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This just in… Saddler gets CoS job… Quinn responds to critics

Tuesday, Aug 24, 2010 - Posted by Rich Miller

* 2:28 pm - Inside sources say Gov. Pat Quinn will choose Michelle Saddler as his new chief of staff.

Here is what I told subscribers this morning

Saddler is the Director of the Department of Human Services. She’s an African-American female and Quinn is desperate lately to appeal to black voters, who appear to be shunning him. She also worked for Quinn when he was state treasurer. He prefers people whom he knows.

The governor’s press conference is about to start, so we’ll see if the sources are right soon enough. Sadler’s name surfaced late.

You can click here to listen to the press conference live.

* 2:44 pm - And it is Ms. Saddler. The governor called her a “good friend” and an “excellent public servant.”

* From the Tribune

Saddler’s background includes working as Quinn’s director of investments when he served as state treasurer in the 1990s. She has a bachelor’s from Princeton University’s Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs and a master’s from Northwestern University’s Kellogg graduate school of management.

* Grace Hou, DHS’ Assistant Secretary for Programs, has been appointed acting secretary of DHS.

* Quinn is now taking questions on the Stermer fiasco. He began by saying “someone violated” state law by giving the inspector general’s report to a reporter.

“It has not a shred of truth,” Quinn said about any connection between the inspector general’s Stermer report and Wright’s firing.

“On the 23rd of July, we e-mailed” their executive appointments person about a replacement for the inspector general. Quinn said his chief counsel went to the EIG and told him personally on the morning of the 13th that he was being replaced. “I don’t think he labored under any assumption that I was going to reappoint him,” Quinn said about James Wright.

“I did not know anything about the report until I arrived at my office” at about 5 o’clock on the afternoon of the 13th. That’s important because the report arrived at his office the day before.

“I was planning to discipline my chief of staff Jerry Stermer” and Stermer was willing to accept that discipline, Quinn said. But after the Sun-Times reporter called, Quinn said he called Stermer and his chief said he did not want to be a “distraction.”

Quinn said he planned to mete out a “strong punishment,” involving “a suspension” for Stermer.

Quinn said his brother made a “keystroke error” when he sent that campaign e-mail to Stermer.

The governor said he interviewed several people for inspector general, started the vetting process and was then told that the candidates decided to go elsewhere.

* 3:29 pm - End.

* I thought he did a pretty decent job, as far as these things go. We’ll see how Brady reacts. Stay tuned.

* In case you missed it, the audio archive of the entire presser can be downloaded here.

  71 Comments      


Tweet of the day

Tuesday, Aug 24, 2010 - Posted by Rich Miller

* From Scott Lee Cohen

Enjoying my evening at the Probation Challenge’s 31st Annual dinner.

The man has no sense of irony.

More importantly, though, a considerable number of prominent African-Americans were likely at that dinner. I wonder if Gov. Pat Quinn was anywhere near there.

* First runner-up goes to Pat Quinn’s Brain

You want message discipline? Today’s message is jobs. Specifically, who will be hired as my new Chief of Staff?

* I can’t read John Corrigan’s latest

Chicago%20taxpayers%20can%20sound%20off%20on%20budget%20next%20month

* JUSTPAC

Media Ignores Kilbride Hostility Toward Illinois Police

Maybe you should do more than just Tweet about it then.

* Somehow, I don’t find the name of this restaurant all that appetizing

Please join us for a special “Meet and Greet”: Thur, 8/26/10 Steam Plant Family Restaurant, 123 Meadow St, Belvidere 11:15 - 12:15PM

* Speaking of food, HuffPo asks

It’s National Waffle Day. We are thinking of the best waffle joints in Chicago. Any suggestions?

Try Pat Quinn’s Brain.

* Illinois-Stage asks

If the state merged the Comptroller and Treasurer offices, what would the new office be called?

Easy. “Troller.”

* Crain’s

Broadway Bank seizure not political move, watchdog says http://bit.ly/cYFhwV

So far, no counter-Tweet from Mark Kirk about how the mob bought off the watchdog and how Kirk is gonna smash that mob like Super Man!

* SJ-R

Illinois strikes out again for federal school funding

The story’s about Race to the Top. The race has started, but we’re left at the bottom. Same as it ever was.

* Finally, news I can use

The White Sox plan to claim slugger Manny Ramirez once the Dodgers place him on waivers, FoxSports.com reports.

Thoughts?

  28 Comments      


*** UPDATED x1 - Halvorson downgraded *** Rasmussen: Brady ahead 46-37

Tuesday, Aug 24, 2010 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Rasmussen’s latest, with previous Ras polls in brackets…

Brady: 46% [48%, 44%, 43%, 47% 45%, 45%, 47%]
Quinn: 37% [35%, 37%, 40%, 36% 38%, 38%, 37%]
Some Other Candidate 6% [6%, 11%, 9%, 8% 5%, 7%, 6%]
Not sure 11% [12%, 9%, 8%, 10% 11%, 10%, 9%]

For the first time, they also included “leaners” in the poll. In other words, those who say they are undecided are asked whom they are leaning towards. The margin narrows a wee bit…

Brady: 49%
Quinn: 41%
Some Other Candidate 3%
Not sure 7%

It really would be nice if Rasmussen started polling the other candidates in this race.

From the pollster

This race now moves from Leans GOP to a Toss-Up in the Rasmussen Reports Election 2010 Gubernatorial Scorecard.

From far away, maybe it looks that way. I still don’t see it up close, though.

Back to the pollster…

Brady receives support from 85% of Republicans, while Quinn is favored by just 68% of Democrats. Among voters not affiliated with either political party, Brady holds a commanding 61% to 17% lead.

Quinn, who took over from impeached governor Rod Blogojevich more than 18 months ago, continues to face a $13-billion state deficit, one of the country’s worst. Eighty-seven percent (87%) of voters in the state know someone who is out of work and looking for a job. Forty-three percent (43%) say the job market is worse than a year ago, while only 15% say its better.

Thirty-nine percent (39%) of Illinois voters approve of the job Quinn is doing as governor. Sixty percent (60%), however, disapprove of his job performance.

Brady is viewed Very Favorably by 19% of the state’s voters and Very Unfavorably by 17%. Quinn earns Very Favorable marks from 10% and Very Unfavorable reviews from 31%.

Both candidates are well-known in the state, but at this point in a campaign, Rasmussen Reports considers the number of people with strong opinions more significant than the total favorable/unfavorable numbers.

* A check of the crosstabs shows Quinn doing quite well with African-Americans. The Illinois Chamber, you may recall, claimed that once those black voter numbers firmed up for Quinn, this could be a 5-6 point race. But with 75 percent black support, it’s still a 9-point race. And Scott Lee Cohen hasn’t ramped up his campaign yet. Quinn’s black support rises to 80 percent with leaners, which accounts for just under half of Quinn’s one-point narrowing because Brady picks up an additional point among African-Americans and rises to 10.

* Methodology

The survey of 750 Likely Voters in Illinois was conducted on August 23, 2010 by Rasmussen Reports. The margin of sampling error is +/-4 percentage points with a 95% level of confidence. Field work for all Rasmussen Reports surveys is conducted by Pulse Opinion Research, LLC.

* TPM PollTracker


*** UPDATE *** Rothenberg has the governor’s race at “Toss-up/Tilt Republican,” but he’s also just moved Congresswoman Debbie Halvorson to “Pure toss-up” status

Illinois 11. Rep. Debbie Halvorson (D) finds herself in deeper trouble than she expected, as GOP challenger Adam Kinzinger has emerged as a serious threat to her. The state political environment is increasingly toxic for Democrats, and polling shows Halvorson, a former leader in the state legislator, in bad shape. Move from Toss-up/Tilt Democrat to Pure Toss-up as Halvorson’s prospects deteriorate.

Other pundit ratings on this race, from Halvorson’s opponent…

The Cook Political Report - Toss-Up (moved from Lean D, 8/17/10)
Real Clear Politics - Leans GOP

  42 Comments      


Quinn to take questions as Brady whacks him again over Stermer/Wright debacle

Tuesday, Aug 24, 2010 - Posted by Rich Miller

* As I’ve already told subscribers, Gov. Pat Quinn will hold a press conference this afternoon at 2:30 to announce his new chief of staff and take questions from reporters. IIS will have a “watch it live” link here.

* While we’re waiting on the guv’s newser, check out this press release from Bill Brady’s campaign…

PAT QUINN’S ILLINOIS: NO JOBS, NO REFORM

Brady Says Quinn Obsessed with Politics, Not Jobs

Chicago – Republican Gubernatorial candidate Bill Brady today said Governor Pat Quinn’s firing of the state’s Executive Inspector General on the very day he learned of an ethics probe involving his chief of staff suggests he’s focused on politics, not jobs during our fiscal crisis.

“In the middle of a recession, people need a governor focused on creating jobs and cleaning up state government,” said Brady. “Instead, Governor Quinn has gone down the same road of his predecessors - ethical lapses, investigations, and protecting political insiders at taxpayer expense.”

“Illinois lost 20 thousand jobs last month alone,” he said. “This latest revelation proves we won’t ever solve our fiscal crisis under a governor consumed by politics, not jobs,” he said.

Questions over the firing of the state’s top ethics official are the latest in a string of published reports that call into question the Governor’s commitment to government reform, and the priorities of his Administration.

Previous examples include:

· Secret pay raises for political appointees, including his Budget Director

· Questionable use of official state time and resources for his political campaign

· Supporting the honesty and integrity of convicted Governor Rod Blagojevich months after federal officials revealed their investigation

· Quietly signing a video poker bill to allow known criminals into gambling against the recommendation of the Gaming Commission

· Failing to support the recommendations of his own reform commission

· Keeping a majority of Rod Blagojevich’s officials in top government positions

· Vetoing McPier reforms

Thoughts?

  30 Comments      


Goodbye, Jason

Tuesday, Aug 24, 2010 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Many years ago, I made a huge mistake and got into an automobile with someone who had way too much to drink. He was pulled over and arrested for DUI, and the cops told me I was on my own.

It was very late at night during the work week, it was freezing cold and I was so poor back then that I didn’t have enough cash for a taxi. But I knew right away that there was one person I could call for help: Jason Hammond.

Jason answered the phone on the first ring, then high-tailed it all the way across town to get me. He had coffee and cigarettes waiting for me as I stepped into his car, freezing, tired and feeling stupid. What a guy.

Jason was one of the most unusual people I knew. He served in Vietnam. He was wounded in action, but reenlisted as a medic. That second tour really screwed up his head, but he said his life was saved because he was discharged in San Francisco at the tail end of the summer of 1967.

He spent the next several years hanging out with hippies and honing his skills as a master carpenter. The guy could build anything. He and his wife raised their children in a modified Bluebird bus and a tipi in southern New Mexico. Not exactly your typical middle class family, but it worked well for all.

Jason eventually ended up working on the National Park Service’s massive Lincoln home restoration in Springfield. The master carpenter was matched up with one of the more difficult and painstaking restoration jobs ever done in the Midwest. He was in Heaven.

After that job ended, Jason decided to move back to New Mexico. His friends were universally bummed out. Jason’s house was the center of most of our gatherings. He had a great fire pit and even an outside bar area. I decided to rent the place to help preserve our little communal spot, but I knew it wouldn’t be the same without Jason and it wasn’t.

We kept in touch, and some friends and I occasionally visited him. I hadn’t heard from him in a while, but sometimes we’d go months without talking then gab like we’d just seen each other the day before.

Anyway, a mutual friend saw a disturbing post on Facebook yesterday and went to Jason’s page and to her great sadness saw that people were leaving condolence messages. Jason had died.

We eventually discovered that Jason had a recurrence of cancer, but didn’t really tell anybody about it. That was his way. He wouldn’t want us fussing over him when we could be laughing with him instead.

I guess my only real regret is that I didn’t visit him more often, particularly after he set up an awesome recording studio in his house and was bringing musicians in almost every Friday night for extended jam sessions. He had quite the scene going on. I often called on Friday nights just to catch the vibe.

On my way to visit him in the late 1990s, I stopped at a friend’s house in northern New Mexico and we wound up at a beautiful American Indian-owned mineral springs spa out in the country. I was chatting with the masseuse about my trip, and discovered that she was from Springfield. I told her that my next stop was to visit Jason and she said she had met him once in Springfield and recalled her entire conversation with him. Jason made a lasting impression on just about everyone he ever met. He was a different sort of human, and I loved the man like a brother.

  50 Comments      


Brady chairman funding tea party groups

Tuesday, Aug 24, 2010 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Bill Brady’s campaign chairman Ron Gidwitz is raising money for tea party groups

The former CEO of Helene Curtis Industries Inc., who ran for governor in 2006 and now chairs Republican Bill Brady’s gubernatorial campaign, is donating his own money and raising more from other Chicago executives to help Tea Party groups in various parts of the state. The money helps the activists get organized, a largely behind-the-scenes effort that could benefit candidates up and down the Republican ticket this fall.

“I see energized people,” Mr. Gidwitz says. “A lot of people are angry. We want to identify people who are dissatisfied with the status quo in Illinois and give them the opportunity to make a change.”

Mr. Gidwitz chairs and helps fund the Illinois arm of Americans for Prosperity, a Washington, D.C.-based conservative, anti-tax group that has a political organizer—longtime Illinois GOP operative Joe Calomino—working with Tea Party groups here.

“They’re very good at putting the plan on the ground,” Mr. McQueen says. “They’re instrumental at showing us what we need to do to be effective.

That move by Gidwitz seems logical, but there’s always the danger of tying his candidate too closely to the more “out there” tea party types.

Americans for Prosperity has not yet spent big money in Illinois. They did do a huge, $4.1 million ad buy in other states. But Illinois may be targeted soon

After seeing the list of the targeted districts, I thought it odd that AFP would neglect Illinois—given all the competitive races in Obama’s adopted state. So I called Joe Calomino who, with just one other staffer, runs the Illinois chapter of the 1.2 million member national group. Calomino told me that a new AFP project, November is Coming is, in fact, dispatching by bus grassroots activists armed with anti-spending petitions to “educate” voters in the 11th, 14th, and 10th districts on September 15th, 16th, and 17th, respectively.

One can safely bet that although the AFP bills itself as nonpartisan, its brigades will not be promoting Democrats Debbie Halvorson (11th), Bill Foster (14th), or Dan Seals (10th), the Democrat who is seeking the seat now held by Mark Kirk. The culmination of the Illinois events is an appearance in Hoffman Estates on September 18th by Glenn Beck who bashed Obama on air for his criticism of AFP.

* In other campaign news, Rich Whitney has come up with some pretty good spin

Green Party candidate for governor Rich Whitney went on the attack Monday, saying Democratic Gov. Pat Quinn has “peaked” and can’t beat Republican state Sen. Bill Brady.

At a Springfield news conference, Whitney referenced recent independent polls that have shown Brady leading the race for Illinois governor. Whitney urged voters who don’t want to vote for Brady to vote for him instead of Quinn.

“He’s peaked,” Whitney said of Quinn. “He can only go down.”

If Whitney knew how to take advantage of this situation then he might have a legit shot. So far, at least, there’s no indication that he does.

* Emphasizing Whitney’s point, Quinn’s running mate Sheila Simon just admitted that her boss’ budget is a disaster

“It boils down to jobs and education and they are thrown in together,” [Simon] said. “The concern now about jobs is much more personal. It’s not a generic concern. The folks I am running into say they are concerned about their own jobs or the jobs of family members. The state budget and the disaster it is really has an impact on anyone at the school level.”

* Campaign 2010 roundup…

* Illinois Review: Despite the base of the Republican Party and the Party’s platform itself being staunchly prolife, Congressman Mark Kirk, also the IL GOP’s nominee for U.S. Senate, continues to hold firm on his commitment to despicable and up-until-now non-productive human embryo experimentation. This response sent out by Kirk campaign to the U.S. district judge’s decision to strike down President Obama’s stem cell executive order is disappointing and disturbing, because it assures us where a U.S. Senator Kirk would be if presented with a decision on the ever-important issue of the sanctity of life.

* Covert Operations: The billionaire brothers who are waging a war against Obama.

* One-sided debate

* Move to merge treasurer and comptroller offices gains steam

* Candidates Gear Up for City Elections

* Cook County Board of Review staff takes day off to raise money for Da Boss

  32 Comments      


Question of the day

Tuesday, Aug 24, 2010 - Posted by Rich Miller

* This happened last week, and even though I posted it in a roundup, we never really discussed it

It’s not unusual or illegal for police officers to flip on a camera as they get out of their squad car to talk to a driver they’ve pulled over.

But in Illinois, a civilian trying to make an audio recording of police in action is breaking the law. […]

“It’s a stretch to apply surveillance laws to a situation on the street with an encounter between the police and the public,” said Maryland defense attorney Steven Silverman. “An officer has no expectation of privacy when he makes a traffic stop or arrest in the course of his workday.” […]

Mark Donahue, president of the Fraternal Order of Police in Chicago, said he believes the state’s eavesdropping law is a good one. Allowing people to make audio recordings of arrests “could potentially inhibit an officer from proactively doing his job,” Donahue said.

According to the ACLU, six people have been arrested in Illinois and faced felony charges for making audio recordings of police officers (usually in conjunction with video).

* The Question: Should the state law which makes it a felony to make audio recordings of police be repealed? Explain.

  39 Comments      


No retrial until next year?

Tuesday, Aug 24, 2010 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Rod Blagojevich may be yapping through Christmas about his “persecution” by federal prosecutors, according to the Sun-Times

Rod Blagojevich’s retrial may not start until next year, and if he wants the public to pay for his defense, he will get only two lawyers — down from seven.

In a private conference last week, Judge James Zagel told lawyers a quick retrial on the corruption charges wasn’t likely because of the logistics of getting a new jury pool.

Zagel said he didn’t want to put a “Christmas burden” on jurors, pushing a retrial possibly to January at the earliest, according to sources with knowledge of the meeting.

The two lawyers are not likely to be Sam Adam Jr. and Sam Adam Sr., who sources say intend on filing a request to leave the case.

Bad news for the Democrats. Very bad.

* Meanwhile, Jon Stewart busted Rod Blagojevich but good last night

Stewart played back a tape of Blagojevich from a year ago when he then tried to explain his words on tape: “I’ve got this thing and it’s f—ing golden.”

In 2009, Blagojevich explains that in the next few words that prosecutors didn’t reveal at the time, he talks about health care for Illinois. But the now-released tape shows Blagojevich actually discussed parachuting himself into the Senate seat spot and calling President Obama a “demigod.”

“The reality of what you said is very different,” Stewart says.

Blagojevich hems and haws as he tries to explain: “Listen to the whole tape.”

Stewart cuts him off: “Is this why you didn’t take the stand?” the audience laughs.

And we know the answer to this one

“You’re a guy that’s the most adamant about his innocence of anyone I ever met, so you’re either the victim of a terrible persecution or you’re a sociopath,” Stewart said.

And the answer to this one is pretty obvious as well

Stewart: You don’t feel (that) in any way that it was a fragile victory? Eleven to one to convict? You don’t think that’s fragile?

Full interview, with swear words, so be careful if you’re at work. Part One


The Daily Show With Jon Stewart Mon - Thurs 11p / 10c
Exclusive - Rod Blagojevich Extended Interview Pt. 1
www.thedailyshow.com
Daily Show Full Episodes Political Humor Tea Party

Part Two


The Daily Show With Jon Stewart Mon - Thurs 11p / 10c
Exclusive - Rod Blagojevich Extended Interview Pt. 2
www.thedailyshow.com
Daily Show Full Episodes Political Humor Tea Party

* Meanwhile, I agree with every word in Phil Kadner’s latest column

There’s nothing quite like listening to imbeciles rant about Illinois politics. The Wall Street Journal writes that, “If (U.S. Attorney Patrick) Fitzgerald doesn’t resign of his own accord, the Justice Department should remove him …”

The Washington Post, in commenting on the likely retrial of former Gov. Rod Blagojevich, says that “(Fitzgerald) should stand down before crossing another fine line - the one that separates prosecution from persecution.”

You want to talk about persecution, try living in a state where a “For Sale” sign seems permanently posted on the governor’s mansion.

Go read the whole thing.

* Roundup…

* Blago’s a Liar: Lisa Madigan

* Lisa Madigan calls Blagojevich a liar

* Lynn Sweet on CNN’s “Reliable Sources” on Blagojevich media blitz

* Jon Stewart to Blagojevich on Daily Show: “I’d like to see you as a victim — but you make it so hard.”

* Blago trial - ‘one of the Al Capone tax evasion cases of today’

* Byrne: Hey, Eastern pundits: Stay out of our mess

* Goudie: Fitzgerald shouldn’t be browbeaten for doing his job

* Blago stammers through ‘Daily Show’

* Journal Star: Enough of ex-gov’s antics, move ahead with retrial

  43 Comments      


The timing’s the thing

Tuesday, Aug 24, 2010 - Posted by Rich Miller

* The most important paragraphs in this story about the Jerry Stermer resignation are at the bottom of today’s Sun-Times story

Quinn’s office added new clarity Monday to the timeline of Wright’s ouster. His removal occurred on the morning of Aug. 13 while the governor did not get formally briefed about Wright’s report against Stermer until that evening, a Quinn spokeswoman said. […]

Many in state government’s political circles were stunned Monday by Stermer’s decision to quit Quinn’s staff over three “inadvertently” sent political e-mails, particularly given that Wright reported scouring 38,700 of Stermer’s e-mails looking for a political angle.

Stermer brought those three e-mails to Wright’s attention in January, the same time Stermer briefed Quinn about the possible violations of a state ethics law. In his Aug. 11 report to Quinn, Wright recommended that Attorney General Lisa Madigan file a complaint against Stermer, 67, before the state Executive Ethics Commission for the political e-mails.

The penalty for such transgressions generally has been light. Earlier this year, the commission imposed a $250 fine against a high-ranking Department of Human Services administrator for a 2008 correspondence to four state workers from his government e-mail address encouraging them to support Barack Obama for president and Howard J. Brookins Jr. for Cook County state’s attorney. The DHS administrator was allowed to keep his job.

I don’t believe that Stermer really resigned over those three e-mails. As the article makes clear, that’s barely a petty offense. And Stermer did, indeed, report every wrongly sent e-mail to the OEIG because the the OEIG spent seven months going over every one of his 38,700 electronic messages.

I believe Stermer resigned because Quinn fired Executive Inspector General Wright the same day he was formally briefed on Wright’s Stermer report. This was either a ham-fisted attempt at retaliation or an extremely unfortunate coincidence. Quinn will answer questions from reporters today, and they need to ask whether he was at all aware that Wright had sent his office a report on Stermer, not just whether the governor knew what the exact wording of the report was. It would also be interesting to know whether Stermer was in on the decision to replace Wright. But don’t hold your breath on getting full answers.

* The Tribune has more on the e-mails

An influential adviser to his brother, Thomas Quinn sent an e-mail headlined: “PQ, the tax cutter.”

“I believe that it’s true to say (that) Pat Quinn has implemented more budget cuts than any other governor in Illinois history,” the e-mail said. “Isn’t that a powerful antidote message to push back at Hynes when he tries to paint Pat as a tax and spender. Also a powerful message for the general election as well.”

Through the governor’s campaign spokeswoman, Thomas Quinn said he inadvertently sent the political e-mail to Stermer’s state account. He then left Stermer a voice mail to “ignore that e-mail.”

Quinn campaign consultant John Kupper, who also got the e-mail, replied that the idea about the governor’s budget-cutting would be a “great fact, if true. Also something to test in our next poll.”

A day later, Stermer hit “reply to all” from his government account. Stermer said he would “work with the budget office to get the precise amount.”

Within minutes, Stermer then sent a separate note to David Vaught, the budget chief, asking for the total amount of money Quinn has cut from the state budget since taking office.

A third e-mail exchange took place in December, when another Quinn campaign aide asked Stermer to weigh in on proposed answers to a candidate questionnaire by the Tribune’s editorial board.

Stermer should never have replied to those e-mails, but he owned up to his mistakes. Also, the campaign folks should’ve known better than to send Stermer e-mails to his state account.

* And excuse me for not bowing to the Chicago Tribune

And Quinn’s opponent, Republican Bill Brady, didn’t hesitate to draw a straight line between the two events: “On the very day Pat Quinn was confronted with evidence by the inspector general of an ethics violation, he put his political interests before citizens yet again and fired the inspector general himself,” Brady said Monday.

It’s now up to Attorney General Lisa Madigan to determine whether to file a complaint with the Executive Ethics Commission, which could impose a fine or other discipline on Stermer.

Is there more to this story? Does there have to be? Nobody in Illinois should need to be reminded why the ethics act prohibits the use of state resources for campaign purposes. Quinn’s interpretation of the rules is liberal enough to justify a public schedule chock-a-block with barely disguised campaign appearances — four stops in a single day, for example, to “encourage shoppers to take advantage of Illinois’ first-ever back-to-school sales-tax holiday” — but there’s no question that Stermer’s actions did cross the line.

Sure, the actions crossed the line. That’s why Stermer reported it himself. And I, too, would like to know if the firing was connected or not. But, pardon me for asking, when has the Tribune published an editorial blasting state Sen. Bill Brady for voting three times for legislation that directly benefited his own construction business? Brady wouldn’t even cop to a conflict of interest, even though that was probably one of the most direct legislative conflicts many of us have seen in a very long time.

* Related…

* Quinn draws fire over timing of inspector general’s ouster

* Quinn, Stermer and Wright: Unfortunate Timing or Retaliation?

* Quinn faces questions on ethics

* Quinn set to announce new chief of staff

* Quinn feeling heat over dismissal of ethics official

* Brown: Let’s be honest: 3 e-mails not a scandal

  25 Comments      


Morning Shorts

Tuesday, Aug 24, 2010 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Exelon to create 4,200 jobs as it begins series of Illinois projects

Exelon Nuclear said in a statement Monday that the $4.6 million planned program should create more than 4,200 jobs in Illinois over the next five years. The program also includes equipment upgrades at six nuclear plants.

The Zion Station decommissioning is to begin in September as a $1 billion, 10-year project.

* Post tax-credit home sales down nearly 40 percent

The president of the Capital Area Association of Realtors also cautioned in the report the “tax credit hangover” could last for a few more months.

* Sunday heroin bust sets Illinois state record

* Chicago Police Step Up Patrols In High-Crime Areas

* Sun-Times: Feels like clout got ride on Metra gravy train

* Suicides on train tracks up: ‘Copycatting is an element’

* Tollway glitch results in thousands of late violation notices

A mix-up in issuing violation notices to Indiana drivers has the Illinois tollway figuring out how to collect an estimated backlog of $7 million from 116,129 Hoosiers.

The glitch spans nearly two years from summer 2008 to spring 2010 and originated from problems related to duplicate Indiana license plates.

The duplicate license plates meant erroneous violations were going out to Indiana motorists. As a result, the Illinois tollway halted sending out fine notices in May 2008 to reprogram the electronic toll system.

* Tollway interim CEO exits

* Tribune: Changing course

Chancellor Cheryl Hyman and board Chairman Gery Chico are not talking about abolishing City Colleges’ admissions policy.

What they’re saying is that a lot of kids who are admitted to City Colleges’ seven campuses aren’t ready to take college courses. They need an alternative because the current system isn’t serving them or taxpayers well.

Yes, those students hold a diploma, often from a Chicago public high school. But many of them have been finished with high school for several years before they seek to start college. And in some cases, their high school diploma doesn’t count for much. They’re not ready for college.

* 15 Chicago schools could see longer days

In an effort to extend what is one of the nation’s shortest school days, Chicago Public Schools plans to add 90 minutes to the schedules of 15 elementary schools using online courses and nonteachers, sources said.

* CPS Holds Job Fair for Laid-Off Teachers

* FEMA awards Aurora $213,758 for West Side flooding

The project will improve drainage to Orchard Lake and alleviate frequent flooding that has occurred in the neighborhood north of Illinois Avenue on the West Side, FEMA officials said.

* DuPage to look again at infrastructure bond issue

* DuPage sets budget forums

* Kane County freeing up jail expenses

* Mitchell: State making Payday Loan Stores pay up

* AG, Board of Education start online safety program

* Madigan in Decatur to promote Internet safety initiatives

* Doctor records taken offline

* Illinois prison agency expanding job-skills program

* Alligator Still in Chicago River

* Asian carp battle moves to courtroom

  1 Comment      


Protected: *** UPDATED x3 - ANOTHER NAME ON THE LIST - Announcement set *** SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition

Tuesday, Aug 24, 2010 - Posted by Rich Miller

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

Tuesday, Aug 24, 2010 - Posted by Rich Miller

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I’m done for the day

Monday, Aug 23, 2010 - Posted by Rich Miller

* I just found out that a very good friend of mine passed away. That’s three lost friends since last fall. I need to go be by myself for a while, so I won’t be monitoring comments. Be good to each other. See you tomorrow.

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Question of the day

Monday, Aug 23, 2010 - Posted by Rich Miller

* I already posted my newspaper column, but I want to pick out one section for our discussion here…

Meanwhile, it occurred to me as I watched Quinn’s speech at the Illinois State Fair’s Governor’s Day event that the guy wouldn’t recognize a campaign theme if it was bleeding to death on his front lawn.

Voters need simplicity. When they think about a candidate for major office, one word or short phrase needs to come to their minds. “Hope,” “Change,” “It’s the economy, stupid,” “What’s she thinking?” etc.

But Quinn is just all over the place, not only with his attacks on Brady, but in his defense of his own governance. One minute, he’s whacking Brady for not paying his taxes, the next he’s talking about the new jobs at Ford, the next he’s whacking Brady on some social issue or for missing a vote, the next, he’s holding a news conference to sign some obscure bill.

* The Question: What campaign theme would you recommend for Gov. Pat Quinn? Snark heavily encouraged.

  100 Comments      


We can’t blame everybody because of one person

Monday, Aug 23, 2010 - Posted by Rich Miller

* When we first learned that the Rod Blagojevich jury was deadlocked, I was silently hoping that the holdout wasn’t an African-American juror because I knew we’d end up with commentary like this

It was no surprise to learn that Jo Ann Chiakulas, the juror who refused to convict Rod Blagojevich of selling a U.S. Senate seat, was an African-American. When Blagojevich was governor, blacks were his strongest supporters. By the end of his governorship, they were his only supporters. In late 2008, Blagojevich’s approval rating was 13 percent. Among African-Americans it was 32 percent.

The headline on that piece was: “How Blagojevich Really Tainted the Jury Pool (Hint: Black Folks Like Him!)”

Nevermind that there were four African-Americans on that jury and only one was a lone holdout on some charges. Nevermind that a poll taken the day after his arrest showed 68 percent of black respondents thought Blagojevich should go to prison, about the same level as all respondents 65 and older. There were other retirees on that jury, and the holdout was also retired, but retirees aren’t the object of attack here. And nevermind that the same poll found that black people and males were just two points apart on whether Blagojevich should resign. The holdout was a female, but there were lots of males on that jury. Also, nevermind that the same poll found that almost half of Illinois Republicans - 46 percent - believed it was somewhat or very likely that President-elect Barack Obama was somehow involved in the alleged Blagojevich crimes. And, finally, nevermind that the poll referenced in that above story showed that barely over half of Democrats disapproved of Blagojevich’s job performance near the end of his career.

No. It’s Chicago, so the race card is obviously going to be played by somebody.

And this is just stupid…

Chiakulas was also a state employee, a toxic combination of liberal leanings that made her inclined to support the governor who signed AllKids and tried to pass the Illinois Covered universal health care plan.

Anybody who wrote that doesn’t know much about state employees during Blagojevich’s reign of error. They despised him. Also, the coverage isn’t clear whether she was a state employee under Blagojevich for very long, if at all.

All that having been said, it is no secret that Blagojevich heavily targeted the black vote while he was governor overtly targeted black jurors after his arrest. His choice of lead defense counsel was probably no accident. But, again, three out of four black jurors voted with the overwhelming majority to convict on numerous counts. Tarring an entire race (or religion, or whatever) for the actions of one person seems more than a bit extreme.

But if you really want to read something extreme, stupid and bizarre, click here. Yeesh.

* Meanwhile, this caught my eye last week

Defense attorney Terry Ekl, who represented Blagojevich chief-of-staff John Harris, said he was surprised Blagojevich wasn’t found guilty on all counts. “What the defense did was really jury nullification. It was not about following the law,” Ekl said. “They said, ‘Well, it was just talk. He’s broke.’ But, that’s what conspiracy is. Even if he just intended to get something, he’s guilty. You probably had two or three jurors who didn’t understand that even just talking is still a crime.”

I agree. But John Banzhaff, a Professor of Public Interest Law at the George Washington University Law School says it’s perfectly OK

Although many do not realize it, and judges usually refuse to let defense attorneys argue — or even mention — it to members of the jury, jurors have a legal right, upheld by the U.S. Supreme Court, to refuse to convict for any reason and all, or for no reason at all. Indeed, under the doctrine of jury nullification, jurors may disregard a judge’s instructions and return not guilty verdicts even if the evidence of guilt is overwhelming.

If a jury finds a defendant not guilty because they believe that the law is unjust, there was governmental overreaching, or simply out of sympathy for the accused, that verdict cannot ever be overturned or even reviewed, and the defendant can never be recharged, even if overwhelming evidence eventually comes to light.

* Related…

* Blagojevich on “Fox News Sunday” with Chris Wallace. Transcript

* Blagojevich to juror: Thanks

* Roeper: Blagojevich too batty even for Comic Con

* Blagojevich pulls in $50 an autograph at Comic Con

* Blago’s Elvis statue now in Sugar Grove

* Kadner: Elvis found inside Blagojevich vault

* Hair-raising drama: Opening of the Blagojevich Vault

* Blagojevich won’t rule out return to politics

* Others in Blagojevich probe await fate

* Blagojevich show on the road again

* Marin: Forget TV: Tell it to the jury next time

* McQueary: My layman’s view: Don’t retry Blago

* Erickson: Blagojevich trial reveals the man’s warts

* Finke: Blagojevich remains a political albatross for Illinois Democrats

  40 Comments      


Quinn vs. Brady is deja vu all over again

Monday, Aug 23, 2010 - Posted by Rich Miller

* My weekly syndicated newspaper column is a warning to Democrats to start facing reality

Lots of people are having trouble getting their heads around the fact that Republican state Sen. Bill Brady may well be our next governor. This is, after all, a Democratic state.

But it’s way past time to consider Brady a very real, even likely probability. Gov. Pat Quinn’s poll numbers, along with the economy and the state budget, are in the dumper. Scott Lee Cohen likely will target African-American voters and badly damage Quinn’s chances. The Green Party’s candidate won’t help, either. And almost $2 million spent on negative TV ads attacking Brady on abortion, health care and the minimum wage haven’t yet worked.

I’ve told you this before, but I think it’s even clearer now. This campaign looks more and more every day like the 1980 presidential campaign between Jimmy Carter and Ronald Reagan. We have the decent, honest person who can’t seem to run a government up against a conservative guy whom all the liberals love to hate.

Carter, remember, relished the opportunity to run against Reagan because he thought Reagan would be the easiest Republican to beat. Carter and friends vastly underestimated Reagan, believing him to be a telegenic empty suit with an actor’s smile and dangerously out of step positions.

Sound familiar?

And Reagan had to clear a hurdle that Brady doesn’t have to worry about. The nuclear button. Once voters decided that Reagan wasn’t crazy enough to blow up the world, they were more willing to give him a shot at the top office. Whatever Brady does as governor, he probably can’t end civilization as we know it.

But it’s not just current polls, spoiler candidates, a failed paid media strategy and an eery American history parallel that point us in Brady’s direction. The Republicans are surprisingly united behind Brady’s candidacy. That’s something few would have believed the morning after the primary, when the state woke up to discover that Brady led his fellow state Sen. Kirk Dillard - the “regular” Republicans’ candidate - by a tiny handful of votes.

The Republicans have been in disarray since George Ryan’s downfall. Jim Thompson gave a less than rousing speech at the Governor’s Day festivities during the 2002 state fair for fellow Republican Jim Ryan, then ended up co-chairing Democratic victor Rod Blagojevich’s transition team. Longtime Republican moneybags Bill Cellini moved in Blagojevich’s direction almost before the last Republican had filed out of the fairgrounds that year. Four years ago, the party’s right wing ridiculed Judy Baar Topinka’s candidacy, and the party never really unified behind her.

The GOP is fully engaged this time, however. The regulars are almost all on board. The right is pleased as punch that they have one of their own on the ticket. And the moderate Republicans are so happy that their party has a real shot at winning that they’ve hardly spoken a discouraging word.

Their party is hungry for victory, but most did their best at the state fair last week to not show how ravenously starved they really are. Their criticisms were pointed, but mostly measured.

Meanwhile, it occurred to me as I watched Quinn’s speech at the Illinois State Fair’s Governor’s Day event that the guy wouldn’t recognize a campaign theme if it was bleeding to death on his front lawn.

Voters need simplicity. When they think about a candidate for major office, one word or short phrase needs to come to their minds. “Hope,” “Change,” “It’s the economy, stupid,” “What’s she thinking?” etc.

But Quinn is just all over the place, not only with his attacks on Brady, but in his defense of his own governance. One minute, he’s whacking Brady for not paying his taxes, the next he’s talking about the new jobs at Ford, the next he’s whacking Brady on some social issue or for missing a vote, the next, he’s holding a news conference to sign some obscure bill.

The scattershot approach may be satisfying to some partisans, who want their governor to provide as many reasons as possible to support him and deliver as many hits as possible on the other side, but if you can’t tie it up with a unifying ribbon, then this stuff will just go over everybody else’s head. It’s just background noise, and that’s no way to deliver an effective message.

Quinn just hired a new media consultant, so we’ll see if anything changes. If Quinn wants to win, it had better.

* And a campaign roundup…

* Zorn: Trouble for Quinn: Brady’s talkin’ sense

* Candidates for governor campaign at area parades

* PJ Star: Brady’s slogans won’t balance state budget

* Lt. gov rivals make their pitches

* Sheila Simon says state budget deficit demands complex approach

* Rutherford, Topinka want to merge state treasurer and comptroller’s office

* Sun-Times: Time to reform how Illinois picks judges

* 56th District candidates say pension reform top priority

* Rauschenberger calls out Noland for campaign ads

* Fritchey wants surplus TIF funds to go to city’s schools

* DuPage Co. chairman candidates weigh in on water costs

  52 Comments      


Morning Shorts

Monday, Aug 23, 2010 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Tribune Co. says bankruptcy negotiations have failed

* Study: Black males graduating at lower rates

* Civic group gives CPS budget cool OK

Once a $400 million “partial pension holiday'’ expires in 2014, the system’s teacher pension tab is expected to soar from $196 million to nearly $600 million, Civic Federation President Laurence Msall warned.

* Students lobby to use smart phones in classrooms

* Three cops hit by vehicle, one suspect fatally shot

* City is running out of would-be cops

* Eleventh-Hour Deal Averts UIC Strike

Talks to replace three-year contracts for UIC clerical, technical and service workers had stalled. Service Employees International Union Local 73 was gearing up to begin a three-day work stoppage at the university and its medical center this morning.

* Smaller nonprofits could lose their tax-exempt status

The groups were identified because they failed to file required returns for 2007, 2008 and 2009. Many of them were never required to file tax returns before that because of their size.

The Pension Protection Act of 2006 required all tax-exempt organizations other than churches and church-related organizations to file an annual return with the IRS.

* DuPage Water Commission’s financial fix hits $2 million

* Daily Herald: Commission needs continued auditing

* Belvidere faces $1.1 million deficit in new budget

* Chicago-K.C. corridor ready to roll

It’s a safe bet that 99.99 percent of Chicago-area drivers using I-88 or the Eisenhower Expressway (Interstate Highway 290) probably have no idea that they are on stretches of a new national highway corridor: the 532-mile Chicago-Kansas City Expressway. In the state, it also goes by Illinois Highway 110.

* Nearly 10,000 in 7 Illinois counties apply for flood aid

* Grayslake police making themselves at home in Hainesville

Cost considerations led Hainesville to eliminate its two-year-old police department and contract for service with Grayslake. Hainesville expects to save about $300,000 over the next budget year, which runs to April 30.

* City of Decatur’s tax revenue situation showing some improvement

  1 Comment      


*** UPDATED x2 *** Quinn’s chief of staff resigns, but it’s a bizarre tale

Monday, Aug 23, 2010 - Posted by Rich Miller

*** UPDATE 1 *** From the Bill Brady campaign…

“This is yet another stunning report involving the administration of Governor Pat Quinn. Today’s revelation suggests that on the very day Pat Quinn was confronted with evidence by the Inspector General of an ethics violation, Pat Quinn put his political interests before citizens yet again and fired the Inspector General himself. This disturbing report leads to a myriad of questions that the citizens of Illinois deserve to have answered.”

*** UPDATE 2 *** Gov. Quinn’s statement…

“Gov. Quinn has accepted Jerry Stermer’s resignation, effective immediately.

“The Office of the Governor complies with investigations of the Office of the Executive Inspector General and takes its inquiries very seriously.

“Jerry Stermer, who previously led the nonprofit organization Voices for Illinois Children for more than 20 years, has served as Gov. Quinn’s chief of staff since Feb. 9, 2009, at an annual salary of $150,000.

“In the case of the three emails in question, Jerry Stermer himself reported the inadvertent use of his state email account to both the governor’s ethics officer and the Office of the Executive Inspector General in order to allow the OEIG to both investigate and recommend corrective action under the state Ethics Act. Jerry Stermer disclosed the emails to the appropriate authorities in order to address the emails in the most honest and ethical manner possible.

“Gov. Quinn was briefed on the OEIG’s report and recommendations on Aug. 13 and has accepted Jerry Stermer’s offer to resign from his position as chief of staff, effective immediately.

“Ricardo Meza was appointed by Gov. Quinn to head the Office of the Executive Inspector General on August 15, 2010 after a lengthy search process which began in the summer of 2009. Ricardo Meza replaced an inspector general appointed by the previous administration whose term expired in 2008. The replacement was not in response to this or any other specific OEIG report, and these events are in no way connected.

“Gov. Quinn is committed to reforming state government, increasing ethics and accountability. All allegations are taken seriously, and acted on as appropriate.”

[ *** End Of Updates *** ]

* Gov. Pat Quinn’s chief of staff Jerry Stermer has resigned, but the resignation raises more questions than it answers. Why? This..

Quinn removed [Executive Inspector General James A. Wright] Aug. 13, the same day the governor was briefed by his staff about findings against Stermer by the executive inspector general.

Wright concluded that Stermer “engaged in prohibited political activity” and encouraged Attorney General Lisa Madigan to file a complaint against him before the state Executive Ethics Commission, according to a confidential report written by Wright and obtained by the Sun-Times.

Normally, one would say that this firing of Wright is a blatant attempt at a cover-up. But Stermer actually reported himself to the OEIG…

Stermer, Quinn’s chief of staff since February 2009, actually initiated a complaint with Wright’s office Jan. 12 to report that campaign-related e-mails he sent “inadvertently” last October and December from his state-issued BlackBerry or personal computer may have broken state ethics laws.

“While my intention was not to do anything wrong, I recognized that a mistake was made and quickly disclosed this information to the governor’s ethics officer — a former assistant U.S. attorney — who recommended that I provide the information to the OEIG for appropriate investigation,” Stermer said. “I voluntarily provided the information to the OEIG for investigation, and made it clear that I was prepared to accept the consequences for my mistakes.”

The plot thickens…

The first of Stermer’s alleged missteps came last Oct. 11 in a response to an e-mail sent a day earlier from the Quinn campaign’s media consultant, John Kupper. He wanted to formulate a response to an expected argument from Democratic gubernatorial rival Dan Hynes about Quinn being a “tax and spender,” the Wright report said.

That ain’t much, and neither are the other two e-mails. If that’s really all Stermer did, and if Stermer really did report his own behavior way back in January, then why, all of a sudden, was Wright demanding an attorney general complaint with the ethics commission? It took him eight months to conclude that Stermer was a bad guy?

Still, firing your inspector general the same day he files a report against your own chief of staff - no matter how rinky dink - is a really stupid idea. Wright could’ve been playing some internal politics to keep his job, but that’s the way it goes. Dumping him that same day was truly idiotic.

Also, John Kupper is the “K” in AKPD, which was fired last week as Quinn’s media consultant. Everybody’s going down at once, it appears.

What a great way to kick off the first week after the Blagojevich verdict.

…Adding… Jerry Stermer’s full statement

“I have offered my resignation as Gov. Quinn’s chief of staff effective immediately.

“Last year, I inadvertently used my state email account to send three emails that the Office of Executive Inspector General later found to be prohibited under the state’s Ethics Act. While my intention was not to do anything wrong, I recognized that a mistake was made and quickly disclosed this information to the governor’s ethics officer - a former assistant U.S. attorney - who recommended that I provide the information to the OEIG for appropriate investigation. I voluntarily provided the information to the OEIG for investigation and made it clear that I was prepared to accept the consequences for my mistakes.

“The people of Illinois must have full confidence in the leadership of their state, and I will not be a distraction in achieving that goal. Gov. Quinn has built his career on the belief that government must be honest and accountable. Today, I am holding myself accountable for a mistake I alone made. I do not want to be a distraction for the governor, the work of his administration and - most importantly - for the people of Illinois. “

  95 Comments      


Lots of fun State Fair videos

Saturday, Aug 21, 2010 - Posted by Rich Miller

* I borrowed a golf cart on Republican Day and took some friends on a tour of the Illinois State Fair. While we were joy-riding, we used my iPhone to video the entire fairgrounds. The idea was to have a little fun, but also show some of you who’ve never been to the State Fair what it looks like. I also thought it would be a good video to watch this winter when we’re all cold and miserable and need some warm memories.

Trouble is, I didn’t turn my iPhone camera on for the first portion of the tour. Oops. Luckily, I figured out the problem as we approached the area in front of the Grandstand.

The video is shaky, the audio is lousy, but we all had a really good time. Ryan McLaughlin of Mac Strategies is the videographer, I’m the driver-narrator, and my intern Barton Lorimor and Ryan’s VP Ryan Keith are in the back, chuckling away.

* Here’s Part One, which starts right at the point where I discovered my screwup


* I probably shouldn’t post Part Two, since we kinda abused the borrowed cart a little bit, but I was determined to drive down that hill to Happy Hollow behind the Illinois Building. Mac was all for it, but Barton didn’t think we could do it


* And Part 3, our conclusion


* Meanwhile, WBEZ shot this video of how the Republican Day crowd reacted to a silly 80s cover band. They didn’t much care for it…


Illinois State Fair - Walking on Sunshine from WBEZ on Vimeo.

* WBEZ’s Justin Kaufmann and Steve Edwards launched a new show from the State Fair this week. It’s called “The Best Game in Town,” and I was fortunate enough to be a guest. Click here to listen.

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