Cook County’s chief watchdog has concluded that more than $330,000 in property tax breaks and refunds that Democratic gubernatorial candidate J.B. Pritzker received on one of his Gold Coast mansions — in part by removing toilets — constituted a “scheme to defraud.”
Cook County Inspector General Patrick Blanchard also recommends in the confidential report that Cook County should try to recover the money from the billionaire. […]
Blanchard writes in the report — obtained by the Chicago Sun-Times — that the Cook County Assessor’s office was “the victim of sworn affidavits containing false representations.” […]
“The evidence indicates that the use of these affidavits was part of a scheme for obtaining money by means of false representations and, in executing the scheme, the responsible parties caused checks to be issued by the Cook County Treasurer and delivered by U.S. Mail according to the direction thereon. […]
“As a result, the County ultimately fell victim to a scheme to defraud, executed in part through the use of affidavits, and which resulted in the property owner ultimately receiving property tax refunds totaling $132,747.18 for the years 2012, 2013 and 2014, as well as additional tax savings of $198,684.85 for the years 2015 and 2016,” the report states.
Uh-oh.
According to the story, one of the affidavits was signed by Pritzker’s brother-in-law. Another was signed by Mrs. Pritzker’s personal assistant.
Under a header “Evidence of a plan to Defraud Cook County” the report includes a work order email dated Oct. 5, 2015 from a project manager to a plumbing company vice president states M.K. Pritzker, J.B. Pritzker’s wife, wanted the toilets pulled.
“She is going to have the house re-assessed as an uninhabitable structure,” the email says. “To do this, she would like to have us pull all toilets and cap all toilet lines in the house. Then after the assessment, she would like us to put the 1st Floor toilet back in and have this as the one functioning bathroom in the place (she will then be finishing out the front room for JB’s [Jay Robert ‘J.B.’ Pritzker’s] hangout/meeting are].”
*** UPDATE 1 *** The Rauner campaign got this one out quick…
“This Inspector General report proves what we knew all along - JB Pritzker is a fraud. From the very beginning, Pritzker was devising a corrupt scheme to defraud Illinois taxpayers by ripping toilets out of his mansion. This wasn’t a standard appeal as Pritzker claimed. Instead, he lied to voters. It’s clear from Pritzker’s repeated use of fraudulent tax dodging that he doesn’t have the character and integrity to be governor.” - Will Allison, Rauner campaign Communications Director
As I write this (4:46 pm), Pritzker is holding an event with Hillary Clinton and tons of reporters. Click here. Timing is everything.
…Adding… As I’m reading through the report, it appears that one of the problems is that Pritzker’s brother-in-law signed an affidavit claiming the property had “no functional bathrooms” from January 1, 2012 through October 15, 2015. However, the toilets were apparently only removed on October 5, 2015 - ten days prior to the affidavit signature.
…Adding… Reading further, however, it looks like there’s an overstatement on the part of the inspector general. “The property has been vacant and uninhabitable since January 1, 2012.” And then the next sentence is: “There are no functioning bathrooms or kitchen.” So, the Pritzkers didn’t actually claim that there had been no toilets since 2012.
*** UPDATE 2 *** Pritzker…
.@JBPritzker said the report was "leaked for political purposes in this last month of a campaign." When asked if he would return any of the $330,000 he received in property tax breaks and refunds, Pritzker said he would "abide by the law" and "follow the recommendations." pic.twitter.com/WzwB5qrUyg
Governor Bruce Rauner is talking up an expansion of gambling to help pay for a big state construction program.
At the groundbreaking for the CREATE program to eliminate the bottleneck of train traffic through Chicago, Rauner was promising a big construction program if’s he’s reelected.
“Funded not with new taxes but with economic growth, balanced budgets funding infrastructure by making it a priority and expanding the entertainment and the gaming industry in the State of Illinois so we stop losing our revenue to Indiana, Wisconsin and Iowa,” said Rauner. “We will have billions of dollars into our infrastructure.”
In May 2017, the Commission estimated that SB0007, as engrossed, (Chicago Casino, 5 new riverboats, 3 racinos, additional positions) could increase [adjusted gross receipts] totals in Illinois by roughly $1 billion per year. While this overall growth in receipts is notably lower than has been estimated prior to the emergence of video gaming, the projected increase of $1 billion still represents a significant increase in new gaming dollars. However, because this proposed expansion would coincide with a reduced tax structure, the Commission’s projection would only increase recurring tax revenue totals from approximately $473 million (under current law) to an estimated $560 million under full implementation – an increase in tax revenues of only $87 million.
Emphasis added.
To be fair, JB Pritzker wants to use expanded gaming revenues to pay for his own capital bill (and for his higher education proposals).
Also, this wouldn’t include sports betting. But that won’t be gigantic.
* The governor and the mayor smiling together? Yep. Been a while I think…
The team of public and private sector partners who came together to develop the #75thStreetCIP is a perfect example of the good that comes when government works with business for the benefit of taxpayers. pic.twitter.com/67ZE9ybSmB
Today I spoke before the EPA, advocating on behalf of the coal industry in my district and voicing my support for the Affordable Clean Energy (ACE) rule proposal. Check out more about this issue & how it will help the coal industry by visiting my website: https://t.co/vUuzFGBk1qpic.twitter.com/DgrhDYX51d
Representing the interest of Illinois’ coal industry, State Senator Dale Fowler (R-Harrisburg) spoke before the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to voice his support for the Affordable Clean Energy (ACE) rule proposal on October 1.
“Those in our coal industry and the individuals who already struggle to afford their power bill need more advocates to stand for their needs at both the state and federal levels,” said Fowler. “Today I’m here to be that advocate and voice, working to remove the bureaucratic red tape that has threatened a major industry in Southern Illinois and the hard earned dollars of the people I represent.”
The ACE rule is the most-recent proposal put forth by EPA to replace the existing greenhouse emissions guidelines, the Clean Power Plan (CPP). Put in place in 2015, the CPP was touted as a means to address growing carbon emissions from power plants.
However, opponents challenged the unprecedented environmental initiative, noting how the EPA’s original proposal was an overreaching mandate that would hurt the coal industry. Voicing their concerns, 150 entities, including 27 states, 24 trade associations, 37 rural electric co-ops, and three labor unions challenged the rule with a bipartisan majority of the U.S. Congress formally disapproving of the CPP.
* Londrigan was the only Democrat in a contested Illinois congressional district to not receive the former president’s endorsement in the first round. That was perceived by some as a snub, or maybe that it would’ve done more harm than good. Either way, Obama has now put her on his list…
Today, I’m proud to endorse even more Democratic candidates who aren’t just running against something, but for something—to expand opportunity for all of us and to restore dignity, honor, and compassion to public service. They deserve your vote: pic.twitter.com/NO5jnhX3XD
New in #IL13: @BetsyforIL reports raising $1.7M over the last three months, more than doubling what she raised in previous 11 months. *translation: prepare for more ads.
Former Democratic presidential contender Hillary Clinton will campaign in Chicago on Monday for governor candidate J.B. Pritzker, a major supporter of her failed efforts to get to the White House.
Clinton, a 2008 Democratic candidate for the White House and the party’s 2016 nominee, formally endorsed Pritzker during a Chicago visit in April after he won in a crowded Democratic field for governor by a wide margin. […]
Clinton is scheduled to join Pritzker at a roundtable event highlighting social service issues, a frequent point of criticism by the Democrat over Republican Gov. Bruce Rauner’s record that included overseeing a historic state budget impasse of more than two years. She is not scheduled to speak to the media afterward.
In the 2016 election, Clinton defeated President Donald Trump in Illinois by 17 percentage points. She won all but McHenry of the state’s traditionally Republican-leaning collar counties, giving Democrats hope they can capture additional state legislative seats as well as flip GOP seats in Congress.
National politics always brings out the worst in people. Take a breath before you comment.
If a political canvasser at your door seems as natural as an improv comic onstage, don’t be surprised. This bit of improvisation is utterly planned and completely intentional.
The Blue Beginning chapter of Indivisible Chicago is using improv comedians to help train canvassers before they hit the streets with their clipboards and candidate cards.
Lori McClain, of Chicago’s Second City, said before a “Yes You Canvass” class at the Hideout in Chicago on Wednesday that she’s “teaching some of the basic skills we use that get people engaged right away … so they can kind of make a quick connection while they’re canvassing.”
She paired off about two dozen people attending the class, and put them through exercises such as holding a conversation in which the last word one person says is the first word the other person has to say.
“Skills improvisers use are listening and not shutting down the conversation, but keeping it going by honoring and adding to what the other person is saying,” McClain said.
Other exercises included using the word “should” repeatedly, then replacing it with “could” — “‘Could’ empowers the listener,” McClain said — and listening to someone’s story and repeating it back, first in abbreviated form and then as a headline or hashtag.
These “storytelling aspects,” she said, “keep people involved in the conversation.”
These are also basic sales techniques, which is why I’ve often told young people that their best training for politics, journalism, etc. is a year doing commission sales work for a reputable company. It can often be as soul-crushing as trying to write songs in Nashville, but it gives you valuable life lessons.
* There’s been lots of talk over the past couple of weeks that Chuy Garcia would definitely run for mayor of Chicago. Fran Spielman reports otherwise…
But on Monday, Garcia gathered his kitchen cabinet together to tell them that he had decided not to enter the mayor’s race in spite of the “Draft Chuy” movement launched by retiring U.S. Rep. Luis Gutierrez (D-Chicago).
At least part of Garcia’s reasoning has to do with money.
Last time, nearly all of the $6 million he raised came from progressive unions: the Chicago Teachers Union and SEIU Local 1.
This time, SEIU Local 1 was firmly in Preckwinkle’s corner. And the CTU was non-committal and expected to remain so.
“Without SEIU or CTU, where would his money have come from,” said a source familiar with Garcia’s decision-making.
“He would have been forced to forge a brown-white coalition with the business community. His old friends—the people who have been with him since the `70’s and `80’s—were not comfortable with that. That didn’t want to do that.”
Discuss.
*** UPDATE 1 *** Chuy…
I’ve seen the mustaches projected on the buildings — and I can’t thank you enough for your faith and confidence in urging me to run for mayor of the city we all love. A special thank you to the hundreds of volunteers circulating petitions for me to run. I am truly moved.
The last few weeks have been a time of internal reckoning. My preparation to go to Congress was, for a moment, halted at the news that the city would have a wide-open opportunity to elect a new mayor. I’ll admit I was tempted to make another run — the last run shook things up and I believe led to a major shift in recent city and state elections, namely Aaron Ortiz, Alma Anaya, Beatriz Frausto-Sandoval and Delia Ramirez. I couldn’t be more proud of them.
I love this city. I love its complexity, its diversity, energy and its ever-changing issues and opportunities. It’s also a city in deep crisis with savage inequality and broken relationships between communities and police and of course continuing fiscal problems.
But in the final analysis, I sincerely believe I can do more for my city now in Washington. This decision is not about ascendancy or political positioning; it is about integrity and what I feel I can do for my city in Congress.
Chicago desperately needs federal help to tackle our infrastructure and transportation issues. Our city’s immigration crisis can be solved only by Congress. Guaranteeing the rights of women and gay citizens and other minorities will be secured only through congressional action.
Chicago needs a mayor who is beholden to no one. We need mayors and congressional representatives who are persuaded by one thing: the best idea in the room. And we need lots of best ideas, whether in the form of a Marshall Plan or something better, we need bold ideas that will improve education, public safety, health care, infrastructure, transportation and whatever it takes to bring economic vitality into neighborhoods that are breeding grounds of hopelessness. We can no longer abide hearing a teenage boy say he doesn’t expect to live past 25.
I look forward to the election on November 6. To be in Washington at a time when I can oppose the direction the Trump administration is taking this country is a calling I am compelled and invigorated to take on. Dreamers are waiting for Congress to act; immigrants who have so much to offer our nation are waiting for Congress to act; citizens who have still not recovered from the recession are waiting for Congress to act. I’m ready to get to work.
To Chicago’s next mayor, I say this: you must make bold changes that will unsettle those comfortable with the status quo. Only through a transformational agenda with deep neighborhood investment will Chicago become a city that works for everyone.
*** UPDATE 2 *** Toni Preckwinkle…
“I am very grateful for the good work that Chuy Garcia has done on the County Board as my floor leader advocating for working families. He has been an ally helping enroll over 400,000 people to our County health system. I know that Chuy will continue advocating on behalf of our shared priorities for immigrants, women, and seniors in his new role as Congressman,” said mayoral candidate Toni Preckwinkle. “I continue to look forward to our work on behalf of all Chicagoans.”
In the Illinois Legislature, a handful of GOP members are working with Democrats to produce bipartisan legislation aimed at reducing gun violence.
We say: Keep it up. Keep telling candidates they owe it to their communities to keep people safe. Remind the governor, too.
Next month, a bill that would help to prevent illegal gun trafficking and hold corrupt or careless gun dealers accountable is expected to reach Gov. Bruce Rauner’s desk. He has said he will veto it.
We’d like to remind him that a fellow Republican, state Sen. Chris Nybo of Elmhurst, worked with a Democrat, state Sen. Don Harmon of Oak Park, to reach a compromise on the bill. They produced a bill that drew bipartisan support after Rauner vetoed a similar bill earlier this year. Democrats and Republicans came together to address the governor’s concerns. That’s the way the system is supposed to work.
Another Republican, Rep. Peter Breen of Lombard, voted for Nybo’s bill and worked with Democratic Rep. Kathleen Willis of Addison on another, the Firearms Restraining Order Act. It allows guns to be seized from people deemed dangers to themselves or others.
In July, Rauner signed that bill and one that requires a 72-hour waiting period for gun buys. Both bills passed with veto-proof majorities, which gave Rauner an extra incentive to sign on.
“This is exactly the direction we needed to move in,” Kathleen Sances, president and CEO of Gun Violence Prevention PAC in Arlington Heights, told us about the bipartisan efforts.
G-PAC doesn’t have a ton of money, but those Republicans need all the help they can get. All four men have “F” ratings from the NRA.
Disturbing graffiti covers the walls of the Winnebago County Republican headquarters in Rockford this weekend.
The vandalism appeared Sunday morning with the words ‘rape’ and ‘shame’ painted on the building.
Local Republicans believe the graffiti is directly connected to the hearings of Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh and his accuser Dr. Christine Blasey Ford. […]
Winnebago County Board Chairman Frank Haney released a statement, saying in part, “This is not who we are. I am extremely disappointed in the individual responsible for the ugliness at our local Republican HQ. Clearly, this person needs help. As a Republican, I am saddened and angry. I am also sad to see other folks in my party unfairly labeled and mischaracterized. Negative generalizations about a group of people has never served us well as a country. This situation is no different. Attacks of this nature aim to silence and destroy, neither of which will occur.”
Rockford Mayor Tom McNamara, a Democrat, also posted a statement about the vandalism on Facebook writing “This type of behavior is unacceptable and certainly does not live up to our community’s values. We all have differences but we must learn to disagree on policy without attacking people.”
* Charlie Laskonis, Chair of the Winnebago Democratic Party…
Regardless of one’s partisan preferences, if any, Winnebago County is first a community. Elected Democrats and Republicans work together to improve our way of life. Our children go to school together, we patronize one another’s businesses and we all want the best for the future. Criminal vandalism is not how we express the differences of opinion in our community.
I’m disgusted at the vandalism and view it as an act at intimidation. Through direct correspondence, I have offered to Winnebago GOP Chair James Thompson the willingness of Democrats to help in the quick clean-up of the damage. In addition, I encourage anyone, with even the smallest bit of information, to take it to law enforcement immediately.
I’m told Laskonis sent a note to the county GOP chairman before issuing the press release.
* Doug House, president of the Illinois Democratic County Chairs’ Association…
The act of destruction in Winnebago County is unacceptable and unforgivable.
Whoever is responsible for this callous, cowardly criminal act should know that they will find no welcome mat in our county Democratic parties. What was done in Winnebago County lacks logic or sanity and anyone who has information regarding the criminals should contact the authorities immediately.
I urge all candidates, activists, volunteers, partners or self-affiliated alliances within our party to take a moment to reflect on the very clear line between disagreement and destructive indecency. If your passions lead you to consider the destruction of property or harm to another person, you are unquestionably wrong.
County-level political organizations – Republicans and Democrats alike – rightfully cherish their offices and campaign headquarters with pride. These are places where we come together to exercise the freedoms of our democracy among our like-minded fellows. Destruction and vandalism are acts of senseless intimidation and small-minded intolerance that we condemn on the highest order.
Again, take a very deeep breath and then completely exhale before commenting, please.
Presenting himself as a champion of working families and their needs, Democratic gubernatorial hopeful J.B. Pritzker [Friday] ripped GOP Gov. Bruce Rauner as a failed leader and defended his own plan to impose a graduated income tax as necessary to stabilize state finances and fund priorities from property-tax relief to education.
But with an apparent eye on the upcoming election, Pritzker rejected all attempts to detail how much the tax reform would raise or who would pay more, saying only that “the vast majority” of Illinoisans actually will end up paying less than they do now under his plan. […]
Schools need a steady stream of money, and local property-tax payers need the relief that will come if the state begins to pay its proper, larger share of total costs, he said. That means, “The wealthy should pay more.”
2017 Illinois median household income was $64,609. In order to cut taxes for the “vast majority” of taxpayers who would get a tax cut, you’d have to bump that target level up to… what? And then after cutting those peoples’ taxes he’d fund all those new programs of his and cut property taxes by focusing all the income tax increases on maybe the top 20-30 percent of taxpayers?
Today, the Rauner campaign is launching a new ad titled “Can’t Afford That.”
The latest ad from the Rauner campaign focuses on JB Pritzker as a puppet of Mike Madigan. The puppets in the ad are concerned about the massive income tax hike they would face if Mike Madigan and JB Pritzker got their way. Illinois families can’t afford a Pritzker tax hike.
Billionaire Democratic governor candidate J.B. Pritzker pumped another $20 million into his campaign, extending his record-setting self-funding to more than $146.5 million, a state finance report filed minutes before midnight Saturday showed.
For the record, the latest multimillion cash infusion made last Tuesday brings Pritzker’s total to $146,550,034 since March 2017, state campaign finance records showed.
Pritzker’s campaign also put $1 million into the Democratic Party of Illinois, which is chaired by House Speaker Michael Madigan, Republican Gov. Bruce Rauner’s chief political nemesis. The contribution followed $420,000 Pritzker gave the state party a week earlier.
Rauner, a wealthy equity investor, has not put any of his own money into his campaign fund since a record single contribution of $50 million in December 2016. It’s part of the $95.3 million of his own money he’s placed into his campaign fund since March 2013, when he announced his first candidacy.
Just this morning, Speaker Madigan reported almost $1.9 million in contributions to his personal campaign committee, including $1.3 million from the Chicago Land Operators Joint Labor-Management PAC, $250K from the American Federation of Teachers and $150K from Michael Sacks.
Illinois Republicans are really having a rough year. Their party’s governor, Bruce Rauner, is trailing by double digits. Four U.S. representatives are in real danger of losing their seats. The state House and Senate Republicans are being vastly outspent by the Democrats. And to make matters worse, their candidates include a Nazi, two conspiracy theorists and an accused harasser. A former candidate was caught up in a bizarre sex scandal.
You probably heard about the Nazi. The Republicans couldn’t find anyone to run against Democratic Congressman Dan Lipinski last year, so perennial candidate Art Jones ran in the primary unopposed. “If I really believed the Holocaust had taken place, I wouldn’t have joined the Nazi Party,” Jones explained to the Daily Southtown.
The Republican Party promised to find and support a write-in candidate, and one did emerge. But the candidate, Justin Hanson, is pro-choice, pro-LGBTQ, anti-NRA and against repealing Obamacare. He told a reporter recently that the party hasn’t yet provided him any help.
Then there’s Bill Fawell, who’s up against U.S. Rep. Cheri Bustos.
The Anti-Harassment, Equality, and Access panel set up by the Democratic Party earlier this year released its final recommendations last week.
The AHEA panel wants the state’s political parties to make their funding of candidates contingent on campaigns adopting specific policies and training. The panel was created in the wake of numerous sexual harassment allegations at the Statehouse and in campaigns.
Among other things, the panel published a model anti-harassment policy for campaigns as well as a list of some things that can be considered harassment, bullying and discrimination. It recommends that bystanders speak up and says campaigns should adopt strict rules against retaliation and set up procedures for reporting violations.
Comptroller Susana Mendoza, Sen. Melinda Bush, D-Grayslake, and Rep. Carol Ammons, D-Champaign, held six listening sessions throughout the state and they seem to have put a lot of thought into the final product, which was sent to all party leaders at the state and county level as well as all statewide and state-level campaigns.
The panel’s final report also includes a goal of making sure at least half the members of the General Assembly (and other state and local governments) are women. It wants the state parties to each hire a “director of diversity” to recruit candidates and staff and invest in training women to run for office. The panel also recommends that the parties require diversity in the pool of applicants for every political vacancy and establish an advisory board to oversee the changes.
The panel wants to “attack the culture of silence that keeps sexual harassment and other misconduct shrouded in secrecy” by instituting a ban on the use of non-disclosure agreements or mandatory arbitration clauses in campaigns relating to sexual harassment.
Campaign staffers often spend long hours with each other, both at work and at play. So, the panel is recommending a “one ask” rule for dating, pointing to Facebook’s implementation of the policy. In other words, if a person declines a date invite for any reason, he or she cannot be asked again. The report does acknowledge that “over-regulation” of the dating issue could “discourage the friendship and camaraderie that is a hallmark of a well-run campaign and may be impossible to enforce.”
The panel also wants campaigns to “monitor” alcohol use and prohibit consumption “to the extent it interferes with a campaign worker’s ability to perform his or her job or exercise proper judgment.” The panel also warns that alcohol policies shouldn’t ever be used to “justify harassing and inappropriate behavior or used to discredit a victim.”
But how realistic are some of these policies in high-pressure, non-stop campaign environments that are exclusively focused on winning the race at hand?
The panel’s report included “paraphrased comments” from participants of the listening sessions like this: “Expecting campaigns or parties to handle harassment internally during a campaign may be unrealistic because everyone, including the victims of harassment, is trying to win the election. This desire to win may be a deterrent to reporting because victims may worry it would hurt the campaign.”
I think that’s why House Republican Leader Jim Durkin’s recent decision to abandon Rep. Jerry Long’s (R-Streator) re-election campaign was so important and so under-appreciated by the media and other political observers.
Durkin has said that his best hope in a year like this is to focus lots of resources on picking up and/or holding on to Downstate seats. Long’s Downstate seat was once in Democratic hands, but pro-Trump, anti-Madigan sentiment helped propel him into the General Assembly two years ago (along with a 2016 opponent who reportedly didn’t care to walk precincts). The Democrats were coming after him hard this year.
Yet, when a campaign worker reported allegations of harassment, Durkin ordered an outside investigation and then publicly walked away from the candidate. There was no attempt to sweep it under the rug until after the election, which is pretty much what you’d expect in other times (and, frankly, even now).
What Durkin clearly demonstrated by abandoning Long’s campaign is that some things have to be more important than winning. That’s an all too rare concept in politics.
It was also prudent in the long-term. Covering up the Long situation could’ve seriously endangered his leadership position if the truth emerged.
However you look at it, this was absolutely the right move by Durkin and it took guts, particularly since some House members on his far-right flank are still not condemning Long and the state’s leading newspaper editorial boards have remained silent.
Over a week ago, the chief of staff for prominent Chicago politician Toni Preckwinkle, for whom I once worked, was forced to resign because of alleged “inappropriate behavior,” which he did not deny. Two days later, Preckwinkle declared her candidacy for mayor and, as the current president of Cook County and head of the Democratic Party, is a presumptive favorite. I could never match the bravery of the woman or women who came forward to ensure her chief of staff would no longer have a job. To be clear, I never was physically violated or threatened at work or out of it. But this former chief of staff was dismissive and demeaning to me in ways I am sure other women would find familiar.
When I first arrived for an interview with him for the County job, I was left waiting for two hours only to be told he had no time to speak with me. When I accepted the position, it was on the condition I would be promoted to replace a retiring staff member. The promotion was delayed indefinitely with no explanation. When I voiced countervailing opinions to his, I was shut out of conversations I should have been in, watching him walk past my door to get to my male colleague’s office. And when I finally gave up and gave a full two-weeks notice, he confirmed receipt of my resignation letter to me, but told HR he never received it because he wanted me to stay longer; he thought that if he didn’t send along my resignation, I wouldn’t be able to leave.
To me, he was a run-of-the-mill sexist. But as I’ve seen the headlines and tweets about his resignation, I’ve grappled internally with how, in less than a decade of professional life, I’ve come to this place where I’ve accepted that sexism is a normal consideration in the workplace.
I left that government office relatively quietly because I didn’t think anyone would care about my experience. Instead of trying to fight the sexism I endured, I walked away, even though I knew I was good at my job, leaving the door open for another smart, capable woman to potentially be treated the way I was. It’s an embarrassing pattern I recognize in myself because I walked away from my journalism career in Washington D.C., too, in part, because I was tired of dealing with the kind of men in politics who live there.