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Debate thread

Monday, Oct 2, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

Come back here tonight for debate liveblogging.

Until then, use the comments to suggest a debate drinking game for both Blagojevich and Topinka.

By the way, your best bet for listening online is probably WBBM AM.

—————————————————————————————

* Man, Topinka sounds nervous at the beginning.

* LOL… Did the governor just call Topinka “Public Official A”? Shameless.

* I wonder how many people will actually hear this debate?

* These endless fillibusters have to stop, on both sides.

* “She’s issued more than 300 no-bid contracts.” - Gov. Blagojevich

* The governor says he got that info on Topinka’s office from a FOIA his office submitted. Topinka has denied that she gave out those no-bid contracts.

* Seriously, the moderators really need to get control of these two a bit more. These endless lists and diatribes are no help at all.

* The fun thing is that the computer broadcast is on a delay, so I can “see” what they’re about to say by reading the comments as they come through.

* Topinka discloses that Paul Vallas helped craft her education plan. I had heard this was the case. Curious that they haven’t made more hay out of this fact.

* There isn’t even a hint of optimism in her voice. The hectoring gets old.

* Topinka commends MJM for asking for special session, says there should be a freeze. That’s gonna put serious pressure on Blagojevich. A ComEd lobster was most worried about this earlier tonight when I talked to him because it could force Blagojevich to actually call the session.

* LOL. JBT brings up the ethanol ad where the guv is standing in a soybean field.

* It’s a good thing that the drinking game wasn’t “Take a shot every time somebody posted a snarky, off-point, high schoolish comment” or I’d be dead by now.

* So, what have we learned from this, campers? They despise each other? No, we knew that one already. Topinka is too negative? Nope. Knew that. Blagojevich is a robot with his talking points unless he’s seriously challenged? Nix that, already knew it (and he wasn’t challenged here tonight).

* What they ought to do is broadcast the post-debate press conferences because we didn’t get much out of this.

* By the way, hats off to the governor’s Internet squad. TopinkaWatch had a bunch of info on the no-bid contracts point moments after the governor uttered it tonight.

* As OneMan just pointed out in comments….

If she gets another debate with him, which I doubt, she needs to figure out how to

A) Sound a little less angry
B) Get him off of his talking points

Easy for me to say, hard for her to do.

Exactly. There was no attempt to put him back on his heels. He just churned out his factoids one after another pretty much uninterrupted, and she sounded like she had a frown on her face the entire time.

Win: Blagojevich.

* My final point: This is basically a tune-up for the Public TV debate (although that debate is not completely certain). Few people will actually listen to a political debate on radio. Many more people will see the news coverage than the debate. And lots more will see the TV ads generated by the debate, if any. Topinka’s performance is less of a factor this time. But that doesn’t excuse it.

[Comments closed. Use Tuesday’s thread instead.]

  179 Comments      


This just in… Madigan wants special session *** Updated x11 ***

Monday, Oct 2, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

*** BIG UPDATE *** Guv will call special session, but WITH A BIG CAVEAT

From the governor’s letter to the leaders.

“Once we have the votes to pass the legislation, I will immediately call a special session to do so.”

So, don’t hold your breath. This looks like a Kabuki dance.

He does say in the letter that he will eventually call a special session if not enough votes can be found, and that the General Assembly will stay in session through the holidays if necessary. That sounds like he could be putting it off until after the election.

We’ll have to wait and see.

Click the pic for the full letter.

guvcaveatspecial

Also, whoever wrote this Reuters story is an idiot.

- Illinois Gov. Rod Blagojevich on Monday called for a special legislative session to extend a nine-year electric rate freeze for customers of Exelon Corp.’s (EXC.N: Quote, Profile, Research) Commonwealth Edison unit and Ameren Corp. (AEE.N: Quote, Profile, Research).

The action follows the state’s first power auction last month which will result in a jump in electric rates of as much as 55 percent for some residential and small business customers of three Ameren utilities in Illinois and a 22-percent hike for ComEd’s 3.7 million customers.

———————————————————————————–

Speaker Madigan has sent a letter to Governor Blagojevich asking that he call a special session within the next seven days to address the pending electricity rate hikes.

Madigan specifically wants the special session to take up Rep. Lisa Dugan’s bill, HB 5766, which would extend the decade-old rate freeze.

As I’ve told Capitol Fax readers before, the rate hikes have become a big issue for Madigan’s incumbents. A special session would showcase his targets.

Check back for updates. I’m told the guv’s office will have something “as soon as possible.”

*** UPDATE *** The SJ-R has more:

“The auction has become little more than a sham procedure for tremendously profitable utility companies to potentially turn already record earnings and profits into exorbitant gains for their executives and shareholders …” Madigan wrote in the letter.

Madigan wants lawmakers to convene and pass a bill to extend the freeze for three more years.

*** UPDATE 2 *** The letter to the governor can be downloaded by clicking this link. [pdf file]

*** UPDATE 3 *** Speaker Madigan reportedly informed the governor’s staff of his intentions this morning. As of noon or so, the word is that the guv’s people were still debating it behind the scenes.

As of 12:25, I’m still waiting on a return call from Senate President Emil Jones’ office. Jones is very close to ComEd and a major supporter in the Senate. It’s doubtful that he’ll want this special session, but opposing it could do some real harm to his incumbents and his candidates.

*** UPDATE 4 *** There are two options to convening a special session. Either the governor calls it or the two legislative leaders can call it together. From the state Constitution:

The Governor may convene the General Assembly or the Senate alone in special session by a proclamation stating the purpose of the session; and only business encompassed by such purpose, together with any impeachments or confirmation of appointments shall be transacted. Special sessions of the General Assembly may also be convened by joint proclamation of the presiding officers of both houses, issued as provided by law.

Also, SB1714 may be the vehicle. The HDems want something that they could move in a day or two, and Rep. Dugan’s original bill would take too long to process because it never got out of Rules.

*** UPDATE 5 *** Pantagraph:

“There appears to be a lot of anxiety among consumers. A lot of these people are senior citizens. Why bring that anxiety into their life? If the legislature can take some action and put a hold on this… that makes some sense to do,” said [Madigan spokesman] Brown.

Power company officials say the rate hikes reflect the actual price of energy after nine years of operating under a rate freeze. Without the increase, Ameren Corp. spokesman Leigh Morris said the company could face severe financial consequences, including bankruptcy.

“There are no winners in a bankruptcy,” said Morris. “A continuation of the rate freeze is not the answer.”

Not only are special sessions uncommon in Illinois, but officials would have to scramble if one were scheduled to find a place for lawmakers to meet. Both the House and Senate chambers are undergoing extensive renovations and are not useable.

Brown said the House could meet in the historic Old State Capitol, which is about five blocks from the Statehouse. There also are other large areas where members could meet to debate the issue and cast their votes.

*** UPDATE 6 *** Senate Republican spokesperson Patty Schuh:

“It needs to be dealt with as soon as possible. Sooner rather than later would probably be best… We’d have to review the House bill [so the SGOPs, in other words, won’t commit to the exact language of Rep. Dugan’s bill]… The [special session] call certainly should be broad enough to start the debate… There needs to be public debate on this issue and a special session is probably the way to do it.”

*** UPDATE 7 *** House Republican spokesman Dave Dring:

We think it could be done in the veto session… Politically motivated… We’re trying to find out if it’s real… But if it’s real and it happens, we’ll take a look at it.

Two House Republicans, candidate Dick Cain and Rep. Bill Mitchell, have already called for a special session on this issue.

*** UPDATE 8 *** If you’re having trouble viewing the Madigan letter, you can download it by clicking this link. [pdf file]

*** UPDATE 9 *** Senate Democratic spokesperson Cindy Davidsmeyer:

We should let the Commerce Commission do their job… Anything that needed to be done could be done during veto session…

However, if the governor does call a special session we will certainly heed that call.

She said she didn’t ask Senate President Jones about his views on the specific language that Madigan wants addressed, but Jones is most likely opposed to that.

*** UPDATE 10 *** AP:

Citizens Utility Board executive director David Kolata praised Madigan for seeking the special session.

“I think that the approach is let’s act sooner rather than later,” Kolata said. “We know we need to change the direction here.”

Supporters of the rate freeze may fear that lawmakers will end up doing nothing if action is put off until the veto session, which takes place after the Nov. 7 election.

David Dring, a spokesman for House Republican Leader Tom Cross, said the call for a special session looks “politically motivated.” A vote on freezing rates could wait until November, he said, adding that Cross hasn’t taken a position on the rate freeze measure yet.

*** UPDATE 11 *** Lt Gov. Pat Quinn:

“I’m all for passage of the rate freeze extension, the sooner the better, and I commend Speaker Madigan for taking action on this important issue that affects so many Illinois families.”

  59 Comments      


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Monday, Oct 2, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Question of the day

Monday, Oct 2, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

I got busy and forgot about posting a question today. Oops.

Have you received any direct mail from a political campaign in the last week or so? If you have, describe the piece(s) and rate their effectiveness.

  34 Comments      


Swamp unspins, but other Illinois media outlets silent, scooped, spun *** Updated x6 ***

Monday, Oct 2, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

The Tribune blog “The Swamp” has an unusually good piece today dissecting letters released by House Speaker Denny Hastert calling for a federal investigation of the Congressman Foley sexual predator scandal.

The letters are interesting because they seem to reveal an emerging damage-control strategy that Hastert may use to defend House Republicans in their handling of the Foley matter. It boils down to saying House Republicans did more than the media did when faced with the same Foley emails. […]

The other interesting thing about the letter is Hastert’s call for an investigation into who had copies of the sexually charged IMs which forced Foley’s resignation. ABC News reported the existence of those IMs and got them from somewhere.

Hastert appears to be suggesting that whoever had those IMs and didn’t go to law enforcement first may have committed a crime. Who knows, maybe it was some Democrat dirty trick meant to embarass House Republicans before the mid-term elections?

Read the whole thing.

Meanwhile, you’d think that if Congressman John Shimkus’ spokesman told at least two Illinois papers a different story than the congressman himself told the St. Louis Post-Dispatch you’d see a follow up today in both of those papers.

Nope and nope.

The spokesman said Shimkus hadn’t seen any e-mail exchanges between Foley and the teenager. The Post-Dispatch reported that Shimkus said he did see the e-mails.

For more info, go here. I’m gonna close comments on that other post to bring people to today’s.

Also, perhaps Congressman Shimkus should peruse his own state’s Abused and Neglected Children’s Act. If he were a school janitor here, he might be in big legal trouble.

*** UPDATE *** From the Wall Street Journal’s Washington Wire:

In the talk shows today others chimed in on this theme too. Sen. Mike DeWine and Rep. Sherrod Brown, in a “Meet the Press” interview on their Ohio Senate race, couched their language carefully, but they said if anyone in the House leadership knew of the emails and failed to act they should resign. Seeming to refer to Hastert, Brown said anyone who knew about the emails but failed to act jeopardized the safety of House pages and forfeited the public trust.

*** UPDATE 2 *** AP:

“As a parent and speaker of the House, I am disgusted,” Hastert, R-Ill., told reporters after holding a meeting at the Capitol in the wake of the disclosure of the e-mails in 2003 to a page, which led to Foley’s resignation last Friday. The page’s home state was not immediately cited. […]

Hastert, who did not take questions from reporters, called on any person who was aware of the 2003 instant messages to speak to law enforcement authorities. He said no Republican leader in Congress was aware of those exchanges until Friday, when ABC News reported it had questioned Foley about them. […]

Shimkus, appearing with Hastert, said new measures would be implemented to keep pages safe and said they include a toll-free hotline for pages, former pages and their families to confidentially report any incidents.

*** UPDATE 3 *** Hastert’s complete statement is here.

*** UPDATE 4 *** Man, Shimkus was totally snowed by this guy.

In a June 7, 2001, speech [to the House pages], Rep. John Shimkus, R-Ill., the head of the page board, referred to Foley as someone “who I know has a vested interest in taking time out to make sure he talks with you and visits with you and he gets to know you.”

“That is a personal trait that you should emulate. He has been successful, and I know it is from his heart,” Shimkus said.

*** UPDATE 5 *** Copley:

The two lawmakers [Hastert & Shimkus] read their statements and then walked away, ignoring questions shouted by a throng of reporters.

After Hastert and Shimkus spoke, [the lone Democrat on the House page board] Kildee issued a statement saying he was “outraged to learn” that changes were being proposed in the page program without Democratic input.

“Once again, I was not informed of the meeting today, nor was I consulted in any way about any proposed changes,” Kildee said. “In my 21 years as a Member of the House Page Board, every decision has been made on not just a bi-partisan basis but on a non-partisan basis, with our main concern always being the safety and wellbeing of the young teenagers who serve the U.S. House as pages.

[Emphasis added]

*** UPDATE 6 *** Durbin wants Shimkus to step down from board.

Sen. Dick Durbin, D-Ill., called on Rep. John Shimkus to step down as chair of the House Page Board, a role that has put the Collinsville Republican at the center of the controversy. Durbin said Shimkus hadn’t acted aggressively enough to investigate the matter, and that his failure to inform others on the board smacked of “a cover-up.” […]

Congressman Shimkus did not aggressively investigate these allegations concerning Rep. Foley’s inappropriate contact” with pages, said Durbin. “And the fact that he did not share this information with other members of the Page Board on a bipartisan basis is very troubling. . . . It has every indication of containment and cover-up.”

*** UPDATE 7 *** Hastert held a press conference after Shimkus was whisked off to an undisclosed location. The Swamp has the plahy-by-play:

Q Mr. Speaker, looking back on that conversation between Congressman Shimkus and Congressman Foley, can you think of any positive construction to put on an e‑mail message in which a 50‑year‑old man asks a 16‑year‑old boy for his picture? I mean if you had been in the room can you think of a positive way to look at an e‑mail message like that?

Mr. Hastert. I think that is apparent that would raise a red flag. Evidently it raised a red flag with the kid, with the page and that is what triggered this response.

Q Do you know ‑‑ do you think then that Congressman Shimkus didn’t have a good detector on there? How did he ‑‑ do you agree with his decision having questioned Congressman Foley then to relay that now.

Mr. Hastert. Well, I am talking about something I didn’t have firsthand knowledge of, but what I am telling you is from the concern of the parents were just to have this cease and desist. That is exactly what Congressman Shimkus did. With my understanding, without even letting Mr. Shimkus or I am not even sure the Clerk know what the actual substance of the message was.

  67 Comments      


Once again, something stinks *** Updated x3 ***

Monday, Oct 2, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

The governor’s office was not happy that Eric Krol and Kristen McQueary wrote stories about the governor’s property tax assessment, but there appears to some there there. The reason for the stories was that the guv’s assessment rose by just 1 percent this year, while his neighbors’ assessments skyrocketed. The assessor’s office claims that the reason for the low assessment increase was because he was hit harder than his neighbors three years ago. But that doesn’t appear to be the case.

* Krol:

A look at the 156 residential properties nearest Blagojevich’s Ravenswood Manor house — the east-west streets of Wilson and Sunnyside avenues and the north-south streets of Richmond Street and Sacramento Avenue — shows the average assessment increase was 36.7 percent this year. The other 155 properties all had at least double-digit increases. Homes of the same real estate class as Blagojevich’s — one-story homes 1,801 square feet and up — rose an average of 22.8 percent. […]

Three years ago, the Blagojevich home’s assessed value went up 40 percent, from $48,006 to $67,231. The average assessment increase among those same 156 neighboring properties was 43.7 percent. […]

Another way to look at property assessments in Blagojevich’s neighborhood is on a square-foot basis — a measurement commonly used in tax appeal cases. That barometer shows the governor’s property assessment is the lowest among both the most highly valued houses and homes in the same property class in his immediate neighborhood.

The $57,365 assessment on Blagojevich’s 3,817-square-foot house — that amount does not include the assessment on his land — comes to $15.03 per square foot. The average figure among the 15 properties in the neighborhood whose market value Houlihan’s office puts at more than $400,000 is $23.19 per square foot. And among homes of the same property class as Blagojevich, the average assessment was $18.69 per square foot.

* McQueary:

In an environment of climbing assessments and amid a push by Cook County Assessor Jim Houlihan to control wildly increasing home values, it seems strange that a chic 3,817-square-foot home, the governor’s, would dip in assessed value.

While property taxes are sufficiently complicated, the basic premise is this: The assessed value of Blagojevich’s bungalow dropped while the land around the house rose slightly. Overall, his assessed value increased by about 1 percent, bumping his market value from $420,194 to $424,331, according to property tax records.

It’s unclear how much his tax bill will be impacted, but it’s a safe bet his bill won’t rise as much as his neighbors. […]

Blagojevich’s neighbors, meanwhile, told me the $420,194 market value pegged by the assessor’s office is far too low to begin with. Homes near his — smaller homes — are selling for upwards of $800,000.

No way is his market value $424K. Not in that neighborhood. No way.

I hear that Assessor Houlihan plans to hold a press conference today to rebut the allegations in the two published stories. Stay tuned.

*** UPDATE *** There won’t be a Houlihan press coference.

*** UPDATE 2 *** Rep. John Fritchey (D-Chicago) had some harsh words about the governor’s property taxes on his blog today in a post entitled “Must be nice.”

The Governor lives in the north end of my district, about 3 miles away from me. And I can tell you that I don’t know of ONE person between my house and his that wouldn’t give a limb for a 1% increase in their assessment. My constituents (and I) are getting pounded by property taxes, and we are getting no help from the Governor’s office in trying to find a solution to this issue.

*** UPDATE 2 *** AP:

…Jay Stewart, the executive director of the Better Government Association and resident of the city’s northwest side, said the governor’s property tax assessment is enviable.

“I can tell you from personal experience that people in that neighborhood would die for a 1 percent assessment increase,” Stewart said.

*** UPDATE 3 *** I received a response from Lucio Guerrero the spokesman for the Cook County Assessor’s office, but most of it was so full of red herrings and misdirection that I won’t put it here.

However, to show you what kind of push-back there’s been on this story, I am including one paragraph.

Unfortunately, the reporters didn’t let the facts get in the way of their “scoop.” The reality is, this story has been shopped around for weeks and most responsible journalists took the time to educate themselves on the process and opted to take a pass.

What a jerk.

  44 Comments      


Check story still not going away

Monday, Oct 2, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

Both the Tribune and Copley had pieces on the YouTube incident from over a week ago. As usual, neither online article provided a link to the videos. But the stories did serve to keep the infamous “check” story alive.

* Tribune:

Gov. Rod Blagojevich made his first YouTube.com appearance in February, when someone posted footage of him being satirized on Comedy Central’s “The Daily Show.” For a telegenic governor in the media age, the widely popular video Web site has been a surprisingly unkind medium for him ever since. […]

For Blagojevich, a second awkward YouTube moment came last week, when a video of impromptu sessions with a dozen reporters landed on the site. An aide for Blagojevich’s Republican opponent, Judy Baar Topinka, shot the video.

The governor, typically smooth and confident before the cameras, looked less than prepared and uncharacteristically uneasy as he was peppered with questions surrounding a $1,500 check he received from a longtime friend. As the Tribune disclosed in a recent story, the check came about the time the friend’s wife received a state job. The raw texture of the amateur video made Blagojevich’s appearance look that much less professional and statesmanlike.

* Copley (Finke’s column):

A week ago Thursday, Blagojevich finally got around to talking with a group of reporters about the check. It did not go well. In fact, it went so poorly that Treasurer Judy Baar Topinka’s campaign put its video from the session on the YouTube Internet site. People have been talking about it ever since.

First, Blagojevich launches into an explanation of his relationship with Ascaridis to show that the check was just a generous gift to one of his children. They’re best friends. They were childhood friends. They’ve known each other since they were 8 years old. They’ve had a 40-year relationship.

Ascaridis is like a godparent to Blagojevich’s children.

And then he repeats it. And repeats it. Throughout the questioning from reporters, Blagojevich kept falling back on the same stock lines. Lifelong friend. Forty-year relationship. Godparent to children. It’s like watching “Rain Man II: The Gubernatorial Years.”

* My syndicated column is also partly about the check and the dispute between the governor and the Tribune over whether the original story accurately quoted Beverly Ascaridis.

There’s a simple way to clear all this up. Release the tape. Most reporters carry little tape recorders around with them. And considering the detailed quotes of Mrs. Ascaridis in the original story, it seems more than likely the Tribune has a recording of her answers. They can post the whole thing on their Web site.

I want to make it clear that I happen to side with the reporter on this matter. He’s a good journalist, and I don’t believe for a second that he would make up a story.

Too often, though, the people who run big media outlets like the Tribune tend to think that when they publish something, everyone has to take it as God’s Word that the story is true and nobody should ever dare question their integrity.

But when the governor of a large state who is already facing serious legal trouble contends that a powerful newspaper deliberately falsified a highly damaging story about him, then the newspaper ought to lay all its cards on the table.

  5 Comments      


Long form

Monday, Oct 2, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

Some newspapers have posted detailed positions from the gubernatorial candidates. The links below are definitely worth the time to read them.

* Tribune: Rivals differ on health-care funds

* SJ-R: Candidates talk the talk on education

* The SJ-R also has a web extra with the full responses

* The Southern Illinoisan: TOPINKA: I will continue to focus on kids

* The Southern Illinoisan: BLAGOJEVICH: We’re creating affordable healthcare for all

* Daily Herald: The big education gamble

  2 Comments      


Morning shorts

Monday, Oct 2, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Editorial: Negative may work, but campaign ads must be truthful

* Traffic stop data raises tough questions, issues

* A look at key statistics from traffic stops by driver race

* Legislator seeks state job files from governor

* Franks: Another ride with Hot Rod

* Blagojevich gives bid to company that contributed $120,000 to campaign

* McCaskill-”Obama’s running for president”

When Obama raises money for himself these days, the money no longer is going into his political action committee fund, but his Senate re-election warchest.

The distinction: Money that goes into the PAC is doled out to other candidates around the country. Money that goes into the Senate fund can be used for an ‘08 White House bid, McCaskill said.

* Duckworth: Bush has slogans, not strategies on Iraq

* Quigley in mix for mayor? - Daley’s foes wonder if county reformer could force runoff

* Madigan Praises Revenue Department Ruling

* Topinka: Ship of state is sinking; Blagojevich: We’re sailing right along

* “An auditor representing two Southern Illinois University Carbondale alumni sent a letter to Illinois Attorney General Lisa Madigan this past week, outlining concerns the university’s foundation might have mishandled private gifts”

  19 Comments      


Illinois media getting beat, spun on congressional sex predator story *** Updated x6 ***

Sunday, Oct 1, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

If you’ve been following the Congressman Mark Foley resignation scandal, you’ve notice that there is a definite Illinois angle. The Florida Republican abruptly resigned after e-mails and other Internet communications emerged that more than just sugggested he was a child sex predator.

If you’ve confined yourself to Illinois media outlets, you probably believe that all is well and that everybody mostly did their jobs (if you’ve seen coverage at all). You’d be wrong.

The Tribune and the State Journal-Register both reported Sunday that US House Speaker Denny Hastert and his office were unaware that one of his Republican members was an accused pedophile until last week.

* Tribune:

Aides to the speaker say he was not aware until last week of inappropriate behavior by Rep. Mark Foley (R-Fla.), who resigned on Friday after portions of racy electronic messages between him and current and former underage congressional pages became public. But the aides conceded they could not be conclusive on the timing.

* SJ-R:

Hastert’s office said no one in his office was made aware of the sexually explicit messages until press and Internet reports surfaced last week.

That reporting appears to be inaccurate.

* Roll Call:

National Republican Congressional Committee Chairman Tom Reynolds (N.Y.) issued a statement Saturday in which he said that he had informed Speaker Dennis Hastert (R-Ill.) of allegations of improper contacts between then-Rep. Mark Foley (R-Fla.) and at least one former male page, contradicting earlier statements from Hastert.

GOP sources said Reynolds told Hastert earlier in 2006, shortly after the February GOP leadership elections. Hastert’s response to Reynolds’ warning remains unclear.

* Speaker Hastert then issued a press release and this non-denial denial was near the end:

Congressman Tom Reynolds in a statement issued today indicates that many months later, in the spring of 2006, he was approached by Congressman Alexander who mentioned the Foley issue from the previous fall. During a meeting with the Speaker he says he noted the issue which had been raised by Alexander and told the Speaker that an investigation was conducted by the Clerk of the House and Shimkus. While the Speaker does not explicitly recall this conversation, he has no reason to dispute Congressman Reynold’s recollection that he reported to him on the problem and its resolution.

* And RollCall claims Hastert’s office was informed right away.

At least four Republican House Members, one senior GOP aide and a former top officer of the House were aware of the allegations about Foley that prompted the initial reporting regarding his e-mail contacts with a 16-year-old House page. They include: Majority Leader John Boehner (R-Ohio), National Republican Congressional Committee Chairman Tom Reynolds (N.Y.) and Reps. Rodney Alexander (R-La.) and John Shimkus (R-Ill.), as well as a senior aide to Speaker Dennis Hastert (R-Ill.) and former Clerk of the House Jeff Trandahl. […]

According to a senior House GOP leadership aide, Hastert’s office was informed of the interview shortly after it occurred, but Hastert himself was not told.

* This morning, the AP reported that Hastert was finally admitting that his office knew about Foley’s dark secret, but claimed he didn’t know the extent of the problem.

The office of House Speaker Dennis Hastert, who earlier said he’d learned about the e-mails only last week, acknowledged that aides referred the matter to the authorities last fall. They said they were only told the messages were “over-friendly.”

And what about Congressman John Shimkus, the chairman of the US House page program? The Hastert press release, which is billed as a timeline of events, claims this:

The Clerk asked to see the text of the email. Congressman Alexander’s office declined citing the fact that the family wished to maintain as much privacy as possible and simply wanted the contact to stop. The Clerk asked if the email exchange was of a sexual nature and was assured it was not. Congressman Alexander’s Chief of Staff characterized the email exchange as over-friendly.

The Clerk then contacted Congressman Shimkus, the Chairman of the Page Board to request an immediate meeting. It appears he also notified Van Der Meid that he had received the complaint and was taking action. This is entirely consistent with what he would normally expect to occur as he was the Speaker’s Office liaison with the Clerk’s Office.

The Clerk and Congressman Shimkus met and then immediately met with Foley to discuss the matter. They asked Foley about the email. Congressman Shimkus and the Clerk made it clear that to avoid even the appearance of impropriety and at the request of the parents, Congressman Foley was to immediately cease any communication with the young man.

The Clerk recalls that later that day he encountered Van Der Meid on the House floor and reported to him that he and Shimkus personally had spoken to Foley and had taken corrective action.

So, a little talking to and a gentleman’s warning is considered “corrective action” in Washington, DC? This is the best evidence yet of how screwed up the capital has become.

But, wait, there’s more.

* This is a representative example of what GOP Congressman Shimkus’ spokesman has been telling the press.

Shimkus “did not see personally any e-mail a year ago when he dealt with the issue,” Tomaszewski said. “He was only told of the one e-mail that came out first, which references, ‘How are you doing after the hurricane?’ and, ‘Send me a picture.’”

When Shimkus learned of other e-mails and text messages that Foley allegedly sent the underage pages, Shimkus “did confront Mr. Foley, who obviously lied to him,” Tomaszewski said.

[Emphasis added]

* Shimkus’ own press release [scroll down] never really says one way or another whether he had read the e-mails, and today’s SJ-R story accepts his explanation without question.

* But the Post-Dispatch talked to Shimkus himself, and the congressman had a different story to tell.

Shimkus, who serves as board chairman for the House page program, read the emails, in which Foley asked about the boy’s well-being in the wake of Hurricane Katrina, what he wanted for his birthday, and for a photograph. (The boy was from Louisiana and had returned to his home state.)

Although there was nothing sexually suggestive in the emails, Shimkus and Trandal agreed: “That was enough for us to approach Mark,” Shimkus recalled an interview Saturday.

Soon after, they met with Foley and his chief of staff in the Florida congressman’s office. “We basically said, ‘We got these emails. And we don’t think this is appropriate. … You have to stop (contacting this boy)’,” Shimkus said.

[Emphasis added]

My own thought is that the story was probably downplayed when it was initially mentioned to Speaker Hastert. He does bear ultimate responsibility as Speaker for this mess, however.

The behavior of Congressman Shimkus, the chairman of the House page program, is far more inexcusable. Parents send their kids off to DC for the page program believing that our nation’s leaders will make sure of their safety. Shimkus completely failed those parents and totally failed his official responsibilities The fact that he never even told the minority party leadership of the page program about the incident suggests he was either clueless about his responsibilities to those kids or there was a partisan cover-up, or both.

An example of the consequences of Shimkus’ inaction and silence was that the Metro East Republican allowed the alleged boy-lover Foley to continue chairing the House Caucus on Missing and Exploited Children. At the very least, Shimkus should immediately resign his page program chairmanship.

Clearly, more answers are needed. And, clearly, the newspapers in this state and particularly in Shimkus’ own district need to get off their kiesters and work this story a whole lot harder.

[Hat tips all over the place, and yes I’m aware there’s more to this story, including the fact that the US House Majority Leader changed his story. After initially claiming to the Washington Post that he told Speaker Hastert of the allegations, he later said he did no such thing. You can find a timeline here.]

[Also, you can comment now, but, as always, comments won’t appear until Monday so I don’t have to spend my weekends monitoring the blog.]

*** UPDATE *** Roll Call:

As of Saturday evening, nearly a dozen House GOP lawmakers and staffers have acknowledged that they knew of the initial batch of non-sexually explicit messages from Foley to a 16-year-old former House page, some of them for a year or more. These include Hastert; Majority Leader John Boehner (Ohio); National Republican Congressional Committee Chairman Tom Reynolds (N.Y.); Reps. Rodney Alexander (La.) and John Shimkus (Ill.); Mike Stokke, the Speaker’s deputy chief of staff; Ted Van Der Meid, Hastert’s counsel; Paula Nowakowski, Boehner’s chief of staff; Jeff Trandahl, the former Clerk of the House; and another Hastert aide and Alexander’s chief of staff, according to public statements and GOP insiders.

*** UPDATE 2 *** Hotline Blog:

What isn’t clear is why no one other the clerk of the House and GOP Rep. John Shimkus (R-IL), the member in charge of the Page program, directly spoke with Foley.

More importantly, and this question may decide whether Republicans retain control of the House, how thorough was the investigation conducted by the clerk and Shimkus? What exactly did that “investigation” discover and/or conclude? It only took ABC News about a day to go from knowing nothing to knowing, well, too much about the contact Foley had with underage pages.

I’d like to know the answer to those two questions as well.

*** UPDATE 3 *** The president of the Page Alumni Association says pages were warned about Foley way back in 2001.

A Republican staff member warned Congressional pages five years ago to watch out for Congressman Mark Foley, according to a former page. […]

Matthew Loraditch, a page in the 2001-2002 class, told ABC News he and other pages were warned about Foley by a supervisor.

Loraditch, the president of the Page Alumni Association, said the pages were told “don’t get too wrapped up in him being too nice to you and all that kind of stuff.”

If the pages knew, why didn’t Congressman Shimkus know? Or did he hear the rumors as well?

*** UPDATE 4 *** The Palm Beach Post, in the disgraced ex-congressman Foley’s former district, reports that Foley’s affinity for the youngsters was “widely known.”

Congressional staff members who asked not to be identified said it was widely known among Hill staffers and some House leaders that Foley had been engaging in inappropriate conduct and language with young aides

*** UPDATE 5 *** I’ve created an automated IceRocket news feed so you can follow the developments:

*** UPDATE 6 *** From the official farewell to the departing page class of 2001-2002:

Mr. SHIMKUS. I thank my colleague. Now someone who spends a lot of time with you also, the gentleman from Florida (Mr. Foley), would like to say a thank you.

Mr. FOLEY. I warn all of you not to cry in front of me, please, so I can get through this very important day with you without shedding tears as well. […]

…and finally John Eunice. John was the highest bidder on lunch with Mark Foley. Maybe you all do not know this story, but John had paid considerable sums to dine with me. I had offered to take the winning bidder to lunch in the Members’ dining room. Then I heard how much John Eunice paid. And I said, “John, there is no way in the world after you committed so much money to have lunch with me that I would dare take you downstairs to eat in the Members’ dining room.'’ I said, “Where do you want to go?'’ He says, without reservation, “Morton’s.'’ I said, “Morton’s? Like in Morton’s Steakhouse?'’ He said, “Oh, would that be too much?'’ I said, “Oh, no, we’ll go.'’ I said, “Call your mother, get permission, make sure she notifies the Clerk and we will go to Morton’s.'’ And so we proceeded to cruise down in my BMW to Morton’s. And all of this story is meant to make you all feel jealous that you were not the high bidders. So we went to Morton’s, and I do not know where you all went.

It’s enough to turn your stomach. And since it was broadcast on C-SPAN, it’s all on tape. Luckily for Shimkus, his opponent doesn’t have the money to put this video into a TV ad.

[Comments now closed. Head to Monday’s post to comment, please.]

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