Request for info
Monday, Jan 17, 2005 - Posted by Rich Miller I think he may regret this, but here goes nothing (just kidding): Many of your readers of CapFax and this Internet site have direct, intimate perspectives on how well/ill [Governor Blagojevich] has done. Jim’s email address is jim@countyenews.com You can also post your comments below if you want to remain anonymous and he’ll check back often. Nowlan is a serious guy, so let’s keep the responses on the level. In other words, please remove your tinfoil hat before submitting any thoughts and I’ll be grateful.
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Kelly v. Mell
Monday, Jan 17, 2005 - Posted by Rich Miller Check here for the amusing back and forth between Bob Clifford’s law firm (representing Blagojevich pal Chris Kelly) and Paul Levy’s firm (representing Ald. Dick Mell). Fun stuff.
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Unintended consequences
Monday, Jan 17, 2005 - Posted by Rich Miller The over-hyped response by the opponents of the gay rights bill cost them at least one vote last week. When Joe Dunn took his seat on the House floor Tuesday morning, he had every intention of voting against the hotly debated gay-rights bill that would be put before him later that day. Read the rest of the story. It’s pretty good, and a cautionary tale for the right wing.
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IL GOP
Sunday, Jan 16, 2005 - Posted by Rich Miller I’m not sure if I agree with everything, but the Tribune has a very long story today about the Illinois GOP’s decline, tracing it all the way back to Richard Ogilvie. No Cook County patronage (after Ogilvie left his job as board president), a party too heavily dominated by a governor, the rise of the right wing, and much more. The party of Lincoln isn’t what it used to be. Long before the Alan Keyes election debacle, long before George Ryan’s troubles, the seeds for the party’s downfall were planted.
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McKenna wins
Saturday, Jan 15, 2005 - Posted by Rich Miller Andy McKenna is the new state GOP chair. My condolences to Mr. McKenna. Neither Jim Oberweis nor John Cox could even reportedly find anyone to nominate them. At the end, it was Jim Nalepa, Steve McGlynn and McKenna, with McKenna reportedly receiving 86 percent of the vote in the first round. Oberweis and Cox are rapidly becoming perennial candidates. Nalepa was supported by a few on the Right (which shows once again that those people are the automatic kiss of death) and McGlynn had some initial downstate support. McGlynn is a Metro East trial lawyer who supported the Alan Keyes ballot appointment, so he didn’t exactly fit the profile.
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Rogers Park’s “Broken Heart”
Saturday, Jan 15, 2005 - Posted by Rich Miller Hey, Alderman Moore, what’s with this? I found the link via Zorn, so the alderman should start worrying that Eric might do a newspaper column on this.
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A very bad week
Saturday, Jan 15, 2005 - Posted by Rich Miller This was not a good week for the governor. His top fundraiser and adviser was accused of trading appointments for contributions by his own father-in-law, he was taunted for flip-flopping on banning video games for minors, the Ford Heights landfill that he closed right after he closed his second cousin’s landfill was reopened by a judge, who said he didn’t have the authority to close it, Lisa Madigan’s investigation into his appointment and hiring practices is gearing up, and Mell’s apparently not backing down from a threatened lawsuit by Chris Kelly. Mell’s lawyer, Paul M. Levy, would not comment on whether the alderman intended to apologize and instead seemed primed for a legal fight — stating in a letter to Clifford that Mell said nothing defamatory because Kelly is a public figure immersed in a public controversy. If Kelly doesn’t file the suit, he’ll look guilty, no matter how much he vigorously protests his innocence. “If he doesn’t go to you, the media, in some fashion, whether it be in person or in writing, to acknowledge these remarks were baseless and not within his personal knowledge, then litigation for defamation will follow,” said Clifford, who has given the governor’s campaign $328,755. But even if he does file the suit, there are already problems brewing. Republicans pounced on Kelly and Clifford’s maneuver, accusing them of trying to steamroll Mell, who figures to be a pivotal witness in the Madigan-Devine inquiry. And if he files the suit and loses… oh, my.
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Kelly lawyers up
Friday, Jan 14, 2005 - Posted by Rich Miller Even if Mell does retract his comments, I doubt that will head off the attorney general’s investigation. Once those people start snooping around, they never stop. The family feud between Gov. Rod Blagojevich and his father-in-law, Chicago Ald. Richard Mell (33rd) took a dramatic new twist late Friday when the governor’s chief fund-raiser threatened to sue Mr. Mell for defamation. Bob Clifford is an excellent attorney. I’d be scared witless if he was coming after me like this.
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Mr. and Mrs. Miller go to Washington
Friday, Jan 14, 2005 - Posted by Rich Miller My mom and dad are huge Barack Obama fans, which is really weird because my father is a lifelong Republican. Up until Obama came along, his political idols were Barry Goldwater and Ronald Reagan. Go figure. Anyway, they went to DC to watch Obama’s swearing-in, and they just sent me these photos. This post is kinda like the Crossblog’s party photos, only it’s a Democrat party and the images are of my parents, not drunken young dudes chatting up young women with the promise that their pics will be prominently displayed on an influential Internets site.
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Link of the week
Friday, Jan 14, 2005 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Friday Topinka blogging
Friday, Jan 14, 2005 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Update
Friday, Jan 14, 2005 - Posted by Rich Miller Fixed a couple of blog links and added a few more. Check the list at right for more info.
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Big trouble
Friday, Jan 14, 2005 - Posted by Rich Miller Still think the Mell/Blagojevich fight was a mutual conspiracy? The explosive accusation that top jobs in Gov. Blagojevich’s administration may be for sale took a dramatic turn Thursday when Attorney General Lisa Madigan and Cook County State’s Attorney Richard Devine announced a joint investigation into the matter. […] Because of Mell’s big mouth, Lisa Madigan is now on a far-reaching fishing expedition that will explore just about every nook and cranny of the governor’s administration. While she’s at it, she ought to look at contracts, too.
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Tools
Friday, Jan 14, 2005 - Posted by Rich Miller The Tribune published a story today that was deeply critical of the governor’s handling of the education budget and the way he has run rough-shod over the Illinois State Board of Education. The new board hired a 24-year-old chief of staff who previously had driven Blagojevich’s press van through rural Illinois. It approved a Downstate charter school at the governor’s urging, even though the previous board had denied it four times. And, now, the state Board is no longer involved in determining how schools are funded. This year, however, board members haven’t even seen the budget being crafted in their name. Instead, it is being written by the agency’s staff members, working with–or for–a governor’s office that is determined not to raise taxes. Once an independent voice, the Board is now silent. For decades, the State Board of Education prepared its own budget for funding public elementary and high schools. Educators across the state relied on the board to advocate for the new money they felt their schools needed. The board rarely disappointed. Things were different last year, before the governor completely controlled the Board and its staff. In January 2004, the state board approved–against the wishes of the governor–a $7.1 billion budget, calling for a $600 million increase over the previous year. And the State Board of Education isn’t the only voice being silenced. Add the Education Funding Advisory Board to the list. By state law, the five-member board composed of business leaders and educators is supposed to recommend, every two years, a minimum per-pupil spending level. Using state and national research, the group is supposed to send lawmakers a report on Jan. 1 in odd-numbered years. The bottom line is the governor has turned the state’s formerly independent education bureaucracy into a public relations front for himself.
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Hynes to run for re-election
Friday, Jan 14, 2005 - Posted by Rich Miller No real surprise here: Illinois Comptroller Dan Hynes said Thursday that he will run for a third four-year term in his current office. Hynes is a good guy who got himself in over his head during the US Senate race last year. He just wasn’t prepared for the challenge of that campaign, even though he had won two previous statewide races by large margins. He’s also had his problems with Governor Blagojevich. After supporting the guv in the 2003 session, Hynes had hoped that Blagojevich would remain neutral in the US Senate primary. Instead, Hynes was convinced that the governor’s operation was pushing Blair Hull, and he wasn’t pleased. The 36-year-old comptroller predicted that Gov. Rod Blagojevich will not be challenged in the Democratic primary in March 2006 and that “the party will be unified behind him” for a second term. According to the article, Blagojevich has promised to work more closely with those very same people this year. Color me skeptical.
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