Another day, another Tribune poll
Wednesday, Sep 9, 2009 - Posted by Rich Miller
* Today’s Tribune headline: “Tribune poll finds nearly 60% oppose video gambling” isn’t exactly what it appears to be. Once again, you have to read way down in the story to find out what’s going on…
The poll found that 58 percent of voters would vote against legalized video gambling in a local referendum, while just 34 percent would support it. Opposition was about 60 percent from voters in suburban Cook County, the collar counties and Downstate, while 49 percent of Chicago voters said they would vote against it and 42 percent for it.
But…
Overall, voters were split on the question of whether Illinois’ various forms of gambling have been good for the state, with 40 percent saying it had indeed been good and 37 percent saying it had been bad.
And…
The poll found that 48 percent of those surveyed disapproved of legalizing video gambling anywhere in the state, while approval was voiced from 40 percent of voters. Though those numbers suggest video poker is still broadly unpopular, it is nonetheless gaining in acceptance. Six years ago in a similar Tribune poll, only 19 percent of those surveyed said they approved of allowing video poker machines into Illinois restaurants and bars. Back then, 71 percent said they were opposed.
Maddeningly, Mother Tribune refuses to publish full toplines and crosstabs, so there’s no way of knowing exactly how the question was phrased nor where it was placed in relation to other gaming, capital bill or budgeting questions.
* Meanwhile…
Gov. Pat Quinn has a 3:30 p.m. meeting in his Chicago office [today] with fellow Democrats House Speaker Michael Madigan and Senate President John Cullerton to “set an agenda” for the fall legislative session. Quinn told reporters yesterday the meeting will focus on campaign finance and state funding.
Hopefully, we’ll have live audio of any post-meeting press availabilities.
* Related…
* Illinois Juvenile Justice Dept. Missed out on Thousands: The Illinois Department of Juvenile Justice won a $330,000 grant to buy computers but failed to buy the computers and therefore lost the grant. That’s one of the findings detailed in a new audit of the agency.
* Chief Justice wants budget cuts reversed: State funds for community-based probation programs were cut 44 percent in the current budget. This same area was cut 13 percent in 2005 and, Fitzgerald said, the money was never restored. “The practical effect … is that probation officers must be laid off, criminal offenders sentenced to probation receive inadequate or no supervision, and the public safety is thereby severely compromised,” he wrote.
* Ill. chief justice wants probation cuts restored
* Illinois chief justice blasts funding cuts
* Peters and Quinn meet to talk about MAP grant
* Milton Township GOP opposes video gambling
* Capitol Q&A: Primer on horse-race betting from home
* 3rd St. fight imperils high-speed rail in Illinois, rail official warns: Springfield officials’ public fight against additional train traffic along the Third Street corridor could derail the entire plan to provide high-speed rail service between Springfield and Chicago, a vice president of the Union Pacific Railroad says.
* SJ-R Opinion: Step up opposition to 3rd Street plan