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Rate Sen. Sue Rezin’s first congressional TV ad

Monday, Feb 10, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* I don’t have a press release, a script or an ad buy, but here you go

  18 Comments      


Mike Will Beat Donald Trump Everywhere

Monday, Feb 10, 2020 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

While Democratic Candidates attack each other in New Hampshire and fight over results in Iowa, Mike’s campaign is laying roots on every corner in cities and towns across the nation building support, spreading his message, and taking the fight to Donald Trump’s doorstep.

Here in Illinois, the campaign has opened five field offices and hired 80 staff members, with more on the way. During the Mike Bloomberg 2020 Weekend of Action, dedicated staff and volunteers reached out to nearly 10,000 voters and held 34 events across the state.

From Belleville to Chicago’s South Side, volunteers and organizers met with some special guests including State Senate President Don Harmon, Ariel Investments CEO John Rodgers, and Mike endorser and National Co-Chair Congressman Bobby Rush.

This effort was replicated in a nationwide show of strength for Mike with over 1,200 events - in every state Trump is competing in, including all the Super Tuesday states.

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Patients With Kidney Failure Are The Most Vulnerable Of The Vulnerable

Monday, Feb 10, 2020 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Kidney failure devastates people emotionally and financially as well as physically. Those with End-Stage Renal Disease (ESRD) have only two options for survival: dialysis or a kidney transplant. They suffer from symptoms that can include fluid retention, swelling, shortness of breath, fatigue, confusion, nausea, and weakness. Faced with these challenges, they must navigate treatment options and insurance challenges. – dialysis can take place at home or at a dialysis center, for example – and access to insurance options is important to reduce financial stress. Many patients are too sick to work, and with dialysis sessions taking four hours each three times a week, it’s tantamount to having a part-time job.

Currently, more than 650,000 Americans suffer from kidney failure – including more than 30,000 Illinoisans. Of these, about 70 percent are on life-sustaining dialysis, while the rest are able to survive with a functioning kidney transplant. The Illinois Kidney Care Alliance (IKCA) has formed with community groups and advocates, health professionals, and businesses from across Illinois to educate the public about the challenges faced by ESRD patients. To sign up for more information, visit our website.

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Campaign updates

Monday, Feb 10, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Rep. Bailey says the quiet part out loud: Illinois separation is “not gonna happen”

Monday, Feb 10, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Someone sent me a recording of Rep. Darren Bailey (R-Xenia) over the weekend. You can hear the Eastern Bloc member and candidate for Illinois Senate talking about the push to separate Chicago from Illinois

I am a co-sponsor of the bill. And that is a way to, kinda like what I acknowledge, you know, you have your boyfriend or girlfriend, husband and wife, get kind of mad, you know, and you say ‘Hey, I’ve got problems here and I’m tired of this.’

The conversation, I was told, took place a few weeks ago at a Charleston Chamber of Commerce dinner.

Chicagoans, Rep. Bailey is heard saying, “wouldn’t really acknowledge southern Illinois,” so, he said, “We are doing things that will eventually get their attention.”

* More from Bailey’s chat

Separation cannot take place involuntarily.

But if you’re a representative, represent the desires and wants of the people. So, fifty years ago, Chicago wanted to separate from Illinois. So every year, every year, someone introduces one of these bills and it’s kind of a, you know, maybe a media pop or whatever. But realistically, the House and the Senate, the state would have to pass it by a two-thirds margin and then it has to go to the federal, I mean, so it’s not gonna happen.

You find out sometimes when… you’re being a legislator that sometimes you can introduce a bill, then you get some attention.

* I reached out this morning for comment and here’s Rep. Bailey’s response…

While I do not appreciate having my conversation surreptitiously taped and leaked to the media, I stand by what I said.

I am a co-sponsor of the legislation to create a New Illinois. I, like so many of my constituents, am concerned about the direction our state is headed. We have to live under rules and laws we do not support and are not reflective of our priorities and values. The District boundaries are drawn in a such a way to maximize the power and influence of the City of Chicago in our state politics and there simply is not enough votes to defeat the bad policies the Chicago majority supports.

Those of us in rural Illinois have different values and a very different way of life. The New Illinois movement is intended to accomplish two things. One, it is hoped that legislators from Chicago will see the support this legislation has in downstate precincts and stop going out of their way to force their policies on us. Two, it is hoped that in time, there will be enough support to form a New Illinois.

What is happening in Illinois is similar to efforts in California and now Virginia.

I know that in the world of media, there is always a desire to have a “Gotcha” moment. My comments about the viability of the New Illinois movement is based on the political realities in Illinois. We are a long way away from getting the support that is needed to create a new state. Accepting the political realities of our state is hardly a “Gotcha” moment. I support the New Illinois effort but in the short term, the real value of this movement is to show Chicago legislators the harm they are doing to rural communities with their bad policies. This is the message I have consistently been communicating to my constituents.

By the way, I checked with an attorney before posting this.

  38 Comments      


Question of the day

Monday, Feb 10, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Press release…

US Senator Ted Cruz has officially endorsed Conservative Republican Mary Miller for Congress in the March 17th Primary Election in the 15th Congressional District.

Cruz posted the following statement on his Facebook page: “In Illinois, I am proud to offer my endorsement and support to Mary Miller for Congress in her campaign for Congressional District 15! I hope you join me in supporting her today.”

Senator Ted Cruz is one of the leading voices of conservatism in the US Senate. A recently launched podcast featuring Senator Cruz (https://www.iheart.com/podcast/867-verdict-with-ted-cruz-56253661/) is one of the most downloaded podcast in the nation.

“I am truly honored and humbled to have the support of Senator Ted Cruz in this race,” Miller said. “Ted Cruz is a principled conservative who is not afraid to stand up for his convictions. I look forward to being able to work with Senator Cruz as a member of Congress.”

Mary Miller is running for Congress in the 15th Congressional District, which includes all of 29 counties and parts of four counties. The District is almost 52 percent rural.

* Press release…

Patrick Pfingsten, spokesman for the Darren Duncan for Congress campaign, released the following statement on recent reports on Ted Cruz’s endorsement in the 15th Congressional District:

    “Apparently Washington politics and Chicago politics aren’t that different. Mary Miller hires Ted Cruz’s campaign manager and Ted Cruz then endorses Mary Miller. Quite the coincidence. Like Donald Trump, Darren Duncan doesn’t play by the Chicago and DC politics game. He’s not paid for by any special interest and won’t hire any fancy political consultant for tens of thousands of dollars just to get an endorsement.

    Mary Miller should disavow Ted Cruz’s endorsement, break her ties with Jeff Roe, and denounce Ted Cruz for his failure to endorse Donald Trump in 2016 and his obstruction to Trump in the Senate.”

The 15th Congressional District covers all or parts of 33 counties in central and southern Illinois. It stretches from Champaign and Ford Counties to the north, all the way south to the Ohio River and across to Madison County, just outside of St. Louis. The district includes Danville, Mattoon-Charleston, Effingham, Harrisburg, Metropolis, and Collinsville. The current Congressman, John Shimkus, is not seeking re-election.

* The Question: Do you think a Ted Cruz endorsement can move the needle in a GOP congressional primary in that part of Illinois? Explain.

  20 Comments      


Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Fundraiser list

Monday, Feb 10, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Donations to private school scholarship program drop 18 percent

Monday, Feb 10, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* By Cole Lauterbach at the Center Square

Illinois’ private school scholarship program’s largest facilitator of grants sent more students to schools of their choice despite a $10 million slump in donations statewide compared to the year before.

The Illinois Department of Revenue has yet to finalize the total amount donated, but Empower Illinois, the state’s largest scholarship-granting organization, estimated all scholarship-granting organizations brought in about $50 million, down from $61 million in the first year of the program. The Invest in Kids private school scholarship program offers a 75 percent state tax rebate in exchange for a donation to help a student go to the school of their choice tuition-free. In 2019, more than 46,000 students applied.

“That potential cut and cap threat to the program in the budgetary process really chilled donors,” Empower Illinois Director Anthony Holter said. “Many of the donors we’ve reached out to subsequent of that say ‘we thought the program was over.’ ”

Gov. J.B. Pritzker had proposed to halve the amount that the Invest in Kids Program could raise and to stop accepting new members instead of letting the program live out its five-year lifespan. However, Pritzker backed down after facing pressure from parents.

Empower raised $41 million, down from $45 million in 2018, according to its annual report from the 2019 school year.

Despite raising less, the organization sent 5,858 students to private schools at no cost, 400 more students than the year prior.

Holter said the reason is that schools in central and southern Illinois saw activity through the program in 2019 and tuition for those schools is cheaper compared to private school tuition in Cook County or the Chicago suburbs.

  47 Comments      


Strike 2

Monday, Feb 10, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Background is here. From the SoS…

Dear Mr. Miller:

Thank you for your follow-up FOIA request from earlier this afternoon. The Secretary of State response follows:

In your request, you ask the Secretary of State to provide you with redacted copies of all photos of every individual currently subject to the General Orders that were referenced in the Secretary of State response to your initial FOIA request sent to you at 11:46 A.M., February 7, 2020. The Secretary of State is unsure what you mean by redacted copies of all photos, photos taken from Secretary of State drivers’ license or state identification files are exempt from production under the Illinois Vehicle Code and therefore, Section 7(1)(a) of the Illinois Freedom of Information Act [5 ILCS 140/7(1)(a)] as explained in my previous email. If, however, you mean that you seek all but the digital photos, the Secretary of State response is the same as in the email sent to you yesterday-the information is exempt from production under the same sections of the Illinois Freedom of Information Act as I stated in the second to last paragraph of the email sent to you at 11:46 A.M., yesterday. Your request is therefore denied.

Should you wish to do so, you may file a request for review with the Office of the Illinois Attorney General, Public Access Bureau, 500 S. Second St., Springfield, Illinois 62706 or you may seek whatever remedy that may be available to you under Section 11 of the Illinois Freedom of Information Act.[5 ILCS 140/11].

Donna M. Leonard
Executive Counsel
Illinois Secretary of State

  14 Comments      


Congressional roundup

Monday, Feb 10, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Sun-Times

Mayor Lori Lightfoot on Saturday endorsed Marie Newman in her bid to unseat U.S. Rep. Dan Lipinski, D-Ill., giving Newman’s campaign a key progressive boost ahead of the Chicago area’s biggest Democratic primary contest next month.

Lightfoot previously signaled her support for the challenger last month, declaring it was Lipinski’s “time to leave” after the eight-term, anti-abortion incumbent co-signed a legal brief asking the U.S. Supreme Court to revisit the Roe V. Wade decision.

But after declining to name her candidate, Chicago’s first black female and openly gay mayor formally announced she was “proud to endorse Marie Newman” in the heated 3rd Congressional District primary. […]

The Newman backing helps Lightfoot burnish her progressive credentials, but it also puts her at odds with state House Speaker Mike Madigan, a strong Lipinski backer whose support Ligthfoot will need in her efforts to secure a Chicago casino.

I wouldn’t be too certain that Madigan is still a super-strong Lipinski backer. Madigan was a big supporter of Dan’s father, but the son is a different matter. He’s not big on listening.

* Tribune

Their much younger political opponents say they are out of touch, aren’t visible enough in their districts and, after spending decades in office, miss important meetings and votes in Washington. The challengers say this shows it’s simply time for newer, younger energy.

But U.S. Reps. Danny Davis and Bobby Rush, two titans of Chicago’s Democratic political scene who have outlasted presidents, mayors and aldermen, say there’s more for them to do.

Davis and his South Side colleague, Rush, each have three challengers in the March 17 primary election.

* The most recent BGA/Politifact report

Ives said Casten “demanded the impeachment of the Republican President before the Mueller report was even released.”

Mueller’s report was released on April 18, 2019. Casten called for an impeachment inquiry on June 20, 2019, and announced publicly he would vote in favor of impeachment on Dec. 12, 2019. So Ives’ timeline doesn’t track.

We rate her claim False.

Ives countered with a diatribe and this

It was a joke, but point taken.

* NRCC…

Hey there –

In the ongoing ComEd corruption probe, federal prosecutors are now zeroing in on lobbyist Michael McClain who wrote the bombshell ‘Rape In Champaign’ email.

McClain, a close confidant of Michael Madigan, is also one of Betsy Dirksen Londrigan’s donors.

So far Betsy’s been silent as to why she accepts money from corrupt ComEd lobbyists who cover up rape.

Not exactly Midwest values…

He gave her $450 in 2018.

* Related…

* Southern Illinois could lose another congressman. Will rural voices still matter?

* Londrigan fourth quarter fundraising outpaces Davis

* Rezin, Oberweis Among GOP Senators Calling for Suspension of Automatic Voter Registration, Investigation

  10 Comments      


Today’s must-read

Monday, Feb 10, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Bob Susnjara at the Daily Herald

As suburban police tout the crime-fighting benefits of striking deals for access to video from Amazon’s Ring doorbell cameras, several critics, including a prominent civil-rights organization, are raising concerns about privacy and about law enforcement helping a private company build a surveillance network.

In nearly 1½ years, Ring, with its associated Neighbors app, has gained relationships with at least 90 police departments in Illinois — many clustered in the suburbs, according to a company map. Aurora was the first Illinois department to link with Ring in September 2018, and Palatine, Schaumburg, Barrington and Libertyville are among this year’s newcomers.

But those deals could be troubling to residents who don’t support police teaming with Amazon’s subsidiary, said Ed Yohnka, spokesman for the American Civil Liberties Union of Illinois. Elected officials should place the Ring contracts on an agenda for debate and public approval, he said, even though no money is involved.

“When law enforcement is making these agreements, I think elected officials ought to be responsible for them,” Yohnka said. “Building out this kind of system isn’t simply a law enforcement decision. It’s a community decision. It’s the kind of community one wants to live in.”

Rolling Meadows Police Chief John Nowacki, whose department was the second in Illinois to forge an agreement with Ring and the Neighbors app, countered that the deal with his town — just like in other communities — was a standard administrative function that didn’t need city council approval.

Susnjara has written an insightful story that I really think you should read from beginning to end. So, please, click here.

  9 Comments      


Fun with numbers

Monday, Feb 10, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Sun-Times on December 31, 2019

Chicago has turned around its perennially dismal rate at solving murders, according to statistics released Tuesday.

The city’s murder clearance rate in 2019 was about 53%, according to Chicago Police Department figures. In 2016, the clearance rate was just 29% — an improvement of more than 50% in three years, the department’s figures show.

The police said that in 2019 they “cleared more murders than in any of the past 10 years, with 263 murders cleared.” […]

Anthony Guglielmi, chief spokesman for the police, said the increase in the clearance rate is “the result of hiring more detectives and giving them technology to help with their investigations. The investments we are making in detectives are already showing gains.”

* Frank Main on Friday night

But, of the 261 murders that the police signed off on as having been cleared last year, 152 were closed “exceptionally” — what the department labels “CCX” for “cleared, closed exceptionally,” meaning no one was charged.

That means there was no arrest in 58% of the cleared homicide investigations.

The number of murder cases that were CCXed has gone up every year since 2016, police department figures show. After the department cleared 70 murders exceptionally in 2015, the number dropped to 39 in 2016, then rose to 87 the following year and 111 in 2018.

The vaunted improvement in the murder clearance rate obscures an important fact: The number of murder cases in Chicago that result in an arrest has gone down, the Sun-Times found.

  23 Comments      


Lightfoot backs embattled appointed legislator

Monday, Feb 10, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* I’ve been telling subscribers to expect this…


Delgado is backed by Mayor Lightfoot’s city council floor leader, Ald. Gil Villegas.

* I told subscribers last week that it seemed possible the House could punt the two qualifications challenges until after the primary, when it could be a moot point either way. And then the House unexpectedly canceled a couple of perfunctory session days scheduled for this week, which had the apparent impact of pushing back the appointment deadline of a special committee that will take up the challenges.

Anyway, bottom line is that if Speaker Madigan sticks to the schedule in the rules, the House will have just two weeks to conduct an investigation, hold hearings and then bring it to the floor before March 5th, the final day of spring session ahead of the March 17th primary. He could always decide to appoint the committee ahead of schedule, however, so stay tuned.

…Adding… A commenter made a point that I’ve also made in the past. Delgado’s opponent is Nidia Carranza, a public schools teacher and a CTU activist who went on a hunger strike during last year’s labor battle. So, this can be seen as a proxy battle between Lightfoot and the CTU.

  12 Comments      


Tollway executive director has hired nine former CHA colleagues so far

Monday, Feb 10, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Marni Pyke

The tally of former Chicago Housing Authority employees in positions paying $85,000 to $195,000 at the Illinois tollway is growing, and that concerns some lawmakers given the top tollway executive also is a CHA alumnus.

Tollway leaders dismissed questions of nepotism when asked about nine ex-CHA staffers who were hired from August through December and are paid more than $1.3 million collectively, state records show. Executive Director Jose Alvarez, the former CHA chief operating officer, joined the tollway in April.

“Taken together, all nine of these employees have decades of experience at a number of different organizations in human resources, talent recruitment, procurement and compliance,” tollway spokesman Dan Rozek said. […]

Democratic state Sen. Laura Murphy of Des Plaines, a tollway reform advocate, said, “I find this information troubling. I am interested in getting a full and complete explanation.” […]

“I understand the need to hire people you trust, but I hope that Mr. Alvarez will cast a wider net when looking for employees in the future,” [Sen. Cristina Castro, D-Elgin] added.

  27 Comments      


Supreme Court Justice Bob Thomas to retire and join law firm that represented him in defamation case

Monday, Feb 10, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Press release

Justice Robert R. Thomas has announced his retirement from the Illinois Supreme Court effective Feb. 29, 2020. Justice Thomas, 67, became the first Chief Justice from DuPage County when he was elected to that post from 2005-2008. One of the major accomplishments during Justice Thomas’ tenure as Chief was the establishment of the Supreme Court Commission on Professionalism, an outgrowth of the Special Supreme Court Committee on Civility, which was formed in 2001. […]

Justice Thomas will join the Power Rogers law firm where he will practice with his son, Jonathan. Justice Thomas was represented by firm co-founder Joe Power in a successful 2006 defamation case against the Kane County Chronicle. […]

The Supreme Court has constitutional authority to fill interim judicial vacancies and has appointed Appellate Justice Michael J. Burke to fill Justice Thomas’ seat effective March 1 through Dec. 5, 2022. Justice Burke has been a member of the Second District Appellate Court since 2008. DuPage County Circuit Judge Liam Brennan has been assigned to the Second District Appellate Court, effective March 2 through Dec. 5, 2022. […]

Following his graduation from Notre Dame, Justice Thomas played 12 seasons in the National Football League, 10 of them with the Chicago Bears. In the 1977 season, Justice Thomas kicked a 28-yard overtime field goal that sent the Bears to the playoffs for the first time in 14 years, and he remains the fourth leading scorer in Chicago Bears history.

* 2007

The Kane County Chronicle has agreed to apologize for publishing defamatory statements about Illinois Supreme Court Chief Justice Robert Thomas and to pay a reduced damage award to settle a case playing out in state and federal courts.

In a joint statement given to the Tribune Thursday, Thomas affirmed the importance of a free press and equal treatment of all under a court system he heads — issues that the paper insisted were at stake.

The statement was attributed to Thomas and Tom Shaw, the Chronicle’s president and chief executive officer, and included the name of former columnist Bill Page. His allegations in 2003 of high court politicking by Thomas were found by a jury to be false and defamatory.

Page, in a phone interview from Florida where he now lives, said he would not have agreed to a settlement and stands by his work.

“I will never back down from what I wrote,” Page said. “It was based on what I had from confidential sources.”

Attorneys for both sides declined to disclose the settlement sum, but Page said the paper agreed to pay $3 million in order to halt court battles that could drag on for years and cost millions.

…Adding… Justice Thomas was up for retention this year, but his district has shifted toward the Democratic Party in past years, so this may have been the smart move. The timing of his announcement means Thomas’ successor will not have to run until 2022 and will face actual opponents.

  18 Comments      


WBEZ source: Chicago feds looking at McClain’s “rape in Champaign” email

Monday, Feb 10, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Tony Arnold

As part of their sprawling public corruption probe, federal prosecutors in Chicago are now scrutinizing a 2012 email in which a powerful Illinois lobbyist lauded a state worker who “kept his mouth shut” about an unspecified “rape in Champaign,” WBEZ has learned.

The bombshell email was written by Michael McClain, a long-time confidant to Illinois House Speaker Michael Madigan. McClain is now a central figure in the ongoing probe into utility Commonwealth Edison’s Springfield lobbying activities. WBEZ first reported on the email last month after obtaining it through an open-records request, prompting immediate calls for criminal investigations from elected officials.

In the 2012 email, McClain wrote to two aides for then-Gov. Pat Quinn to seek leniency for a state worker facing discipline. McClain praised the worker because he “kept his mouth shut on Jones’ ghost workers, the rape in Champaign and other items.” […]

It’s still unclear what McClain was referring to. WBEZ has not been able to verify the facts underlying his statements in the email, including whether a rape occurred, its alleged perpetrator or whether Forrest Ashby, the worker facing discipline, had actual knowledge of the crime, as McClain contended.

But a law enforcement source with knowledge of the federal investigation says the feds are interested in several aspects of the email, including the mention of the rape and the apparent reference to ghost payrollers. The source requested anonymity because they are not authorized to speak publicly about the ongoing criminal probe.

  15 Comments      


The rules are a mess

Monday, Feb 10, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Hannah Meisel’s Daily Line story is chock full of interesting stuff today, but I want to focus on this part for now

One major area the Joint Commission on Ethics and Lobbying Reform is studying in the weeks leading up to the deadline for its March 31 report is conflicts of interest — a subject the commission spent nearly five hours on during its Jan. 30 meeting.

[Legislative Inspector General Carol Pope] said the legislative inspector general is put in an awkward position by current state law, which prohibits her from using statements of economic disclosure filed by lawmakers as evidence of wrongdoing that could lead to discipline.

Pope told The Daily Line that “several” investigations of possible conflicts of interests have been hamstrung by seemingly competing responsibilities both to investigate possible wrongdoing and the language of the statute.

“You get to the point where you say to yourself, ‘Okay the taxpayers are paying me, am I going to spend hours, days investigating a conflict of interest?’” Pope said. “Even if there is a conflict and it’s not disclosed because disclosure is not mandated, where’s it going ultimately? I have to think about, ultimately, so I, you know, if I know that even if I make a founded report it’s not going to be published or go anywhere because of the conflicts legislation, it seems not a good use of resources to pursue it.”

* More on this from the Sun-Times editorial board

Moreover, as the laws are written, the IG has a much broader authority to investigate various types of transgressions than the commission has the authority to do anything about. The commission is restricted to acting on such misconduct as doing political work on state time, promising something of value in exchange for a political contribution, accepting certain positions after state employments ends, sexual harassment and similar violations.

That leaves a world of mischief that the IG might uncover but for which the commission can’t impose penalties, such as fines.

So for example, if the IG gets a tip that a legislator is working for a company that’s going to get a huge financial windfall as a result of a bill the legislator is pushing, the inspector general can check it out and write up a report. But there is no way for the commission to impose a punishment.

And, of course, if the commission isn’t pleased, the report will never see the light of day.

* Meanwhile, the Tribune editorial board apparently thinks the governor can just snap his fingers and make something happen

Strengthening the legislative inspector general’s authority should not wait until a March 31 deadline Pritzker set for his ethics task force to make recommendations. The legislature reconvenes Feb. 18. Make it priority No. 1, Gov. Pritzker. And then get about making public whatever “founded” allegations involving elected officials are being kept secret. Voters deserve to know. […]

The hearing also exposed the wariness of lawmakers to empower the watchdog, even now when ethics is top-of-mind for voters.

To Porter and other experts who testified, lawmakers tossed out numerous hypothetical questions about what could be considered investigation-worthy. What about political retribution, false claims, personal matters? Would divorces be off limits? Relationships? Financial conflicts? Stocks and investments? What about showing up drunk to work? Really. It came up. As a hypothetical, of course. […]

Pritzker cannot leave this inadequate setup for House and Senate leaders to overhaul on their own. They have proved they won’t do it, or they’ll only hang some window dressing. Pritzker needs to lead on this, and he needs to lead hard.

Elections have consequences and the voters did not elect someone who would wage all-out war with the General Assembly. That guy lost.

  13 Comments      


Oberweis mail mystery solved?

Monday, Feb 10, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* We discussed a couple of similar-looking mailers on Friday. One was from the New Prosperity Foundation, which is headed by Jim Gidwitz and Greg Baise…

The other was sent by Congressional candidate Ted Gradel…

* Cal Skinner at the McHenry County Blog did a bit of snooping and discovered that the two largest contributions to the New Prosperity Foundation were from a guy named Thomas Mazza, totaling $150,000.

Thomas and Sue Mazza have also given $5,600 each to Ted Gradel’s campaign.

…Adding… From comments…

Tom Mazza is Ted Gradel’s boss at Metolius Capital

Click here.

  9 Comments      


You’ve heard what he didn’t say, here’s what he did say

Monday, Feb 10, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* My weekly syndicated newspaper column

I’ve read and heard a lot of commentary about what Gov. J.B. Pritzker didn’t say in his State of the State address last month. Some folks are still quite angry that he didn’t address their pet causes.

And the previous day’s guilty plea by former Sen. Martin Sandoval prompted the news media to focus mainly on the anti-corruption portion of the governor’s speech. Behind his strong, quote-worthy rhetoric, however, were three concrete proposals: 1) A ban on legislators being paid to lobby; 2) Disclosure of conflicts of interests and punishment for non-compliance; and 3) Forbidding legislators from becoming lobbyists immediately after leaving office.

The House Republicans are already on record in favor of a legislator lobbying ban, and House Republican Leader Jim Durkin has introduced a conflict of interest bill (HB 3954) that would even require attorneys to disclose clients who could pose potential conflicts. Senate President Don Harmon offered support of the lobbying revolving door provision. Senate Republican Leader Bill Brady said he supports the conflicts of interest disclosure bit.

House Speaker Michael Madigan did not indicate support for anything. The chairman he appointed to head an ethics commission, however, supported all three.

But beyond what Pritzker didn’t say, and beyond the corruption angle, the governor did get into some other substance which was lost in the shuffle.

On the subject of property taxes, Pritzker complained about the “perverse incentives in state law” that encourage local governments to “max out” their property tax levies “even when they don’t need to.” He was referring to an unintended consequence of the state’s Property Tax Extension Limitation Law that essentially encourages units of government to tax to the cap every year for fear of forever losing that revenue. What Pritzker wants to do is not yet known.

Pritzker also proposed allowing citizens to initiate consolidating or eliminating units of local government. The General Assembly has passed some limited, highly localized legislation on this topic. Pritzker wants to take it statewide.

Other governors have talked about ethics, property taxes and consolidation and ended up accomplishing little. Pritzker will have to use all of his considerable persuasive powers to move his agenda to the goal line. He spent a whole lot of his political capital on last year’s mega-agenda and a governor’s second year is never as “easy” as the first. There is generally an eagerness to help a brand-new governor achieve his goals, but that can wear off.

Pritzker’s clean energy proposals included legislation “that reduces carbon pollution, promotes renewable energy, and accelerates electrification of our transportation sector.”

That matches up with the three “pillars” of the Illinois Clean Jobs coalition. Pritzker also made clear that ComEd’s hegemonic days are over: “I’m not going to sign an energy bill written by the utility companies.”

Harmon told Public Television’s Jak Tichenor after the speech that he didn’t believe anyone was suggesting that Exelon and ComEd shouldn’t be at the bargaining table. “What is encouraging to me,” Harmon said, “is that they won’t be the loudest voice in the room now. The governor made it very clear that he’s going to amplify the voices of other people.”

On the social justice front, the governor said he wants to start phasing out cash bail. He also wants to follow “many of the recommendations made by the bipartisan criminal justice reform commission created by my predecessor, most of whose ideas were never adopted because of the rancor and dysfunction.” Gov. Bruce Rauner drew widespread praise for his criminal justice reforms, but the issue got lost in his never-ending battles with Democrats.

Pritzker did have a pointed response to those who have been pushing him hard to hire more Democratic patronage workers.

Democratic insiders have been grumbling for a full year that their people have to go through the same hiring practice as everyone else and often don’t wind up being picked.

In response, people within the administration have complained about how party bosses have been trying to shove an inordinate number of politically connected and unqualified or under-qualified white men down their throats.

Pritzker insisted that his way of hiring has made the state better: “The old patronage system needs to die…finally and completely. The input of women and people of color needs to be treated as essential to decision making — not as some token show of diversity.”

It was a well-written speech, but the really hard part comes soon when he introduces his next budget, which, at last check, was projected to be $1.8 billion out of balance.

  21 Comments      


Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today’s edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)

Monday, Feb 10, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

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*** LIVE COVERAGE ***

Monday, Feb 10, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Follow along with ScribbleLive


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« NEWER POSTS PREVIOUS POSTS »
* Isabel’s afternoon roundup
* Showcasing The Retailers Who Make Illinois Work
* Indictment alleges NYC mayor gamed campaign reform to scam $10 million out of taxpayers
* The Importance Of Energy Storage
* Big staff changes announced for Pritzker’s communications team
* Question of the day
* Open thread
* Isabel’s morning briefing
* SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition and some campaign updates
* SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today's edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)
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