Some campaign stuff
Monday, Nov 22, 2021 - Posted by Rich Miller
* WGLT…
A Bloomington state senator is pushing back against former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie’s view that Illinois will not be a top-tier state next year for funding in Republican races for governor and U.S. Senate.
Christie made the remark in Chicago, during a speech at the Chicago Union Club. Christie was promoting his new book about how to get the Republican Party past former President Donald Trump.
State Sen. Barickman, R-Bloomington, said Christie should wait a bit on his conclusion that Illinois is not competitive in those statewide races.
“I don’t think the answer on that issue is fully yet known. Whether we are a top-tier state for funding largely depends on who the candidates are,” said Barickman. […]
“Suburban voters I think are not going to be overly motivated by social issues per se. I think they’re going to be driven by property taxes, crime, high quality schools. We can’t do it if our candidate is a non-starter with the suburban households where there are so many votes,” said Barickman.
* What Christie said…
As for Republican chances in Illinois in next year’s midterms, when Democratic Gov. J.B. Pritzker and U.S. Sen. Tammy Duckworth are seeking reelection, Christie likened the situation to a famed “Peanuts” cartoon.
“Sometimes Illinois is a little bit like Charlie Brown and the football and Lucy, and how you think you’re gonna get it and then you wind up on your back,” said Christie, who as head of the Republican Governors Association was actively involved in the election of one-term GOP Gov. Bruce Rauner in 2014.
“I think there could be Republican gains here but it’s not a top-tier state in terms of where Republicans are targeting money,” he said, referring to lower-ballot races such as those for Congress. “If we’re spending money in Illinois in October of next year, we won the House and Senate already. That’s called piling on once you do that.”
Thoughts?
* Zero surprise here…
Democrat Nikki Budzinski of Springfield, a labor activist who worked in President Joe Biden’s administration until earlier this summer, has secured an endorsement from U.S. Sen. Dick Durbin of Springfield in her run for U.S. Congress in the 13th District.
The announcement came Sunday at Durbin’s Springfield home. […]
Democrat David Palmer, 35, a Champaign resident who is a Country Financial Insurance broker and financial planner, lives in the 13th District.
Palmer, who is Black, said the new 13th District would include majority Black East St. Louis which would be a boost to his election chances.
Still waiting to see what Rep. Carol Ammons (D-Urbana) plans to do.
…Adding… A commenter claims Rep. Ammons announced her re-election campaign today. Checking.
…Adding More… Rep. Ammons got back to me just now to confirm that she’s running for reelection.
* Meanwhile, on to a press release…
Michael Rabbitt, business transformation leader at Argonne National Laboratory, and a community activist, who is seeking the appointment to replace retiring State Representative of the 15th House district in Illinois, John D’Amico, has received the endorsement of 39th Ward Neighbors United, an independent political organization that fights for racial, social, and economic justice in Chicago’s 39th ward. Rabbitt’s strong performance yesterday’s People’s Candidate Forum, coupled with this key endorsement, gives him momentum heading into Tuesday’s appointment meeting.
The ward with the most weighted vote is the 39th and Sen. Ram Villivalam is the committeeperson. Contrary to what you might have read elsewhere, Villivalam had nothing to do with the Neighbors United endorsement.
* Russ Stewart…
State law mandates the area committeepersons of the party of the resigned incumbent meet within 30 days to pick the replacement, which means in D’Amico’s case by Dec. 8. The selection is by weighted-vote, based on the turnout in the 2020 Democratic primary, which was 35,637. The apportionment is as follows 38.2 percent in the 39th Ward, 32.6 in Maine Township, 17.7 in Niles Township, 9 in the 41st Ward, and the rest scattered. Joe Cook, the 41st Ward committeeperson, has said he won’t seek the job. The choice will serve through the end of 2022 and have an edge in the June 28 primary.
Michael Rabbitt of Wildwood was in the race before D’Amico quit. He works for Argonne Laboratories as a manager. He is an advocate of police reform and affordable housing. He models himself after Will Guzzardi, Lindsay LaPointe and John Arena, and is waging a door-to-door campaign. He will be the leftmost candidate.
Others in the contest, who will likely seek selection, are Dan Cotter, an attorney from Edgebrook and former LSC president and CBA past president, Casey Smagala of Albany Park, a 2019 39th Ward aldermanic candidate who is close to Villivalam, Mike Kelly of Mayfair, a firefighter who is the football coach at St. Edward’s parish school, Liam Kelly, who ran for subcircuit judge in the 2020 primary, and whose brother Eamon is Evanston Township committeeperson, and Dean Alonistiotis, who works for MWRD commissioner Kim Du Buclet.
Mike Kelly is close to former Rep. D’Amico.
…Adding… Candidate list courtesy of the 39th Ward…
-Dr. Christina Brophy (Triton College; Professor of History & Humanities)
-Daniel Cotter (Howard & Howard PLLC; Attorney)
-Vince Fattore (Lexington Group; Chief Information Officer)
-Judy Kehoe (AAIA/A.C.E.S., Inc.; Contracting Specialist)
-Michael J. Kelly (Chicago Fire Department; Firefighter/EMT)
-John Melaniphy III (Village of Niles; Director of Economic Development)
-Michael Rabbitt (Argonne National Laboratory; Business Leader)
* Related…
* Illinois Comptroller visits Arcola mayor
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* The DuPage County Democratic Central Committee has been paying this person $500 a month for the past three years. It was definitely not money well spent…
After Sunday’s Christmas parade horror in Waukesha, Wisconsin, an Illinois Democrat appeared to portray the tragedy as a form of payback for Friday’s acquittal of Kyle Rittenhouse in Kenosha.
“It was probably just self-defense,” read one of a series of mocking social media posts from Mary Lemanski, who is listed as the social media director for the Democratic Party in DuPage County, Illinois.
Lemanski also describes herself as an acting student with the famed Second City comedy group.
“Living in Wisconsin, he probably felt threatened,” read another post attributed to Lemanski, referring to the SUV driver in the Waukesha case.
* After the pushback began…
The DuPage Democrat then offered onlookers her own perspective on the Sunday attack.
‘I’m sad,’ Lemanski shared later that night. ‘I’m sad anytime anyone dies.’
‘I just believe in Karma and this came around quick on the citizens of Wisconsin.’
Then, in another, more judgmental, message directed to the citizens of the state that saw both of the contentious attacks, the staffer proclaimed, ‘You reap what you sow, Wisconsin.’
Her tweets are now deleted, but you can see them all at the links above.
* Facebook…
The DuPage Democrats deleted that post, and rightly so. She shouldn’t have been using the official site to announce her resignation.
* Twitter…
* So much has been written about the Rittenhouse case nationally and in Illinois, but I’ve avoided it because it was a Wisconsin court case. Various Illinois pols reacted after the verdict, but I’m ignoring them, too. Do yourself a favor and read Mark Brown…
Many people are going to have trouble accepting the Kyle Rittenhouse not guilty verdict, but I think there would be fewer of them if they’d watched the trial, beginning to end, as a jury does.
It bothers me deeply that Rittenhouse killed two people with a gun a 17-year-old shouldn’t have had in a fight he shouldn’t have been anywhere near.
But, as I wrote before the jury began its 26-plus hours of deliberations, it’s the correct verdict based on all of the evidence and the law.
It really was self-defense. Rittenhouse wasn’t the aggressor in the chain of events that led to the shootings. […]
I certainly pray people won’t be emboldened by this verdict to show up with their guns every time there is a protest over a matter of public dispute. But I fear some will.
Despite what people are saying, Rittenhouse’s acquittal should not be seen a victory for white supremacists (though I’m sure that crowd is celebrating) any more than a guilty verdict would have been a victory for antifa.
On the other hand, if those redneck clowns in Georgia get away with the shotgun lynching of Ahmaud Arbery, now, that would be a victory for white supremacists.
Take a very deep breath or three before commenting, please. There are plenty of other websites that encourage you to spew anything that comes to mind. This ain’t one of them. Also, remember that you’re often being manipulated…
…Adding… Press release…
“The Democratic Party of DuPage County immediately severed all ties with Mary Lemanski once became aware of her callous and reprehensible posts. She does not speak for us and we unequivocally reject her statements about the tragic events that occurred yesterday in Waukesha. We as a party denounce violence of any kind. Our thoughts and prayers are with the families impacted by this heinous act, which shocked and saddened us all.”
- Democratic Party of DuPage County Chair Ken Mejia-Beal
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* May 8, 2020…
Orland Park Mayor Keith Pekau has called for his community to reopen faster than is outlined as part of Governor JB Pritzker’s plan.
He says it just can’t wait.
“The governor’s plan would not allow restaurants to reopen until at least June 26. Frankly, most of our small, family-owned restaurants will not survive that long,” Mayor Pekau said.
Mayor Pekau posted video on social media Thursday. The village said that it may lose $2.7 million this year in sales tax revenue because of COVID-19 restrictions, so it has laid out its own plan to reopen businesses at a faster pace.
* More from that video…
Pekau said Pritzker’s plan is based off “weird science” and has used an “asinine display of logic” in his guidance to restart the state after COVID-19’s peak.
The video is here.
* May 18 of last year…
Trustees in Orland Park could vote Monday to seek legal action against the state if businesses and “civic life” aren’t reopened in Illinois by June 1.
* Not long after he posted that video…
Less than one week after Orland Park Mayor Keith Pekau used taxpayer monies to file a vague and unclear lawsuit against Gov. Pritzker demanding that COVID-19 restrictions be eased, the coronavirus struck close to home.
According to sources, an employee in the Village Manager’s Office at Orland Park Village Hall has tested positive for Coronavirus.
Although this is the first confirmed case of COVID-19 at Orland Park’s Village Hall – other government agencies have reported cases – Pekau’s high profile publicity, his demand restrictions be eased, and his taxpayer-funded lawsuit against Gov. Pritzker’s coronavirus plan has made Orland Park the symbol of a growing movement of people who believe the virus is more of a myth than a threat.
* And then a judge dismissed efforts by the village to obtain a TRO in August…
A federal lawsuit filed by the Village of Orland Park against Gov. J.B. Pritzker has been denied by the U.S. District Court of Northern District of Illinois.
The lawsuit – which was filed in June by the Village, an Orland Park restaurant and two Orland Park residents – claimed the governor’s executive orders in response to the COVID-19 pandemic violated the U.S. Constitution, Illinois Constitution and the Public Health Act.
However, in an opinion filed on Aug. 1, Judge Andrea R. Wood denied the Village’s motion, stating the “plaintiffs have a negligible likelihood of success on the merits of those claims.” Wood also wrote that the “plaintiffs have not demonstrated a likelihood of success on the merits of any of their federal claims based on traditional constitutional analyses.”
* But Mayor Pekau persisted. He finally had to face reality in October of last year…
The federal lawsuit filed by the Village of Orland Park against Gov. J.B. Pritzker has been dropped, records show.
After months of discussion and investigations, the dismissal of the case on Tuesday did not give an explanation as to why the village decided to voluntarily drop the lawsuit. Mayor Keith Pekau, reached by phone Friday morning, said “it doesn’t matter anymore.”
“It was pretty clear that [the judge] was going to say that we don’t have standing in a federal court and take it back to a state court, which obviously costs a ton of money… when it doesn’t matter anymore. We’re open,” Pekau said, adding that from August to now, the village has spent “almost no money” on the case.
Also…
Trustee Dan Calandriello, who was opposed from the start to the litigation, said the consensus during Monday’s closed-door session was drop the matter.
“The feeling was it was time to finish this thing,” he said.
Calandriello, who is an attorney, said he believes the total legal bill for Orland Park will be about $70,000 and was critical of the expense at a time when municipal revenues have been affected due to the pandemic.
“At the end of the day this was not productive,” he said.
* Sept. 8 of this year…
The Village Board of Orland Park voted 7-0 Tuesday to approve a resolution that opposes Gov. J.B. Pritzker’s mask mandate and any vaccine mandate against COVID-19. […]
Pekau went on to state that Illinois has been under a state of emergency for 600 days, during which time the governor had issued 97 executive orders. “These are the actions of a dictator,” the mayor said.
* Ted Slowik in the Daily Southtown around the same time…
I think it’s rather sad how some elected officials keep making the pandemic about politics rather than public health.
Leaders in Orland Park, for example, seemed incapable of discussing mask and vaccine mandates last week without criticizing Gov. J.B. Pritzker.
“We’re ruling by fiat, and by one man, we’re not ruling by legislative action,” Mayor Keith Pekau said during a rambling, 25-minute diatribe at the Sept. 7 Village Board meeting. […]
Pekau refused to answer [WGN-AM’s Steve Bertrand’s] question about whether the mayor was vaccinated. […]
Pekau is hardly the only warrior for the aggrieved who seems like an opportunist using the pandemic to gain attention and score political points.
* Yesterday…
Mayor Keith Pekau is running for Congress in the 6th Congressional District, according to federal documents filed Monday.
The Orland Park mayor had not formally announced his candidacy as of Thursday afternoon, but registered Pekau For Congress as a committee under the Federal Election Commission Monday afternoon.
Currently, the 6th District is represented by Democratic incumbent Congressman Sean Casten. … Democrat Marie Newman [has announced she will run] against Casten in a primary contest. Pekau has registered to run as a Republican.
* Related…
* Illinois suffers highest COVID-19 caseload in two months, spikes in hospitalizations, positivity, deaths: ‘We are in a surge’
*** UPDATE *** Media advisory…
WHO: Mayor Keith Pekau
Special Guests: Jeanne Ives and Other Local Leaders
WHAT: Orland Park Mayor Keith Pekau has fought career politicians and the radical left to help his hometown put “people over politics.” Now, he’ll take that fight to the halls of Congress. Pekau will formally announce his campaign for the 6th Congressional District at a local small business.
WHEN: Monday, November 22 at 10:00am
Press can arrive at 9:30am to set-up.
WHERE: Alexander Equipment Co., 4728 Yender Ave, Lisle, IL 60532
WHY: Keith Pekau is the common sense, local leader 6th District residents need in Washington to take on the extreme politicians. His record of results stands in stark contrast to the failed far-left politics of Marie Newman, Sean Casten, and Nancy Pelosi.
EXTRA: Pekau’s public Campaign Kick-Off Event is that evening (November 22nd) at 5:30pm at Fox’s Pizza & Irish Pub in Orland Park.
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Lots of land mines in this post
Friday, Nov 19, 2021 - Posted by Rich Miller
* Mike Miletich…
The Illinois State Board of Education hopes to approve a new rule that would further cement Gov. JB Pritzker’s executive order mandating that Illinois teachers, staff and school contractors be vaccinated against COVID-19 or go through weekly testing to be inside schools. […]
Under the proposal, teachers and other staff could still be exempt from getting the vaccine if they have a medical issue or strongly held religious beliefs. However, the proposed rule could allow schools to require unvaccinated staff to get tested twice per week if there is a COVID-19 outbreak. Schools could also bar staff from entering buildings if they have any COVID-19 symptoms. […]
Not all ISBE board members were happy with proposal. ISBE member Roger Eddy, a former state lawmaker and head of the Illinois Association of School Boards, said the board shouldn’t use rule-making to overrule the subject of multiple court cases.
“I think that allowing the courts, as one of the three branches of government, to weigh in on this would be a far more prudent way to proceed at this time,” Eddy said.
There was a time when Republicans opposed activist judges dictating policy rather than trying to get the policy right to begin with.
I mean, seriously, since when do members of a state board vote to abdicate their authority to slightly change some rules to the whims of judges?
* Let’s move along to this from last month…
The National School Boards Association has apologized to its members for its letter last month to President Joe Biden in which the group sought federal help in countering threats, harassment, and violence targeting school officials and said that some of the actions could be classified as “domestic terrorism” or hate crimes.
In a Friday letter to NSBA members, the group stated that while the safety of its members and schools in general was its top priority, “There was no justification for some of the language included in the letter. We should have had a better process in place to allow for consultation on a communication of this significance.”
Lots of Facebookers were sure up in arms about that.
* So, I was a bit surprised that the state’s Republican congressional delegation minus Adam Kinzinger waited until late yesterday afternoon to issue this press release…
Today, Congresswoman Mary Miller (IL-15) led a letter with members of the Illinois Congressional delegation urging the Illinois School Boards Association to withdraw from the National School Boards Association.
On September 29, 2021, the National School Boards Association (NSBA) sent a letter to the Biden Administration asking the Department of Justice (DOJ) to treat concerned parents, advocating for their children peacefully, as “domestic terrorists.”
“Parents should never be treated as domestic terrorists for showing up at school board meetings to advocate for their kids,” Miller said. “Many school boards across the country are trying to force racist Critical Race Theory, a perverted sexual education curriculum, and transgender policies that are harmful to teenage girls. We must empower the role of parents in their children’s education, and we hope that the Illinois School Boards Association will withdraw from the National School Boards Association.”
The Illinois School Boards Association (ISBA) plans to meet today and discuss their continued involvement with the National School Boards Association (NSBA).
“The FBI is still “tagging” parents they deem threatening at school board meetings,” Miller said. “I believe that Illinois parents and families should play a central role in their children’s education, not the federal government.”
Not over the top at all. Also, it’s the Illinois Association of School Boards (IASB). The full letter, which has the name right, is here. The press release was sent after the IASB meeting ended, by the way.
* I reached out early this morning to IASB Executive Director Thomas Bertrand for comment. His reply…
Hi Rich,
Thanks for your email.
On 10/20/21 I sent a message to IASB members that stated that IASB is currently not a dues paying member of NSBA. Last year the IASB Board of Directors suspended membership in NSBA (for this year) because of concerns that have persisted over time with the national organization. The IASB Board affirmed that decision yesterday at its regularly scheduled board meeting.
So, the letter was not only too late, it was unnecessary. Click here for the press release issued by the IASB.
* From that October letter…
The Illinois Association of School Boards (IASB) supports school board members in their civic duty to represent their community and provide quality educational opportunities for all students of the district. The letter to President Biden was sent without the knowledge or input from the state associations that NSBA represents. While the letter drew attention to reports of physical and verbal threats made at some publicly held school board meetings, including isolated incidents here in Illinois, the incendiary language used in it detracted from that message.
This is not the first disagreement that IASB has had with NSBA. Prior to this incident the IASB Board of Directors was evaluating its relationship with NSBA. IASB previously expressed concerns to NSBA about problems related to governance, transparency, and financial oversight. IASB suspended payment of dues to NSBA for 2021-2022, and sought to address these concerns through changes to the governance structure of the national association.
* And, in other news, here’s an op-ed by Rep. Adam Niemerg (R-Dieterich)…
In other words, the indoctrination is being implemented implicitly rather than explicitly and thanks to the actions of the Illinois State Legislature, it is only going to get worse. Illinois has embraced Culturally Responsive Teaching Standards, which encourages teachers to embrace woke ideology. Additionally, the Governor has signed Senate Bill 818, which requires schools to implement the National Sex Education Standards beginning in kindergarten. Students as young as 8 years old will now have curriculum that teaches them about masturbation and other sexually explicit material.
Add to this the willingness of the Illinois State Board of Education and the Illinois Education Association to not only go along with the Governor’s overreaching school mask mandates but to encourage these mandates, and the wokeism in our schools is inescapable.
He sure likes that word “woke.” All-purpose.
If you want to know what’s really going on with Culturally Responsive Teaching Standards, click here for a reasoned, factual piece. And SB818 does not require all schools to do anything and parents can opt their kids out.
Some people just gotta be angry all the time. I don’t get it.
...Adding… Might as well throw this one on the pile…
(The Center Square) – As a group of schools continues to get court protection against punishment from the Illinois State Board of Education, another Illinois district is gearing up for a legal fight to make masks optional. […]
In Vandalia, School Board Vice President Joe Schall said the board was unanimous this week in returning to mask optional policies starting Dec. 6. […]
“Our budget is $100,000 for our tort, so we’re going to set up a trust,” Schall said. “There will be more details to follow, but if you feel necessary, if you feel compelled to donate to the cause as our legal bills may go over our budget, you are more than welcome to do that.”
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* We talked about the BLS problems a couple of days ago. Here’s IDES…
The Illinois Department of Employment Security (IDES) announced today that the unemployment rate fell -0.2 percentage point to 6.0 percent, while nonfarm payrolls increased by +40,900 in October, based on preliminary data provided by the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) and released by IDES. The preliminary report for September monthly payrolls was revised from +9,200 to +11,000 jobs. The September unemployment rate was also revised from the preliminary report, decreasing from 6.8 percent to 6.2 percent, as a result of a large downward revision that the BLS introduced to September statewide unemployed. More information on the September unemployment rate revision can be found in the attachment to this news release.
The October payroll jobs estimate and unemployment rate reflects activity for the week including the 12th. The BLS has published FAQs for the October payroll jobs and the unemployment rate.
In October, the three industry sectors with the largest over-the-month gains in employment were: Professional and Business Services (+17,700), Leisure and Hospitality (+8,400) and Trade, Transportation and Utilities (+7,700). The industry sectors that reported the monthly payroll declines were: Information (-1,500) and Educational and Health Services (-500). […]
The state’s unemployment rate was +1.4 percentage points higher than the national unemployment rate reported for October, which was 4.6 percent, down -0.as 2 percentage point from the previous month. The Illinois unemployment rate was down -2.1 percentage points from a year ago when it was at 8.1 percent.
Compared to a year ago, nonfarm payroll employment increased by +190,300 jobs, with gains across nearly all major industries. The industry groups with the largest jobs increases were: Leisure and Hospitality (+60,800), Professional and Business Services (+50,000), and Trade, Transportation and Utilities (+37,200). Financial Activities (-5,200) was the only industry group that reported jobs losses. In October, total nonfarm payrolls were up +3.4 percent over-the-year in Illinois and +4.1 percent in the nation.
The number of unemployed workers was down from the prior month, a -3.4 percent decrease to 370,400, and was down -27.7 percent over the same month for one year ago. The labor force was up +0.1 percent over-the-month and was down -1.6 percent over-the-year. The unemployment rate identifies those individuals who are out of work and seeking employment. An individual who exhausts or is ineligible for benefits is still reflected in the unemployment rate if they actively seek work.
* The above-referenced attachment…
Explanation of the revision to the September 2021 Illinois statewide unemployment rate
Since the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics has examined state labor force data for unusual monthly changes, also referred to as outliers, and made monthly adjustments based on a statistical evaluation of the monthly changes. Without these adjustments, the BLS statewide labor force models would have discounted a portion of the pandemic impact and would not have reflected accurately the current labor force conditions. Historically, these types of adjustments to monthly state labor force data occur during the annual benchmarking in February of each year, but they have been implemented on a monthly basis since the beginning of the pandemic to be more responsive to the recession’s impact.
In January 2021, BLS introduced an adjustment to the State of Michigan’s labor force model in response to a detected outlier. This adjustment inadvertently created distortions to statewide labor force estimates for Michigan and other states within the East North Central Division (Illinois, Indiana, Ohio, and Wisconsin) for January and all subsequent months through September 2021. One part of the monthly statewide labor force estimation process involves adjusting monthly statewide employed and unemployed estimates to equal monthly Census Division employed and unemployed levels. In turn, Census Division employed and unemployed estimations are adjusted to national monthly employed and unemployed estimates, which ensures that the sum of all states equals national employed and unemployed levels.
The distortions to the state labor force estimates occurred gradually through September 2021 but were only recently identified by the BLS after Illinois and another East North Central Division state raised concerns about their monthly 2021 statewide labor force estimates. The BLS has found that distortions to the Illinois labor force estimates are limited to January-September 2021.
Effective October 2021, BLS changed its approach to detecting and adjusting for outliers in monthly statewide labor force data. This change has reduced distortions to the revised September 2021 statewide labor force estimates and the preliminary October 2021 statewide labor force estimates for Illinois and other states in the East North Central Division. The distortions made to January–August 2021 statewide labor force estimates will be modified during the annual benchmarking process in February 2022.
* By the way, not everyone was revised upward…
The federal government has corrected Michigan’s unemployment rate upward by 1.7 percentage points, above the U.S. average.
Federal officials cited an outlier in statistical modeling amid sharp job swings during the coronavirus pandemic.
The September unemployment rate is now 6.3%, but it had been 4.6% — below the national rate. The October number, also released Wednesday, dipped to 6.1%.
Oof.
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* Shot from the Bond Buyer…
* Chaser from S&P…
S&P Global Ratings revised the outlook to positive from stable and affirmed its ‘BBB’ rating on the State of Illinois’ general obligation (GO) debt outstanding, its ‘BBB-’ rating on the state’s appropriation-backed debt, and its ‘BB’ rating on the state’s moral obligation debt. At the same time, S&P Global Ratings assigned its ‘BBB’ long-term rating to the state’s $400 million GO bonds series A and B of December 2021, with a positive outlook. […]
The positive outlook means that there is at least a one-in-three chance that we could raise the rating within the two-year outlook period given Illinois’ continued improved transparency and budgetary performance. While pension-related fixed costs are likely to persist, if funding of the actuarially determined pension obligations does not continue to improve and the state’s forecast budgetary outyear gaps do not meaningfully narrow, we could revise the outlook to stable. If funding of the actuarially determined pension obligations continues to improve and the state resolves its forecast budgetary outyear gaps in a timely way, we could raise the rating. […]
Illinois’ strengthened operational reporting and controls and improving economic condition are leading to positive budgetary performance. The state now forecasts fiscal 2022 will close on June 30 with a $418 million surplus. This projected surplus includes $1 billion to complete repayment of the Municipal Liquidity Fund (MLF) borrowings from the Federal Reserve, a $928 million repayment of interfund borrowing, a proposed $913 million supplemental appropriation to reduce the health insurance reserve fund backlog, and a $300 million proposed contribution to the almost empty budget stabilization fund (BSF). This follows fiscal 2021’s strong results showing a $2.7 billion general fund surplus that also included a $1 billion MLF paydown. Not including the MLF paydown, the surplus represents more than 6% of fiscal 2021’s total expenditures. […]
As strong as the current performance is, the five-year forecast could indicate that this positive performance may not be short-lived. One year ago, the five-year forecast delivered in the annual Economic and Fiscal Policy Report from the Governor’s Office of Management and Budget (GOMB) showed five consecutive outyear budget gaps of $4.2 billion-$4.8 billion annually. The November 2021 report shows a considerably more manageable budget gap forecast, with the largest expected deficit occurring in fiscal 2025 of $1 billion and all other years below that. In the annual budget cycle in a state with the resources that Illinois has, we view it to be able to close a $1 billion gap without any extraordinary measures. […]
The positive outlook reflects our anticipation that continued economic recovery will deliver revenues in line with forecast, the state will take action to rebuild the BSF, and that regular revenue and expenditure reporting will lead to timely actions to deliver a fiscal 2022 surplus.
…Adding… Fitch also assigned a positive outlook…
The Positive Outlook reflects Illinois’ preservation of fiscal resilience through the pandemic, coupled with unwinding of certain nonrecurring fiscal measures. Continued improvements in operating performance and structural balance could support a return to the pre-pandemic rating or higher. […]
Factors that could, individually or collectively, lead to positive rating action/upgrade:
–Sustained progress in reducing the state’s liability burden by maintaining recent improvements including further reducing accounts payable closer to a level more consistent with normal operations, or fully repaying federal and interfund borrowings in the next fiscal year;
–Continuation of the recent pattern of more normal fiscal decision making, including on-time budgets that address fiscal challenges primarily with sustainable measures;
–Narrowing of the structural budget gap by better matching recurring revenues with recurring spending, including funding pensions at actuarially determined levels.
Factors that could, individually or collectively, lead to negative rating action/downgrade:
–Failure to implement plans for early retirement of federal pandemic loans and repayment of interfund loans in fiscal 2022;
–Actions that materially exacerbate structural budget challenges, such as substantial use of one-time federal aid for recurring expenditures in future years.
The word “normal” in the context of Illinois fiscal matters has rarely been seen in years past.
…Adding… Yvette Shields…
The Teachers Retirement System, the largest of the five that make up the state’s pension system, said its newly released fiscal 2021 actuarial results “revealed that since the 2019 inception of two benefit buyout programs, TRS members have collected $534 million in advance benefit payments, which has led to a $70 million reduction in the required state contribution in the new fiscal year.” […]
The Teachers’ Retirement System recently published its preliminary fiscal 2021 financial report showing its funded ratio moved up to 42.5% after holding steady around 40% for several years and its unfunded liabilities dropped slightly to $79.9 billion from $80.7 billion due in large part to stellar investment returns of 25.5% for fiscal 2021, according to Segal Consultants.
The state’s total fiscal 2020 tab was $141 billion. If the others show similar results to TRS the total figure would mark a reversal in the steady rise.
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* The four declared Republican gubernatorial candidates appeared on a Wirepoints Facebook program yesterday to talk about pensions. Here’s a transcript of what they said. I’ve tried to clean up some of the repeated words and other tics, but I didn’t have all day. I’ve highlighted actual policy ideas for those of you who would rather not read everything. And, as always, please forgive any transcription errors.
Let’s start with Darren Bailey…
Well, good morning everyone. It’s nice to be with you. Ted, I’ve made no bones about it since the beginning, late June of 2017, you have a lot of responsibility for me entering into government, as a state representative, when I was totally checked out, people across this state, indeed, don’t truly understand this burden. Because once Illinois is unable to sell bonds, once they’re unable to borrow money, and the interesting thing is check out our last, you know, 20 years worth of budgets. And you know, I’m a farmer, and if I have a bad year, and I lose money, I can’t go to the bank and borrow money and say that I made money. That’s what Illinois is doing, because this money must be paid back. So getting on board understanding this, you know, the pension problem in 2017. You know, I did something about I saw the problem I was concerned about the future and for our grandchildren jumped in ran for state representative against someone who had been voting for just just more tax debt, more pension debt. And that’s been the fight since day one. You know, I get out being blessed to be able to serve as a state representative for the last two years. And now as senator, when I talk to the people, all across the the pensioners, I find that I find something in common. No one feels secure about their future. And I certainly believe that when a promise has been made, it should be honored. And I think that it is very important that we communicate to these pensioners that we you know, we are trying, working, wanting to uphold your earned obligation. But we have got to sit at the table and work and come up with solutions. And as two years in the House, and now one year in the Senate, I found another, a common point. Union bosses and the political elites, they don’t want to talk about this. They just they just keep wanting to push kick the can down the road, as you suggest. And it is becoming an enormous problem. So gosh, I’ve been sharing Wire Points information since day one, people are responding to it.
I did something that anyone would have said probably would have been the broad side to a campaign just a month after announcing. I drew up and introduced a constitutional amendment to remove the Pension Protection Clause, because as I sit in committees, as I talk to union bosses, which they’re, you’re correct, they won’t hardly talk to you unless you force the issue. Many times it’s because I had an audience in a committee and was abruptly shut down that we’re not talking about any problems solutions, because there are, we had tier two a few years ago and no, yes, we it is protected by the Constitution. Yet when I go out, and I talk to the people that are working, they are very uncertain, very concerned about their future. So it must be talked about. So I sat and I thought well, what in the world can I do to try to create conversation? So I introduced this constitutional amendment to remove the the Pension Protection Clause. And interestingly enough, it garnered conversation, people are now coming to me as they see this platform expanding and they’re wanting to talk.
Governor Pritzker, you know, he loves to to chastise the Republican saying that we have no solution saying that we’re anti union saying that we’re trying to take away everyone’s pension, which is absolutely untrue, we have got to come up with some solutions. Wire Points has some wonderful starting points. I like to tell people that I liken it to purchasing a piece of farm equipment or purchasing a vehicle that we start somewhere and then we bring people to the table. And that’s just exactly what the Republican Party has to do. That’s what I will do.
As your governor, I will bring people to the table. I don’t want to talk to the union bosses, I don’t want to talk to the political elites, I want to talk to the men and women of IDOT, of Department of Corrections just on and on and on who are very concerned as they should be about their feature. We’ll sit down, we’ll come up with some solutions. You know, it’s obvious that 401k plans must supersede it’s obvious that we have to, you know, we’ve got to work with a reasonable COLA, we’ve got to have obviously, you know, health insurance participation and all this can be done. And as much of your research Ted suggests that in 15 to 20 years, we can begin to right this ship. We can come up with a final fix so that we’re not worried or concerned or talking about pension problems anymore, and then we can make Illinois the great state that we know that it should be and that we can help make the The people that are working so hard and diligently under state government secure in their future. So I just want to thank you so much for allowing this for your research for your concern about Illinois. Thank you.
His constitutional amendment is here. And the long-established 2045 target date for paying off the pension liability is not much more than 20 years from now.
…Adding… It’s being debated in comments, but putting workers on a 401(K) plan would increase costs to Illinois taxpayers because of Social Security payments and any matching 401(K) contributions. The real problem here is the unpaid debt, not the “normal” costs. And moving workers off the pension systems would also mean the state would have to come up with money lost from employee contributions.
* Gary Rabine…
Thank you very much Ted for putting this together. I really like the fact that we have four people running for governor as conservatives. And as conservatives we hopefully look at the future whether it’s bright or dull and shine a light on it, and this is what we’re doing. We’ve got trouble ahead. And if we don’t fix it if we don’t look forward to fixing it as conservatives, it’s not going away. And so I like the fact that we have four governors running on the Republican side that are all looking at this issue hard and fast. And Ted, we appreciate your guidance because we’ve all been watching your you know, your your everything you’re writing, and we we get it so I appreciate that. We better face this problem. If we don’t our state is going to is going to go to hell in a handbasket.
And so here’s the thing. I was at breakfast this morning with a friend of mine. He was he was showing me that he’s paying his bill in Florida for his place in Florida. $300,000 place It was less than $1,500 for his annual taxes. Okay, where I live in Woodstock, Illinois, that would be $12,000. Okay, Ted, so when you you show that 2% of value? I think that’s 2019. I’m very confident we’ve got more than that. 2.2 or 2.3 Wherever that was, we’re up closer to three in my opinion. That’s how far we’ve I’ve seen my property value right my property taxes go up. At the same time property taxes have gone down. I got another a couple examples. East St. Louis to St. Louis. Boy St. Louis they’re booming. East St. Louis is looking terrible. Just like you said, the border town. Decatur I think you used, it’s sickening to see the depreciated value that the loss in value to our border counties and heck, across our state of Illinois, depreciation of value instead of appreciation. We have all this crazy inflation, everything else and we’re still down in values for most homes in Illinois. Since 2008. That’s tax theft. This isn’t fair for any Illinoisan to have, you have to go through this. When I was looking at a friend of mine’s property of the day to look at repaving a parking lot for him, this building this building would cost $30 million to rebuild about a $500,000 parking lot to repave. He can only spend like 20 or $30,000 to patch it up. Because he says the value of the building is no more than one or $2 million today. Because his taxes are 500,000 a year on a building with like, zero to $3 million in value is his estimated value. Okay, on a building that would cost 30 million to rebuild. So it’s not just the residential properties that were getting crushed on. It’s our commercial properties as well. And so you’re seeing vacancy everywhere in retail and office and this isn’t going to stop if we don’t face the facts. And then the crazy thing Ted is, what are we getting for it if these high taxes were actually paying down that the some of the principal on this debt, that’d be one thing we could talk about, but we’re not even paying down any principal, it keeps growing. We’ve been paying down all the interest on this debt. So if we don’t face it now we’re going to be a dark place in years to come. And great leadership like I believe we have on this call will face this tough problem, like politicians usually don’t. And I gotta tell you, visionaries look to the future bright or dull and they really, you know, they understand what to do to fix the future and I gotta tell you that the future looks great in Illinois, if we can fix it, when we fix this problem and only when we fix it. The goal is to save the pension for pensioneers, but you can’t do it if you don’t look at the future of it. I say there’s when I think of the the it’s just not property taxes you know, we’re pumping up our gas tax you know second highest I think in the country now we’re looking at you know a sales tax everywhere you know, different different pockets raising your sales tax and Cook County number one or two in the country today. With this all this all trickles down to to to unsustainable living for working class families, and we better stop and we better stop ait fast so I admire the fact that we’ve got for four people seriously running for governor and I believe we need to band together this doesn’t need to be a point of differentiation between us in my opinion with help from from smart people in economics like yourself Ted, and people across the country have fixed this problem. We should band together have a solution for this problem together and know that anybody that votes for the Republican that wins they are going to get common sense can’t-be-bought leadership, like I’m gonna bring to the table because I tell you what, we haven’t seen that in Illinois in a long time. So I thank you so much for having us on. And thank you to the other three, gubernatorial candidates for being on because I know you guys are serious as I am about fixing In this problem.
You go on a program that’s about pensions and you don’t bother to do any sort of research about what to do about pensions except mouth vague platitudes? C’mon, man.
* Paul Schimpf…
Well, thank you. Thank you, Ted. And thank you to Wire Points for your important work on this absolutely critical issue. I also want to echo what Gary said about my fellow candidates, I’m glad that you’re taking us seriously and dedicated to solutions. Lastly, I want to also thank those of you who are tuning in and watching this. Thank you for taking the time to educate yourself about what is a very critical issue facing our state. Now, my name is Paul Shimpf and I’m running for Illinois Governor because our state needs common sense, conservative leadership that we can trust. I am not a career politician, you’re going to hear me talk about the causes of this shortfall. In a couple minutes. I was not part of that problem. I spent my adult life in the United States Marine Corps. I got out as a lieutenant colonel in 2013, I came home, wound up getting involved in politics, because I think you have a duty to try to make your state your country and your community a better place. So I was a state senator from 2017 until beginning of this year, I’m not a state senator anymore, but I am not a career politician.
Look, the current status of our pension system is simply unsustainable. The insolvency of our pension systems threatens the very financial stability of our state. You know, and this is something that leaders do have to be talking about. Ted mentioned out-migration from Illinois. I was shocked when JB Pritzker gave his last State of the State speech. And he didn’t even mention the fact that people were leaving our state that we were hemorrhaging population. You know, JB Pritzker has not led on this issue. The numbers that Wire Points just unveiled are absolutely alarming and shocking. But it’s important that we also realize that we did not get into this mess overnight. We have been as a state digging this pensions hole that we now find ourselves in for decades. And it’s important to understand that there’s not going to be any silver bullets or magic beans type solution that’s going to get us out of this quickly. The number one driver for our pension shortfall is simply the Illinois politicians not making the required pension payments. And you know, I’m military, I can’t help myself. But there is no other way to describe it than simply dereliction of duty by the Illinois General Assembly. And that negligence is not going to be able to over be overcome instantaneously. But we can solve this problem. However, it’s going to require sacrifice in time and fiscal responsibility. Now, in 2019, JB Pritzker, his very first budget, saw our state increase spending across the board, despite the fact that we had record revenue coming in. We had a real opportunity in 2019, to do something to move ourselves in the right direction. Unfortunately, we missed that opportunity. I was one of just a handful of Republican senators who voted no on that first Pritzker budget, and I voted no because the increased spending and failure to pay down the pension shortfall made our situation much worse in the long run. That no vote that I cast on that first Pritzker budget. And that was a no vote in opposition to the Republican leadership in the House and Senate who supported that budget. That no vote is how you know that I’m serious about solving this fiscal this pension crisis that our state faces. JB Pritzker and the Democratic Party that he leads have had absolute control over Illinois government for three years now. And what have they done to solve this problem? Nothing, absolutely nothing. The only solution that JB Pritzker offers to this, or any other challenge that our state faces is increased taxes, increase government spending. JB Pritzker simply does not have the leadership capability to handle this crisis. This is yet another example of what I’ve been calling the Pritzker leadership deficit. It is real and it is adversely affecting our state like ever Another challenge our state faces, we need leadership, not outrage to solve our pensions crisis. Illinois needs a leader who can be tough, trusted to tell the truth, give measured analysis, offer solutions and then unite our state. I am that leader. And I’m asking for your trust. And your vote in the upcoming Governor election in 2022. Thank you so much for listening to me today.
Schimpf’s solution is to spend more money on pensions and spend less money on other things. Of course, the devil is in the details. What gets cut? Education? Public safety? Healthcare?
* Jesse Sullivan…
Great, Ted. Thanks for having me. And thanks, everyone, for joining this really important conversation. So I think back when I think of the pension issue, I think of sitting when I was telling my dad, I was going to run for governor, and I was sitting on his back porch of his house, it’s, I’m his neighbor. And so as we’re looking out over our corn and soybean fields, and my dad said, Hey, listen, he’s a retired public school teacher, and he said, Hey, if you’re going to take away my pensions, I’m not going to vote for you. And I said, Hey, you know, what, you taught me better than that, you taught me that your word is your bond. And, you know, a man is only as good as his word. And the state made a contract with a set of individuals that owned up to their part of that contract. Now, it’s incumbent upon us to actually care for these pensioners that are receiving these by actually making good on that promise. And as you know, you pointed out Ted 39% funded that is an insecure future for these retirees that we’ve made a promise to. So now you need to recognize, okay, we’ve got to do something serious about this, not by taking away any earned benefits from those who have earned them, but by reforming the system, drastically reforming it. And you think about JB Pritzker, his leadership, or lack of leadership on this, it’s really a head in the sand approach to the most important issues facing our state, whether that’s crime, or the pension issue. I’m not a politician. I’m a common sense problem solver who looks at you know, a business person who says what is the core problem here? What is the root cause problem that our state is facing? And politicians don’t like to do that, because then that means they own the problem. And they actually own solving the problem, and getting real outcomes for the people of the state. That’s why JB Pritzker has avoided taking it on. And so, for me, it’s just making that recognition that being a common sense problem solver is what we need to take this on. And I don’t think this is a partisan issue, I think it can be a bipartisan issue and approach. I think, back in 2013, there was a real initiative in a bipartisan way to get this done. I was able to serve over in Afghanistan, doing counterinsurgency work as a Department of Army civilian. In this work, what I learned was, you put the mission first, you don’t care who’s on the right and the left of you what their ideologies are, you know, what you care about is getting the job done getting the outcomes for those who are in need. And, and that’s what we need, as a leader of our state, someone who’s willing to step in and take this problem head on. Also, I approached this as a job creator, someone who I created Altar, a venture capital firm to back entrepreneurs, creating jobs around the world. I recognize what is needed from the government in order to create an atmosphere that business businesses and job creators want to be in. We are doing the exact opposite of that here in Illinois, we’re creating a really unfriendly business environment. And don’t take it from me as a business person. Take it from Warren Buffett, you know, the Great Investor who said, Hey, one of the first things we look at whenever we’re looking at investing into a new state is what are their unfunded liabilities. And when you look at Illinois being this extreme outlier, we’re not going to be able to create the jobs of the future here in Illinois for our children, if we have this, I call it it’s like a crack under the sea, it’s pulling everything else down along with it. And we need to point it out, we need to identify it, we need to have a bridge builder who can actually solve it. And that’s the last piece is we need someone who can actually be a common sense problem aolver work with people on the other side to be able to get outcomes here. And there are a lot of potential outcomes. I know today’s not about solutions. But there are a lot of potential solutions out there. But it’s going to take the right type of person who’s able and willing to work with the other side to actually get the results and outcomes the people of Illinois deserve. So I want to be that fighter, as your governor to actually step up and say we need to care about our retirees, those who have earned a pension. We need to care about them so much that we make this system solvent. We also have to care about the tax. There’s making sure they’re not getting around to the deal moving into the future, we need to care about the job creators here in Illinois and have a governor who will stand up for them and make this a business friendly state. So please check out Jessesullivan.com. I know I’m new to politics, but I’m not new to Illinois, and I love our home, I want to fix it. And I want to work together with the next generation of leaders here in Illinois that are going to make it happen.
OK, my eyes glazed over so much at all that excess fluff that I couldn’t accurately edit the statement. Sheesh. He started out strong talking about his dad, though.
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Caption contest!
Thursday, Nov 18, 2021 - Posted by Rich Miller
* From 2019…
Charlie Wheeler has forgotten more about the Illinois Legislature than most reporters will ever know — and he hasn’t forgotten much, least of all the time an ill-tempered state senator purposely dumped a bowl of hot soup on him.
Longtime readers of the Chicago Sun-Times might remember Wheeler by his elegant byline, Charles N. Wheeler III, matched by the equally elegant writing style he used to explain the legislative complexities in a way everyone could understand.
More recent readers might know him for his insightful comments, offered from his perch as director of the public affairs reporting program at the University of Illinois-Springfield, where he has helped mold a generation of top young journalists.
Wheeler, 77, is retiring this summer after an amazing 50-year run as a close observer of the Springfield scene — the first 24 years with the Sun-Times, the last 26 running the reporting program.
* Today is Charlie’s 80th birthday, so I thought we could honor our occasional blog commenter with a caption contest…
Happy birthday, Charlie!
…Adding… From Charlie…
Hi Rich,
Thank you so much for the kind words in your post about my birthday in yesterday’s Capfax. Thanks too to all the commenters who responded to your captions request, they really gave me a chuckle, especially those relating to my Santa Claus-like appearance and presumed octogenarian tastes. In my defense, I’d mention that I have heard of ear buds, but unfortunately they don’t work well when your ears are already plugged with hearing aids, thus the traffic controller headset.
I would have included my thanks as a Point of Personal Privilege in the comments section, but I spent most of the day with my daughter and grandkids, and by the time I saw the post, I figured it was too late to add anything. But I did want to let you know that I appreciate the shout out.
Cheers, and happy Thanksgiving!
Charlie
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Some political updates
Thursday, Nov 18, 2021 - Posted by Rich Miller
* Politico…
Democrats move the line on litmus tests
Gov. J.B. Pritzker attended a fundraiser last night for state Sen. Mike Simmons, a signal to any potential primary challenger that the recently appointed lawmaker from Chicago’s 7th District has the deep-pocketed governor’s support.
Simmons is Black and the state Senate’s first openly LGBTQ+ member, a point of pride for the party.
But Simmons also didn’t take a position on the most prominent piece of legislation the General Assembly tackled this year: the clean energy bill. The governor fiercely supported it, and traveled the globe to celebrate it at the U.N. Climate Change Conference in Glasgow.
At the time of his vote, Simmons told constituents he was concerned that the legislation would raise residents’ electric bills by $4 or more a month. Simmons took a pass — voting “present” — out of principle, knowing that the legislation would easily pass anyway.
By not holding that vote against him, Pritzker seems to be signaling that he doesn’t use litmus tests when it comes to supporting fellow Democrats.
It’s a turn-around from how the Democratic Party handled a lawmaker who sat out a vote on a crucial issue in 2019. Then-Democratic state Rep. Yehiel “Mark” Kalish, the General Assembly’s first member also serving as an Orthodox Jewish rabbi, passed on voting for the Reproductive Health Act, a law that enshrined abortion rights into state law. Kalish checked with the bill’s sponsor beforehand to be sure that it could pass even with his non-vote.
But his fellow Democrats turned on him nonetheless because he had said during his appointment interview that he would vote for the bill. He later lost his reelection bid in 2020.
Similarly, Simmons said during his appointment interview that he’d support the clean energy bill — which is why a few 47th Ward Democrats in his district are now concerned about his non-vote.
There is a huge difference between Simmons’ climate/energy bill vote and the backlash against Kalish: None of the groups behind the climate/energy bill are up in arms and demanding Simmons’ political head be put on a platter. Kalish’s flip-flop infuriated the pro-choice groups, particularly at Personal PAC, which, like it or not, has been a hugely powerful and influential pro-choice organization for decades here.
So, Kalish had to go. And so might Simmons if the AFL-CIO teamed up with the environmental groups to angrily demand his ouster. That hasn’t happened. Also, Personal PAC is more of an all-or-nothing organization. Its motto is “Pro-choice or no choice.” Labor and the enviros are more about the art of driving hard legislative bargains.
…Adding… Good point in comments…
The bill changed drastically between his commitment and his vote. By all means feel free to hold him to it, but then expect more non-answers from politicians like “It depends on what’s in the bill.” Or “I support the principle of promoting clean energy, but cannot make any commitments until I see the bill.”
I’m sure onlookers looooove that kind of response, but that’s what you incentivize.
Kalish just 100% flipped on a clear issue.
* WGIL…
State Senator Neil Anderson has announced that he will run for re-election in a sense, but in a new Senate District.
Republican Anderson hails from Andalusia, Illinois, and has been representing the nearby 36th District in the Quad Cities area.
Anderson is a firefighter and paramedic for the City of Moline, where he holds the rank of engineer.
The newly redrawn maps by the Democratic-controlled legislature very narrowly put Anderson in the 47th where he will run to represent parts of Knox, Rock Island, Warren, McDonough, and Fulton counties.
That new district is much more Republican than his current district. It’s already been interesting to watch his generally pro-labor voting record change to voting against the climate/energy bill.
* Rep. Dan Brady has been in office nearly 20 years and represents a very GOP district. His campaigns have mostly been cakewalks…
As of Sept. 30, Brady had nearly $190,000 in his campaign coffers. By comparison, the top two Dem campaign coffers are owned by Giannoulias, who ended September with more than $3.4 million in the bank, and Valencia, who raised more than $707,000.
But Brady was undaunted by the financial challenges. The longtime state rep said he’s been the underdog — and underfunded — in every campaign he’s ever been in but “there’s no hill for a climber.”
Click here for a bit of electoral history.
…Adding… Mayor Lightfoot was asked yesterday about FOP President John Catanzara’s threat to run for mayor…
In all seriousness, it would be a gift.
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The federal roundup continues
Thursday, Nov 18, 2021 - Posted by Rich Miller
* Jon Seidel…
A suburban businessman admitted Wednesday he rewarded then-state Sen. Martin Sandoval with thousands of dollars for Sandoval’s help speeding up the sale of property in McCook in a scheme that also involved former Cook County Commissioner Jeff Tobolski.
Vahooman “Shadow” Mirkhaef, who ran Cub Terminal in McCook, pleaded guilty to a conspiracy during a hearing held by video before U.S. District Judge Mary Rowland. He also agreed in his 18-page plea deal to cooperate with federal prosecutors.
The judge did not set a sentencing date for Mirkhaef.
Mirkhaef’s plea deal refers to a “Public Official A.” A source identified that person as Tobolski, who also served as mayor of McCook. A lawyer for Tobolski declined to comment Wednesday. Tobolski pleaded guilty to an extortion conspiracy last year and agreed to cooperate with prosecutors. His sentencing is also on hold.
…Adding… Forgot to post this one…
The man who led southwest suburban Crestwood for nearly a decade admitted Wednesday not only that he took a secret $5,000 cash payment from a red-light camera company’s representative, but that he did so while promising tickets there would “creep up higher.”
Louis Presta even bragged about the higher percentage of red-light traffic violations approved by Crestwood and issued to drivers in February 2018, telling the person with an ownership stake in SafeSpeed LLC, “You got a new sheriff in town.”
Those details were revealed when Presta, 71, pleaded guilty Wednesday to corruption charges and told U.S. District Judge Thomas Durkin he resigned his position with the village Tuesday night. Crestwood lawyer Burt Odelson said a special meeting has been set for Nov. 23 to try to pick an acting mayor who would serve through the next municipal election in April 2023.
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