Inaugural Ball pics
Tuesday, Jan 9, 2007 - Posted by Rich Miller
These were taken with my Treo last night, so they’re not the highest quality.
A commenter here once called them “The three horsewomen of the apocalypse” and they all thought it was pretty funny, so we had to get a pic…

Deputy Governor Sheila Nix with her husband. See? She’s a human being just like you or me…

Himself. He said something to me, but I didn’t quite catch it…

Doug Scofield, the calm one of the bunch…

Alexi’s new chief of staff, Rep. Robin Kelly…

Frankie!

Should we announce their engagement here? Yeah, let’s do it. Quite a rock on that finger…

I still say he looks like Joe Birkett…

Roland was looking quite dapper…

My good pal Bob and his MUCH better half…

I hope this doesn’t get him in trouble with Rod, but if I had to pick a favorite director, Chuck would be it…

Carol Marin currently has more jobs than some people have in a lifetime…

Could be a big day today for Jimmy’s property tax bill…

Let’s see… The IFT people were there, but the IEA never got an invitation. Must’ve been lost in the mail. Yeah, that’s it…

Too much fun…

Timmeh…
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Question of the day
Tuesday, Jan 9, 2007 - Posted by Rich Miller
I had a chat with State Fair Manager Amy Bliefnick last night and told her I was thinking of asking my blog readers what bands they’d like to see perform at the State Fair Grandstand this summer. She said I’d better hurry up because the decisions are being made soon.
So, let’s give Ms. Bliefnick some ideas.
[Round One voting is now closed. Go to Round Two.]
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Reports explain Cook’s election night mess
Tuesday, Jan 9, 2007 - Posted by Rich Miller
Technical problems and poor training led to the second awful election night in a row for Cook County Clerk David Orr.
Cook County Clerk David Orr and Sequoia Voting Systems are both to blame for vote-tabulation delays that triggered confusion and distrust following the November election, a panel of experts has concluded.
Led by retired federal Judge Abner Mikva, the Orr-appointed panel found that a combination of “technology failures in multiple areas” and a lack of testing triggered a spiraling series of glitches that left some results unclear for days. […]
“Although technology problems occurring on Election Night constituted the primary cause of the reporting delays, operational shortcomings in the process leading up to Election Day also played a role in failing to understand and thus mitigate the risks,” the report said.
A separate report, prepared by Sequia found more problems.
A report prepared by Diamond and also obtained by the Tribune shows that more than a third of the precinct-tabulation machines did not even attempt to make a connection after the polls closed.
The panel also found that Sequoia, in a more than $50 million system sold to Chicago and Cook County, had stitched together components from its own shelves and that of its parent company in a way that failed to seamlessly work together.
What a mess.
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Blagojevich’s second inaugural
Tuesday, Jan 9, 2007 - Posted by Rich Miller
The Daily Herald took the corruption route in its coverage today.
With the political pal once accused of trading state jobs for campaign cash and the father-in-law who made, then retracted, those allegations sitting in the crowd, Gov. Rod Blagojevich was sworn in for a second term Monday, never mentioning the ethical questions that continue to dog him.
Instead, Blagojevich used his 20-minute inaugural address to tout past successes such as expanded I-PASS use on the tollway and make the case for providing every Illinois resident with health insurance. […]
His aides maintain county, state and federal investigations into his administration have not and will not be a distraction, pointing to the governor’s re-election, making him the first Democrat to win a second term in the office since Otto Kerner in 1964.
The governor made healthcare his top priority for a second term.
Even some Republican critics gave Blagojevich points for opening debate on one of today’s most difficult policy issues. “Health care for Illinoisans is something on everybody’s mind,” said House Minority Leader Tom Cross, R-Oswego. “I give him credit for bringing up an issue that needs discussion.”
But Blagojevich offered no details on how the program would be funded, saying he would lay out a plan in detail in coming months. Because he also vowed to continue opposing any general tax increase, the issue of how the cash-strapped state will fund such an ambitious program is likely to be the first and hardest question from critics.
But, as noted above, he avoided talking about ethics reform.
His decision to avoid talk about ethics reform was highlighted when Giannoulias, Hynes and White all mentioned their efforts to clean up government corruption in their inaugural speeches.
“I feel he should have addressed it head on,” said Senate Minority Leader Frank Watson, R-Greenville.
And…
Notably absent from the governor’s address was any discussion of ethics, unlike his first inaugural when he noted his election represented a desire for change following the scandal-tarnished years of his predecessor, George Ryan.
Four years ago, Blagojevich declared he would “govern as a reformer.”
The event was far from well attended.
The convention center was far from full, symbolizing how the event was at a vastly restrained level compared to the celebration that marked Blagojevich’s initial inaugural, when he became the first Democrat in decades to become governor.
“I didn’t anticipate it would be this empty,” Rep. Jack Franks (D-Woodstock), a frequent Blagojevich critic, said as he looked over the arena.
And the Sun-Times had a classic quote from Mike Madigan.
“Remember that old saying by Will Rogers? . . . He said that ‘I’m not a member of an organized party. I’m a Democrat,’ ” House Speaker Michael J. Madigan told reporters. “Democrats like to be Democrats. And Democrats by instinct don’t like to come together.'’
The governor wasn’t taking questions yesterday.
Meanwhile, back at the Executive Mansion, Blagojevich spokesman Gerardo Cardenas said the governor would not be answering any questions from the press. To ensure that this was the case, no reporters were allowed in the room where the governor was shaking hands with well-wishers. Television cameras, however, were willingly accommodated by the governor and his staff.
Audio of inaugural speeches:
* Governor Rod Blagojevich
* Lt. Governor Pat Quinn
* Attorney General Lisa Madigan
* Secretary of State Jesse White
* Comptroller Dan Hynes
* Treasurer Alexi Giannoulias
I’ll post some photos later today.
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Troutman arrest roundup
Tuesday, Jan 9, 2007 - Posted by Rich Miller
You can download the criminal complaint against Alderman Troutman here [pdf file]. The Tribune starts off our coverage…
Chicago Ald. Arenda Troutman (20th) accepted a bribe from a federal informant who claimed to be working with a developer wishing to do business in her ward during an undercover investigation, according to a criminal complaint unsealed today.
The complaint, which charges Troutman, 49, with one count of bribery, was filed Friday and unsealed today following her arrest, according to Gary Shapiro, first assistant U.S. attorney in Chicago.
Shapiro described the complaint as a “civics lesson” in how Troutman conducts business in the 20th Ward.
“You want the alderman’s support, you pay your alderman. You pay Arenda Troutman,” Shapiro said at a news conference following her initial court appearance at the Dirksen Building Courthouse.
Sun-Times…
They turned up at her house early Monday, but Ald. Arenda Troutman (20th) pretended she wasn’t there, even though they spied her peeking out a window. So federal agents had to break another window to get in to arrest her on charges of public corruption. Such is the troubling saga of Troutman, who not only was questioned by the FBI more than two years ago about her relationship with a Chicago thug but also had connections to city’s scandal-ridden Hired Truck Program.
What the Feds say…
• In May 2006, a friend of the alderman began secretly recording conversations with her. The person, who was cooperating with federal agents, set up a fictitious development, and Troutman allegedly greased the way for zoning changes in exchange for $15,000, another $5,000 in campaign contributions and a residential unit within the development.
• Upon getting one $5,000 cash payment, Troutman allegedly called a city zoning administrator to push through the development.
• An ordinance involving the project was backed by the City Council’s Transportation Committee last week and is scheduled for a full Council vote Thursday.
• Troutman also is accused in a second alleged scheme. She allegedly shook down a businessman — who wanted a property re-zoned — for $12,000.
Mark Brown…
It had been so long since we’ve had a Chicago alderman indicted that I was starting to think they’d all gone straight. Nah — just kidding.
Before Monday’s arrest of Ald. Arenda Troutman, however, it had seemed as if Mayor Daley had so marginalized the City Council during his 18-year reign that its 50 members didn’t have nearly as many opportunities to get into mischief as in the old days.
But the case against Troutman, as outlined by federal investigators, is a good reminder that the long-standing policy of aldermanic prerogative, which allows each alderman to be the main arbiter of development matters in his or her own ward, continues to create criminal possibilities for those greedy enough to take advantage.
Or maybe it just reminds us what Troutman herself succinctly stated in a secretly recorded conversation: “Well, the thing is, most aldermen, most politicians are ho’s.”
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Question of the day
Monday, Jan 8, 2007 - Posted by Rich Miller
Use this as an open thread to discuss the Governor’s inaugural address, which will start around noonish. Listen here when the time comes.
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Things that make you go “Hmmmm…”
Monday, Jan 8, 2007 - Posted by Rich Miller
Interesting.
Gov. Rod Blagojevich’s administration has fired a state employee who is challenging a City Council ally of Mayor Richard Daley’s in the Feb. 27 election.
Carina Sanchez said she lost her job last week because she is running to unseat Ald. George Cardenas (12th). Cardenas is supported by the pro-Daley Hispanic Democratic Organization.
“If they didn’t think I could beat Cardenas, they would have left me alone,” said Sanchez, who was paid $60,000 a year as director of policy and community relations for the Illinois Department of Financial and Professional Regulation. “This is how they play.” […]
“Running for office is a full-time job,” [state spokesperson] Hofer said. “Because she was in a senior policy-level position, there was just too much potential for conflict.”
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Fun, fun, fun
Monday, Jan 8, 2007 - Posted by Rich Miller
My syndicated newspaper column this week takes a look at the Better Government Association’s Freedom of Information Act lawsuit against the governor’s office and Lisa Madigan’s upcoming role.
Madigan will reportedly not be joining the Better Government Association’s lawsuit. Instead, Madigan likely will represent the governor’s office in the case.
Madigan is, per the state constitution, the state’s chief legal officer, and she therefore has the sole authority to represent any state official or office that is sued in an official capacity. The governor’s office can request that the AG appoint a special attorney general to handle this case, but Madigan reportedly will resist.
We got a taste of this sort of thing last fall when Madigan dumped the law firm she had appointed to defend some top Illinois Department of Transportation officials, including Transportation Secretary Tim Martin, in a case of alleged politically motivated firings. Madigan took over the case herself and began doing things that were pretty obviously not in the defendants’ best interests, but were in what she concluded to be the state’s best interests as a whole. For instance, Madigan began negotiations with the plaintiffs in the case to comply with their subpoenas, which Martin and the other defendants previously had fought tooth and nail, contending the subpoenas were “overly broad and burdensome.”
Martin and the other defendants sued, claiming Madigan had a conflict of interest, but a judge ruled in August that Madigan, as the state’s chief legal counsel, was “fully authorized to represent the state in this case.” A couple of months later, a different judge ordered Springfield attorney Mary Lee Leahy to give a deposition in the IDOT firing case, which Martin and his co-defendants had tried to block for months, contending they had an attorney-client privilege. Leahy had advised several state agencies, including IDOT, about hiring practices. After Madigan took over the IDOT case, she concluded there was no attorney-client privilege and didn’t argue against Leahy’s deposition.
The bottom line here is that we very likely will be treated to the spectacle of Lisa Madigan “defending” Rod Blagojevich’s office in a FOIA case where the plaintiffs are using Madigan’s own opinion to make their arguments that the subpoenas should be made public.
It’s gonna get real fun, real soon, campers.
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Finance reform discussed
Monday, Jan 8, 2007 - Posted by Rich Miller
Lee Newspapers continues its series on campaign finances with a report on reform ideas.
But now, after another year of heavy spending bought nasty television ads and bitter mailers, campaign finance reform hopefuls say 2007 could be their year.
Most agree leadership on the issue will have to come from the top if anything is to happen.
“A lot of this is going to depend on the governor and how much energy he wants to put into it,†said state Sen. Dan Rutherford, R-Chenoa. […]
Others want to end the potential conflict of interest that comes from campaign donors being awarded millions in state contracts — a practice known as “pay to play.†The issue hounded both Blagojevich and Topinka in the last campaign.
Go read the whole thing. Lee also has a story about Green Party financesFinance during the last election.
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No Durbin opponents stepping up
Sunday, Jan 7, 2007 - Posted by Rich Miller
The state GOP’s woes continue.
The 2008 Senate election may seem far away, but the battered Illinois Republican Party already is running late if it plans to challenge Democratic Sen. Dick Durbin.
No Republicans have stepped forward to say they will run against Durbin, and no one seems to be on the sidelines preparing to jump in.
“This is really becoming a problem for us,” said Illinois Senate Minority Leader Frank Watson, R-Greenville.
Although the election is 22 months away, that’s not a particularly long time in politics; the deadline to qualify for the ballot is less than a year away.
Peter Fitzgerald is quoted in this piece saying Dick Durbin will be “hard to beat.” And a spokesman for Bill Brady said he’s looking at another run for governor.
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“Buying” votes?
Sunday, Jan 7, 2007 - Posted by Rich Miller
Lee Newspapers has a big to-do this weekend about contributions from state legislative leaders to targeted candidates.
[M]ore than $8 million was funneled from the campaign war chests of the leaders into 10 select races for the state House and Senate.
Observers say the amount of money dumped by the leadership into those battles raises concerns about the independence of locally elected representatives.
“When someone is elected after having a legislative leader drop 65 to 75 percent of the funds into that race, there is an indebtedness. It is much harder for a candidate in that position to buck the wishes of the leader,” said Cindi Canary, director of the Illinois Campaign for Political Reform. […]
“The big issue is that it put these races in the hands of the legislative leaders, as opposed to putting it in the hands of constituents. So, the (campaign) decisions aren’t even made by the candidates based on what the people in their districts want to hear,” Canary said.
“It’s a much more centralized approach to elections,” she said. “It’s a campaign that’s being produced off site.”
The Herald & Review has an accompanying editorial.
The fact is that the statewide elections and most contested legislative elections come down to who can buy the most votes. The system effectively leaves many voters out of the loop and virtually guarantees that the cost of government will continue to increase.
As a chart with today’s stories points out, in every case, the candidate who spent the most money per vote in the November election won. In Central Illinois, Rep. Bob Flider, D-Mount Zion, spent $37.60 for every vote in his favor. His opponent, Republican Dick Cain, spent $32.88.
That’s a bargain, compared to some other areas. In the Centralia area, Democrat Kurt Granberg spent $67.15 per vote in order to defeat his rival. In February, after year-end reports are filed, the Herald & Review will report specifically on where the money comes from and where it’s spent.
The chart can be viewed here.
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“I am not a loser”
Sunday, Jan 7, 2007 - Posted by Rich Miller
I can understand that she’s frustrated, but wasn’t this a bit much?
Hurt, incensed and moved to tears, mayoral challenger Dorothy Brown on Friday accused state Sen. James Meeks of sexism and calling her a “loser” unworthy of endorsement in her race against Mayor Richard Daley.
“I am not a loser. I am a winner. I am the epitome of the American dream and Dr. Martin Luther King’s dream,” said Brown, clerk of the circuit court.
“To make the kind of statement he made in the face of my hard work — the challenges and discrimination I have overcome in growing up poor and becoming a respected countywide elected official in this town — I see it as a direct disrespect for me as a human being, as a woman and as an African-American.”
Brown said the Meeks insult is particularly infuriating on the heels of the all-but-endorsement of Daley by vanquished mayoral challenger Bobby Rush.
Meeks, of course, said he wouldn’t be backing any losers when asked if he would endorse Brown.
But he didn’t exactly smooth things over with his reply:
“Why would she automatically assume that means her?” Meeks said. “Why would she declare herself as the loser?”
Meeks said his appearance with Daley was not “part of any political campaign of any candidate.”
“For her to take a statement like that and automatically crown herself as the loser, I feel real bad for her for doing that,” Meeks said. “I’ve supported her in every race she’s been in, and she’s a nice person.”
And…
“Just because she doesn’t have a possible chance of winning this particular election, it doesn’t mean my comments are sexist. It’s reality.”
The Chicago Reader’s new blog “Clout City” also covered Brown’s presser and closed with this:
In fact, the toughest question of the afternoon, posed by a veteran sitting on a table to the side, had nothing to do with Meeks or Daley: “You know, Harold Washington once said, ‘Politics ain’t beanbag.’ Do you think you have thick enough skin to do this?â€
Brown gripped the podium and gazed back at him. Maybe she couldn’t get outraged—not on public display, at least—but she could show everyone that she was serious. “Yes,†she said. “I’m in this race to win it.â€
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