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Afternoon “radio” blogging
Wednesday, Oct 4, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller * Congressman John Shimkus was interviewed by KMOX host Charlie Brennan today. (Stream or Download) It’s mostly sympathetic and they only took listener calls for less than 2 minutes. * Chicago Public Radio’s morning news update. * Newsradio 780’s morning report, includes quote from Daley defending Speaker Hastert. * IIS: Ethanol industry will grow dramatically in Illinois (Stream or Download) [I don’t think we’ll have comments on these “radio” posts but you can comment on the KMOX show here.]
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY (Part 2) - Obama; Serious nastiness in the Myers/Frerichs race (Use all caps in password) *** Updated x1 ***
Wednesday, Oct 4, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Spears TV ad; Abortion; Obama; Granberg; Special session; Franks; Poe; Target feed (Use all caps in password) *** Updated x1 and fixed video ***
Wednesday, Oct 4, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Rate hike may be jolt, but don’t pull plug on process
Wednesday, Oct 4, 2006 - Posted by Capitol Fax Blog Advertising Department (The following is a paid advertisement) Sun-Times Editorial (excerpts) In 1997, the Legislature sent us down a path to deregulation of the electricity market. ComEd’s rates were cut 20 percent and frozen for what turned out to be 10 years, with the understanding that at the end of the freeze, rates would be set by competition rather than regulation. The result? A 22 percent rate hike next year — and some wrongheaded calls for a return to regulation. As it turns out, bills will go up 22 percent next year, about what ComEd expected, but far less than the dire predictions of the Citizens Utility Board and other critics of the auction. And what option is there? CUB demanded an extension of the rate freeze, arguing that we should wait for competition to develop. But that is something like trying to put the genie back in the bottle. You can no longer simply freeze the rates we pay ComEd because that could force it to buy power for more than it could charge to sell it. You can’t force electric companies to sell power to ComEd at a cheaper rate. Finally, freezing the rate would probably just further delay the entrance of competition.
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Question of the day *** Updated x2 ***
Wednesday, Oct 4, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller Should Denny Hastert step down as US House Speaker in the wake of the Foley scandal? Should Congressman John Shimkus resign as chairman of the House page board? Explain your answers. Bonus question: Will either of those two scenarios ever happen? Explain. Also, I should say that I’ve been getting a strong sense that I had seen this “fall guy” thing played out elsewhere. It finally occurred to me last night. The Maltese Falcon:
In the end, Gutman (Hastert?), Cairo (Boehner?), Wilmer (Shimkus?) and O’Shaughnessy (Reynolds?) all went down. *** UPDATE *** And the dam begins to burst: senior congressional aide said Wednesday that he alerted the House Speaker Dennis Hastert’s office in 2004 about worrisome conduct by former Rep. Mark Foley with teenage pages — the earliest known alert to the GOP leadership. This Fordham guy is just chum for the sharks. *** UPDATE 2 *** Fordham as Wilmer? Hotline: And a leadership aide sympathetic to Hastert said that Fordham “is now contradicting his comments” about learning of Foley’s behavior recently. Fordham told the AP this morning: “This was someone I had worked for 10 years. I had no inkling that this kind of blatantly reckless — just obscene — behavior was going on behind our backs.”
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Catch-up continues
Wednesday, Oct 4, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller 6th Congressional District Republican hopeful Roskam has taken a reasonable stance on the Foley scandal, even though he has already been attacked for toeing the party line.
That parental angst, of course, is a main factor driving this debate. The Post-Dispatch couldn’t reach Congressman Shimkus yesterday. Shimkus was unavailable for comment Tuesday, despite attempts to reach him at his home, his office and on the road. His staff reiterated his previous statements and dismissed the possibility of political side-effects. And neither could Carol Marin. Here’s my conversation Tuesday afternoon with Shimkus’ press secretary, Steve Tomaszewski: But Copley did, and Shimkus was not in a good mood. Asked whether that made it look like a political cover-up, Shimkus said: “Bull–, what I regret is that now it’s used for the political expediency, for a political agenda by the Democrats. Anybody who knows me knows that I wouldn’t do anything to assault or hurt these kids. Shimkus admitted yet again that he had seen some e-mails, even though his press spokesman originally insisted to everyone who called that the congressman had seen nothing. That point was not addressed in the story.
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More negativity in the 8th
Wednesday, Oct 4, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller I have a feeling things are gonna get worse before they get better in the 8th. Republican 8th District candidate David McSweeney hit cable TV Tuesday for the fourth week in a row, this time ripping Congresswoman Melissa Bean for votes on wiretapping and the mention of God in the Pledge of Allegiance. And, as I already told you, here’s the mailer that Rep. Bean is upset about, calling it, “the most desperate and personally offensive attack yet.†Click it for a larger image.
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The debate debate
Wednesday, Oct 4, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller The State Journal-Register editorial board was not impressed with Monday night’s debate. We suspect you are wondering who won Monday’s gubernatorial debate between Gov. Rod Blagojevich and Treasurer Judy Baar Topinka. And Eric Krol made several points about the debate in his Animal Farm bloglike thingy. Here are his first two: What a difference a few months makes. During their first debate at NBC-Ch. 5 in late May, Republican challenger Judy Baar Topinka batted Democratic Gov. Rod Blagojevich from pillar-to-post. Blagojevich looked rattled as Topinka steamrollered him on ethics. On Monday night in Decatur, Blagojevich was more calm and focused, sticking to his talking points and even scoring a few points of his own on ethics by pointing to what he said were no-bid contracts in Topinka’s treasurer office. Meanwhile, John Patterson of the Daily Herald had a funny piece today. He’s sure the $1,500 check to his 7-year-old daughter was a birthday gift. He eventually gets around to the YouTube thing. Go read it, and make sure to check out the companion piece, “Sticking to the script may work.” Democratic Gov. Rod Blagojevich often gets caught saying one thing to one group and something else to another, while Republican nominee Judy Baar Topinka has a habit of saying a little too much.
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Reuters poll: Duckworth up by 5 *** Updated x1 ***
Wednesday, Oct 4, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller Reuters polled 15 US House races and finds that Duckworth is leading Roskam by 5 points, which is just outside the margin of error. Democrats lead Republicans in 11 of 15 crucial races in the November 7 election to decide which party controls the U.S. House of Representatives. Check back later because I’ll try to get the full results for the district, including crosstabs, if any are available. By the way, with that sample size and that margin of error, a five point lead means the probability that Duckworth is ahead of Roskam is 89.33%. *** UPDATE *** This was at the bottom of a Daily Herald story today: Meanwhile, Roskam, a personal-injury lawyer, faces another challenge in the form of a lawsuit filed Tuesday in DuPage County court.
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Morning shorts *** Updated x1 ***
Wednesday, Oct 4, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller * Sorry, but a $20,000 “no-bid” employment contract that led to a part-time job for a “criminal” who “stole” $350 when he was 19 years old does not equal out the corruption factor in the governor’s race. * Tribune: The Carpentersville Village Board postponed discussion Tuesday night of a proposed ordinance that targets illegal immigrants after a crowd estimated at 3,000 people arrived for the meeting. * Steinberg: If your congressman quit, would you notice? * Richards: Why this election doesn’t Bear watching * Democrats seek an opening - Party hopes to crack GOP’s monopoly on DuPage board * Republicans may win, even if they lose * Forest district funds going to Republicans * AP: The 26-year-old son of Madison County’s treasurer has been arrested after police say he punched an Edwardsville businessman in a scuffle over a political sign. *** UPDATE *** The I-Team’s latest report: There is more controversy over a major political endorsement for Governor Rod Blagojevich. It concerns the recent endorsement by the Illinois Fraternal Order of Police, the state’s largest law enforcement union. In this Intelligence Report: why state prison guards are crying foul. * Tribune: A Lake County judge ruled Tuesday that commanding officers from the Illinois State Police may not use a union official’s letter in pursuing their claim that their vacation benefits were cut because they did not endorse Gov. Rod Blagojevich in the last election. * And I forgot to put this up earlier from Eric Zorn: Assessing the assessment scandal
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Evening “radio” clips *** Updated x1 ***
Tuesday, Oct 3, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller * Let’s start with a long interview of Green Party candidate Rich Whitney that was conducted right after last night’s debate. Whitney was interviewed by Illinois Channel honcho Terry Martin. * Next up, an IIS story about Rep. John Fritchey’s legislative proposal to expand who can be notified when minors seek abortions. (Chicago Public Radio has a story here.) * And, finally, Governor Rod Blagojevich announces an Internet safety plan. The first clip is the IIS story, the second is the guv explaining the plan. *** UPDATE *** The entire gubernatorial debate from last night can be downloaded by clicking here.
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One of, if not the, best negative ads of the year *** Updated x1 ***
Tuesday, Oct 3, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller Topinka’s new ad is up and running and we’ve got it right here. ![]() You can subscribe to videos that I upload myself by clicking here. I uploaded the Topinka video this morning, so subscribers got the first notification. Be advised, though, that when I see a video I like I usually add it to my video log with one quick click, and those vids won’t show up in your subscriber alerts. The video log is on the home page. *** UPDATE *** Just another quick note. New videos by others that I’ve put on my “vlog” include:
The vlog is on our YouTube home page. * Here’s JakeCP’s long rant about his cruddy textbooks, his mistrust of Gov. Blagojevich and, in the end, a plea for older people to vote for Topinka. It’s worth a look if you have a minute. Not bad for a kid. * Here’s a short video made by JakeCP of one of his textbooks, “just to prove that Rod Blagojevich isn’t giving enough funding to the Public School System.” ![]()
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Abortion; Jacobs; Syverson; Schock; Electricity; Special session; Granberg/Cavaletto; Target feed (Use all caps in password)
Tuesday, Oct 3, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Question of the day
Tuesday, Oct 3, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller I changed the headline, added a story and bumped this to the top so we can use it as the question of the day. Use these stories as a jumping off point. * ABC7 * Tribune * SJ-R Question: How did the two candidates do at last night’s debate?
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Still behind, Illinois media tries to play catch-up on Foley scandal
Tuesday, Oct 3, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller * The State Journal-Register editorializes: Most of us are not looking at this situation as a political football game. We are looking at it as parents who wonder how in the world anyone could consider even for a nanosecond that politics might be more important than protecting a child. * The SJ-R’s article completely buried the item about Sen. Dick Durbin’s call on Shimkus to resign as chairman of the page board, relegating it to one sentence. * The Sun-Times editorial, which won’t be read by many in Shimkus’ district, is harsh on the Republican incumbent. “Mark Foley should be ashamed,” Shimkus told the press conference. So should Shimkus and any other Republican who failed to protect the young people serving as pages. Hastert says he does not recall being told about the first reports of Foley’s behavior last year. The early reports on the messages did not contain any explicit language. Still, when the GOP leaders heard about them, why did they take Foley’s word that the messages were merely “over friendly?” Why didn’t they launch a formal investigation? In this day, when there has been so much angst and anger over the sexual predations of Catholic priests and school teachers, why did Shimkus and the other Republicans in the know just shrug this off? The horrible irony is that Foley himself sponsored legislation to protect children from sexual predators. * The Tribune editorial makes a good point at the very end: But this scandal now rests where it should: at the door of the speaker of the House. Mr. Hastert, you don’t need a squad of FBI agents to tell you how you and your colleagues in the House reacted when they first learned that Mark Foley had crossed a line that ought never be broached. You need to tell us. * Democrat Dan Stover, Shimkus’ opponent, got some rare ink. A Democratic congressional candidate says U.S. Rep. John Shimkus should step down from panel that oversees more than 70 pages working in the U.S. House. * The Alton Telegraph ran this long headline above its coverage of Shimkus today: “U.S. Rep. John Shimkus ducked a chance to address his role in the growing House page scandal on Monday, and his November election opponent and other Democrats wasted little time in turning up the heat. ” * The Tribune looks at the political fallout in the 8th: U.S. Rep. Melissa Bean (D-Ill.) and Republican challenger David McSweeney disagreed Monday over whether to scrap the congressional page program amid a scandal involving a Florida congressman. * Crain’s has more from congressional candidates:
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Truth, please
Tuesday, Oct 3, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller The Cook County Assessor’s office seems to be having trouble with the truth about why Gov. Rod Blagojevich’s assessment rose by just 1 percent while his neighbors saw 40 percent increases. From ABC7: “It’s just another example of Rod Blagojevich being the luckiest man in Illinois,” said Jay Stewart, executive director, Better Government Assn. That’s the key here. Everybody’s assessment in that neighborhood increased three years ago. And, as Jay Stewart asks in the piece…
Some truth would be nice. And as far as motivation is concerned, it wouldn’t be this, would it? Just wondering.
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Morning shorts
Tuesday, Oct 3, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller * Safety net for your kids - Gov, rival push plans to make cyberspace safer for children * Daley yet to announce, but campaign gets in gear * “Sneed has learned interim Cook County Board President Bobbie Steele is launching a two-pronged attack to seek more money from Gov. Blagojevich’s state coffers.” * Inc. Magazine: Blagojevich a “Three-star” governor… “Creative and diligent but still needs work” * Economy divides governor hopefuls * Protest planned as crackdown proposal causes stir in suburb
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