Capitol Fax.com - Your Illinois News Radar
SUBSCRIBE to Capitol Fax      Advertise Here      About     Exclusive Subscriber Content     Updated Posts    Contact Rich Miller
CapitolFax.com
To subscribe to Capitol Fax, click here.
Gov. Pritzker reacts to Senate acquittal of President Trump

Wednesday, Feb 5, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Gov. Pritzker…

Governor JB Pritzker released the following statement after the United States Senate voted to acquit President Donald Trump on the impeachment charges of abuse of power and obstruction of Congress.

“Today we saw Republicans in the United States Senate thwart the intentions of the framers of our Constitution and capitulate to this corrupt and untruthful President. The Republican Party now has confirmed it is captive to a political ideology denies the truth and refuses to hear the witnesses that legal and moral precedent demand – and that the vast majority of Americans hoped to hear from.

“Here is the undeniable truth: President Trump used our tax dollars to help his reelection campaign by refusing to give an ally needed aid until they helped his political operation.

“As governor of the nation’s fifth-largest economy, I’m going to continue to make Illinois a firewall against Donald Trump’s assaults on our democracy and hold him accountable on behalf of all the working families he has harmed.

“Illinois will always stand on the side of all the brave individuals across this nation who are fighting to hold the United States of America to its own ideals of liberty and justice for all.”

Take some deep, cleansing breaths before commenting, please.

  81 Comments      


Rate the first Marie Newman TV ad

Wednesday, Feb 5, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Press release…

Today, Marie Newman, Democratic candidate for Congress in Illinois’ 3rd District, announced her first television ad with a spot called “Learned” in her primary race against 15-year incumbent Dan Lipinski.

The ad tells the story of Marie’s roots in the district and the values she learned from her community that led her to become a successful small business owner and community activist (script is below). It also highlights some key differences with Dan Lipinski and echoes Marie’s belief that it’s time for a real Democrat to represent this district. The ad is part of an over half million dollar buy the Newman campaign has reserved.

Momentum continues to grow for the Newman campaign, with endorsements from the Illinois Federation of Teachers this week and 8 local elected officials and 4 key independent political organizations.

* Ad

* Script

Meet Marie Newman. Born at Little Company of Mary, baptized at St. Barnabas, raised in Beverly and Palos. This community shaped Marie’s belief in hard work and equality. Marie scrubbed floors to pay for college and went without health insurance when she couldn’t afford it. But Marie became a successful small business owner and community leader. Now Marie is running for Congress to do what Dan Lipinski won’t: raise wages for working people and ensure health care is a right for everyone.

…Adding… On a side note in that district…

Illinois State Republican Leadership Endorses IL-3 Congressional Candidate Mike Fricilone Over Nazi Arthur Jones
“We have a fantastic candidate for Congress in Mike Fricilone. I am proud to join countless other Republicans in endorsing him for Congress.” – Republican Senate Leader Bill Brady

CHICAGO – IL-3 GOP Congressional Candidate Mike Fricilone today was endorsed by both Republican Leaders of the Illinois State Senate and State House. His opponent is American Nazi Party leader Arthur Jones.

Republican Senate Leader Bill Brady
“We have a fantastic candidate for Congress in Mike Fricilone. I am proud to join countless other Republicans in endorsing him for Congress. Mike has been a leader on the Will County Board in passing budgets that both cut taxes and improved services. Republican voters must know that the party in our state stands with Mike and not his fake Republican opponent who has been a Nazi leader and denies the Holocaust.”

Republican House Leader Jim Durkin
“Today I am proud to announce my endorsement of Mike Fricilone for Congress. Mike has fresh and bold ideas for our community, state and nation. He is a proud, forward-thinking conservative. Under his watch as Finance Chairman in Will County, they cut taxes, reduced waste and built a new public safety center, new courthouse and new county health center, all without raising taxes. Mike’s opponent Arthur Jones has also filed as a Republican, but he is only running to spread his Nazi message of Holocaust denial which our party condemns in the strongest possible terms.”

Will County Board Member Mike Fricilone
“Our party needs a nominee who can show the public what real Republican values are. We must show the voters there is a real Republican choice and that I am that candidate. I am so honored to have the endorsement of both Leader Brady and Leader Durkin. Together we will build a party that fights for lower taxes, cuts wasteful spending, and brings fresh, bold ideas that move our nation forward.”

About Mike Fricilone: Mike Fricilone is a Will County Board Member and the Republican Leader of the Will County Board. Fricilone, is running for Congress to bring bold and fresh ideas to Washington to move our community forward. Mike is an active sports coach in our community, a 30-year member of St Bernard’s Parish, President and a charter member of the Lockport High School Charitable Foundation, and has spent the last 6 years on the board of directors of the Will County Children’s Advocacy Center.

  22 Comments      


State’s $420 million broadband expansion begins with $50 million in matching grants

Wednesday, Feb 5, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* This is an important step. From a press release…

Governor JB Pritzker announced today that the state releasing $50 million in funding for the first round of matching grants of Connect Illinois, the state’s $420 million statewide broadband expansion.

“We’re beginning to deliver on an ambitious 4- year plan to deliver broadband to homes, businesses and community institutions like hospitals and libraries in every corner of the state,” said Governor JB Pritzker. “I want to be clear: This isn’t about a person’s ability to check Facebook. This is about a small business owner having the tools she needs to reach new customers. This is about an elderly couple’s ability to get access to medical experts anywhere in the nation even if they live in a rural community. This is about giving children the ability to research their homework assignments online. In short, this is about the right of all our communities to access health care, education, and economic opportunity.”

Applicants are required to provide at least 50% of non-state funding, effectively doubling the size of the nation’s largest state competitive grant program to expand high-speed internet.

Applicants are anticipated to include internet service providers, rural cooperatives, nonprofits and local governments. Grant responses for the initial $50 million round of funding can be submitted through Friday, April 3, 2020. Up to $5 million per project will be available during the first round, and subsequent rounds will follow over the course of the next several years. The Notice of Funding Opportunity is available online at: https://www2.illinois.gov/dceo/AboutDCEO/GATA/Pages/2366-1333.aspx.

Connect Illinois is centered around three main outcomes: education, telehealth and economic development. It aims to provide universal access to basic broadband for homes, businesses, and community anchor institutions by 2024.

The Rebuild Illinois capital plan dedicated $420 million toward broadband expansion — $400 million for the grant program and $20 million to strengthen the Illinois Century Network. The matching requirements in the grant program will leverage state funds to attract at least an additional $400 million from internet service providers.

“Fast, reliable internet isn’t a luxury anymore, it’s a necessity,” Sen. Bill Cunningham (D-Chicago). “Broadband access is critical for everyone, from students to small business owners, and it’s vital that we continue to invest in its availability in all corners of our state. We’ve done a lot of great work on this issue so far, and I look forward to continuing to work with Governor Pritzker and my colleagues in the legislature to expand this critical resource.”

“I am honored to represent rural and downstate Illinois as a member of the Broadband Advisory Council. Funding for new and improved infrastructure will give more residents access to high-speed Internet, provide better e-learning opportunities for schools, and boost telehealth programs in areas that do not have easy access to specialized medical facilities and doctors,” said Sen. Jil Tracy (R-Quincy). “We are providing resources to give our communities, our farmers and our local businesses access to the technology they need to compete in today’s economy.”

“I am proud to stand today with the Governor and the other members of the Broadband Advisory Council as we move from design to execution in expanding broadband Internet access statewide to reach Illinois communities still left behind by the broadband revolution, bringing additional resources for education, economic growth, healthcare, and other areas benefiting from Internet resources,” said Rep. John Connor (D- Romeoville). “Using the Broadband Council’s comprehensive plans presented today, Illinois begins to bridge the digital divide that separates city from country to strengthen Illinois through more expansive broadband Internet access statewide.”

“Internet access has profound impacts on opportunities in education, jobs, health care and nearly every other aspect of daily life,” said Assistant House Minority Leader Keith Wheeler (R-Oswego). “Expanding broadband access to every corner of Illinois, particularly rural communities, is vital to move Illinois’ economy forward. I applaud the Governor for making this critical investment that will lift up students, families and job creators. Together we will build broadband infrastructure across Illinois that is second to none.”

“Investing in a secure technology infrastructure, such as the Illinois Century Network (ICN), brings the world to the fingertips of teachers and students,” said Mary Reynolds, Group CIO for Education at the Department of Innovation & Technology (DoIT). “Illinois students will have equitable access to digital learning opportunities as a result of broadband expansion through Connect Illinois.”

“What makes Connect Illinois sing is its historic investment in infrastructure coupled with meaningful community engagement in broadband planning and capacity building,” said Adrianne Benton Furniss, Executive Director, Benton Institute for Broadband & Society. “Community leaders of all stripes should play an important role because they are closest to local needs and have earned peoples’ confidence and trust. Their voice in the creation of local broadband access, adoption, digital inclusion, and utilization strategies will help to ensure the success of Governor Pritzker’s long-term economic development plans for the state of Illinois.”

“Broadband access is a critical component of modern agriculture, but far too many Illinoisans are missing out,” said Richard Guebert, Jr., President of the Illinois Farm Bureau. “Not only can broadband access improve the economic well-being of farmers, but it can also help revitalize rural Illinois and boost our economy.”

“The Partnership for a Connected Illinois looks forward to partnering with the Office of Broadband to leverage this broadband investment to increase access to services delivered via telehealth, and therefore, improve equity and health outcomes for patients in need,” said Nancy Kaszak, Director of the Illinois Telehealth Initiative at the Partnership for a Connected Illinois. “I applaud Governor Pritzker for his leadership on this issue. This historic investment into broadband will allow Illinois to become a leader on telehealth. This opens the door for to healthcare in rural and underserved communities, particularly for opioid addiction recovery and behavioral health care for children around the state.”

“Broadband connects people, stimulates entrepreneurship, and helps close the skills gap in rural and disadvantaged communities,” said Bill McBride, executive director of the National Governors Association. “Our research and work with governors’ offices on broadband shows that investments in this critical infrastructure pay social and economic dividends for years to come. We applaud Governor Pritzker for his leadership in bringing high-speed, affordable broadband access to the people of Illinois.”

“The Connect Illinois Broadband Strategic Plan rightly recognizes that ubiquitous broadband usage is a necessary part of delivering Illinois’ future progress in agriculture, energy, health care, information, manufacturing, and transportation,” said Jonathan Sallet, Former General Counsel, Federal Communications Commission. “That’s why it’s so important that the Illinois broadband plan seeks progress on deployment, plus digital skills and equity.”

“Broadband grants will help extend quality, high-speed service to hard-to-reach areas of the state,” said Josh Shallenberger, CEO of the Shelby Electric Cooperative. “Like rural electrification a century before, Connect Illinois will drive progress throughout meaningful partnership.”

Rural electrification is not a bad analogy. Illinois has to do things like this to get ahead of other states because it can’t or won’t do other things that make us less competitive. So, more like this, please.

  10 Comments      


Question of the day

Wednesday, Feb 5, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Gov. Pritzker earlier today while speaking with reporters…

I want to be clear with everybody. This state is a diverse state in so many ways, in ways that Iowa and New Hampshire are not. Our state is more representative of the United States of the, you know, rural, suburban, urban environments of the entire country, of the technology industry and the farming industry, the agriculture industry.

We represent every aspect of the United States in Illinois. And I think it is appropriate for us to put ourselves forward as the first in the nation. If you can win in a state like Illinois, with so many different regions, so many different types of people from all over the state. If you can win in a state like this, then you’re worthy of being the nominee of your party.

We’ve discussed it twice already, but let’s put it to a vote since he continues making this a thing.

* The Question: Do you agree with the governor that Illinois should host the first in the nation primary? Take the poll and then explain your answer in comments, please…


bike trail guide

  37 Comments      


It’s just a bill

Wednesday, Feb 5, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Press release…

The Illinois House Transportation: Vehicles and Safety Committee today advanced legislation State Representative David McSweeney (R-Barrington Hills) is sponsoring to ban red light cameras in non-home rule communities in Illinois. House Bill 322 would prohibit non-home rule units of government from enacting or enforcing red light camera ordinances. McSweeney passed the same bill in the House in 2015 and it was killed by former Senator Martin Sandoval.

Rep. McSweeney has long been a proponent of banning red light cameras. He believes that red light cameras are more about revenue than public safety. He said the bribery charges against former State Senator Martin Sandoval provide even more evidence of the need to ban red light cameras.

“These cameras are nothing more than a get rich scheme for the companies that install the cameras and the politicians who profit from protecting the companies behind this scam,” McSweeney said. “It is time to end this corruption once and for all.”

More than $1 billion in fines have been collected from red light cameras and multiple people have been indicted for crimes connected to the red light camera industry.

“It is time to end this madness,” McSweeney said. “These cameras are not about making communities safer. They are about producing more revenue for local governments and padding the pockets of political insiders. It is another example of the culture of corruption in Illinois. My legislation is big step forward in fighting Illinois corruption.”

The committee approved the measure by a vote of 11-0. House Bill 322 now advances to the House floor for further consideration.

Looks like it may have some wings. We shall see.

* This bill may not sprout wings, however. HB4484 is sponsored by Republican Rep. Deanne Mazzochi of suburban Elmhurst

Creates the End Aldermanic Privilege Law in the Illinois Municipal Code. Provides that, in the City of Chicago, a property owner, or a developer or contractor having the written permission of the property owner, shall not have any approvals under the Zoning Division denied because of an aldermanic hold, objection, extra-judicial or extra-legal request, or for any law or ordinance enacted or adopted after the date on which the property owner, developer, or contractor: (1) participated in a concept meeting for construction with representatives from the City of Chicago regarding the subject property; (2) filed a building permit application with the City of Chicago for the subject property; (3) presented a proposed development plan to a city council for the subject property; (4) substantially invested resources in the preparation of building plans, concept drawings, or securing building contracts for a preceding period of one year for the subject property; or (5) otherwise gave sufficient notice of an intent to develop to the pertinent regulatory authorities for the subject property. Allows suit against the State or the City of Chicago that seeks to enforce or impose a more restrictive law, regulation, ordinance, or resolution against the property owner, developer, or contractor and allows for a $5,000 civil penalty and other damages if the property owner’s, developer’s, or contractor’s claim is successful. Limits home rule powers.

* Press release…

More than 100 hospital workers and community health advocates joined Illinois lawmakers Wednesday morning at the Capitol to show support for new legislation HB 4533 and SB 3010 that would fix the broken Medicaid Assessment funding formulas to make them equitable for community hospitals.

In introducing the legislation, Senator Omar Aquino and Rep. Chris Welch, the bill’s chief sponsors, raised concerns that urban and rural communities with the lowest levels of life expectancy have far more limited access to healthcare services and good paying jobs.

“Despite a distance of just nine miles, residents of two Chicago neighborhoods – Englewood and Streeterville – experience a 30-year difference in life expectancy,” said Representative Chris Welch. “The African-American community has been denied equitable resources for healthcare. As representatives of the community, we cannot stand by and let this inequity persist. We demand fair funding now.”

Hospital workers from around the state joined the lawmakers to show their support, holding signs that read “Fair Funding for Community Hospitals” and “We Are Worth More.”

“We want to stop the suffering in our neighborhoods and in the hospitals where we work—the suffering caused by unfair funding,” said Wellington Thomas, an ER tech at Loretto Hospital. “Community hospitals are closing because they don’t have the funding they need. I can tell you that the difference between a four-minute ride to a hospital and an eight-minute ride can be the difference between life and death.”

“It is my job to take care of patients and make sure they recover,” said Kim Smith, a patient care tech at Northwestern Memorial Hospital. “But sadly, Northwestern doesn’t always seem to put patients’ care first, saving the money it gets from property tax exemptions for managements’ paychecks instead of putting it back in community care. I know this isn’t how we should treat the patients who come to us in times of need, and that’s why we’re calling on the state legislature to adopt this new bill as soon as possible.”

Workers said they hoped to draw attention to the process through which hospitals in Illinois are allocated federal Medicaid dollars meant to compensate them for treating low-income and under or uninsured patients. The new legislation would make a $1 billion investment in payments specifically to hospitals dependent on Medicaid, private hospitals in high-need communities, and rural critical access hospitals.

Specifically, the bill would establish a changed Fair Provider Tax, reversing the current problem of small and community hospitals being taxed at a higher rate than wealthy, high volume medical facilities, call for a Larger and More Effective Transformation Fund allowing hospitals serving high-need populations to better serve their communities, provide for Well-Targeted Payments to ensure funding goes where it is most needed and allow for Transitioning of Supplemental Payments when Federal regulations phase out payments to reduce impact on smaller community hospitals.

“Currently the laws in Illinois benefit the big and rich hospitals at the expense of the community and safety net hospitals,” said Kathrine Jones of South Austin Community Coalition. “It’s the safety net hospitals that provide care to those most in need but get the least support. I’m happy to be speaking out today with all others throughout Chicago who are fighting to end this offensive system.”

  9 Comments      


Health Advocates Join To Highlight Needs Of Kidney Disease Patients

Wednesday, Feb 5, 2020 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

To highlight the needs of people with kidney disease, organizations from across our state have banded together to create the Illinois Kidney Care Alliance (IKCA), a coalition of health advocates and professionals, community and patient groups, and providers and businesses. The coalition will focus on raising awareness of the needs of people who suffer from End-Stage Renal Disease (ESRD), a condition also known as kidney failure. The stark fact is that people whose kidneys no longer function properly have only two options for survival: dialysis or a kidney transplant.

Currently, more than 650,000 Americans suffer from kidney failure, including over 30,000 in Illinois. Of these, about 70 percent are on life-sustaining dialysis, while the rest are able to survive with a functioning kidney transplant. The incidence rate of ESRD is expected to rise in the U.S. over the next decade – and is higher among African-Americans, Latinos and people of color than among whites.

Kidney disease in its early stages often has no symptoms and therefore remains undetected until it has reached an advanced stage. For this reason, some call it a “silent disease.”

For more information, visit our website.

  Comments Off      


Protected: *** UPDATED x1 *** SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Delgado update

Wednesday, Feb 5, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

This post is password protected. To view it please enter your password below:

  Comments Off      


Caption contest!

Wednesday, Feb 5, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Alex Nitkin at the Daily Line captured this photo yesterday of former Rep. Luis Arroyo hurriedly leaving his arraignment

  33 Comments      


Trump’s Talk Is Cheap, Mike Will Get It Done

Wednesday, Feb 5, 2020 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Last night, we heard more of Trump’s campaign of lies and deceit. We also saw the Democratic Party fall apart in Iowa.

Democratic voters want someone with the courage, the chops, and the track record to go toe-to-toe with Donald Trump. They want someone who can build on our blue wave, someone who can expand the map, and bring new voters into the fold. The results in Iowa tell us that there is only one candidate who can do that - Mike Bloomberg.

While other presidential hopefuls focus their energy and investments on taking each other down. Mike is taking the fight to Trump everyday, picking up endorsements and drawing huge crowds in Philadelphia, Phoenix, and Denver.

Talk is cheap. We need a leader who will fight back against Trump’s lies. We need a leader who will get it done.

Check out Mike’s first gubernatorial endorsement from Rhode Island’s Gina Raimondo, Farm Aid’s John Mellencamp, and read more about his reaction to Trump’s State of the Union lies here, here and here.

  Comments Off      


A notably unkept campaign promise

Wednesday, Feb 5, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* From a Tribune editorial entitled “Gov. Pritzker should know: Ethics reform starts with a truly independent map”

As corruption scandals worm through the establishment Democratic Party, Gov. J.B. Pritzker finds himself with new and unexpected leverage. He can push for meaningful ethics reform in Illinois government by removing the barricades his own party’s leaders erected in the past. Those Democrats are wounded. He is not.

So will he lead on real reform?

“Restoring the public’s trust is of paramount importance,” Pritzker said during last week’s State of the State address while his two chamber leaders — House Speaker Michael Madigan and Senate President Don Harmon — stood at the dais behind him. “Let’s not let the well-connected and well-protected work the system while the interests of ordinary citizens are forgotten. There is too much that needs to be accomplished to lift up all the people of Illinois.”

That effort starts with drawing a fair map of legislative districts after this year’s federal census. It could happen through constitutional change. […]

Pritzker said as a candidate for governor he supported amending the Illinois Constitution to take the process out of the hands of lawmakers: “We should amend the constitution to create an independent commission to draw legislative maps.” More recently, he said he would not sign into law an unfair map.

But that’s not as strong a position as his call for an amendment. It gives him wiggle room to backtrack. Who defines “unfair”?

* OK, let’s start with the end of the above excerpt and work our way up. Before the 2018 primary, I asked all candidates this specific question

Will you pledge as governor to veto any state legislative redistricting map proposal that is in any way drafted or created by legislators, political party leaders and/or their staffs or allies? The exception, of course, would be the final official draft by LRB.

Pritzker’s response

Yes, I will pledge to veto. We should amend the constitution to create an independent commission to draw legislative maps, but in the meantime, I would urge Democrats and Republicans to agree to an independent commission to handle creating a new legislative map. That designated body should reflect the gender, racial, and geographic diversity of the state and look to preserve the Voting Rights Act decisions to ensure racial and language minorities are fully represented in the electoral process.

* To the editorial’s main point, does Pritzker now have the “leverage” to get this done? The editorial board cheered Rauner’s “leverage” for two solid years of budget impasse. Can Pritzker pass this with the bully pulpit alone, or will he have to do something more drastic? And if he does take drastic action, will the ends justify the means? What happens to the rest of the governor’s agenda if he goes all-in?

These and more questions should be pondered before rushing off to yet another potentially ruinous legislative war.

The Tribune roundly mocked the concept of “doable” agendas back in 2015 and we saw how that ended. Doable doesn’t mean nothing, it means bending the curve beyond where it’s been. Fiery populist thinking got us into a big mess during three straight administrations.

* All that being said, reformers are absolutely right to do their jobs and push the governor on this point. He has been awfully mum and the deadline to get this on the ballot is approaching. Pritzker should absolutely take some legit heat. I mean, the guy helped fund remap reform efforts for years. Put your agenda where your money was, governor.

The governor could, for instance, support one of the remap plans, like Sen. Julie Morrison’s proposed constitutional amendment that’s co-sponsored by Senate President Pro Tempore Bill Cunningham.

Pritzker said during the campaign that the state should amend the constitution to enact redistricting reform. He’s actually been pretty good at keeping his campaign promises. But this one stands out as almost completely unaddressed.

I think the trick here is to not over-learn the mistakes of the populist past, while still maintaining an even-enough keel.

  25 Comments      


McLaughlin poll: Oberweis at 46 percent in five-way primary

Wednesday, Feb 5, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* McLaughlin & Associates does a lot of polling for a lot of GOP candidates and entities, but keep in mind that this is a quickie two-day poll of 300 likely Republican primary voters with a +/- 5.6 percent margin of error. Even so, this lead is way outside even that high MoE…

Survey Summary: The Republican Primary Election – Jim Oberweis has an overwhelming lead.

The results of our recently completed survey in Illinois’ 14th Congressional District show that with only 6 weeks to go and even with more candidates in the race, Jim Oberweis maintains a 30 point lead over his closest competitor. Jim Oberweis is in a very strong position to win the Republican Primary election for U.S. Congress. Almost half of voters polled, 46%, say they would vote for Oberweis, while only 16% say they would vote for Sue Rezin, followed by 6% for Catalina Lauf, then just 2% for both Jim Martel and Ted Gradel.

    If the Republican primary election for U.S. Congress was held today, for whom would you vote?

The majority of Republican primary voters in Illinois 14 are favorable to Jim Oberweis, 55%, with only 20% unfavorable. Sue Rezin, who lives outside the district and has said that she will not move into the district, is still widely unknown among Republican primary voters with, 59%, who have never heard of her, only 19% are favorable towards her, 5% are unfavorable, and 17% have no opinion. This explains why State Senator Rezin’s first campaign mail has been an attack on Jim Oberweis.

The vast majority of Republican primary voters in Illinois 14 have never heard of the other three candidates in the race, Catalina Lauf, Jim Marter and Ted Gradel. 72% have never heard of Catalina Lauf, 74% have never heard of Jim Marter, and 77% have never heard of Ted Gradel.

    Now, I am going to read you a list of names. Will you please tell me if you have a favorable or unfavorable opinion of each person? If you have no opinion or have never heard of each person, just say so.

In contrast to Senator Rezin’s attack on Jim Oberweis for losing past elections to Senator Durbin, Republican Primary voters are actually more likely to vote for Jim Oberweis because he ran against liberal Democratic Senator Dick Durbin.

    Would you be more likely or less likely to vote for Jim Oberweis if you knew that in his race for U.S. Senate, he defeated Liberal Democrat Dick Durbin in each county in your congressional district and came the closest of any Republican to beating Dick Durbin?

Conclusions:

With only 6 weeks to go, Jim Oberweis is the clear frontrunner in the Republican Primary in Illinois Congressional District 14 with the highest and most favorable name recognition of any Republican candidate in the district. His opponents have a long way to go in a mere 6 weeks in a very expensive media market. Jim Oberweis is clearly the best Republican to unseat Pelosi Democrat Lauren Underwood and win back an important Congressional seat for the Republicans.

Methodology: Republican Primary

This poll of 300 likely Republican Primary election voters in Illinois Congressional District 14, was conducted from January 28th and January 29th, 2019. All interviews were conducted via telephone by professional interviewers. Interview selection was random within predetermined election units. 41% of interviews were completed on cell- phones. These samples were then combined and structured to correlate with actual voter turnout in a Republican Primary election. This poll of 300 likely Republican Primary election voters in Illinois Congressional District 14, has an accuracy of +/- 5.6% at a 95% confidence interval.

* Here are the latest cash-on-hand numbers for the primary

Oberweis: $1,073,397.35
Gradel: $649,126.92
Rezin: $329,389.18

None of the others had more than $32K on hand.

…Adding… Daily Herald

This is the first time Oberweis has polled against Lauf, who has found momentum as the “Anti-AOC” candidate on Fox News and conservative podcasts. Her campaign was not impressed with Oberweis’ poll.

“We’re not sure why someone who’s been running for office for decades and loaned his campaign millions of dollars would push a poll showing him below 50%, but we don’t try to understand the tactics of career politicians,” Lauf’s campaign team said in a statement. “We’re seeing overwhelming enthusiasm on the ground behind Catalina’s candidacy.

“She is not only the only candidate who will stand with President Trump and the only candidate who can beat liberal Lauren Underwood, but the much needed new energy and new face for the Republican Party.” […]

“What is ludicrous is that Oberweis and his pollster contrived a question seeking to laud Oberweis for having lost to Dick Durbin,” said a written statement from the [Rezin] campaign. “What is the point? Oberweis lost that race. He has lost elections for this congressional seat twice already. “If a candidate is supposed to get credit for a previous failed campaign then, by all means, Jim Oberweis is the undisputed king of Illinois politics.”

…Adding… Rezin campaign…

Jim Oberweis and his discredited pollster can maintain their self-delusion all they want but reality will once again hit them in the head on March 17 when Oberweis loses yet another election–just like all six of Oberweis’ previous elections for Congress, US Senate and Governor. 

We note, the Republican U.S. House Majority Leader lost his primary election in 2014 because Oberweis’ pollster was wrong by an astounding 45 points.

What is ludicrous is that Oberweis and his pollster contrived a question seeking to laud Oberweis for having lost to Dick Durbin. What is the point? Oberweis LOST that race. In fact, he has lost elections for this congressional seat TWICE already.

When a candidate goes out of his way to make one of his numerous election losses into a reason why he is supposedly sure to win this primary, it is evidence of him living in a parallel universe and making the same delusional mistakes that led to his losses in his previous six elections for Congress, US Senate and Governor.

Now that voters are fully tuning into this election, Sue Rezin is excited about engaging primary voters over the next six weeks and to the result on Election Day–just like all of her previous election victories—all five of them.

  31 Comments      


“I clean before I invite company over”

Wednesday, Feb 5, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Greg Hinz wrote a piece yesterday calling for Illinois to be the first primary state, or at least near the front of the line...

Now that the Iowa Democratic Party has joined and maybe even replaced the hanging-chad folks in the political hall of infamy, the moment has arrived for Illinois politicians to do something they should have long ago.

That’s to put Illinois first, or as close to first as they can get us.

It’s time to quit deferring to corn country, rocky New Hampshire and casinoed Nevada. Time to do what it takes to place this diverse state exactly where it needs to be: at the front of the presidential nomination process, somewhere it will have clout—not stuck somewhere in the meaningless middle. And think of all that sweet tourism money that flows in every four years as journos and campaign staffs and pollsters and bandwagon-jumpers eat, sleep, drink and door-knock their way through the Hawkeye state. Wouldn’t it be better if they did all that eating, sleeping, drinking and door-knocking in the Land of Lincoln instead?

* Greg also updated with this statement from Gov. Pritzker

I firmly believe that the nominating process should reflect the country’s diversity, and there’s no better state to do that than Illinois. Illinois has all the best features of America, with its urban, suburban and rural regions, tremendous demographic diversity and the variety of manufacturing, service and agriculture jobs throughout the state. With all due respect to Iowa . . . Democratic nominees should start out showing they can win in a state that is more like the rest of the nation. I look forward to working with other elected officials and the party to change the calendar so that Illinois’ primary comes first in the nominating process in the 2024 presidential election.

* As Tina Sfondeles and Lynn Sweet report, Mayor Lightfoot likes the idea

Lighfoot — in Washington on Tuesday for the State of the Union address — said whether Illinois should become the first primary state is a “worthwhile question to pursue.”

“The dynamics of the Democratic electorate and the dynamics of the people who are going to run for president have forever been changed,” Lightfoot told the Sun-Times. “And I think we have to think, give serious consideration to starting with a state that’s diverse.”

Pritzker’s chief of staff Anne Caprara to the Sun-Times

“We feel that we have a really strong case to make about Illinois. That it is geographically, ethnically and economically very diverse. We sit in the Midwest in the middle of a lot of states that are important to the presidential election calendar. That if you come to this state, you’re going to have to campaign in urban areas and rural areas, and all different types of communities,” Caprara said. “And that’s really a great proving ground for a presidential election.”

Something to consider

Pritzker would have to be willing to back moving up the Illinois primary ahead of mid-March. Illinois in 2008 moved up the primary date in order to help then U.S. Sen. Barack Obama clinch the Democratic presidential nomination. This year, Illinois’ primary is on March 17, along with Arizona, Florida and Ohio.

That 2008 February primary was murderously cold. And some of Speaker Madigan’s members ended up having closer than expected primaries because the post-holiday election season was so short and turnout for Obama was so high.

* More from the Center Square

Illinois state Sen. Andy Manar, D-Bunker Hill, said Illinois should be first instead.

“So put the complicated caucus system behind us,” Manar said. “Let’s find a state that’s more representative of the country as a whole and Illinois I think on all accounts is that state.”

Illinois’ population is culturally diverse and the state features not just major metropolitan areas but also rural areas.

State Rep. Dave Severin, R-Benton, said moving Illinois up in the national process may be worth looking at.

“That might be something to consider,” Severin said. “But I tell you what else is encouraging to me is the state of Illinois finally is not the worst debacle in the United States. Iowa just took over.”

Heh.

* We have an up-and-coming commenter named Candy DoGood and these are CD’s thoughts yesterday

Illinois hosting the first in the nation primary would be an admirable goal.

In order to meet this goal, Illinois can demonstrate its maturity and ability as a state party to host the first in the nation primary by instituting broad reforms to make their actual party apparatus more inclusive and the leadership reflective of the active members of the party rather than being made up of mostly elected officials.

Some major issues to address:

When was the last time the Democratic Party of Illinois had a convention?

When was the last time the Democratic Party of Illinois created a concise platform?

What does the Democratic Party of Illinois plan to do or what reforms do they plan to enact to address that the chair of their party is also the House Speaker and is at the center of an organization which may have aided in retaliation against victims of sexual harassment and hostile work environments?

Are they (both parties really) prepared to address the expectation that caucus staff are required to “volunteer” or work on campaigns for a salary generally below market in order to retain their positions as caucus staff?

Are they prepared to lobby the governor to make changes so that precinct committee people, county parties, district apparatuses, and the State Central Committee are more inclusive and provide better access for people of lower incomes, mobility issues, or situations that make it difficult for them to be able to run on a ballot or fund raise to run for a party position?

I think it’d be great for the State of Illinois to shoot to be first in the nation, but we’ve got a lot of work to do before that happens.

We’re literally in the middle of a situation where the GOP super minority is fractured with ultra-right wing separatists and the Democratic Party’s dealing with State Senators wearing a wire to inform on other State Senators because of a broad sweeping federal investigation which still hasn’t ended yet and is long over due.

First in the nation isn’t the kind of microscope I would be inviting if I were a shot caller in either major party organization.

The Iowa Democratic Party messed up a reporting system by relying on an app. Okay. Well they (the IDP and the Iowa GOP both) also have a caucus every two years where precincts meet, select delegates to county conventions and submit platform planks, the county convention turns out a county platform and selects delegates to the District and State conventions which also turns out platforms and selects delegates to the national convention and or the DNC members.

Say what you will about caucuses being undemocratic, but Iowans rebuild their parties every two years and reaffirm their leadership every two years and produce platforms every two years.

And their party leaders aren’t known for whining about not receiving enough political graft or getting their people hired and Iowa’s hiring/firing scandals don’t involve decades long consent decrees that are willfully defied by folks that don’t get that this stuff is illegal.

I’m being hard on the Democrats because the Democrats are pushing this at the moment, but there’s the Illinois GOP literally just sold itself to a billionaire a few cycles ago and abandoned every principle they had to do so while also, somehow, letting a Nazi get on the ballot.

I clean before I invite company over.

Illinois should too.

  59 Comments      


Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition

Wednesday, Feb 5, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

This post is password protected. To view it please enter your password below:

  Comments Off      


Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today’s edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)

Wednesday, Feb 5, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

This post is password protected. To view it please enter your password below:

  Comments Off      


*** LIVE COVERAGE ***

Wednesday, Feb 5, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Follow along with ScribbleLive


  Comments Off      


Lauren Beth Gash claims she’s likely secured enough votes to be the next Lake County Democratic Chairperson

Tuesday, Feb 4, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Press release…

In anticipation of a potential leadership change in the Lake County Democratic Party, today 101 precinct committeepeople candidates (nearly all unopposed in the March primary election) announce their commitment to support Lauren Beth Gash to lead the party. Lauren Beth Gash has now likely secured the weighted vote necessary to become the next Chair of the Lake County Democrats.

Each elected precinct committeeperson may vote for the Lake County Democratic Party Chair. Each committeeperson’s vote is weighted by the amount of votes cast in the Democratic primary election in their precinct.

The committeepeople candidates announcing their support for Gash hail from every one of Lake County’s 18 townships and include residents of the 6th, 10th and 14th Congressional Districts. These Democrats supporting Gash include significant representation of Lake County’s sizable African American, Latino and Asian communities.

Gash is now expected to be elected Chair of the Lake County Democrats during the County Convention, if a leadership change in the party does occur.

“It does not surprise me that Lauren has consolidated support from such a broad, diverse cross-section of Lake County Democrats so quickly,” said Fremont Township Democrats Chair Matt Lowry. “Under Lauren’s leadership, I am fully confident that our party will be united as we approach the critical 2020 elections.”

In addition, even more community leaders are adding their names to the list of Gash’s supporters for Lake County Democratic Chair.

“I will always be grateful for the work Lauren has done to welcome Lake County’s Muslim community into the Democratic Party’s coalition. She truly embodies the adage that ‘diversity is our strength; unity is our power’. Lauren has my strong endorsement to lead the party in the years ahead,” said Vaseem Iftekhar, founder of the Northern Illinois American Muslim Alliance, who also announced today his endorsement of Gash.

The current party chairman, Sen. Terry Link, has not yet said when or even if he will resign, although his resignation is expected sometime in the foreseeable future. As subscribers know, Sen. Melinda Bush has also expressed a strong interest in the position.

Gash’s full endorsement list is here.

  2 Comments      


*** UPDATED x2 - Stava-Murray also files objection *** Durkin files objection to Rep. Delgado appointment

Tuesday, Feb 4, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Press release….

Illinois House Republican Leader Jim Durkin (R-Western Springs) filed an objection to the appointment for the replacement of disgraced former Rep. Luis Arroyo in the Illinois House’s 3rd District. Please find the objection attached.

Click here to read the challenge. [Fixed link]

*** UPDATE 1 *** From Rep. Eva Dina Delgado…

House Republican Leader Jim Durkin’s petition is misguided and further evidence of the partisan culture in Springfield that lacks solutions. While clouds of indictments and insider deals catch headlines, the real narrative here is that I am the most qualified candidate to represent the 3rd Legislative District and there was not one vote cast against my appointment. My appointment followed the law every step of the way, and I am confident that my qualifications as an attorney, community leader and experience in the public and private sectors will withstand any challenge. While this filing is disappointing, I remain focused on representing the interests of the hard working people of the district I am honored to represent.

* Sun-Times

“A clean break from the arrested legislator is required to re-establish the General Assembly’s trust with its constituents,” Durkin wrote in his letter challenging Delgado. “Had the votes of Mr. Arroyo not been part of the selection process, this appointment would not be called into question.”

In the letter, Durkin said that the appointment process that resulted in Delgado replacing Arroyo, who was hit with a federal bribery charge, “calls into question the integrity of the process and the House itself.

“The candidates who were vying to replace Rep. Arroyo and who were not chosen, were victims of a corrupt process,” Durkin wrote. […]

“The public’s distrust of its government to illegal actions of its officials hinders the ability of the government to provide the services it is constitutionally tasked with carrying out,” the letter reads. “Everything it does, even if legitimate and legal, will be viewed in a negative light should the individuals who are arrested for illegal activities have a part in the selection process.”

* Tribune

Despite his public statement before the selection, Madigan had been silent on the subject since. Spokesman Steve Brown said in an email Tuesday that Madigan will review Durkin’s petition “and take the appropriate action required by House rules.”

Delgado, an attorney and former Chicago Police Board member, pushed back against the idea that she was Arroyo’s choice for the position, noting that he circulated nominating petitions for another candidate.

“I wouldn’t have participated in the process if Arroyo had been involved in any way,” she said. “Part of the reason I even stepped up to do this is I didn’t want the district to go a whole year without being represented.”

Delgado said she met briefly with Madigan last week but did not discuss the possible qualifications challenge. “As far as my qualifications go, I think they stand for themselves,” she said.

*** UPDATE 2 *** I told subscribers about this earlier today, but here’s the Daily Line

[Rep. Anne Stava-Murray, D-Naperville] told The Daily Line that upon reading news last week that Madigan was waiting for someone else to file a qualifications challenge to Delgado, she felt called to take action.

“Literally no one asked me to do this,” Stava-Murray said. “I did it myself and it was because if I’m a member and if I see wrongdoing, then it’s incumbent upon me to follow through and see that it’s investigated. I take ethics extremely seriously and it’s important that people can trust that their government representation is there for them and not because of a conflict of interest.”

Stava-Murray said she would be happy to work with Delgado if an investigation clears her of the cloud surrounding her appointment, and acknowledged serving her last week was “awkward,” as it was the first time the two had ever met.

Stava-Murray, who made headlines even before being sworn in as a legislator last year for vowing to vote “present” instead of voting for Madigan for House Speaker, said she served Delgado Wednesday morning as House members waited for Gov. JB Pritzker to make his State of the State address in front of the chamber.

  31 Comments      


Dem legislator says she overrode Pritzker veto because he “chose to misrepresent” the issue and played politics

Tuesday, Feb 4, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* This is the first time a chamber has overridden a veto by Gov. JB Pritzker

State Rep. Monica Bristow, D-Alton, released the following statement after the Illinois House overrode the governor’s veto of House Bill 3902 on Tuesday, which would protect local jobs and industries in the region and keep Illinois businesses competitive in the field of aviation repair:

“Today, the Illinois House sent a strong, bipartisan message that we value good-paying jobs in our state and will do what it takes to protect them. With major concerns about people and businesses leaving Illinois, it is our responsibility to protect industries and jobs, including the more than 3,400 jobs in aviation repair across our state.

“I came to Springfield to put local jobs, people and families over politics, even if it means standing up to a governor of my own party. While some party leaders may not have wanted me to do this, I overrode the veto of the governor because he chose to misrepresent this issue and play politics with legislation that directly impacted hundreds of local jobs in the Metro East that people depend on to support their families.” […]

Bristow sponsored House Bill 3902 which reinstates a tax credit that will allow aviation repair stations across the state to remain competitive and continue providing high paying jobs and economic growth in their communities. By overriding the governor’s veto of the bill, Illinois will once again join 36 other states with similar legislation and keep Illinois from losing businesses and jobs to neighboring states. The legislation will directly impact local businesses such as West Star Aviation in East Alton, which provides maintenance and repair services for private aircraft and employs more than 500 Metro East residents.

The billionaire governor probably couldn’t sign that bill without taking heat, even though it overwhelmingly passed both chambers with only one legislator voting against it (appointed Sen. Patrick Joyce).

The override passed 107-0 with two voting “Present,” suggesting that he didn’t work against it. The motion now moves to the Senate.

Rep. Bristow is a Tier One target and President Trump won her district by 16 points four years ago, which may help explain her rhetorical heat.

  13 Comments      


State tax amnesty program brings in $62 million more than expected

Tuesday, Feb 4, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Press release…

The Illinois Department of Revenue announced today it collected nearly $240 million through its tax amnesty program. Over $60 million of the funding collected through the program will go to local governments, with roughly $7.5 million going to the City of Chicago. Governor JB Pritzker proposed the amnesty program as part of last year’s budget, and the Office of Management and Budget estimated the program would recover $175 million in outstanding tax liabilities.

Although the program ended in mid-November, the department expects to verify tens of millions more towards unpaid liabilities. As of January 31, IDOR had verified $237,090,718.07 in qualified amnesty payments from 63,006 taxpayers. The department is continuing to process and certify tax amnesty payments over the next several months to ensure that the payments comply with the provisions of the program.

“The Tax Amnesty program proved to be successful, and we are pleased so many taxpayers took the opportunity to come into compliance and earn a clean slate with the state of Illinois,” said Acting IDOR Director David Harris. “Today’s announcement is further evidence that Governor Pritzker crafted a financially responsible balanced budget, and we’re pleased that a bipartisan majority agreed and moved forward with this fiscally responsible approach. Our mission at the department is to ensure all taxpayers are treated fairly. By encouraging taxpayers with liabilities to pay what they owe, we build trust in the system while raising revenues the state can use to invest in our future.”

The Illinois Tax Amnesty Program allowed qualified taxpayers to pay off any outstanding state tax liability and have corresponding penalties and interest forgiven. Eligible taxpayers would have incurred a tax liability after June 30, 2011 and before July 1, 2018. Taxpayers were required to fully pay their tax liability to participate in the program, submit original returns for any unfiled periods and amended returns for periods being adjusted. Payments for liabilities related to the business income tax, the sales tax, and the individual income tax accounted for over 90 percent of the receipts under the program.

  7 Comments      


Caption contest!

Tuesday, Feb 4, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Herald & Review

Michael Carrigan, the former president of the Illinois AFL-CIO and Decatur city councilman, has been appointed to the Illinois Commerce Commission.

Carrigan’s natural curiosity, desire to be involved and trying new things, led to his climb up the ranks of the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers 146. He served as an officer, then split his time as the training coordinator for apprenticeship program and as an agent for the local, before becoming the local’s business manager in 1992.

“As an agent and business manager, I became more and more involved in going to Springfield and following the legislature and bills that affected labor and electrical industry,” Carrigan said. “That’s when I learned the in and outs of moving legislation.”

That led to Carrigan becoming secretary-treasurer of the Illinois AFL-CIO before being named its president in 2007. After 12 years, Carrigan retired from the union leadership post at the end of 2019.

* As most of you know by now, Carrigan’s successor at the AFL-CIO is Tim Drea. I went to college with Drea, and it occurred to me that Tim should be “honored” with a caption contest. Here you go…

  25 Comments      


Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - More campaign stuff

Tuesday, Feb 4, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

This post is password protected. To view it please enter your password below:

  Comments Off      


Madigan asked why he released some Jack Franks information and why he didn’t release other Jack Franks information

Tuesday, Feb 4, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Speaker Madigan talked to reporters today after the House Democrats caucused. First up, why did he decide to release the Jack Franks search warrant

Let me speak generally to the matter of Jack Franks. My interest and the interest of my office throughout has been the welfare and the privacy of the victim. And our investigation proceeded at all times at the wishes of the victim.

Early on, we notified Mr. Franks, that he should not go into the Capitol building, that he should not contact our employees. Later, we made sure that the Capitol Police knew that he should not come into the Capitol Building without an escort.

And then I was the one that called the Sangamon County State’s Attorney, advised the Sangamon County State’s Attorney that I wanted my attorney to come over and speak to him about a potential criminal event. That all happened. So my attorney and my human resources director met with the state’s attorney, the state’s attorney advised that we should work with the state police, which we did.

In terms of the matter of turning over the documents that’s a difference of opinion among lawyers. But throughout all of this, again, my interest is the welfare and the privacy of the victim.

* Madigan was then asked if Franks was such a danger that he had to be escorted by the police, why didn’t Madigan notify Franks’ constituents and colleagues about what was happening

We are proceeding under the usual rules of these matters, which is, number one, to to protect the welfare and the privacy of the victim. And then at the appropriate time, we notified law enforcement. Once we notified law enforcement, the matter is in the hands of law enforcement.

And as I said earlier, I was the one who placed the ball at the Sangamon County State’s Attorney.

* “Why respond to a FOIA?” Madigan was asked. “I thought the General Assembly was exempt from FOIA”

Well, again, this is a matter of a difference of opinion among lawyers, which I’m sure the lawyers will work through. So with all of that, thank you.

The GA isn’t totally exempt from FOIA. Several news organizations, you’ll recall, FOIA’d the Sandoval Statehouse search warrant from the Senate. But, yeah, it’s unusual to see MJM’s office respond to a FOIA so quickly, if at all. (Many thanks to Hannah Meisel for the audio recording.)

  10 Comments      


Arroyo pleads “not guilty”

Tuesday, Feb 4, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* More in a minute, but this is unexpected…


Some background

Federal prosecutors filed a charging document on Jan. 17 known as an information, which typically indicates that a defendant plans to plead guilty.

According to the criminal complaint, Arroyo began paying bribes in August to a state senator who has been cooperating with the feds since 2016. That senator has been a cooperating witness for the FBI even before it was revealed he had filed false income tax returns. The unnamed senator’s cooperation began again afterward, but the complaint says he has not been promised anything in exchange for working with the feds.

…Adding… And right after this, the judge adjourned…


…Adding… Press release from earlier today…

Below is the statement of Nidia Carranza, Democratic candidate for Illinois’ 3rd District, on former State Rep. Luis Arroyo’s arraignment today on bribery charges:

“It is long overdue that Luis Arroyo is brought to justice. When parents of my special needs students met with him to ask for more funding for special education, he turned on the TV to tune them out. He is a corrupt politician who underserved our community, and must be held accountable.

“But the 3rd District is not out of the woods yet. The same corrupt donors, politicians, and lobbyists who backed Arroyo have hand-picked his successor: a corporate lobbyist and People’s Gas executive who is price-gouging Chicagoans on their gas bills in the middle of winter. I denounced this rigged appointment process, but my opponent willingly accepted the tainted position and has stayed silent on the corruption and harm caused by her predecessor.

“It’s time to turn the page on corrupt insider deals. I’m running because the people of the 3rd District don’t need more pay-to-play lobbyists representing them in Springfield. They need a fighter who knows their struggles, who has a track record of fighting back, and who will work hard every day for working people.”

…Adding… Cameron has covered a lot more of these than I have, so I defer…


…Adding… Seidel

Arroyo’s arraignment before U.S. District Judge Steven Seeger lasted roughly five minutes. Though he pleaded not guilty through his lawyer, Michael Gillespie, he also waived indictment by a grand jury that would find probable cause for the charge against him.

  8 Comments      


Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Campaign developments

Tuesday, Feb 4, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

This post is password protected. To view it please enter your password below:

  Comments Off      


At least prove you can walk before musing about a running-shoe contract

Tuesday, Feb 4, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Kelsey Landis at the BN-D

As the state grants more licenses this year, growers will continue scaling up. Operations such as 4Front Ventures will try to fill the maximum square footage allowed by the state, [Kris Krane, president and co-founder of 4Front Ventures] says.

Cultivation centers can grow up to 210,000 square feet of canopy space, or the amount of space dedicated to growing plants. In July, the state will award 40 licenses to “craft growers,” who can cultivate up to 5,000 square feet of canopy space.

“Grams per square foot of canopy space” is becoming the industry standard for measuring output, Krane said. 4Front Ventures has built out 14,000 square feet of its 94,000-square-foot facility near Chicago. Cultivators can produce 425 grams per square foot in 6,500 square feet of canopy space.

To meet demand, Krane said his company would need a 400,000 square-foot space.

“Nobody’s able to keep up with demand right now,” Krane said. “It’s just not possible.”

Dude is using just 15 percent of his available space and less than 7 percent of his legally allotted space and yet he’s talking pie in the sky plans about needing a space that’s more than four times as large as what he has now.

Fill up your own grow center first, my man. Then get nearer to the state max. And then maybe start talking about a need for larger options. Until that time, I don’t want to hear about it.

* I asked Joe Kienzler at the Illinois Department of Agriculture about some chatter I’d heard that growers may be deliberately not cultivating as much product as they could. Why would they do something like that? Perhaps to pressure the state into doing what Krane suggested above - and doing it before the state approves social equity applicants. Paranoia will destroy ya, so I’m not buying into that yet without some hard evidence. Here’s Kienzler’s response…

The Cannabis Regulation and Tax Act allows cultivators licensed for adult use to expand from 100,000 square feet to 210,000 square feet. While most did expand in anticipation of legalization, on the whole cultivators did not expand to the full 210,000 square feet right away, in order to wait for the market to adjust to have the necessary capital to fund a full expansion.

Construction and expansion cost money. I get that. The growers should do what they can to reach the max as quickly as they can and not even mention their desire for more until they complete those basic steps. /rant

  11 Comments      


While Trump Spins, We Win

Tuesday, Feb 4, 2020 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

While chaos and uncertainty reign over Iowa, Mike’s continuing to focus on the issues that matter to the greatest number of Americans and matter to states that reflect America’s diversity.

Like building intergenerational wealth and closing the economic gap between white and black Americans.

Like tearing down decades of racist policies that prevent home ownership and access to capital to build small businesses that help communities thrive.

Like ending the gun violence, and the public health crisis that surrounds it, that disproportionately communities of color.

Like addressing deep inequities in environmental justice made worse by Trump’s EPA deregulation and improving access to clean water and air.

Like addressing disproportionate access to health care and ensuring that all families have an opportunity to flourish.

While Donald Trump spins his way through the State of the Union during black history month, Mike is barnstorming the nation visiting cities like Compton, Philadelphia, and Detroit.

Learn more about Mike’s Greenwood Initiative here: https://www.mikebloomberg.com/2020/policies/economic-justice

  Comments Off      


Question of the day

Tuesday, Feb 4, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Press release…

The Illinois Manufacturers’ Association (IMA) launched the first annual “Makers Madness” contest, a bracket-style tournament in which voters will decide what product is the Coolest Thing Made in Illinois.

The competition is designed to highlight the many different products manufactured in Illinois, ranging from food products and furniture to automobiles and components for the aerospace industry. Statewide, manufacturing generates more than $304 billion in economic output, contributing 12 percent to the state’s Gross Domestic Product – the largest share of any industry in Illinois.

Nominations are now being accepted at www.makersmadnessil.com, where all voting will take place. Voting to narrow the field to the Top 16 products will begin on February 26. Weekly matchups will follow, culminating in an awards ceremony at the Governor’s Mansion on April 1, when the Coolest Thing Made in Illinois will be named.

“From combines and bulldozers to American flags and macaroni and cheese, Illinois manufacturers make some of the most iconic products in the nation. Manufacturers make the world a better place every single day by creating products that help feed the world, save lives, and explore planets beyond our own,” said Mark Denzler, president and CEO of the Illinois Manufacturers’ Association. “This contest is designed to not only showcase the many amazing things made in Illinois but to also highlight the great careers available in manufacturing, ranging from product designers and robotics specialists to cyber security experts and human resources professionals.”

Manufacturers employ 592,200 women and men in Illinois at an average salary of $88,691, providing $52 billion in wages and benefits. However, the industry is facing a worker shortage and skills gap as 300,000 baby boomers are set to retire in the coming years. The IMA worked in partnership with the Governor and lawmakers last year to extend the Research & Development tax credit and establish a new apprenticeship tax credit, which will allow manufacturers to jump-start their efforts to build a pipeline of workers to help fill the next generation of manufacturing jobs.

* The Question: What is (or should be) the coolest thing made in Illinois?

  63 Comments      


*** UPDATED x1 *** At least 2,500 kids who were supposed to be enrolled in managed care are currently without insurance

Tuesday, Feb 4, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Hannah Meisel at the Daily Line

Advocates continued to call for state officials to reverse the transition of 19,000 adopted children and former foster children to Medicaid managed care that took place Saturday.

The same change is set to take place in April for 17,000 current foster children.

Against this backdrop, a joint Senate panel will hear from foster and adoptive parents Tuesday morning in Springfield, as well as representatives from the Department of Children and Family Services and the Department of Health Care and Family Services.

The Senate Human Services Committee and the Special Committee on Oversight of Medicaid Managed Care is set for a 10:30 a.m. hearing on both this weekend’s transition and progress for the coming transition for foster kids on April 1. […]

Saturday’s transition follows criticism from the child welfare community last week after Pritzker’s State of the State address did not mention foster children or child welfare more broadly.

Kyle Hillman, the director of legislative affairs for the Illinois Chapter of the National Association of Social Workers, told The Daily Line that he felt it was an extension of the “wait-and-see” approach he felt the Pritzker administration is taking on child welfare.

“I think it’s incredibly disappointing considering the amount of challenges that we’re currently having within the child welfare system, not to highlight that in the State of the State,” This is an opportunity to speak to the legislature on what their priorities need to be and I think we were incredibly disappointed that DCFS is not one of their priorities.”

* Hannah is covering the hearing…


*** UPDATE *** OK, fine, but if the system is so good then why did that Sunday meeting even have to take place?…


  16 Comments      


Unclear on the concept

Tuesday, Feb 4, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Some bizarrely false information was recently posted on the widely read Second City Cop blog

Opening the State Constitution?

This is the first we’re hearing of this and it needs thorough researching and verification. Opening the State Constitution via a back door method which would end up screwing up all current and future pensioners:

    When FOP Board Members like Donahue, continue to support their progressive political pets, like Senator Rob Martwick, they are supporting opening the Illinois Constitution. Opening the Illinois Constitution will allow these progressive politicians to change the state’s pension clause.

    The FOP has continually claimed politicians like Martwick and Madigan are fighting to protect or pensions and that’s what makes them “qualified” to be recommended by our Union. Donahue has thrown 10’s of thousands of dollars of our dues, at Martwick and Madigan to “protect our pensions.”

    The interesting part of this is, politicians like Martwick and Madigan have been pushing the Graduated Income Tax or also known as the Progressive Tax , since 2016. If the Graduated Income Tax passes, the Illinois State Constitution will be opened up so the wording can be amended to change the flat tax to a progressive tax. What Donahue isn’t telling the members is that while the Sate Constitution is open, to amend the tax clause, it will also be open to change the state’s pension clause. That piece of paper that states, “Membership in any pension or retirement system of the State, any unit of local government or school district, or any agency or instrumentality thereof, shall be an enforceable contractual relationship, the benefits of which shall not be diminished or impaired,” is all that’s standing in the way of politicians, like Martwick, from completely gutting our pensions.

    Once they get their Graduated Income Tax passed, they can use that as a back door to change our pension clause to diminish or impair our pensions. So Donahue is supporting a politician who is not interested in protecting our pensions, but is pushing to open a door for them to walk right in an take it.

So they can use the Graduated Income Tax as a crowbar to amend the Constitution to comply with the new passed law? If we’re understanding this, it would circumvent the Constitutional Convention vote that is required to be held every 20 years and endanger all pensions immediately.

That just couldn’t be more false. I don’t know how anyone could even remotely believe it. One amendment does not “open up the constitution” to further changes. If it did, the Tribune would be loving the governor’s proposal. Instead, it complains that the governor won’t also agree to a pension amendment.

  49 Comments      


It’s just a bill

Tuesday, Feb 4, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* NPR Illinois

Income of about $1.4 billion a year for Illinois workers would be generated if paid parental leave became law — that’s according to a report out today from a pair of Illinois think tanks.

Paid-leave legislation was introduced last year, and state Rep. Mary Flowers, a Chicago Democrat, told NPR Illinois she would introduce a version of that again this legislative session.

The report’s lead author Jill Gigstad says, “Ultimately, paid parental leave is first and foremost about the health and well-being of newborn children, adopted children and their parents. But it also has a lot of economic impact as well – positive impacts.”

The study comes from the Illinois Economic Policy Institute and the University of Illinois’ Project for Middle Class Renewal.

The study is here.

* Press release

Last fall State Representative Tim Butler (R-Springfield) introduced legislation (House Bill 3940) to ban so-called “sweepstakes” machines in Illinois. The legislation was filed in the wake of revelations regarding a former House Member’s advocacy for the machines. Even though sweepstakes machines look, operate, and are marketed almost exactly like legal video gaming machines, they operate outside the strict requirements of Illinois’ video gaming law.

A growing chorus of bipartisan legislators have been pressing the case for the legislation as the concerning realities of sweepstakes machines have continued to be exposed. On Friday, Butler, joined fellow State Representatives Kelly Cassidy (D-Chicago), Jaime Andrade (D-Chicago) and Keith Wheeler (R-Oswego) in sending a letter to House colleagues seeking to grow the number of cosponsors to ban the machines.

The letter states:

    “In many instances these machines have been known to be located in businesses which have been denied a video gaming license. These machines have been located in communities which have banned the use of video gaming machines in their towns. Sweepstakes machines are even marketed as ‘slot-style games’ offering ‘jackpots’ to players… Yet, sweepstakes machines are unregulated, the owners are not subject to background checks, and the machines do not pay state or local taxes.”

    “The argument that this is corollary to winning a Big Mac in a scratch-off at McDonald’s is completely bogus,” said Butler. “It is obvious to anyone that has seen one of these ‘sweepstakes’ machines that they are clearly setup as gambling machines designed to skirt the law. I find that very concerning because it puts consumers at risk. The 2012 video gaming law was setup with important consumer protections like requiring operator background checks, limits on the number of gaming terminals and guaranteed chances for players to win to ensure they are not being cheated.”

So far, HB 3940 has 27 sponsors in the House. Butler and his fellow chief sponsors hope that number will expand further, particularly in light of recent lobbying efforts in favor of sweepstakes machines despite the scandal surrounding the machines.

That last part is true. At least one sweepstakes lobbyist was at the Statehouse last week working members.

Elements of the industry tried to bribe their way in. If that isn’t a gigantic red flag, I do not know what is. Former Rep. Luis Arroyo is being arraigned today on that alleged bribery. He’s expected to plead guilty.

* Center Square

An Illinois lawmaker is proposing an additional 10 percent sales tax on what she calls “assault weapons” but an advocate says her novel definition of the term would mean nearly all firearms would be hit with the tax.

A firearm sale in Illinois already includes federal taxes, state sales taxes, and local taxes. Chicago’s assesses a $25 per gun fee that’s long-faced a legal challenge.

State Sen. Ann Gillespie’s Senate Bill 2468 would impose a 10 percent retail sales tax on what she calls “assault weapons” and their magazines, which she refers to as a “large capacity ammunition feeding device” that would hold more than 10 rounds of ammunition.

Her definition of a qualifying gun is anything that would accept one of those magazines, something Todd Vandermyde with the Federal Firearms Licensees of Illinois says would encompass the broad majority of guns sold.

“Every modern handgun that’s not a revolver or a Derringer comes into play,” he said, adding that the tax would nearly immediately face a court challenge upon passage.

* Related…

* Amid corruption investigations, some look to give Illinois’ attorney general more power to investigate: Former Attorney General Lisa Madigan did look into possible criminal neglect surrounding the legionnaire’s deaths at a veterans’ home in Quincy under the administration of former Gov. Bruce Rauner. That pre-election announcement was seen by the Illinois Republican party as a political move.

  9 Comments      


More questions about the Jack Franks probe

Tuesday, Feb 4, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Greg Hinz

So if McHenry County Board Chairman Jack Franks was so dangerous he had to effectively be banned from the Capitol, why weren’t other officials and Franks’ constituents told?

That’s the most prominent but by no means the only question in the wake of the remarkable news over the weekend that Franks, who was a Democratic state representative before getting the McHenry job, is the subject of a probe of sexual harassment and stalking being conducted by Illinois State Police. […]

Among those not in the know was House GOP Leader Jim Durkin, whose spokeswoman confirms that the House’s official opposition chief “had no idea” and is “as shocked as anybody else.”

When I asked Madigan spokesman Steve Brown why all of this was kept quiet, he replied, “The first thing we were trying to do is protect the privacy of the individual” as well as protect her physical safety. “I think the actions we took were the appropriate actions,” Brown said.

* An area Senator is also concerned about how the allegations were kept secret during the investigation…


* I told subscribers about this yesterday afternoon. Here’s the Center Square’s Greg Bishop

The Sangamon County State’s Attorney said House Speaker Michael Madigan ignored a nondisclosure order contained in the search warrant served on Madigan’s office last week seeking information related to sexual harassment allegations involving a former state lawmaker. […]

Sangamon County State’s Attorney Dan Wright on Monday requested the case be under seal moving forward. […]

In the filing, Wright said the warrant “contained an explicit order that the ‘issuance and execution of this Search Warrant shall not (in bold) be disclosed and that any such disclosure could impede the investigation being conducted and thereby interfere with enforcement of the law.’ ”

“The January 29 Order of nondisclosure was entered to preserve the integrity of an ongoing criminal investigation conducted by the Illinois State Police … and to protect the rights of any suspects and victims,” the filing said.

“ISP Investigators state that they repeatedly instructed recipients of the Search Warrant that the January 29 Order prohibited disclosure,” Wright said in the filing. “Nevertheless, the recipients of the Search Warrant disclosed the Search Warrant on January 31, 2020, in response to a Freedom of Information Act … request received on that same date.”

“Despite the plain language of the Court’s January 29 Order, the recipients disclosed the Search Warrant although they were not otherwise required to make such disclosure,” the filing said. “Immediate public access is not presumed until after return is made to the Court and filed with the Circuit Clerk.”

  27 Comments      


Should Illinois go first?

Tuesday, Feb 4, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Politico

Before knowing the extent of Iowa’s debacle, Gov. J.B. Pritzker tweeted that Illinois should be first to hold a Democratic primary. “If you’re looking for a state whose people represent the diversity of America, look no further than Illinois. It’s time for the most representative state in the country to be the first in the nation.” He linked to a 2016 NPR story that lists Illinois as “the perfect state” to host the first Democratic presidential contest.

We spoke to Anne Caprara, Pritzker’s chief of staff, late last night — given she knows something about waiting on Iowa. In 2016, Caprara worked for Priorities USA, Hillary Clinton’s super PAC. “I remember that that result went late into the night and it was a very close win by Hillary. So, I think there was a general sense coming out of Iowa that nothing had been decided,” she told Playbook.

And we can say the same today. Like her current boss, Caprara sees Illinois as being a better fit for the Democrats’ first foray into presidential primaries. “We are the most representative of the rest of the country. We have a rural population, urban population and representation of literally every ethnic group in the country and all sorts of business and manufacturing. It makes sense that Illinois should help decide who the Democratic nominee is.”

That NPR story is here.

Thoughts?

…Adding… Caskey had some pretty funny insights into this topic last night. A sample from his thread…


  78 Comments      


Board of Elections admits to voter registration “mistake”

Tuesday, Feb 4, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Press release

The Illinois State Board of Elections [yesterday] notified 59 local election authorities that 774 former inmates of the Illinois Department of Corrections may have had their voter registrations erroneously canceled due to a data-matching error involving both agencies.

Matching based on information forwarded to the State Board of Elections incorrectly categorized the individuals as currently incarcerated when in fact they had completed their sentences and been discharged. The State Board of Elections has worked directly with the Illinois Department of Corrections to identify the affected individuals, whose records were among more than 126,000 shared between the two agencies between 2014 and 2019.

Under Illinois law, voting rights are suspended during an inmate’s period of incarceration but are restored upon release, though the individual must re-register to vote. This includes those who are released on parole, on mandatory supervised release and on condition of electronic monitoring.

The Board of Elections has provided each election authority with voter information on the affected individuals so that their registrations can be reviewed for reinstatement by the start of early voting on Feb. 6. It is possible that some of the cancellations are for reasons unrelated to this data error and known only to the local election authority.

The Board of Elections and Department of Corrections are committed to ensuring this does not happen again. Both agencies are currently revising their data sharing agreement and matching parameters to avoid this error in future data exchanges. Upon identifying the potential problem in November 2019, the Board ceased sharing IDOC matches with local election authorities and began the process of identifying individuals who may have been affected by the error. Because Illinois allows for voter registration on Election Day and the casting of provisional ballots for those whose registration status is in question, the affected registrants would have had the opportunity to re-register and/or cast provisional ballots at their polling places if they wished to vote in an election after the error occurred.

Countywide totals are here.

* Sun-Times

It’s just the latest voter registration-related headache for the state.

Late last month, Republicans and some Democrats called for an investigation into how 545 self-identified non-citizens were mistakenly registered to vote as part of the Illinois’ automatic voter registration program. And last week, the Illinois secretary of state was told to stop allowing 16-year-olds to start the voter registration process.

Despite the series of gaffes, voters shouldn’t be concerned about the integrity of the state’s voter registration system, Dietrich said.

”The earlier issue with [automatic voter registration] has been fixed — we know that we’ve tested it we’re continuing to monitor it,” Dietrich said. “This is something that’s different, this had nothing to do with the voter registration process, it had to do with our mistake that may have led to these jurisdictions cancelling registrations who should not have had their registrations cancelled.”

  8 Comments      


Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today’s edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)

Tuesday, Feb 4, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

This post is password protected. To view it please enter your password below:

  Comments Off      


*** LIVE COVERAGE ***

Tuesday, Feb 4, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Follow along with ScribbleLive


  Comments Off      


“Illinois is going to end up with a dead child over the decision to prematurely dump all of these children in the MCO plan”

Monday, Feb 3, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* From the Cook County Public Guardian…

February 3, 2020

VIA EMAIL

Theresa Eagleson, Director
Illinois Department of Healthcare and Family Services

Marc Smith, Director
Illinois Department of Children and Family Services

Re: MCO Train Wreck

Dear Directors Eagleson and Smith:

My staff spent the day dealing with a deluge of inquiries and problems due to Illinois’ decision to precipitously dump 19,000 children into the MCO plan on Saturday despite knowing perfectly well what a train wreck it is. A few of the issues include:

    • An MCO insisting to two different sets of adoptive parents that the plan’s “member” is the child (the child of one family is 9 and the child of the other child is 2) and that the MCO can only deal directly with the member unless the member signs a power of attorney. The MCO offered to mail form powers of attorneys to the “members” to sign so that the adoptive parents could access medical care for their young children.

    • A 14-year-old adopted girl needed seizure medicine and her pharmacy wouldn’t take her card and couldn’t tell her adoptive parents where to go or what to do.

    • The two adopted children of a woman got sick over the weekend and she has been trying to take them to a doctor today but no one is taking her card and she’s been getting the runaround.

    • Adoptive parents trying to buy feeding tubes and other critical medical supplies for their adopted children.

These are just a sampling of the calls we have received today. I don’t want to be dramatic, but Illinois is going to end up with a dead child over the decision to prematurely dump all of these children in the MCO plan before all of these problems have been worked out. I implore that former youth in care be extended until April, as Illinois has already done for current youth in care.

Sincerely,

Charles P. Golbert
Public Guardian

  14 Comments      


SafeSpeed dumps Omar Maani

Monday, Feb 3, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Press release…

Following reports of his alleged involvement in criminal activity, SafeSpeed, LLC terminated Omar Maani’s ownership interest in and association with the company, Sunday, February 2. Omar Maani did not and will not receive any money from the company as part of this process. The company does not believe Omar Maani should profit in any way from his alleged criminal behavior.

Until the reporting of events related to the federal criminal investigation last week, SafeSpeed did not know about the payment of government funds totaling $70,000 by Mr. Maani to Senator Sandoval and had no knowledge of the government’s use of SafeSpeed to further its investigation. That conduct did not benefit SafeSpeed; in fact, the alleged criminality of Mr. Maani and Senator Sandoval has caused significant harm to SafeSpeed’s business and its reputation. Mr. Maani’s alleged criminal activity was done without the Company’s authority; his alleged criminal actions violate every trust the Company placed in him, and contradict and undercut the company’s important work with local municipalities to promote traffic safety and save lives.

While Mr. Maani held a minority ownership interest in SafeSpeed, he has not been active in the Company’s business’s management or operations for more than a year.

To be clear, Omar Maani’s alleged criminality does not reflect the values and integrity of SafeSpeed and its employees—the people who work hard at the company every day and are invested in its success and integrity.

SafeSpeed applauds the government for rooting out corruption. We stand resolute in our commitment to continue to serve Illinois municipalities with honesty, integrity, and a commitment to the law.

…Adding… Meant to post this and didn’t

The politically connected red-light camera company at the center of former state Sen. Martin Sandoval’s brazen bribery scheme has been hit along with Sandoval and several suburban officials with a federal racketeering lawsuit.

The lawsuit targets SafeSpeed LLC as well as Cook County Commissioner Jeff Tobolski, his chief of staff Patrick Doherty, former Oakbrook Terrace Mayor Tony Ragucci, Alsip Mayor John Ryan and Summit Mayor Sergio Rodriguez.

Other defendants include Oakbrook Terrace, former Chicago Deputy Aviation Commissioner Bill Helm, former Justice police chief Robert Gedville, Worth Township Supervisor John O’Sullivan, former state Rep. Michael Carberry, Summit Police Chief John Kosmowski and Bill Mundy, head of public works in Summit.

Finally, the lawsuit names SafeSpeed co-founders Nikki Zollar and Chris Lai, as well as SafeSpeed stakeholders Omar Maani and Khalid “Cliff” Maani.

This is the same plaintiff who is suing because he didn’t get a job at PACE allegedly because of Sandoval. The suit is here.

  14 Comments      


Protected: *** UPDATED x1 *** SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - A new twist in the Jack Franks case

Monday, Feb 3, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

This post is password protected. To view it please enter your password below:

  Comments Off      


Today’s number: $39,247,840.83

Monday, Feb 3, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Press release…

The Illinois Department of Financial and Professional Regulation has announced that statewide adult-use cannabis sales in January totaled $39,247,840.83. Dispensaries across the state sold 972,045 items over the 31-day period. Sales to Illinois residents totaled $30,611,632.22, while sales to out-of-state residents totaled $8,636,208.61. A portion of every cannabis sale will be reinvested in communities harmed most by the failed war on drugs.

“The successful launch of the Illinois’ legal cannabis industry represents new opportunities for entrepreneurs and the very communities that have historically been harmed by the failed war on drugs,” said Toi Hutchinson, Senior Advisor for Cannabis Control to Gov. Pritzker. “The administration is dedicated to providing multiple points of entry into this new industry, from dispensary owners to transporters, to ensure legalization is equitable and accessible for all Illinoisans.”

Last month, the Illinois Department of Agriculture (IDOA) released applications for cannabis infuser, craft grower and transporter licenses. The applications are available on the Department’s website here. IDOA will begin accepting completed applications on Friday, February 14 and all cannabis infuser, transporter and craft Grower applications must be submitted by 5 p.m. CST on Monday, March 16, 2020.

Social equity applicants will receive additional points on their application and are eligible to receive technical assistance, grants, low-interest loans and fee reductions and waivers. In the coming weeks, IDOA will be partnering with the Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity to provide information workshops across the state to answer questions and assist interested applicants. Additional information about the timing and location of workshops will be available in the coming days.

I decided Saturday to drop by the Joliet dispensary on a fact-finding mission on my way home from a funeral and the line was about an hour long, the place was way under-staffed and the product selection was minimal. Still, it’s finally legal and pretty much everyone in that line was just happy to be there.

* Related…

* Cannabis Resource Fair attendees reflect on 1st month of legal weed: ‘The bar set here is tremendous’: Mayor Lori Lightfoot kicked off the fair in a key-note panel discussion with State Rep. Kelly Cassidy (D-Chicago), who sponsored the Cannabis Regulation and Tax Act, and Wanda James, founder and CEO of Simply Pure Dispensary, the nation’s first black-owned marijuana dispensary.

* Marijuana shortages aren’t a coincidence. Illinois kept the market small on purpose.

* ‘Everybody’s friendly, everybody’s high’: Marijuana tour buses begin rolling in Chicago, with a stop at a private bring-your-own smoking lounge

* Homewood’s marijuana dispensary is popular with Indiana customers, who say they aren’t worried about the return trip home

  21 Comments      


6 More Weeks of Trump Lies

Monday, Feb 3, 2020 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Yesterday was Groundhogs Day. While Punxsutawney Phil could not find his shadow - let’s make sure President Trump does, and send him back to Mar-a-Lago permanently in November.

Trump is a pathological liar who lies about everything: his fake hair, his obesity, and his spray-on tan.

Mike is focused on the issues: gun safety, health care and the environment.

While Trump tried to distract America on cable news, Mike was in El Paso, Denver, Phoenix and Los Angeles releasing plans on immigration, tax reform and housing.

While Trump rigs his impeachment trial, Mike got endorsed by 20 Mayors from Washington, DC to Santa Fe, Congressmen from Chicago to San Diego and Utah, and celebs like Tim Gunn, Dhani Jones and Judge Judy — and Mike is gaining in the polls.

Learn more at: mikebloomberg.com

  Comments Off      


Open thread

Monday, Feb 3, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* I’m giving a speech at noon and then I have some errands to run. Please be nice to each other and keep the conversation Illinois-centric. Thanks.

  43 Comments      


If only reality was this simple

Monday, Feb 3, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Crain’s editorial

The most glaring omission in the governor’s address, however, was the state’s overwhelming pension underfunding crisis—an exclusion that had pundits straining to find new ways to describe the avoidance of uncomfortable conversations without invoking the proverbial elephant or gorilla in the room. To be fair, Pritzker did nod to passage of a bill last year to allow police and fire pensions outside Chicago to consolidate statewide, but the savings that will result will be nowhere near enough to fill the shortfall in the state’s public employee pensions.

What the governor apparently would rather not discuss is the need for real, structural tax reform to put the state on a path toward actuarially sound financial terrain. Pols at the Capitol and in Chicago’s City Hall want us to believe budget salvation lies in sin taxes on gambling and pot. But an agreement between the Lightfoot administration and Springfield on the best way to divvy up casino revenue and licenses has been elusive, to put it charitably. Meanwhile, the legalization of the marijuana market, with its high taxes and low supply, seems to have done more to drive pot buyers into the arms of black market purveyors than to raise a meaningful and reliable revenue stream. And yet, even if these two new taxing opportunities had been rolled out to perfection, they wouldn’t come close to being enough to fill the pension hole, which widened $3.8 billion to reach $137.3 billion at the end of fiscal 2019.

What Illinois needs even more than an intelligently functioning marijuana market and an amicable arrangement on casino revenue is a constitutional amendment allowing the state to undo the automatic cost-of-living hikes built into public pensioners’ plans—the ones that exceed the actual cost of living and are causing our debt to spiral ever upward.

The graduated income tax proposal that forms the basis of so many of Pritzker’s plans requires a constitutional amendment—creating an opening to push through a pension fix at the same time. Pritzker won’t walk through that door, no doubt because the unions that helped him win office wouldn’t like it much. But the responsibility Pritzker won was to represent the interests of all Illinoisans, not just those who carry a union card.

The governor is not a dictator. He cannot simply command legislators to do his bidding. We had three populist governors in a row who tried that route and they all failed to one extent or another.

Cutting off their paychecks didn’t work (both times it was tried), holding up a state budget for two years didn’t work, saying members were spending state money like “drunken sailors” didn’t work, threatening to finance primary opponents didn’t work (both times). He has pro-union Democratic super-majorities in both chambers and a sizable chunk of the Republican caucuses wouldn’t go anywhere near a constitutional amendment. And there is some doubt whether it could even pass muster with the voters if it got that far.

By all means, keep pounding on the guy if you want. It’s a free country. Just recognize that there’s only so much a governor can do. Even this one.

  37 Comments      


What really is “fair”?

Monday, Feb 3, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Tribune editorial

As corruption scandals worm through the establishment Democratic Party, Gov. J.B. Pritzker finds himself with new and unexpected leverage. He can push for meaningful ethics reform in Illinois government by removing the barricades his own party’s leaders erected in the past. Those Democrats are wounded. He is not.

So will he lead on real reform?

“Restoring the public’s trust is of paramount importance,” Pritzker said during last week’s State of the State address while his two chamber leaders — House Speaker Michael Madigan and Senate President Don Harmon — stood at the dais behind him. “Let’s not let the well-connected and well-protected work the system while the interests of ordinary citizens are forgotten. There is too much that needs to be accomplished to lift up all the people of Illinois.”

That effort starts with drawing a fair map of legislative districts after this year’s federal census. It could happen through constitutional change.

Pritzker said as a candidate for governor he supported amending the Illinois Constitution to take the process out of the hands of lawmakers: “We should amend the constitution to create an independent commission to draw legislative maps.” More recently, he said he would not sign into law an unfair map.

He issued the veto pledge around the same time, but whatevs. And fair maps could also happen with a state law: 60-30-1 is a lot easier than 71-36.

* Crain’s editorial

Another hot topic that must have been cut from the final draft of Pritzker’s speech: remap reform, a subject that must be aired out as lawmakers prepare to redraw legislative and congressional districts after this year’s national census. Will the governor demand fair maps that give all Illinoisans a say in the state’s business no matter where they live? He missed an opportunity to call on the General Assembly to make it so.

The fairest map imaginable will not elect Republican legislators in hardcore Democratic areas nor will it elect Democrats in overwhelmingly Republican turf (2018 saw a major, if perhaps temporary, shift in voters’ party orientation, not in the maps).

What a fair map would do is make sure that legislators aren’t choosing their voters. Legislators may have large, extended family in certain parts of their districts and they may want those folks in their redrawn districts. They may have represented one area of the district as a mayor or township supervisor or whatever, or they may have a business in a town or are active in a local church or school district and they’ll want those folks who know them well in their new districts. Or they might see an up and comer and want that person mapped out of their districts. Right now, incumbents draw the maps, so they have an unfair advantage over any potential challenger (primary or general) who does not draw those maps. A fair map system would level that particular playing field.

Probably above all else, legislators also want their residences to remain within their districts. A blindly drawn map wouldn’t necessarily take that into account.

* Eric Zorn

One definition of a politically “fair” map is one that results in a balance of power in the state legislature and the U.S. congressional delegation that reflects the partisan divide in that state. If roughly 55% of voters in any state are Democrats, then roughly 55% of the seats should be won by Democratic candidates, for example.

Easier said than done. Mapmakers have to take into account civil rights laws that guarantee majority-minority districts, and they often strive to keep natural communities of interest together. Even those with the purest of motives can end up drawing crazily shaped districts that may or may not seem “fair” to certain constituencies or governors.

But if it could be done in Illinois to be fair to Republicans, should it? Those who study the issue of gerrymandering estimate that, nationwide, the current political maps give the Republican Party at least 20 more seats in Congress than their actual voting strength ought to give them. Research published in 2017 showed North Carolina had three more Republican seats in Congress than it should if the state delegation mirrored the electorate. Republicans in Michigan had two more seats than they deserved.

Meanwhile, Illinois had one more Democratic seat than a “fair” map would yield.

The Democrats have since picked up two more congressional seats, but those were won in districts that were considered pretty darned Republican when they were drawn.

In other words, yes, we are most definitely gerrymandered here. But that doesn’t necessarily mean that the Democrats have given themselves an egregious partisan advantage. As Senate President Don Harmon recently noted, “Gov. Rauner won 35 or so Senate [districts]” in 2014. There are several seats the Republicans could very well be expected to pick up this year if they weren’t facing such strong DC headwinds. This is politics. Them’s the breaks.

  25 Comments      


Money reports

Monday, Feb 3, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Lynn Sweet

In the biggest Chicago-area Democratic primary, embattled Rep. Dan Lipinski, D-Ill., enters the final weeks of the 3rd Congressional District campaign with more cash-on-hand than chief rivals Marie Newman and Rush Darwish.

And in the major Republican primary in the Chicago region, the willingness of state Sen. Jim Oberweis, R-Sugar Grove, to self-finance his bid — he’s put in $1 million so far — puts him ahead of his key competitors in the seven-way contest for the 14th Congressional District seat held by freshman Rep. Lauren Underwood, D-Ill.

His main competition, state Sen. Sue Rezin, R-Morris, and Ted Gradel, a Naperville businessman, also made substantial loans to their bids. They each outraised Oberweis in the last quarter of 2019.

Rep. Raja Krishnamoorthi, D-Ill., is the Illinois House fundraising champion, and he faces only nominal primary opposition and no Republican opponent. He has stockpiled a stunning $6,895,927 in campaign cash — more than twice than Rep. Bill Foster, D-Ill., who ranks second with $3,330,558 cash on hand.

* Ted Slowik

For the three-month period ending Sept. 30, Lipinski reported donations of $176,741, expenses of $191,690 and a balance of $693,088. Newman reported donations of $345,640, expenses of $183,278 and a balance of $514,237. Darwish reported receipts of $210,779, expenses of $83,943 and a balance of $318,113.

* Shia Kapos

13th District: Democrat Betsy Dirksen Londrigen out-raised incumbent GOP Rep. Rodney Davis in Q4 2019. Londrigan took in $531,090 and is holding $1.14 million heading into a Dem primary against little-known Stefanie Smith. Davis raised $360,937 and has $1.1 million cash on hand. […]

14th District: Democratic Rep. Lauren Underwood raised $878,087 in Q4 and has $1.7 million in the bank. There are three leading GOP candidates in the money race: state Sen. Jim Oberweis raised $726,209 and has $1.1 million COH; Ted Gradel raised $269,650 and has $649,126 COH; and state Sen. Sue Rezin raised $217,074 and has $329,389 COH. Four other GOP candidates lag behind, each holding under $40,000.

6th District: Dem. Rep. Sean Casten has $1.9 million COH after raising $639,054 in Q4 2019. He’s awaiting the outcome of the GOP primary between Jeanne Ives and Jay Kinzler. Ives raised $267,997 in Q4 and has $313,366 COH. Kinzler raised $150,903 and has $145,534 COH.

Thoughts?

…Adding… Press release…

With just 43 days before the Illinois primary, conservative Darren Duncan has shown himself to be the clear frontrunner in the race to replace incumbent Congressman John Shimkus.

As Federal Election Commission fundraising reports were filed Friday, Duncan showed immense strength, even though he had a three month delay on Mary Miller raising money and putting together an operation. Duncan closed the end of the year with over $200,000 cash on hand, while Miller’s campaign showed about $100,000.

Miller has tried to portray herself as a fundraising juggernaut in the initial months of her campaign, but it appears much of her rhetoric was inflated. Of Miller’s roughly $100,000 cash on hand, almost $60,000 of it, more than half, is earmarked for the General Election. That means she can’t touch it without the risk of having to pay it back if she loses the primary.

None of Darren Duncan’s Q4 contributions were earmarked for November, meaning every dollar in his campaign account is accessible before March 17.

Duncan has amassed tens of thousands of views on his first web ad, “He’ll Help Trump,” and will be on the air beginning Tuesday.

Since entering the race, Duncan has put together a district-wide operation and has positioned himself as the conservative candidate who will help Donald Trump pass a conservative agenda in Washington.

A seventh-generation farmer, Duncan was endorsed by former House Agriculture Committee Chairman Mike Conaway and the Rural America Counts PAC, chaired by Arkansas Republican Congressman Rick Crawford. He’ll be rolling out high profile local endorsements in the coming days.

The clock is ticking to March 17 and Darren Duncan has shown himself to be the frontrunner for Congress.

  13 Comments      


Somebody’s always gotta be a downer

Monday, Feb 3, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* The BGA fact-checks the governor’s State of the State address

Pritzker said “over the past year, Illinois has reduced its unemployment rate more than all of the top 20 most populated states in the nation — and more than our Midwestern peers.”

Federal data back that up. However, the differences between those states’ reductions are minimal, and Illinois’ unemployment rate remains higher than 12 of the states included in that comparison.

We rate his claim Mostly True.

Read the rest for the details if you so desire.

…Adding… University of Illinois…

The U of I Flash Index began the new year with a slight decline in January, falling to 105.4 from its 105.6 reading in December.

The index remains in the narrow range it has occupied the last 18 months. “This reflects the now-familiar story of both the national and Illinois economies continued growth at a moderate, steady rate,” said University of Illinois economist J. Fred Giertz, who compiles the monthly index for the Institute of Government and Public Affairs. An index reading above 100 denotes growth.

The recently-released fourth-quarter GDP growth rate shows a return to the near 2 percent level that has seems to be the new norm with 2.1 percent, 2.1 percent, and 2.0 percent registered respectively for the last three quarters. “On a positive note, this is actually good news compared with recession fears raised mid-year in 2019,” Giertz said.

The Illinois employment rate fell to 3.7 percent, the lowest in more than 50 years and only two-tenths of a percentage point above the national level.

Two components of the index, the corporate and individual income tax receipts, declined. Sales tax receipts increased slightly compared with the same month last year after adjusting for inflation. The lower corporate receipts may be a response to strong revenues over the last quarter of 2019.

…Adding… Press release

State Representatives Tom Demmer (R-Dixon) and Jeff Keicher (R-Sycamore) issued the following statement today upon the announcement that the Ferrara Candy Company will move into a new 1.6 million-square-foot distribution center in the ChicagoWest Business Center near Interstate 88 by the end of 2020:

“Today’s announcement from Ferrara brings a significant investment of 1,000 new jobs that will boost our local economy in the DeKalb region, with 500 new jobs in the first phase alone. We have both said that creating jobs is one of our top priorities. As part of the bipartisan state budget and capital bill approved by the General Assembly last year, we were able to enact pro-business reforms that will lay the groundwork for thousands of new jobs for years to come. Specifically, these reforms included the creation of the Blue Collar Jobs Act to attract large-scale construction; reinstatement of the Manufacturer’s Purchase Credit to encourage further investments in manufacturing in Illinois; and elimination of the Franchise Tax. Passage of these pro-business reforms made it possible for DeKalb to land Ferrara to the ChicagoWest Business Center, and the capital bill secured the funding necessary to prepare the site for such a large investment.

  38 Comments      


Audit: State elections board not ready for disaster

Monday, Feb 3, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Hannah Meisel at the Daily Line

The third-party audit certified by Auditor General Frank Mautino found the [State Board of Elections] had not adequately protected confidential or personal information “most susceptible to attack.”

“The lack of adequate cybersecurity programs and practices could result in unidentified risk and vulnerabilities and ultimately lead to the Board’s volumes of personal information being susceptible to cyber-attacks and unauthorized disclosure,” according to the audit.

The audit’s finding comes after Russian intelligence officers tried to hack into Illinois’ voter registration database in the run up to the 2016 presidential election.

The hackers accessed at least 76,000 voters’ data, but were unable to change voter information data, according to Illinois officials. An indictment obtained by former special counsel Robert Mueller alleged that two officers of the Kremlin’s Main Intelligence Directorate stole voter data from Illinois.

The Elections Board lacks “an adequately documented and tested disaster recovery plan” according to the audit.

The audit is here.

  3 Comments      


Pritzker added to township suit

Monday, Feb 3, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Northwest Herald

McHenry and Nunda Township Road District officials have named Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker in a lawsuit challenging a decision to afford voters to right to eliminate townships.

Pritzker signed a law in August allowing McHenry County voters to dissolve the area’s 17 townships through referendum. The new law is an initiative to reduce property taxes in McHenry County by reducing levels of government. If a township is dissolved, its operations, property and employees would be transferred to the county government. The option to eliminate both McHenry and Nunda Townships will appear on the March ballot, but the townships road districts’ officials have questioned whether the law is constitutional. […]

McHenry Township Highway Commissioner James Condon agreed that the law’s specificity to McHenry County means that it is “special legislation,” and therefore in violation of the Illinois constitution.

“It’s our understanding that the constitution doesn’t allow you to write a law that is specific to one group when that same law can be applied to all groups, in other words, to the whole state,” Condon said. “And the law they wrote, they apply only to McHenry County. So they’re singling McHenry County out.”

State Rep. David McSweeney, R-Barrington Hills, introduced the bill, which was signed into law in August. Reached by phone Friday, McSweeney wasn’t concerned about the road districts’ amended lawsuit, calling it “a complete waste of time.”

* From the Constitution

The General Assembly shall pass no special or local law when a general law is or can be made applicable. Whether a general law is or can be made applicable shall be a matter for judicial determination.

This is a standard pilot project, so I’m figuring it’ll be fine with the courts. We shall see.

  18 Comments      


Rate Mary Miller’s new ad

Monday, Feb 3, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Yesterday afternoon press release…

Mary Miller, Candidate for Congress in the 15th District, will debut her first television spot to coincide with the Super Bowl.

The ad highlights Miller’s support for President Donald Trump, religious freedom and the recent Illinois Farm Bureau ACTIVATOR endorsement.

The ad will debut in conjunction with the Super Bowl and will also run during the State of the Union Address.

Miller (no relation that I know of) is embroiled in a four-way GOP primary race to replace retiring GOP US Rep. John Shimkus. President Trump won this district by 45.5 percentage points in 2016. She is married to Rep. Chris Miller, an Eastern Bloc member. I do not know how much money she has behind this spot.

* The ad

* Script

I’m Mary Miller. My husband and I run a grain and cattle farm. But the crop I’m most proud of are our seven children, who grew up to be strong, Trump-loving Christian conservatives.

Today, Democrats are turning freedom of religion into freedom from religion, degrading our Christian values and our way of life. That’s why I’m running for Congress.

I’ll put an end to godless socialism, defend the unborn and support President Trump’s America First agenda.

I’m Mary Miller and I approve this message

  72 Comments      


“A battle unlike anything else”

Monday, Feb 3, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* My Crain’s Chicago Business column

Senate President Don Harmon, D-Oak Park, was elected to the Senate’s top job on Jan. 19. The election was preceded by two months of constant intrigue, horse-trading, betrayal and plenty of angry finger-pointing.

Along the way, egos were bruised, friendships and alliances were torn, and careers were damaged.

Harmon’s predecessor, John Cullerton, was the Senate president for 11 years before he abruptly announced his retirement in November. Michael Madigan became the Illinois House Speaker in 1983 and, except for two years after the 1994 national Republican landslide, he’s ruled his chamber ever since. He’s served with five different Senate presidents and is the longest-serving legislative leader in American history.

Madigan has chaired the Democratic Party of Illinois for 22 years after he took command from his former protege and chief of staff, Gary LaPaille. Madigan has been the Democratic committeeman for Chicago’s 13th Ward since 1969. He is, by many measures, the most successful politician in state history.

Madigan takes care of his House members similarly to how he would treat a family member, maybe better. Everything they need, from jobs to sports tickets to getting their relatives out of trouble, is done for them. He routinely raises more than $30 million every campaign cycle to keep his members in office and defeat Republican incumbents.

He has, in other words, made himself irreplaceable to his members.

But after watching the Senate Democrats slug it out among themselves, I started wondering what replacing Speaker Madigan might look like.

Go read the rest before commenting, please. Thanks.

  21 Comments      


Unsolicited advice

Monday, Feb 3, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* My weekly syndicated newspaper column

“It’s hard for me to swallow how [people] make so much off of you. Right? And I gotta do the work.”

That’s from the July 31, 2018 federal surveillance of now-former state Sen. Martin Sandoval (D-Chicago) complaining, according to media reports, to one of the founders of the red-light camera company SafeSpeed. Sandoval was bemoaning how he was killing and passing bills on the company’s behalf while watching other people make bank off the red-light cam industry.

This was, apparently, not new behavior for Sandoval. “I usually say, ‘What’s reasonable? You tell me,” Sandoval told the SafeSpeed official when discussing what his bribe would be. He was obviously practiced at shaking people down and ended up demanding $5,000 a month.

His plea deal claims he took $70,000 from the SafeSpeed official (the money was supplied by the government). Overall, though, Sandoval “accepted over $250,000 in bribes as part of criminal activity that involved more than five participants.”

Well, at least we now know how Sandoval could afford the expensive suits he always wore.

The feds may have had Sandoval under surveillance since at least August 16, 2017, when they apparently recorded a phone conversation with the SafeSpeed official about the company’s annual $10,000 campaign contribution.

The feds raided Sandoval’s Statehouse office two years later, in late September of 2019. They seized $3,000 in cash that day and another $18K a few weeks later.

Sandoval has agreed to cooperate in full, meaning all those folks he shook down, or who eagerly ponied up cash to get something done or who profited with him on villainous schemes probably haven’t been sleeping well.

He was the longtime chairman of the Transportation Committee, so it’s assumed Sandoval will be giving up road-building industry types. His federal search warrant mentioned several other types of companies and individuals, including video gaming and sweepstakes businesses.

His plea agreement notes that Sandoval “also engaged in corrupt activities with other public officials.” So, we can expect him to roll over on whoever those folks may be. I assume we can start with some of the local officials whose offices were raided right around the same time as Sandoval’s was searched.

Sandoval was a brazenly greedy bully who specialized in intimidating people who needed something from their government.

His annual golf fundraiser, which was a must-attend for anyone who needed something from him, had grown to lavish excess. And last August, the event wound up attracting unfavorable national news coverage when photos emerged of a server “shooting” someone wearing a Donald Trump mask with a tequila gun. It’s probably no surprise that some of the people who helped Sandoval run that gaudy fundraiser are also under federal scrutiny.

But maybe Sandoval can finally do some good for his state (and himself, by reducing his prison sentence) by helping weed out the people who prefer to take the short-cut of illegal cash rather than doing the real work usually required to get things done.

Also, here’s a little bit of unsolicited advice: If you’re a legislator or a local government official and you’re starting to become envious of the people around you who are making a lot of money, please quit your job right away. Go be a lobbyist or something. Or stop hanging out with rich people.

I’ve seen this happen over and over again and it never ends well. Save yourself the trouble and get out now. There’s nothing inherently wrong with wanting to better one’s financial situation. But if you can’t do it honestly then you’re heading for disaster. You will be caught. Heck, you may already be caught and don’t even know it, like Sandoval was for two years.

Just go away.

And the leaders have to stop enabling these people. It was no big surprise when Sandoval was busted. Yet, Senate President John Cullerton routinely assigned red-light camera regulation bills to Sandoval’s committee knowing exactly what he would do with them, and also put Sandoval in charge of the massive infrastructure bill last year.

And House Speaker Michael Madigan created a new appropriations committee especially for now-former Rep. Luis Arroyo to oversee the capital plan’s formation. That’s like giving a gas can to a pyromaniac. Arroyo (D-Chicago) was arrested last year for bribery.

Yes, the people of their districts elected them, but the leaders do not have to continually enable their worst clowns.

  12 Comments      


Good morning!

Monday, Feb 3, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Wut

  8 Comments      


Protected: *** UPDATED x1 *** SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today’s edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)

Monday, Feb 3, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

This post is password protected. To view it please enter your password below:

  Comments Off      


*** LIVE COVERAGE ***

Monday, Feb 3, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Follow along with ScribbleLive


  Comments Off      


« NEWER POSTS PREVIOUS POSTS »
* SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Another supplement to today’s edition
* Isabel’s afternoon roundup
* Question of the day
* No, the mayor did not help pass the actual EBF bill
* Mayor Johnson announces school board appointments
* Roundup: Jury selection to begin Tuesday in Madigan’s corruption trial
* DPI down-ballot focus continues with county-level races
* Showcasing The Retailers Who Make Illinois Work
* Open thread
* Isabel’s morning briefing
* SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition
* SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today's edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)
* Live coverage
* Selected press releases (Live updates)
* Sunday roundup: Rep. Williams says no takeover; 'Guardrail' bill floated; More alderpersons sign letter; Biz weighs in; CTU president claims city pays the bills for 'every municipality in this state'; Progressive Caucus supports letter
* News coverage roundup: Entire Chicago Board of Education to resign (Updated x2)
* Yesterday's stories

Support CapitolFax.com
Visit our advertisers...

...............

...............

...............

...............

...............

...............


Loading


Main Menu
Home
Illinois
YouTube
Pundit rankings
Obama
Subscriber Content
Durbin
Burris
Blagojevich Trial
Advertising
Updated Posts
Polls

Archives
October 2024
September 2024
August 2024
July 2024
June 2024
May 2024
April 2024
March 2024
February 2024
January 2024
December 2023
November 2023
October 2023
September 2023
August 2023
July 2023
June 2023
May 2023
April 2023
March 2023
February 2023
January 2023
December 2022
November 2022
October 2022
September 2022
August 2022
July 2022
June 2022
May 2022
April 2022
March 2022
February 2022
January 2022
December 2021
November 2021
October 2021
September 2021
August 2021
July 2021
June 2021
May 2021
April 2021
March 2021
February 2021
January 2021
December 2020
November 2020
October 2020
September 2020
August 2020
July 2020
June 2020
May 2020
April 2020
March 2020
February 2020
January 2020
December 2019
November 2019
October 2019
September 2019
August 2019
July 2019
June 2019
May 2019
April 2019
March 2019
February 2019
January 2019
December 2018
November 2018
October 2018
September 2018
August 2018
July 2018
June 2018
May 2018
April 2018
March 2018
February 2018
January 2018
December 2017
November 2017
October 2017
September 2017
August 2017
July 2017
June 2017
May 2017
April 2017
March 2017
February 2017
January 2017
December 2016
November 2016
October 2016
September 2016
August 2016
July 2016
June 2016
May 2016
April 2016
March 2016
February 2016
January 2016
December 2015
November 2015
October 2015
September 2015
August 2015
July 2015
June 2015
May 2015
April 2015
March 2015
February 2015
January 2015
December 2014
November 2014
October 2014
September 2014
August 2014
July 2014
June 2014
May 2014
April 2014
March 2014
February 2014
January 2014
December 2013
November 2013
October 2013
September 2013
August 2013
July 2013
June 2013
May 2013
April 2013
March 2013
February 2013
January 2013
December 2012
November 2012
October 2012
September 2012
August 2012
July 2012
June 2012
May 2012
April 2012
March 2012
February 2012
January 2012
December 2011
November 2011
October 2011
September 2011
August 2011
July 2011
June 2011
May 2011
April 2011
March 2011
February 2011
January 2011
December 2010
November 2010
October 2010
September 2010
August 2010
July 2010
June 2010
May 2010
April 2010
March 2010
February 2010
January 2010
December 2009
November 2009
October 2009
September 2009
August 2009
July 2009
June 2009
May 2009
April 2009
March 2009
February 2009
January 2009
December 2008
November 2008
October 2008
September 2008
August 2008
July 2008
June 2008
May 2008
April 2008
March 2008
February 2008
January 2008
December 2007
November 2007
October 2007
September 2007
August 2007
July 2007
June 2007
May 2007
April 2007
March 2007
February 2007
January 2007
December 2006
November 2006
October 2006
September 2006
August 2006
July 2006
June 2006
May 2006
April 2006
March 2006
February 2006
January 2006
December 2005
April 2005
March 2005
February 2005
January 2005
December 2004
November 2004
October 2004

Blog*Spot Archives
November 2005
October 2005
September 2005
August 2005
July 2005
June 2005
May 2005

Syndication

RSS Feed 2.0
Comments RSS 2.0




Hosted by MCS SUBSCRIBE to Capitol Fax Advertise Here Mobile Version Contact Rich Miller