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Question of the day
Tuesday, Jun 28, 2011 - Posted by Rich Miller * You probably saw this go by in the live feed yesterday…
* And then there was this quote as Blagojevich talked to reporters…
* The Question: What do you make of those quotes?
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What happens next?
Tuesday, Jun 28, 2011 - Posted by Rich Miller * Funny, but not quite true…
* More likely…
* Also plausible…
George Ryan got 6 and a half years. A status hearing is set for August 11th. A sentencing hearing schedule could be set then. * The Trib lays it out…
And if he continues to insist he’s innocent? Bad things will happen come sentencing time. Remorseless convicts are rarely given a judicial break. Also, just think of the deterrence factor if he did get 300 years. That’d make folks think twice, I’d wager. * But, first, there’s the matter of his bond…
* And then the appeal itself…
* Scott Fawell, speaking from experience, offers some sound advice…
I just can’t see him doing that. …Adding… I agree with Betty…
* Related…
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Time for more reform?
Tuesday, Jun 28, 2011 - Posted by Rich Miller * Yesterday, Gov. Pat Quinn reacted to the Rod Blagojevich verdict by reviving his proposal from last year to give Illinoisans a right to petition the General Assembly to act on ethics bills. Listen… Quinn used his amendatory veto pen last year to add this referenda language. It would require 100,000 signatures be gathered and then the proposal would be submitted to the House, which would be required to vote up or down. If it pased, it would move on to the Senate, which would also have to give it a recorded vote. If it failed to become law, the proposal would be put on the ballot as an advisory referendum. Since last year’s AV, the governor appeared to drop the whole idea and didn’t press for its passage during session this year. * As I told you yesterday, Quinn also wants a conflict of interest law for the General Assembly. That’s easier said than done, of course. For instance, should a farmer be prohibited from voting on farm bills? Or do you go the way of Congress and forbid all outside income unless assets are put into a blind trust? * Quinn also talked about open primaries. This is a longstanding cause for the governor, but he’s always been rebuffed. And he spoke about expanding recall to more state and local officials. * Not everyone agrees that new laws are needed, however…
* And sometimes reforms can backfire…
* Meanwhile, two Tribune reporters offer up this bit of analysis…
He was most certainly an outlier. If the system was full of Rod Blagojevich types, we’d have crashed and burned long ago. The man was a menace. * Heck, even Patrick Fitzgerald all but admitted as much…
* The Tribune editorial board, however, is not impressed…
Blagojevich was an outlier, and, yes, the problem isn’t fixed, and, yes, we need better candidates. Maybe if the Tribune hadn’t wasted its endorsement on Andy McKenna last year, an electable Republican might’ve been nominated. Newspapers don’t have all that much power these days, but even the Trib could’ve swung a couple hundred votes to Kirk Dillard. Also, with the awesome corporate political power unleashed nationally by the US Supreme Court, you’re not going to find many Democratic politicians amenable to putting even stricter campaign caps into law. * The Sun-Times partially looked at the bright side…
* And the SJ-R blamed everything on Mike Madigan…
* Other stuff…
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In case you were wondering…
Tuesday, Jun 28, 2011 - Posted by Rich Miller * We just barely missed setting a new page-view record yesterday, coming up just barely short of Rod Blagojevich’s arrest day. One reason is our new ScribbleLive software, which doesn’t require reloading the page to see updates. Without that, I’m confident we would’ve easily surpassed that crazy December day in 2008 when we were knocked offline for what seemed like an eternity. Some folks had difficulty accessing the blog yesterday, particularly just as the jury verdict was read. Site speed did slow down quite a bit, but at least we weren’t knocked completely offline like the Sun-Times, WBEZ and others were. And if you were already on the page and watching the ScribbleLive feed, you didn’t notice a thing. Anyway, I thought you’d like to know.
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Jurors restored faith in the system
Tuesday, Jun 28, 2011 - Posted by Rich Miller * This is a fascinating insight into how the Blagojevich jury operated…
* They seemed to be intelligent, calm, rational and respectful…
* And open-minded…
* And just…
* Watch jurors explain their verdict by clicking here. A transcript is here. * This is a far cry from the image of juries conjured up by John Kass earlier this week…
Thankfully, the Blagojevich jury wasn’t interested in conducting silly experiments.
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today’s edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)
Tuesday, Jun 28, 2011 - Posted by Rich Miller
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