 200 advanced practice nurses, out of network, a top executive revealed that the clinic is “not optimistic about an agreement.” In response to an update request from WCIA 3 Thursday, Chief Financial Officer Chase Hammon said Springfield Clinic is “disappointed” that efforts to restore a previously decades-long relationship with the largest insurer in Illinois “have not been more fruitful.” * NBC Chicago | Illinois’ Secretary of State Election a Battle to Replace Jesse White: The 88-year-old White has served as secretary of state since 1999 when George Ryan was elected as governor of Illinois. Since then, he has routinely collected nearly two-thirds of the vote in every one of his reelection bids, including a 68.3% vote share as he rolled to victory over Jason Helland and Steve Dutner in 2018. Now, White will take a step out of the political theater, and three different candidates are hoping to replace him in office. * Red Line extension needlessly caught in the switches due to CTA/City Council beef:Sun-Times | If there’s any chance at all to rebuild and repopulate the Far South Side, the Red Line extension is key — and far too important to be caught in a standoff between the CTA president and the City Council. * Sun-Times | CPS faces $600M financial cliff as costs shift to schools with no long-term funding plan in place: Mayor Lori Lightfoot has moved millions in pensions and other costs to CPS before it becomes independent, run by an elected board. Those new payments and longstanding financial challenges could lead to dire choices once federal pandemic relief runs out. * Tribune | Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs to buy Chicago-area cannabis operations in deal connected to $2 billion Cresco-Columbia Care merger: Sean “Diddy” Combs has agreed to buy nine cannabis retail stores and three production facilities in Illinois, New York and Massachusetts for $185 million as part of required antitrust divestitures for the pending $2 billion Cresco-Columbia Care megamerger. * Grown In | Three Illinois dispensary licensees racing to open by early 2023: There’s been little word from Illinois’ first social equity dispensary licensees since they got their licenses from the state in late summer 2022. Although dozens of license winners attended Grown In’s Cannabis Business Conferences in September 2022, one cultivator told us that it’s been, “Very quiet out there.” Illinois is one of the nation’s most lucrative cannabis markets, with just 110 dispensaries that are making $160 million in sales a month. With those kinds of numbers, one would expect dispensary license holders to move as quickly as possible to get a store open. * NYT | Russia Reactivates Its Trolls and Bots Ahead of Tuesday’s Midterms: The user on Gab who identifies as Nora Berka resurfaced in August after a yearlong silence on the social media platform, reposting a handful of messages with sharply conservative political themes before writing a stream of original vitriol. The posts mostly denigrated President Joe Biden and other prominent Democrats, sometimes obscenely. They also lamented the use of taxpayer dollars to support Ukraine in its war against invading Russian forces, depicting Ukraine’s president as a caricature straight out of Russian propaganda. * The Hill | Biden on people calling him a socialist: ‘Give me a break, what idiots’: President Biden on Saturday said people holding signs calling him a socialist were idiots, while warning that Republicans want to cut health care benefits for Americans three days before Election Day. Gov. Pritzker is on the final stretch of the campaign trail. He’ll be holding rallies in Marion at 6:45 a.m., Metro East at 8:45 a.m., Springfield at 11 a.m., Peoria at 1:15 p.m., Quad Cities at 3:30 p.m. and Rockford at 5:30 p.m. More to come!
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Live coverage
Monday, Nov 7, 2022 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Follow along with ScribbleLive…
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Reader comments closed for the weekend
Friday, Nov 4, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller * I explained to a friend the other day that the reason I yell “Oscar boy!” the way I do when I want my dog to come is because of this song. And now my friend walks around singing the song at a very high decibel level. It’s hilarious… If you don’t bring that seltzer * And since it’s been a bit, here’s Oscar with another friend of ours a few days ago… ![]() Oscar loves him some Herb. Have a good weekend.
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Appellate court strikes down Chicago FOP’s vax lawsuit
Friday, Nov 4, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller * First District Illinois Appellate Court…
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Campaign notebook
Friday, Nov 4, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller * Illinois early vote totals…
* Chicago early vote totals…
Chicago, with 21 percent of the population, is still at just 17 percent of the total. * Roll Call…
* Sen. Darren Bailey was asked today what specifically he would do differently about K-12 education that what’s currently being done…
* ILGOP press release…
* Hoan Huynh is the Democratic nominee in the 13th Illinois State Representative District… ![]()
Mussolini? * Isabel’s roundup…
* Daily Herald | What’s fiction, what’s fact about the SAFE-T Act and the elimination of cash bail: There’s not a hotter topic on the campaign trail in Illinois, or in law enforcement circles nationwide, than the SAFE-T Act, the sweeping criminal justice reform package that will eliminate cash bail starting Jan. 1. And with all that heat has come plenty of confusion and misinformation about what’s really in the bill and what it means for you. * Sun-Times | Beware of fake ‘newspapers’ packaged as the old-school real deal : Alarmingly, those disseminating false information have gotten wiser, learning how to relay their problematic narratives in packaging that can potentially confuse even the most discerning readers. Take the case of right-wing “newspapers” that have been infiltrating the mailboxes of Chicago area voters as we head into next week’s mid-term elections, as the Sun-Times’ Lynn Sweet reports. * Tribune | J.B. Pritzker, conquerer of worlds? The memeing of the Illinois governor gets weird: Among the lesser discussed subjects of the 2022 midterm elections has been a quiet campaign to elect J.B. Pritzker to the position of Great Khan of the Midwest and — well, who knows what the borders of his empire shall resemble once he conquers? As you’re probably aware, Pritzker is currently governor of Illinois, seeking a second term. He has made no formal announcement of his intent to deliver a horde into battle and crush Wisconsin or anywhere else. But that has not stopped Nomadic Warriors for Pritzker. * Crain’s | Thanks to early voting and vote-by-mail, 1 million ballots have been cast so far in Illinois: Just under 12% of Illinois’ registered voters—roughly one in eight—have already cast a ballot in the 2022 general election, according to the latest report from the State Board of Elections. Voting continues to be particularly peppy in portions of the suburbs while relatively light in Chicago proper, although the city has picked up some, too. * Daily Herald | Wheeler, Hanson vie to represent the redrawn 83rd state House distric : Voters in the redrawn state House 83rd District Tuesday will choose between someone who has been a legislator for the past eight years or a former Kane County Board member. Republican Keith Wheeler of Oswego, the Republican, has been in the state legislature since 2015. He currently represents the 50th District. * David Orr | Election deniers in Illinois are putting pressure on voting access. We can’t let them succeed. : Election officials across the country are bracing for possible disruption by extremist groups planning “aggressive poll watching.” They’re also resigning in large numbers in the face of harassment, threats and bogus charges of fraud — constituting a major loss of badly needed professionalism and experience and, in many cases, an opening for those who want to dictate election results of their own liking. On a smaller scale so far, similar efforts are afoot in Illinois, purportedly to promote “election integrity” but actually aimed at undermining confidence in our elections. WBEZ-FM 91.5 has reported on a coordinated campaign of “copycat letters from conspiracy theorists” going to county clerks across the state, threatening lawsuits and citing vague “evidence” that “America has not had a free or fair election since 2017.” * Illinois Times | 2022 Elections: When there is so much confusion in this nation’s politics, when misinformation itself is on the ballot and election deniers campaign for election, it is more important than ever to vote. A vote is an endorsement of the process, and marks each voter as a participant in a system under attack. If the process thrives this time, confusion and misinformation will eventually be defeated, and democracy will win this election. * Illinois Times | Much confusion over Amendment 1: Some people have taken to calling it the stealth amendment: an effort to amend the Illinois Constitution in a manner that will benefit organized labor. But just how it would work and what exactly it would do has many folks scratching their heads. Amendment 1, which voters will decide Nov. 8, would amend the state constitution to make it easier for labor unions to maintain membership and to protect benefits of workers who are mostly employed by local and state governments. * WICA | Candidates compete for position as Illinois’ chief financial officer: Comptroller Susana Mendoza is running for re-election against Republican challenger Shannon Teresi. A recent Nexstar, Emerson College and The Hill poll shows about 49% of likely voters said they would support Mendoza, while about 36% said they would back Teresi. * Sun-Times | With tensions high ahead of Tuesday’s election, top cop says there’s ‘no threats specific to Chicago’: Last month, federal authorities issued advisories warning about threats to both election workers and voters. A poll conducted in March by the Brennan Center, a nonprofit law and public policy institute headquartered in New York City, found that nearly 17% of poll workers reported being threatened. But on Friday, Chicago Police Supt. David Brown assured reporters there weren’t any “threats specific to Chicago,” adding that his department’s social media team continues to monitor for anything alarming. * AP | US Employers Are Hiring Briskly Even In Face of Rate Hikes: America’s employers kept hiring vigorously in October, adding 261,000 positions, a sign that as Election Day nears, the economy remains a picture of solid job growth and painful inflation. Friday’s report from the government showed that hiring was brisk across industries last month, though the overall gain declined from 315,000 in September. The unemployment rate rose from a five-decade low of 3.5% to a still-healthy 3.7%. * WTTW | Cook, DuPage County Boards With Tight Races Up For Grabs Next Week: There’s real competition in DuPage County where there’s an open seat for DuPage County Board chair. Republican Dan Cronin has chaired the DuPage County Board for the past dozen years, but he is not running for re-election, making it an open seat that Democrats hope to claim for the first time. State Representative Deb Conroy of Elmhurst says all 58 chairs of the DuPage County Board have been Republican men and it’s time to change that. * WBEZ | Five commonly asked questions about judicial elections: While the candidates listed on this section of the ballot might be more obscure, the decisions that judges make have a direct impact on people’s lives, including who might get custody of the children in a divorce and whether someone is sent to prison. So as part of our ongoing collaboration with Injustice Watch, we’re answering your last-minute questions about how judicial elections work and where you can find more information about the candidates on the upcoming ballot. * Daily Herald | Why three suburban congressional races have been among the hottest in the state: In the 6th District, 11th District and 14th District, Republican challengers are trying to unseat Democratic incumbents. The races have been costly, with most of the campaigns raising and spending millions to share their messages with voters through TV ads and other means. The three races also have been fairly messy, with the candidates — or their teams and supporters — trying to discredit their rivals in interviews, speeches, news releases and social media posts. * Herald Review | Crime, SAFE-T Act top focuses in race for the 96th: In sum, 60 House members voted in favor of the act, 50 voted in opposition, and three did not vote. Scherer’s was thus one of the deciding votes effectively passing the bill. Now, the Decatur Democrat is about to face a challenger who says it was Scherer’s SAFE-T Act vote that helped convince her to run. Lisa Smith, a political newcomer who ardently opposes the act, argues it will lead to multiple unintended consequences. * NPR | Why aren’t more moms running for office? One group is hoping to change that: This year, there are a record number of women who are nominees in races for governor and state legislatures, according to the Center for American Women and Politics at Rutgers University. Women — even more so those with young children — are still in the minority, Vote Mama’s research shows. This is despite the proven political power of mothers, University of Virginia a politics professor Jennifer Lawless said. * ABC 7 | Evanston residents to vote on ranked choice voting referendum in 2022 election: It’s called ranked choice voting. “Rank Choice Voting can make our politics more democratic and less divisive,” said Alisa Kaplan, Reform for Illinois executive director. “It’s great for voters because they can choose more than one candidate.” * The Hill | Large majority says they are concerned about political violence: Majorities of every political persuasion are “very concerned” about the phenomenon, including 75 percent of Democrats, 61 percent of independents and 56 percent of Republicans. Most Democrats and Republicans say that the opposite party is to blame for political violence, with 31 percent of those polled claiming that Republicans are responsible and 25 percent saying Democrats are responsible.
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Report reveals 16 energy plants in Illinois with coal-ash dumps contaminating groundwater
Friday, Nov 4, 2022 - Posted by Isabel Miller
* Indy Star…
* Circle of Blue reported on how mine cleanup is weakened by the decline of coal in October…
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*** UPDATED x1 *** Question of the day
Friday, Nov 4, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller * Heckuva job, Elon…
* The Question: Have you ever been hacked? Tell us what happened. *** UPDATE *** She got her account back…
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition
Friday, Nov 4, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Today’s clickbait
Friday, Nov 4, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller * Some folks received this text… ![]() Click the link and it goes here… ![]() Cute. Are you getting many campaign texts this season? Seems like I’ve received more than in the past.
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Can this AI generator predict our tweets?
Friday, Nov 4, 2022 - Posted by Isabel Miller * I’ve been playing around with a new AI tweet generator this morning…
* @DarrenBaileyIL… ![]() * @JBPritzker… ![]() * @RepKellyCassidy… ![]() * @JohnAmdor… ![]() * @CapitolFax… ![]() * @DanProft… ![]() * @ThomasDeVore76… ![]() Play around with it yourself and tell us the results.
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Woman featured in Proft ad will respond to “malicious” Pritzker TV spot
Friday, Nov 4, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller * ABC7 back in March…
* Dan Proft’s PAC released a TV ad about the case the other day… “My message to the governor,” Cabel says in the ad, “would be ’shame on you.’” * Pritzker rebutted with his own TV ad… The Proft spot is called an “outrageous TV ad that should insult us all.” The ad points out that the governor cannot parole anyone and the announcer states “the [Proft] ad is 100 percent false.” * Proft’s PAC today…
I got the Pritzker ad from Proft’s PAC. Isabel will be covering the press conference, so stay tuned for any updates. …Adding… Ms. Cabel at the press conference…
The governor’s office says that the case had “only one other parole hearing in 2014. We checked the file and there are not letters from previous governors in it.”
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*** UPDATED x3 *** Tribune claims possible evidence of alleged illegal coordination
Friday, Nov 4, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller * The Tribune story is here. From DPI…
* This is an odd story all around…
The penalty appears to be a fine. *** UPDATE 1 *** Pritzker campaign…
A $28 million fine? Whew. *** UPDATE 2 *** The Democratic Party of Illinois has filed a complaint with the State Board of Elections, according to the Tribune, and the Dems have revised the possible penalty upwards to $42 million…
*** UPDATE 3 *** From DPI’s filed complaint…
From the Bailey campaign’s statement to the Tribune…
That answer begs the question about what the campaign did with Proft during the primary.
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*** UPDATED x1 *** Now he belongs to the ages
Friday, Nov 4, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller * The original ad is here. From the HuffPost…
* Full video is here, but this is a short clip… Kimmel should’ve used some of the outtakes. * Longtime readers will remember Tim Nieukirk, who ran for governor in 2006 as a write-in. We profiled the “Get Nieuked” campaign’s YouTube “ads” on the blog and Fox News eventually did a piece on him. He even showed up for my bipartisan preelection party. I’ve invited Dick Bigger Jr. to this year’s event. Tim’s first spot… “Ricky, get off my Trans Am!” still makes me chuckle. And “In bed with…” remains a classic. Tim is getting married soon, by the way. *** UPDATE *** Stephen Colbert also did a bit on it and he used some of the outtakes… Thanks to a commenter for providing the link.
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today’s edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)
Friday, Nov 4, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Open thread
Friday, Nov 4, 2022 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Happy Friday! Talk amongst yourselves but keep it about Illinois, please!
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Morning briefing
Friday, Nov 4, 2022 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Democrats give big bucks to IL17 Eric Sorensen, IL13 Nikki Budzinski, IL6 Sean Casten and IL14 Lauren Underwood…
* A roundup to start your day… * Tribune | Conservative GOP operative Dan Proft’s involvement in Bailey campaign matter raises questions about his role: An internal dispute between Republican governor candidate Darren Bailey’s campaign and a recently departed Bailey political worker has raised questions about the level of involvement the conservative leader of a Bailey-aligned political action committee has had with the Bailey campaign. At issue is an attempt by Dan Proft, a longtime Republican operative and onetime losing candidate for Illinois governor, to inject himself into a potential legal settlement being sought by Brett Corrigan, a Bailey family friend who worked for the campaign for more than a year before leaving around mid-September. Corrigan’s attorney described his client’s complaint as an “internal HR,” or human resources, matter but didn’t provide any additional details. * Politico | The districts seeing the most spending show why House Democrats are in trouble: The bulk of the fall TV spending in the House has gone into defending Democratic-held districts Joe Biden carried comfortably in 2020. * WBEZ | Meeting abortion patients where they are: providers turn to mobile units: In response to increasing abortion restrictions in the region, a Planned Parenthood chapter in Missouri and Illinois is preparing to open a mobile unit providing abortions in southern Illinois. * Tribune | A mobile vasectomy clinic dubbed ‘Nutcracker’ offers free procedures in Midwest amid surge in demand post-Roe: A few days a month, Dr. Esgar Guarín hits the road in his mobile vasectomy clinic, crisscrossing the Iowa heartland to reach patients throughout the state, sometimes traveling hundreds of miles from his Des Moines-area office. The 24-foot-long health facility on wheels is decorated on the outside with large images of sperm and bold-lettered slogans like “One small snip for man, one giant leap for Humankind(ness)” and “It’s time to be responsible: love with respect.” * Chicago Tribune | Proud Boys member from Aurora pleads guilty to assaulting officers in Jan. 6 Capitol attack: James Robert Elliott, 25, who also goes by “Jim Bob,” was charged in December in U.S. District Court in Washington with six counts, including civil disorder, assault of a federal officer, entering a restricted building with a dangerous weapon and carrying out an act of violence on Capitol grounds. Elliott, who is free on bond, pleaded guilty Wednesday to a single count of assault during a video conference hearing before U.S. District Judge Royce Lamberth. * NBC Chicago | SAFE-T Act’s Elimination of Cash Bail a Positive Development, Cook County’s Chief Judge Says: “There is no purge law,” [Justice Timothy Evans] said. “The public does not have to worry about any purge law. Under the current law, nor under the SAFE-T Act, is that a purge law where on the ubiquitous day out there can do whatever they want.” * Sun-Times | New Illinois law gives cops choice not to jail people for small amounts of drugs — a follow-up to our ‘Costly toll of dead-end drug arrests’ investigation: The change follows a Sun-Times/Better Government Association investigation last year that documented the impact of “dead end” drug arrests in which people are briefly locked up, only to see the charges soon dismissed. * Daily Herald | What’s fiction, what’s fact about the SAFE-T Act and the elimination of cash bail: There’s not a hotter topic on the campaign trail in Illinois, or in law enforcement circles nationwide, than the SAFE-T Act, the sweeping criminal justice reform package that will eliminate cash bail starting Jan. 1. And with all that heat has come plenty of confusion and misinformation about what’s really in the bill and what it means for you. * Center Square | Candidates for Illinois treasurer agree on one big change to the office: For all the views the candidates have given since starting their campaigns, the two have agreed on one issue that has been floated for years: joining the state comptroller’s office with the state treasurer’s office. * WSJ | Illinois Is Government Union Heaven: According to Open The Books, which focuses on government transparency, the state has 132,188 public employees with salaries and benefits over $100,000. That’s a total cost of $17 billion. The list includes 10 police department leaders and 18 school superintendents with salaries above $300,000 and some 16,592 retirees with six-figure pensions. Five of the top 10 public school employee payouts are for pensions above $330,000 a year. * WAND | Bailey votes as election day approaches: It was one of the first appearances Bailey has made this week after receiving a telephone threat at his Springfield office from an individual who claimed he would torture and kill Bailey. A 21-year old Chicago man, Scott Lennox, has been arrested in connection with the threats. * WCBU | Fact check: Anderson campaign mailer misrepresents Koehler comments in WCBU interview: A recent campaign mailer supporting Republican challenger Desi Anderson in the 46th District State Senate race inaccurately represents comments by incumbent Democrat Dave Koehler in an interview with WCBU. The issue centers around the no-cash bail provision of the SAFE-T Act that’s set to go into effect on Jan. 1. The ad claims Koehler “told NPR how a man arrested for beating his wife could be released,” implying a result of the no-cash bail system. * Block Club | CTA Boss Says He Won’t Ghost A City Hall Hearing Next Week As Public Pressure Mounts To Address Rider Complaints: CTA President Dorval Carter told aldermen he’ll finally take the hot seat after months of skipping meetings as commuters complain of long wait times, security issues and ghost trains. * WBEZ | Formerly-incarcerated Illinoisans could become a powerful voting bloc: Illinois is one of sixteen states where those convicted of a felony automatically have their right to vote restored upon release from prison. But many of those who are formerly incarcerated don’t realize they have the right to vote. * Sun-Times | Would-be minority pot entrepreneurs say state rules are scaring off investors: Regulations for businesses who got licenses in Illinois ‘social equity’ lottery make it hard to raise cash, panelists at a City Club luncheon said. * Shaw Local | In House District 63 race, a former teacher and incumbent disagree on school choice: Meyers agreed with Reick that there is a high property tax burden within school districts, but he felt various solutions, including consolidating districts and creating charter schools, ranged from “complicated” to outright terrible. * Tribune | Pritzker finds a buyer for Damen Silos, industrial site once featured in ‘Transformers’ movie: MAT Limited Partnership put in a high bid of $6.52 million after the state announced in August it would auction off Damen Silos, a 23.4-acre riverfront property at 2900 S. Damen Ave. with several old, abandoned grain silos familiar to drivers on the Stevenson Expressway. Owner Michael Tadin Jr. said the company and its affiliates will eventually demolish the silos and create a new corporate headquarters, as well as infrastructure to support its trucking fleet, now operating out of 10 acres at Stockyards Industrial Park in the Back of the Yards neighborhood. * Sun-Times | White Sox make it official, name Pedro Grifol manager: “Pedro is a bilingual, modern baseball thinker who brings two-plus decades of experience in a variety of roles — bench coach, hitting coach, winter ball and minor league manager, director of player development and scout,” White Sox general manager Rick Hahn said in a statement. “He is an excellent communicator and an experienced game planner who brings a high energy and detail-oriented approach to leadership. He is committed to building an inclusive and cohesive clubhouse, and we could not be happier to have Pedro leading our club.” * Indy 100 | Man named Dick Bigger Jr becomes unlikely US political icon: He’s a farmer from Henderson County, and appears in one of her campaign videos, where he struggles to get his words out, providing a whole load of bloopers. “Oh boy”, he sighs, after several attempts at one tongue-twisting sentence. Not only that, but naturally people are obsessing over his NSFW name, despite being an innocent old man. * Huff Post | Jimmy Kimmel Spots The Filthiest-Sounding Political Endorsement Maybe Ever: Jimmy Kimmel spotted a pretty unusual political ad that was made for a candidate in Illinois but that’s getting attention far beyond the state’s borders for an unexpected endorsement. It’s “not a major name,” Kimmel noted. “But a really good one.” That name? Dick Bigger Jr., a farmer featured in a spot for Susana Mendoza, a Democrat seeking reelection as state comptroller. More to come!
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Friday, Nov 4, 2022 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Follow along with ScribbleLive…
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