* Dana Milbank of the Washington Post in in St. Louis for tonight’s vice presidential debate. Milbank kicked off a live online chat this afternoon with some characteristic wit…
I feel my arrival here has enhanced my domestic policy experience.
It certainly does, because our next door neighbors here are other states. They’re next to the state that I am in.
Missouri has a very narrow maritime border between another state, Illinois, and on our other side, the land boundary that we have with Kansas. We have trade missions back and forth. We do.
It’s very important when you consider even national security issues with Illinois as Governor Blagojevich rears his head and comes into the airspace of Missouri. Where– where do they go? It’s Missouri. It’s just right over the border. It is from Missouri that we send those out to make sure that an eye is being kept on this very powerful state, Illinois, because they are right there. They are right next to– to our state.
I, myself, have been a strong proponent of going to war with Missouri and seizing territory at least as far west as University City, or perhaps out to the western suburban riverboats. Milbank’s fears are not unfounded.
* This is a vice presidential debate open thread, or you can use it to discuss pending war plans with the Show-Me State. Either way is fine, but, as always, try your very best to keep those stupid DC talking points out of the discussion, please. We like to think we’re better than the rest, so let’s prove it. Thanks.
* Attorney General Lisa Madigan ought to be ashamed of herself today. Her office tried and failed yesterday to convince a Cook County judge to keep the constitutional convention ballot question as originally written. The judge, as I told you yesterday, flat-out nixed that idea, ruling the question and a ballot instruction unconstitutional. As a refresher, here’s the question in, um, question…
In 1988 the electors rejected the call for a constitutional convention, with 75 percent voting against calling a convention and 25 percent voting in favor of calling a convention.
That’s clearly leading language and a completely unnecessary addition. But Madigan’s office argued that it was just fine and dandy.
[Judge Howse] ought to have lowered the lights in his 17th-floor courtroom and issued the attorneys flashlights to hold under their chins to illuminate their faces as they outlined the horrors they said would result from efforts to remedy the problem.
“You’ll be putting the presidential election at risk,” Assistant Atty. Gen. Thomas Ioppolo said. “You’re going to be disenfranchising people. We cannot blow up the whole election over this.”
Ballots already are printed. Absentee ballots already are in the mail. Voting systems vary in Illinois’ 102 counties, and making systemwide changes would pose insurmountable printing and computer programming challenges.
What about creating a new, separate paper ballot with appropriate wording?
“There are too many quality-control issues,” Ioppolo said. “Too many problems. Too much risk. The election judges haven’t been trained. You’re going to have confusion.”
At one point, he said, “I am shouting the sky is falling because maybe it will be falling.”
Please.
So, this is how Lisa Madigan wants to kick off her 2010 gubernatorial campaign? Blatant fearmongering for the powers that be?
The AFL-CIO is part of the Alliance to Protect the Illinois Constitution, which is organizing against Con-Con and had $224,871 in the bank as of June 30.
While the economic downturn may prevent the Alliance from hitting their original fundraising targets, Drea says there will be “plenty of money” to carry out an effective campaign. What does that mean? They’ll hit lots of union and editorial board meetings and also take out print ads in newspapers and bulletins.
“I think there will be some ads. I don’t think you'’re going to see us on network television in Chicago. I’d be surprised to see us on TV downstate,” he said. [emphasis added]
TV ads move voters. Period. The Alliance may go on cable, but it’s hard to tell from that quote. Cable ads are just as good as the nets for targeted campaigns. We’ll see. Downstate polling shows lots more opposition to the con-con there, so maybe that’s why they won’t bother running ads in the region.
But this is certainly an opening for the proponents.
In an unusually candid interview, a top official for the largest union backing Obama said that internal union polling shows that the race remains much more volatile and fluid in key battleground states than public polling suggests. He warned that low-information swing-state voters are saying they still don’t have a firm enough grasp on Obama’s life-story, character and record for the Illinois Senator to close the deal with them. […]
“This election remains extremely volatile in the battlegrounds,” [AFL-CIO deputy political director Mike Podhorzer] told us. “The public polls are giving a false sense of precision about where the race is. That’s a story that’s not really being told.”
Strikingly, Podhorzer said that his union’s internal polls — which push voters hard on the question of whether people are really firmly committed to their pick — show that as many as “15 to 20 percent” of battleground state voters remain “persuadable,” as he put it, despite what public polls say about the level of undecided voters.
“There are more voters than you’d expect who are just starting to pay attention to the election,” he said. “And there’s a lot of room for people to go back and forth.” […]
“Low information voters who haven’t been following this don’t know very much about Obama, in a way that might be different from other elections,” he said. “Voters are saying, `I really don’t want another four years of this, but I don’t know much about him.”
FBI agents met with Will County Auditor Stephen Weber for two hours Wednesday morning regarding an investigation the auditor initiated into a countywide office, the Tribune has learned. […]
Sources say the investigation centers on Will County Executive Larry Walsh’s office. Walsh, who faces Joliet businessman Dan Kennison in the November election, was outraged by rumors that investigators were looking into whether one of his employees was improperly accepting payments from a lobbying firm hired by the county.
Walsh, a Democrat, blamed the accusations on gutter politics. Weber is a Republican who also faces a November challenger, Democrat Kevin Duffy Blackburn.
Walsh has been prominently featured in some of Obama’s TV ads during the presidential campaign.
At 9:45 a.m., Chicago agent Joseph Basile and another man walked into the offices of Will County Auditor Steve Weber. They walked back out again just after 11 a.m. […]
“If you are insinuating that [chief of staff Matt Ryan] is receiving some kind of monetary reimbursement from them, I find that totally preposterous,” Walsh said.
The lobbying firm has secured quite a bit of federal funding for the county, including money to clean up and modernize the water and sewer system in Joliet Township’s Ridgewood neighborhood; to do engineering work at 143rd Street and Interstate 355; and to add laptop computers to the squad cars driven by Will County police. […]
“I have never received one nickel of compensation from anyone, including Mr. Smith, since I have been a county employee,” Ryan said.
Walsh is up for reelection, so this could just be a political game. But the timing isn’t just bad for Walsh, it’s bad for Obama.
Please remember our rule forbidding the use of mindless DC talking points in the comment section. They’ll just be deleted anyway, so you might as well come up with something original to begin with. Thanks.
Presented with a certificate from Gov. Rod Blagojevich for her 100th birthday, Skokie resident Sally Lerner, looking as vital as ever, had this to say:
“That’s very nice. I don’t like some of the stuff he does, but OK.”
In the dark of night between Thursday and Friday, an anonymous citizen, or group of citizens, made a bold statement concerning Gov. Rod Blagojevich’s current plans to shut down or cut open hours for many of Illinois’ historical sites.
Julia Dent Grant, the proud statue next to the [Ulysses S Grant] home, was discovered on Friday morning with a bandage around her head, cotton up her nose, her arm in a makeshift sling. On her pedestal was taped a sign that read, “Thanks Gov’ner.”
* Some citizens were not so successful at expressing their displeasure, perhaps because they overreached…
Although she is disappointed Oprah Winfrey and Lt. Gov. Pat Quinn won’t attend the Save the Park Rally on Saturday at Gebhard Woods State Park, rally organizer Rachel Pfaff says it is not going to stop her or the community from fighting to keep the parks open.
Gov. Rod Blagojevich announced in August that 11 state parks and 13 historic sites would be closed to accommodate the state’s deficit. The Senate voted last week to take $221 million from dedicated accounts to restore funds to save the parks and human service programs.
The bills to dedicate and appropriate the funds are going through the process to hit the governor’s desk for approval, changes or veto.
“It still has to go on. We still have to fight this fight,” Pfaff said.
That hug between [Speaker] Madigan and Blagojevich at the Democratic National Convention? No doubt Madigan took a Silkwood shower afterward.
* And on a day when no new stories about the sped-up federal investigation of the governor were published, Tony Rezko was back in the news…
A federal judge on Wednesday froze more than $100,000 belonging to Antoin “Tony” Rezko, saying the money may be needed if she orders the prominent political fundraiser to forfeit a big chunk of his assets as punishment for masterminding political corruption.
“There is a substantial probability that the United States will prevail in its request for entry of a money judgment against the defendant,” U.S. District Judge Amy J. St. Eve, who presided at Rezko’s trial, said in her order freezing the money.
* And a former deputy chief of staff who is now running for congress, Jill Morgenthaler, wasn’t exactly heaping praise on the guy at the Tribune editorial meeting this week…
Morgenthaler said Blagojevich “has been good in some areas and bad in other areas.”
Civil wars drown even innocent bystanders in brotherly bloodshed. So before Chicago’s outer suburbs place orders for cannons, before inner-ring communities float a navy, let’s all chill and take a fresh look at Canadian National Railway Co.’s offer to buy the underused Elgin, Joliet & Eastern Railway.
In just a few years, Mayor Daley’s wife has built one of the fastest-growing charities in Illinois.
The charity — After School Matters — has seen its revenues soar 243 percent from 2003 to 2006, from $5.3 million to $18.2 million, according to the latest reports it’s filed with the Internal Revenue Service. […]
The charity gets donations from city contractors who can no longer give money to Mayor Daley’s campaign fund as a result of the reforms he imposed three years ago in the wake of the Hired Truck scandal.
* City expected to ban driving while texting - Web surfers would be fined $75, too
Distracted driving has come a long way in the 95 years since the invention of windshield wipers prompted fears that drivers would be “hypnotized” by the back-and-forth motion.
* Planned Parenthood marks 1 year in Aurora amid controversy - Supporters, opponents of clinic claim successes; protests continue near its doors
“This group has invested a lot of money. They’re gonna want to maximize that investment. It’s gonna be up to me to see how many flights they’re talking about. That’s why the soundproofing is so important. That’s very important to me and my consituents,” Zalewski said.
Chicago taxicab fares will be going up in 2009 for the first time in four years, but not because cabbies are threatening to “paralyze the city” if they don’t get an increase, a top mayoral aide said Wednesday.
Consumer Services Commissioner Norma Reyes said she’s sympathetic to the United Taxidrivers Community Council’s request for a 16 percent fare increase.
* Ex-Lake County chief judge must stand trial on DUI charge, court rules - Judge says police had cause to stop David Hall, who resigned after being arrested in April
James Munger ran the Garrick Restaurant in the Loop for 20 years and helped start an association that harnesses the buying power of hundreds of Greek restaurateurs in the Chicago area.
Mr. Munger, 82, died Tuesday, Sept. 30, of complications from leukemia at his Deerfield home, said his son Andrew.
* Tropicana Field: Orange-ja glad you’re not there?
* 4:39 pm - At last check, the court battle over the wording of the constitutional convention referendum question is still going on. They’ve been at it for three hours. The judge in the case has told both sides he will rule on a motion to dismiss at 4:40 pm this afternoon, so check back.
They’ve gone back and forth on the various issues all afternoon, so there could be more rulings fairly soon if the suit isn’t dismissed.
The plaintiffs (Chicago Bar Association, Lt. Gov. Quinn, etc.) have proposed a remedy that would involve printing a paper ballot that would just have the con-con question on it, in addition to the already printed ballots.
* 5:04 pm - Text message from a reporter friend on the scene…
Cook County judge just ruled the con-con ballot language unconstitutional, and orders a notice of revised language.
* 5:10 pm - More from that same reporter friend on the scene [paraphrased to avoid too many brackets]…
The judge ordered said a paper notice should be handed out at the polls advising voters to ignore the language on the ballot itself. Also, the same polling place notice shall provide voters with the newly revised language. The judge says the same notices should also be mailed to voters.
This seems reasonable, and could actually work in favor of con-con supporters because it provides them a reminder at the polls that the question is on the ballot.
* 5:18 pm - From Pat Quinn’s office…
The judge placed a stay on Cook County from sending out any more absentee ballots. Chicago had already stopped sending out the ballots when they received notice of the case.
The judge also ordered everyone back Friday morning at 9 to discuss language proposals.
* 5:37 pm - So, here’s essentially what happened as far as I can tell…
Local election authorities claimed it was simply too late to print all new ballots in time for the November election, not to mention early voting and the absentee ballots which have already been mailed. So, the judge in the case couldn’t really toss out the existing ballots and order new ones printed.
Instead, the judge ordered said he wanted voters to be given a flier at the polling place which tells them to ignore the ballot question as originally written and instead use the new language on that flier as their guide. The new ballot question language will be decided at a Friday morning court hearing. [Strike was made for a clarification. The plaintiffs have not yet formally accepted this remedy and may ask for a different remedy.]
No word yet on any appeals.
As a reminder, here’s the ballot question language that was tossed out today…
In 1988 the electors rejected the call for a constitutional convention, with 75 percent voting against calling a convention and 25 percent voting in favor of calling a convention.
A judge has ordered Illinois election officials to temporarily stop mailing absentee ballots and create a flyer to hand to voters on Election Day because of “misleading” and “inaccurate” language on the ballot.
Circuit Court Judge Nathaniel R. Howse Junior ruled Wednesday the flyers should explain how the language, which deals with a referendum on a constitutional convention in Illinois, is biased. He ordered lawyers to return Friday to discuss specific ballot changes. [emphasis added]
So, not only are voters to be given a new question at the polling place (and via the mail) and advised to ignore the question on the original ballot, but they are also to be told how the original question is so biased. Interesting.
I’m expecting the judge’s order soon.
* 6:48 pm - From the attorney general’s office, which represented the defense and asked that the case be dismissed today…
We will decide our next step after we review this with our client.
In other words, no decision yet on an appeal.
* Also, Lt. Gov. Quinn and I just had a brief phone conversation (the Sox fan is at Cub Field, so I couldn’t bear speaking with him for long)…
“It went pretty well, I thought… We’re a lot better off right now than we were this morning.”
* And this is from Bruno Behrend and John Bambenek, co-founders of the Illinois Citizens Coalition…
“Today’s ruling in Cook County Court that calls on the Illinois Secretary of State and the Illinois State Board of Elections to implement revised language into the November ballots – specifically, rewording the question for the Constitutional Convention – is a victory for Illinois voters. As the Illinois Citizens Coalition, we maintain that our primary goal this Fall is to show Illinoisans why it is necessary to open a Constitutional Convention. We have a huge mountain to climb – just today a court of law identified faulty language on the ballot as related to the Con-Con question and conveniently no entity was identified as being responsible for that faulty language. That point alone shows that the foundation in Illinois is broken and that the powers that be are willing to compromise the ability of voters to have a free and fair election. Too few have too many powers and the only way to fix the system is to rebuild its foundation. We sincerely thank Lt. Governor Pat Quinn and the Chicago Bar Association in helping us advance this matter and we look forward to November when Illinois voters vote yes!”
A referendum on the Nov. 4 ballot asking whether Illinois should hold a constitutional convention is “downright misleading and false,” a Cook County judge said today. […]
“I believe the language is not accurate [and] interferes with the rights of voters,” said the judge, who stopped short of ordering a statewide reprint of all ballots that include the so-called “Con-Con” question.
Instead, he ordered lawyers to come up with a new version by Friday morning and offered a suggestion: printing the new question on separate paper that carries an official government seal and distributing that at polling places on election day.
A: I was encouraged. In general, it’s true in politics in India and the United Kingdom that the more conservative party is the one that breaks through key barriers. It took Lincoln to end slavery, it took Nixon to go to China, and hopefully it will be the Republican nominee who becomes the first female vice president.
In an interview of two of the 10th Congressional District candidates conducted by the Tribune editorial board, Kirk would not say whether he believed Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin, had the necessary qualifications to become president.
“Quite frankly, I don’t know,” said Kirk, 49, of Highland Park, when asked if Palin could step into the job. In answer to repeated inquiries about Palin’s experience, Kirk said, “I would have picked someone different.” [emphasis added]
…Adding… Gov. Palin is getting a lot of criticism for her Katie Couric interview stumbles. But remember this little gem?…
Republican congressional candidate Aaron Schock came to his political senses Tuesday, saying he’d reimburse local taxpayers for the $38,000 they spent providing extra police protection and other city services to President Bush when he appeared at a private fundraiser for Schock back on July 25. […]
Schock’s initial instincts here were dismaying. To suggest the criticism was solely partisan - but not the few defenses, heaven’s no -was disingenuous and self-serving and never held up to scrutiny. There was never any question about whether Peoria should help protect a visiting president - another off-putting attempt at spinning this story - but who should pay for it when there was no public component whatsoever to the trip. Suddenly this bedrock Republican was taking his cue from a liberal Democrat?
Ultimately, this would have amounted to a $38,000 donation to Schock’s campaign from taxpayers given no choice in the matter. Stiffing local taxpayers in this fashion is not the behavior of a true fiscal conservative, as Schock describes himself.
His biggest mistake was waiting so long. Everybody knew he’d have to do it sooner or later.
* Manufacturers slam 5 GOP reps over bailout vote… Five Illinois Republicans who helped defeat the Bush administration’s financial rescue bill are under pressure by the National Assn. of Manufacturers to reverse their votes when Congress reconsiders the issue.
* The GOP Blames the Victim - Capitalism sure is fragile if subprime borrowers can ruin it
* Bailout bill is creating unusual alliances … Republican Mark Kirk, in a tough battle for re-election in the 10th District on the North Shore against Dan Seals, joined ranks with Democratic Chicago Rep. Danny Davis and Rahm Emmanuel in voting in favor of the bailout.
* Candidates for 6th District seat square off: The two candidates for a west suburban congressional seat mixed it up on abortion and ethics Tuesday, with Democrat Jill Morgenthaler accusing her opponent of harboring extreme conservative views and Republican Rep. Peter Roskam highlighting her previous role as a top aide to Gov. Rod Blagojevich.
* Illinois Valley Community College’s Student Government Association will host a political forum for the 11th Congressional District from 10 to 11 a.m. Wednesday, Oct. 8, in the Cultural Centre on the main campus.
* As you are surely aware of by now, Mayor Daley has announced a 99-year lease of Midway Airport for $2.52 billion. But far less than half that will be realized as profit…
The city, which must repay about $1.4 billion of existing debt on the airport, would net about $1.1 billion, which the mayor said would be used for infrastructure projects.
Chicago committed to spending about 90% of the remainder on infrastructure and to help trim its $9 billion unfunded pension liability under state legislation approved in 2005. That leaves about $100 million from the transaction unrestricted. [emphasis added]
Stewart International Airport near Newburgh, N.Y., was operated by UK-based National Express Group, but that lease was sold to the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey because it was not generating enough revenue, sources said. British Airports Authority gave up the Indianapolis International Airport lease for the same reason.
But as with previous Daley deals to privatize city parking garages and the Chicago Skyway, costs for the flying public are expected to rise. Transportation experts predicted that Midway’s private operator could charge higher prices for the basics at an airport that is particularly popular with budget-conscious travelers.
* Meanwhile,the city treasurer has these words for residents concerned about the Wall Street gyrations…
Wall Street’s troubles aren’t putting Illinois’ state investments at risk, but the recent economic decline means they will generate less income than in recent years, Treasurer Alexi Giannoulias said Tuesday.
“The good news is that our portfolio is safe,” he said. “Is this going to have a huge impact on the state portfolio? That remains to be seen.”
Giannoulias’ office invests about $8 billion in state taxes and fees. It also administers the Illinois Funds, which invest $6 billion on behalf of state agencies, local governments and other taxing entities.
None of that money was put into asset-backed securities or other forms of investing that have taken dives lately, Giannoulias said. But interest income for the current fiscal year still is expected to be half as much as it was a year ago, he said.
Illinois’ riverboat casinos are seeing a dramatic drop in revenue, adding to the state’s money problems and possibly renewing efforts to change Illinois’ smoking ban. […]
While state lottery revenue climbed a little, riverboat casino taxes slumped from $685 million to $564 million in one year — a drop of $121 million, or nearly 18 percent. Lottery revenues topped riverboat money for the first time since 2002. […]
The state numbers show that admissions dropped slightly statewide in fiscal 2008, which ended June 30, down about 2 percent from the year before. But people who are still going to the boats are spending significantly less when they’re there, the figures indicate.
Tom Swoik, executive director of the Illinois Casino Gaming Association, said many gamblers enjoy smoking while playing slots or tables. Now they gamble for a couple of hours, but take breaks to smoke and sometimes don’t return.
St. Louis and Iowa casino revenues are up, while Illinois’ are down. Those two states have no smoking bans.
* There’s an important court hearing today on the General Assembly’s ridiculous inclusion of language in the constitutional amendment referendum reminding voters that the question lost badly twenty years ago…
State officials chose to include that factoid in the ballot question and now the Chicago Bar Association questions its legality while pro-rewrite groups are crying foul, claiming the wording stacks the deck against them. […]
The Chicago Bar Association claims that the explanation on the ballot and several other aspects are unconstitutional and, if not fixed, could result in the entire process having to be done again.
* Here’s the statement which will be presented to voters…
In 1988 the electors rejected the call for a constitutional convention, with 75 percent voting against calling a convention and 25 percent voting in favor of calling a convention.
* The Tribune editorial board, which is so far neutral on the referendum itself, is rightly outraged…
The connivers must have been so proud. So sure no one would notice their mischief. Yes, the Illinois Constitution does give those pesky citizens the right to demand a constitutional convention every 20 years—with the next vote scheduled for the Nov. 4 general election. Could be bad for this state’s arrogant political class in a year when voters are so furious over failed leadership. You can almost hear the insiders who concocted this year’s referendum murmur the secret, sacred words to one another: “Let’s rig the question!”
And they did. Peek inside this fiasco and it’s obvious that the folks who benefit mightily from the way the current constitution distributes power are desperate to keep things just as they are.
This exercise in chicanery is scheduled to get scrutiny Wednesday afternoon from Cook County Circuit Judge Nathaniel Howse Jr. The Chicago Bar Association, among other plaintiffs, is asking him to block what would be a cheesy injustice to the voters of this state. We hope the judge doesn’t let the people who plotted this scheme get away with it. It appears that he can order a correction of ballots—or delay the convention referendum until a subsequent election. There may be other remedies.
(S)tate Senator Dale Righter defends how the referendum is worded. He says the lawyers taking the matter to court are, quote, “looking for something to do.”
* Meanwhile, I told you late yesterday afternoon that Cook County Assessor Houlihan supports the con-con question. From Houlihan’s press release…
Opponents of the convention talk out of both sides of their mouths. On the one hand, they want you to be afraid it will be hijacked by out-of-touch, irresponsible extremists. On the other hand, they say it would be controlled by the same powerful leaders who run things now. But the reality is, the 1969-1970 convention launched a new generation of political leaders, reviving the state’s political culture with an influx of new, fresh, young talent.
Reasoned opponents agree that education funding is a constitutional issue, but argue that a constitutional convention would be a disaster. But Illinois has had four different constitutions in its history. With each new constitution, the state has flourished.
To those people and groups who oppose a constitutional convention, I pose a few simple questions: What are you afraid of? Why does democracy terrify you? What is it about a fresh constitutional convention that frightens you? As Thomas Jefferson said, “We are a people capable of self-government, and worthy of it.”
Let us put our confidence in the people of Illinois and support this call for a constitutional convention.
*** UPDATE 1 *** I’ve heard reports that Gov. Blagojevich was booed at yesterday’s Cub rally, but this, albeit edited video from the Tribune sure seems to prove the theory that Cub fans will blindly cheer anything that has their litle logo on it, including this hugely unpopular governor.
The Sun-Times makes no mention of booing during this passage in the governor’s speech…
“Sometimes when I’m arguing with the Legislature, I feel like Lou Piniella arguing with the umpires. Some of the times I have to make decisions as governor, I ask myself, ‘What would Lou do?’ Then I make some decisions,'’ Blagojevich said.
Hundreds of school funding protestors are expected to converge outside Wrigley Field today during the Cubs playoff, but they won’t be ringing the stadium as originally planned.
Instead, protestors wearing bright orange t-shirts will be confined to a cordoned-off area in the middle of Addison, near the park entrance, State Sen. James Meeks (D-Chicago) said Tuesday.
The group’s new position is “a compromise'’ with city officials for agreeing not to surround the perimeter of the stadium with 6,000 protestors, Meeks said.
Fewer protestors will now be needed, but Meeks said he still expects more than the 1,400 who gathered at New Trier Township High Sept. 2 to protest the inequities in Illinois’ school funding system.
The recent dollar-per-ride surcharge has meant reduced tips for drivers, said Prateek Sampat, spokesman for the United Taxidrivers Community Council.
The group plans to present its petitions to city officials Wednesday.
“The surcharge is not even close to covering the needs of drivers,” Sampat said. “It’s not just (the increase in) gas prices. The general cost of living is going up, for things like food.”
The price of gas has jumped by 75 cents a gallon or more at times since the $1 surcharge went into effect April 28.
Local 150 in 2007 was headed by political power broker William Dugan, whose slate won all offices. Dugan retired in June amid an FBI probe. No criminal charges have been filed. Dugan’s successor, James M. Sweeney, said the suit to void the election boils down to “two alleged technical violations” and that the union’s 21,000 members want their leaders to “stand and fight.”
Huh? Sneed is told Cook County Board President Todd Stroger won a silent auction bid this weekend for a front-row seat at a board meeting and lunch with fellow Commissioner Larry Suffredin!