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Wackos amping up wacko activities

Wednesday, Sep 7, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Mark Maxwell

With nine weeks to go before the 2022 midterms, local election officials across Illinois are fielding a new wave of baseless grievances and impossible demands from ‘election integrity’ activists who insist the 2020 presidential election was stolen.

In recent weeks, a variety of form letters and emails, most of them including the same language, started arriving in county clerks’ inboxes. The letters often came as open records requests filed under the state’s Freedom of Information Act law, but they included incoherent demands or inaccurate lists of data the clerks don’t collect in their election counting processes. […]

Michelle Turney, a former Chicago police officer who failed to collect enough signatures to appear on the 2022 primary ballot, sent an email to the Iroquois County Clerk’s office under the subject line “Class Action Lawsuit.”

“I am contemplating filing suit against your organization based on credible information I have received regarding your organization’s possible involvement in criminal and/or civil actions pertaining to election integrity issues,” Turney wrote.

Later, in the same email, she told the local election authorities who work in a county two hours south of her hometown that she was their employer and threatened them with criminal consequences.

“I AM CONSIDERING SUING YOU FOR YOUR AND/OR YOUR ORGANIZATION’S INVOLVMENT IN THE FRAUDELENT (sic) ELECTIONS THAT WILL SOON BE PROVEN TO HAVE TAKEN PLACE SINCE 2017,” Turney wrote in all capital letters. “Any attempts by you or your organization to destroy the election records and accompanying relevant documentation that I, as your benefactor and employer, have demanded you retain will be met with the harshest possible criminal and civil repercussions available under the law.”

Isabel has filed a Freedom of Information Act request for all the FOIAs filed with the Madison County clerk, which appears to be a top target of election results deniers. We’ll let you know what we see.

Also, Iroquois is about the most Republican county in the state.

* More on Ms. Turney from earlier this year

A slate of far-right conspiracy theorists have filed to run in June’s Republican primary for nominations for Illinois public offices ranging from governor to a seat in Congress, aiming to amplify baseless claims of rampant voter fraud and to “take back” the government.

Their website features a slogan and symbol linked to QAnon supporters, although one of the candidates sought to downplay the connection. […]

Secretary of state candidate Michelle Turney — a former police sergeant from the Beverly neighborhood — said in an email that her first priority would be to “decertify the 2020 Election on day one of my term.”

Turney, who has more than a thousand YouTube followers, also wrote that all “voting machines will be disassembled, sold, donated, or destroyed.” She’s no longer on the city payroll.

Her failed slate’s website is still active and might conceivably be the source for at least some of the FOIA filings. Click here.

* Related…

* Madison County Clerk comments on “frivolous” FOIA requests

  25 Comments      


Question of the day

Wednesday, Sep 7, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller

* WTTW

Although team officials continue to say a move to Arlington Heights remains a matter of “if,” not “when,” the Chicago Bears have offered the first sneak peek of their vision for a new stadium complex.

A trio of high-level renderings released by the team on Tuesday demonstrate the scope of the Bears ambition. More than just a new stadium, the team is aiming to turn the 326-acre property into “a multi-purpose entertainment district anchored by a new, best-in-class enclosed stadium, providing Chicagoland with a new home worthy of hosting global events such as the Super Bowl, College Football Playoffs, and Final Four.”

Though the team’s press materials were long on anticipated revenue-generating benefits for Cook County and the state of Illinois — forecasting $1.4 billion in annual economic impact — they were short on projected costs.

The team stated it would seek no public funding for direct stadium construction, but would expect to partner “with the various governmental bodies to secure additional funding and assistance needed to support the feasibility of the remainder of the development.”

Aside from the stadium, the master plan also encompasses entertainment, commercial and retail, restaurants, parks and open spaces, housing and possibly a hotel.

* Sun-Times

“Whenever anyone is offering up an economic impact number, a good rule of thumb is to move the decimal one place to the left,” [University of Chicago economics Prof. Allen Sanderson] said, noting he hasn’t seen the team’s research. “It doesn’t matter if it’s the Bears, or a local chamber of commerce, or a mayor — 90% of that is hyperbole or just inflated.

“It’s especially true in the NFL, because money affiliated with the team is local in nature. People will be watching the Bears whether they’re in Soldier Field or Arlington Heights. Money gets redistributed, but the net addition is usually minimal,” Sanderson said.

And the sizable “mixed-use” development the Bears are pitching on the rest of the 326-acre plot probably won’t create the massive economic windfall the team has suggested, said Sanderson.

He added that the team’s implication that they’re not seeking public financing for the stadium project “made me scratch my head.”

“Essentially they’re saying, ‘We’re not going to ask for public money for the stadium, but we are going to ask for other money to build next to it.’ In the end, somebody is going to have to fork over something like $2 billion to build this facility. I don’t care what euphemism is used, but it’s $2 billion.”

* The Question: Should the Bears receive any public (state or local) assistance in constructing their multi-purpose project? Explain.

  66 Comments      


Illinois awards first tax credits under electric car program

Wednesday, Sep 7, 2022 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Capitol News Illinois

The state on Tuesday announced the award of the first electric vehicle manufacturing-targeted tax incentives made possible by a law signed by Gov. JB Pritzker last year.

The incentives come from the Reimagining Electric Vehicles Act, which passed nearly unanimously and became law in November, and will provide an estimated $2.2 million in value to T/CCI Manufacturing in Decatur.

The REV Act passed two months after the Climate and Equitable Jobs Act which incentivizes EV adoption, driving Pritzker’s vision to make Illinois “the best place in North America to drive and manufacture an electric vehicle.”

T/CCI’s Decatur plant currently manufactures compressors for gasoline-powered cars. The company plans to retool the Decatur facility to produce compressors for EVs with an estimated $20 million investment. Currently, T/CCI makes EV compressors, a part which cools batteries and powers car air conditioning systems, in China and India.

* The Pantagraph

Pritzker, joined by industry leaders and state and local elected officials at T/CCI’s facility, proclaimed that “if you want to build a career in the electric vehicle economy, you can start right here in Decatur.”

“This is another in-state element to the EV ecosystem of Illinois that we’re building, which is especially crucial given the supply chain challenges of the past year,” Pritzker said. “And thanks to the REV Act, Illinois beat out international competition to bring this deal home. That means new jobs and jobs that would have gone overseas are staying right here.”

It was also announced Tuesday that T/CCI will partner with Richland Community College to create an EV innovation cluster that will include a Climatic Center for Innovation & Research Facility.

About $15.3 million has been allocated to Richland and $6 million to the city of Decatur from the state’s fiscal year 2023 budget for the project.

* Pritzker said the manufacturing of EV parts domestically is necessary to work around supply chain issues. Fox 2

REV Illinois offers competitive incentives to companies that manufacture EVs, EV parts or components, and EV charging stations. The incentives are contingent upon job creation and retention, capital investments, annual compensation, and continued operation in the state.

“This pivotal moment for our economy, our climate, our communities demand ambition, and Illinois is meeting this moment,” Pritzker said.

The announcement comes as EV infrastructure planning and development grows on both sides of the river.

“It’s coming faster than everybody realizes. It’s not stopping. It’s here” said Gabe Warner, project manager at RJP Electric.

* Crain’s

The company will also set up a climate innovation center in cooperation with Decatur’s Richland Community College. State and company officials say the center will serve more than T/CCI, with Deputy Gov. Andy Manar saying he hopes the facility will be the first step in creating a broader EV campus that will spur manufacturing here.

The deal is rather modest, at least compared to multi-billion-dollar EV battery plants that have recently been announced in Ohio and other states. Still, T/CCI will invest more than $20 million and has agreed to keep 103 jobs that now produce compressors for conventional vehicles while adding 50 more.

But officials are hopeful the move is the first of bigger additional announcements to come. “We could have chosen to locate this anywhere. We chose Illinois,” said company Vice President Kara Demirjian-Huss in an interview. The company has facilities in China and India and considered the latter, as well as other facilities, for the new plant. But the new incentives–mostly payroll tax credits–made a difference, she said.

Those incentives will be worth up to $2 million, with another $250,000 tax credit awarded under a different program, Manar said. In addition, another $15.3 million in grants will go to Richland over some years with the city of Decatur getting $6 million for infrastructure improvements.

* While taking questions from reporters, Pritzker played down the notion that the lack of new projects was bad news, but claimed Illinois will see more out of the REV Act and more companies coming to the state

Well, it’s been less than 10 months. I mean, I think anybody in business can tell you that it takes quite a long time to evaluate facilities’ locations where you’re going to put new manufacturing, and then to make the decision to put the capital into the ground, so to speak, that you need to in the community. So you’ve got to know it’s not just about the financial incentives. That’s obviously a core portion of what businesses consider. We provide it through the REV Act, a very competitive ability to attract companies from a financial perspective.

* Ensuring areas overburdened by past pollution can participate in and benefit from Pritzker’s clean energy law is more complicated in practice, St. Louis Public Radio reports

But achieving this vision is more complicated in practice, which was on display when dozens of people gathered at Lewis and Clark Community College last week to discuss a local workforce development hub, just one of the key provisions laid out in the law.

“There’s still more work to be done,” said Hilary Scott-Ogunrinde, executive secretary of Macedonia Development Corp. in East St. Louis. “Community leaders now have to make sure that what’s in the black and white actually ends up in our households, in our businesses, at our city municipal governments and on our table.” […]

Along with Scott-Ogunrinde, union electricians and carpenters, environmental groups, educators, community organizations and local elected leaders gave their ideas on how to best implement such a hub, which will provide education and training for jobs related to solar and other clean energy transitions.

“Let’s face it, it’s a big piece of legislation, it’s very wonky,” said Virginia Woulfe-Beile of the Piasa Palisades Sierra Club in Alton. “It’s got a lot of moving parts, and to get these moving parts going in sync, we need people that understand what the legislation is supposed to do and how we’re supposed to get there.”

  5 Comments      


Campaign notebook

Wednesday, Sep 7, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Sen. Darren Bailey on Facebook yesterday

And then finally as your children are off to school again today in public schools all across Illinois, unfortunately, they’re being taught woke ideology. They’re being taught CRT, they’re being taught sex education, and these curriculums have been elevated. That’s all that’s been talked about over the last couple of years instead of the math, the science, the reading, all of the history. History. We have got to start teaching our children how to live, how to work, how to thrive. History is very important, the real history because history repeats itself. History is repeating itself right now. History will repeat itself in a dangerous way if we allow it, but we can stop this.

* Vanity Fair interviewed Gov. Pritzker early last month, when people were talking about runs for president and stuff like this

“I think it is disgusting,” outgoing Illinois congressman Adam Kinzinger, one of two Republicans on the January 6 committee, told CNN in late July of the strategy [by Democrats to help nominate far-right Republicans in primaries].

Pritzker brushed off the criticism.

An overwhelming majority of voters in the Illinois Republican primary selected Bailey of their own volition, and it’s insulting to their intelligence to suggest they were tricked into it, he told me. What’s more, “the ads that were run in the primaries were all ads that I could run today in the general election,” he said.

The GOP was fighting to “transform the state of Illinois into what Donald Trump wants the country to be transformed into.” What was he supposed to do?

“I was being attacked,” he said. “Don’t tell me I’m not allowed to attack back.”

* Kelly Bauer and Colin Boyle at Block Club Chicago report that US Rep. Chuy Garcia will soon announce a decision about a mayoral bid

Rep. Jesús “Chuy” García is considering a run for mayor, he said Wednesday.

García — a longtime local politician and community organizer — would be entering an already crowded field, but he could pose a significant challenge to Mayor Lori Lightfoot. In the 2015 elections, when he last ran for mayor, he forced then-Mayor Rahm Emanuel into a runoff. […]

“I don’t want to pressure myself,” García said at a news conference where he and other leaders announced who they’re endorsing in various races. “I want to be as deliberate and as understanding of all of the issues that are facing the city of Chicago. The public safety challenges, the promise of new endeavors, and the area of public safety … .” […]

“In all seriousness, I am conflicted because of the responsibility that I have to help save and protect our democracy and our republic,” García said. “The threat against our democracy remains so violent. We’ve been hanging by a thread for the past year now or so. So I’m conflicted.”

* Speaking of which, here’s Mary Ann Ahern

Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot is already facing a large field of challengers in the upcoming mayoral election, but a familiar face may join that crowd as former Illinois Gov. Pat Quinn says he is mulling a run.

Quinn, who served as governor after the impeachment of Rod Blagojevich and who was defeated by Republican Bruce Rauner in 2014, says that he will make his final decision within a matter of weeks as petitions begin to circulate for candidates.

“I think Chicago needs someone who can step in and rescue our city,” he said.

Quinn says that polling data shows a strong performance if he were to jump into the race.

“I did a poll earlier, just recently, and I had 42% and I think the incumbent mayor had 31%,” he said.

* Yesterday…

Today, the Illinois AFL-CIO criticized Regan Deering, Republican candidate for Congress in Illinois’ 13th Congressional District, for her tone-deaf and anti-worker comments in her interview with WCIA’s Cole Henke on Labor Day.

Deering said that she “doesn’t believe we need to enshrine union power” when asked if she supports the Workers’ Rights Amendment on the ballot in Illinois this year. Deering, who is worth up to over $142 million was asked if she supports a minimum wage – after previously complaining about having to pay workers $10 per hour – said that she would look at the “$10 to $13” – which would be a decrease from Illinois’ $15 dollar minimum wage that fully goes into effect in less than three years.

“When you’re worth up to $142 million, you probably don’t need to worry about enshrining the right to bargain collectively and fight for fair wages and safe working conditions,” said Illinois AFL-CIO President Tim Drea. “For the rest of us, we do. That’s why organized labor exists – to stand up for the worker against people like Regan that would exploit them.

“Regan left no room for doubt – she is anti-labor and anti-worker. She is advocating to pay workers less than the Illinois minimum wage.”

* Today…

Candidate for the 13th Congressional District in Illinois Nikki Budzinski has spent her career championing policies that cause tax increases, higher gas prices, and inflation, all of which are the triple threat faced by working families today all across Illinois. Now, Budzinski wants to take her attack on middle-class families a step further, and repeal the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act.

According to Budzinski’s policy agenda, her top economic priority is repealing the 2017 tax cuts legislation that save Illinois families over $1,000 a year.

“This is the absolute worst time to raise taxes on Illinois families,” said Illinois Republican Party Chairman Don Tracy. “As families across our state grapple with Gov. JB Pritzker’s high taxes and President Joe Biden’s inflation, the last thing we need in Congress is another tax-and-spend-happy politician. Whether working for Pritzker or Biden, one thing is consistent about Nikki Budzinski - she’s made a career out of championing policies that have caused pain at the pump, higher taxes, and the generationally high inflation that we’re facing today. She will do even more damage if elected to Congress.”

In 2019, while Nikki Budzinski was serving as a Senior Advisor in the Office of the Governor, JB Pritzker signed a $45 million package of bills that doubled the gas tax, while indexing annual gas tax increases to inflation. She was also in a senior role in advocating for Pritzker’s failed tax referendum that would have changed the Illinois Constitution to give politicians more opportunities to raise income taxes.

In 2021, Budzinski joined the Biden Administration as Chief of Staff to the Office of Management and Budget to - you guessed it - advance higher taxes and higher inflation while turning a blind eye to skyrocketing energy costs. Budzinski led the office that was in charge of implementing Biden’s vision for America that included canceling the Keystone XL Pipeline, which eliminated more than 1,000 great jobs and cut Americans off from much-needed additional energy resources. Budzinski continues to champion the American Rescue Plan, despite dire warnings from respected Democrat economists that it would cause the severe inflation that we are now seeing.

“Nikki Budzinski’s solution to solving the inflation problem she helped create is implementing higher taxes on working families. Central Illinois families cannot afford Nikki Budzinski,” said Chairman Tracy.

* 3rd Supreme Court District…

Justice Mary Kay O’Brien, candidate for Illinois Supreme Court, 3rd District receives the strong backing of the Coalition of Frontline Police Officers. The coalition comprises Illinois Police Benevolent & Protective Association (“PBPA”), Metropolitan Alliance of Police (“MAP”), Illinois Council of Police and Sheriffs (“ICOPS”), and Association of Professional Police Officers (“APPO”), representing over 20,000 active and retired law enforcement officers across Illinois.

“Judge Mary Kay O’Brien earned our support because she has made the safety and advocacy of law enforcement officers in the line of duty a priority,” said Sean M. Smoot, Chairman of the Coalition and the Director and Chief Counsel of PBPA. “Judge O’Brien’s extensive career serving Illinoisians over the last 25 years as a State Representative and Appellate Court Justice is the experience we need on the highest court in Illinois.”

“I am honored to have the support of the Police Benevolent and Protective Association of Illinois,” said Justice Mary Kay O’Brien. “As an association who protects the rights of our working men and women in law enforcement, I am proud to have the support of law enforcement across the Third District.”

“Accordingly, the Coalition strongly endorses Justice Mary Kay O’Brien to the Supreme Court of Illinois.”

The Coalition of Frontline Police Officers was established in 2022 to provide a voice for frontline officers who serve and protect our communities across Illinois.

* Equality Illinois…

In an unprecedented move, Equality Illinois, the state’s LGBTQ+ civil rights organization, endorsed Judge Elizabeth Rochford and Judge Mary Kay O’Brien for election to the Illinois Supreme Court in the 2022 General Election.

“Equality Illinois has not traditionally engaged in judicial races but the alarm bells are ringing loudly for our democracy and our rights. That’s why we today are proud to endorse Judge Elizabeth Rochford and Judge Mary Kay O’Brien for Justices on the Illinois Supreme Court,” said Justin DeJong, Chair of the Equality Illinois Board of Directors. “We are confident Judge Rochford and Judge O’Brien will ensure every person receives equal protection and due process under the law and that they will also protect the tenets of democracy.”

This fall, two newly-redistricted seats on the Illinois Supreme Court are up for election: the 2nd Judicial District (DeKalb, Lake, Kane, Kendall and McHenry Counties) and the 3rd Judicial District (Bureau, DuPage, Grundy, Kankakee, LaSalle and Will Counties). Rochford is in the 2nd Judicial District and O’Brien is in the 3rd Judicial District.

With the United States Supreme Court controlled by justices opposed to the foundational rights underpinning reproductive freedoms and marriage equality, the Illinois Supreme Court is the last line of defense to protect the rights grounded in Illinois law. If anti-equality and anti-family forces take over the Illinois Supreme Court, many hard-won freedoms will be in jeopardy. In Illinois, the non-discrimination protections in the Illinois Human Rights Act, the marriage equality law, the conversion therapy ban, and the requirement to teach LGBTQ+ contributions in public schools are examples of laws that could be annihilated. We are also gravely concerned about judicial attacks on free and fair elections, access to justice, voting rights, reproductive rights, workers rights, and criminal justice reforms.

“For voters in the 2nd and 3rd Judicial Districts, we urge all who care about LGBTQ+ equality and justice to vote for Rochford and O’Brien,” said Brian C. Johnson, CEO of Equality Illinois. “Vote like your rights depend on this election. Because they do.”

* AFFI…

Today, the Associated Fire Fighters of Illinois (AFFI) announced its endorsement of Judge Elizabeth Rochford in her campaign for Illinois Supreme Court in the Second District. The Associated Fire Fighters of Illinois is the state’s foremost authority on, and advocate for, issues related to professional union firefighters and EMS providers. The AFFI does not base its political endorsements on party affiliation, but on support of issues important to firefighters in general and to their members in particular.

“The Associated Fire Fighters of Illinois recently met to consider the candidates in this race, and it was clear that Judge Elizabeth Rochford is the most qualified to serve on the Illinois Supreme Court in the Second District,” said AFFI President Chuck Sullivan. “Judge Rochford’s extensive experience and qualifications in and around the court system has positioned her to be an excellent Justice, and we are proud to support her campaign.”

This endorsement builds on Judge Rochford’s strong support in both the primary and general elections, including the Illinois State AFL-CIO, Illinois Federation of Teachers, Personal PAC, Secretary of State Jesse White, Cook County Clerk of the Circuit Court Iris Martinez, and multiple pro-choice legislative leaders.

“Our firefighters are an incredibly important part of the fabric of our communities, risking their lives everyday to keep us safe,” said Judge Elizabeth Rochford. “I’m honored to receive the endorsement of the Associated Fire Fighters of Illinois in my campaign, and am committed to bringing equity and justice to the Illinois Supreme Court.”

* DuPage County…

Dear Honorable Deb Conroy:

The International Union of Operating Engineers (IUOE) Local 150 is a proud labor union with a long history of representing the interests of working men and women on the job, at the bargaining table, and in the halls of government. In addition to workers’ rights, we value commitment to a strong and reliable infrastructure that supports Illinois’ economy and creates job opportunities in every industry.

I am proud to inform you that IUOE Local 150 has endorsed your candidacy for DuPage County Chair in the General Election, and this endorsement will be communicated to our membership.

Hardworking Illinoisans are counting on determined leaders to stand up for their rights and ensure that we have a safe infrastructure that is a strength rather than a weakness when it comes to economic activity and job creation.
Good luck in the upcoming election.

In Solidarity,

James M. Sweeney
President-Business Manager

…Adding… Press release…

Today, three Mayors- Inverness Mayor Jack Tatooles, Gilberts Village President Guy Zambetti, and Rolling Meadows Mayor Joe Gallo- announced their decision to join the “Mayors for Raja” coalition, endorsing Congressman Raja Krishnamoorthi’s re-election campaign to continue to represent Illinois’ 8th Congressional District in the U.S. Congress.

“I have been in contact with the Congressman on a regular basis to discuss and address our local issues and needs,” said Inverness Mayor Jack Tatooles. “I am confident our community will be well served by Raj.”

“Congressman Raja reached out to me when I was sworn in as Village President and maintained communication since,” said Gilberts Village President Guy Zambetti. “Being able to pick up the phone when I have questions or concerns means a lot to me.”

“Congressman Krishnamoorthi and his office have been instrumental assisting residents of Rolling Meadows through the immigration process and a path towards citizenship,” said Rolling Meadows Mayor Joe Gallo.

“I humbly accept these endorsements,” said Congressman Raja Krishnamoorthi. “The new Illinois 8th Congressional District spans across the West and Northwest Suburbs of Chicago, from the 41st Ward in the City of Chicago to St. Charles, Illinois. Having the support of the many bipartisan local leaders who represent these communities is absolutely instrumental, and it speaks to my track record of working collaboratively and in a bipartisan fashion on the pressing economic and social issues impacting working families in Illinois.”

The growing list of 14 Mayors now includes:

• Addison Mayor Richard Veenstra
• Carol Stream Village Mayor Frank Saverino
• Elgin Mayor Dave Kaptain
• Elk Grove Village Mayor Craig Johnson
• Gilberts Village President Guy Zambetti
• Hanover Park Village President Rod Craig
• Hoffman Estates Mayor Bill McLeod
• Inverness Mayor Jack Tatooles
• Itsasca Village President Jeff Pruyn
• Oak Brook Village President Gopal Lalmalani
• Schaumburg Village President Tom Dailly
• Rolling Meadows Mayor Joe Gallo
• Roselle Mayor David Pileski
• Villa Park President Nick Cuzzone

  27 Comments      


White’s consistently unifying appeal has no equal in this state’s politics

Wednesday, Sep 7, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller

* My weekly syndicated newspaper column

Way back in 1996, I spent a few minutes walking around the Chicago-based Democratic National Convention with then-House Minority Leader Michael Madigan.

Madigan at the time was working to regain his chamber’s majority after the 1994 national Republican wave combined with the Republican-drawn legislative district maps to knock the speaker’s gavel out of his hand.

But even with his lessened official status, Madigan was still hugely powerful within his party, and he was clever enough that many figured he’d somehow find a way back.

At some point that evening, Cook County Recorder of Deeds Jesse White approached Madigan. White had served 18 years in the House with Madigan, so the two knew each other well.

White told Madigan he was seriously considering running for secretary of state. Madigan was polite but non-committal in response.

After White walked away, Madigan turned to me, chuckled, shook his head “no” and sighed, “Jesse.” He clearly had other plans for the office, which had been held by the Republican Party for 15 years by that time and was likely to be an open seat if incumbent George Ryan did as expected and ran for governor.

Long story short, Madigan ended up supporting Tim McCarthy, a former Secret Service agent who took a bullet to his chest while protecting President Ronald Reagan during a 1981 assassination attempt. White ended up winning the 1998 Democratic primary by 13 points. Madigan, by then the House speaker, brought a large campaign check to his first post-primary meeting with the winner and supported White from that point on.

White went on to win the 1998 general election against former state Rep. Al Salvi, whose spouse Kathy is currently running for U.S. Senate, by 13 points.

From that election forward, White became a singularly unifying force in Illinois politics. He routinely managed to win areas where no other Democrat could even hope to compete. In 2002, he won all 102 Illinois counties, raking in 68% of the vote and cementing his legendary status. He won 63% of the vote four years later, then won subsequent elections with 70%, 66% and 68%.

A determined worker, White had gone all-out to defeat Madigan’s candidate in 1998, campaigning everywhere, and he was not happy he lost a few counties in 2006 after sweeping them four years earlier, so he made sure to ramp up his efforts in 2010.

Over six elections, White outpolled his party’s candidate for governor by an average of 13.8 percentage points.

In 2018, he lost just two of Illinois’ 59 state Senate districts, according to the Illinois Elections Data website.

Nobody has ever tried to quantify White’s impact on down-ballot races. Did crossing over for White help nudge Republican-leaning voters to maybe support a Democrat for the legislature or local office? There’s no data to prove such an hypothesis, but I gotta figure he helped, and nobody can ever doubt that White has been a strong net-positive for his party.

And when his preferred candidate to replace him as secretary of state failed after innumerable problems were exposed with how she has run her current Chicago office, the Democratic nominee Alexi Giannoulias was quick to embrace the longtime incumbent White, knowing he’ll be an asset in the fall campaign.

When White leaves office in January, I just don’t see how we’ll ever see another politician like him. His appeal not only crosses party lines, but he showed Madigan and others in 1998 that people of all colors and origins would eagerly support him.

In 1998, I wrote White was an American hero and predicted Illinois voters would pick up on that. He recruited kids out of neighborhoods that many folks are afraid to even drive through to his eponymous Tumblers team and helped shape them into solid citizens. He’s run that team since 1959, and over all those decades only a tiny handful have ever had serious trouble with the law. His fellow party members aren’t the only ones who owe him a debt of gratitude.

White’s retirement may or may not make a difference for Democrats on Election Day going forward. We simply don’t know what actual impact his huge wins have had on other races.

What we do know is we are losing an elected official whose consistently unifying appeal has no equal in this state’s politics. And we will be the lesser for that loss.

* Meanwhile, from a brand new press release…

Today, Illinois Secretary of State Jesse White endorsed Mayor Lori E. Lightfoot’s re-election campaign for Mayor of Chicago. Secretary White announced his support in a video testimonial.

The video is here.

  22 Comments      


Law enforcement leaders want part of opioid settlement directed to some early childhood programs

Wednesday, Sep 7, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Press release…

Law enforcement leaders throughout Illinois are calling on state decision-makers to strengthen opioid prevention and remediation efforts by investing in early childhood programs that are shown to help with such goals — and doing so with a promising, new source of funding.

The settlement of several national lawsuits against the distributors and manufacturers of opioids will bring hundreds of millions of dollars to Illinois over the next two decades. A portion of these resources should be committed to birth-to-3 initiatives helping the youngest and most vulnerable victims of the opioid epidemic, say DuPage County State’s Attorney Robert Berlin and other members of Fight Crime: Invest in Kids Illinois.

“Tragically, children have been hit especially hard by the opioid epidemic,” said Berlin, one of the prosecutors who originally filed some of these lawsuits. He was among the law enforcement leaders participating in a news conference Wednesday. “As our state considers where to most wisely invest its settlement funding, we must prioritize efforts that support vulnerable kids and their families and help prevent future opioid abuse.”

Berlin noted that, every 25 minutes nationwide, a baby is born suffering from opioid withdrawal, or Neonatal Abstinence Syndrome. NAS rates skyrocketed by 64 percent in Illinois between 2011 and 2017, alone, before opioid abuse grew even further during the COVID-19 crisis.

“As the adoptive parents of a child who was born with Neonatal Abstinence Syndrome, my wife and I personally know just how significant the toll of opioid addiction can be on infants and toddlers,” added Winnebago County State’s Attorney J. Hanley. “Young people born to addicted parents, like my adopted daughter, need support to ensure they can grow up to be healthy and successful.”

Hanley and Berlin are among 100+ Illinois prosecutors, sheriffs, and police chiefs who have joined a public statement from Fight Crime, calling for settlement-funding prioritization of voluntary home-visiting programs that are known by various names, including Healthy Families, Maternal and Child Home Visiting (formerly Parents Too Soon), and Nurse-Family Partnership.

These initiatives work with new and expecting parents in supporting the healthy development of infants and toddlers. The programs can help parents with addiction problems connect with treatment options, and several home-visiting programs have been shown by research to reduce what are known as Adverse Childhood Experiences — such as child abuse and neglect — which, in turn, are linked with a greater likelihood of future opioid abuse and criminal activity.

Fight Crime members similarly support greater investments in Early Intervention services — physical, occupational, speech, and other therapies for infants and toddlers with developmental delays or disabilities.

“The programs we are talking about today are backed by clear data and research,” said Rock Island County State’s Attorney Dora Villarreal. “If we want to see significant improvements in public safety, we have to look at evidence about what works best, and act accordingly.”

Unfortunately, Villarreal added, a 2020 analysis showed that 15,000 Illinois families lacked the home-visiting help they needed — one reason why Fight Crime members are looking to forthcoming funding from the settlement of opioid lawsuits.

In February, Illinois Attorney General Raoul — working with several county prosecutors — announced the state would receive approximately $760 million in settlement funding from a national lawsuit against major distributors and manufacturers of opioids, including Johnson & Johnson. Those dollars are intended for opioid prevention and remediation purposes over a period of 18 years, with some of the funding going to counties and municipalities for distribution.

In July, Raoul revealed that two further lawsuit settlements will add to that funding total, once details are finalized. Governor Pritzker issued an executive order creating a statewide office to oversee the distribution of settlement dollars. The executive order also calls for the establishment of an advisory council consisting of experts with experience addressing opioid use and addiction to determine the best use of funding.

“Addressing the needs of pregnant or parenting women and their families, including babies with Neonatal Abstinence Syndrome,” is one approved use of these resources, named in the state’s Opioid Settlement Agreement — and, law enforcement leaders said, further evidence of the relevance of their recommendations.

Fight Crime has shared its recommendations with several key Illinois decision-makers, including officials at the Department of Human Services and a number of legislators. Its law enforcement leaders will continue to monitor these funding determinations and seek further opportunities to support efforts prioritizing the well-being of young people, with an eye toward boosting crime prevention and bolstering public safety.

Thoughts on this?

  3 Comments      


Rate the new Pritzker TV ad

Wednesday, Sep 7, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller

* This ad was shipped to TV stations today

* Script

Emily: When I got the call and it was the doctor, not the nurse, I kind of suspected that there was something not right.

ON SCREEN: Emily and her husband were expecting their second child.

Emily: She said that there was something wrong with your baby. There’s a chromosomal disorder, most likely she’s not going to survive.

ON SCREEN: The condition would have caused the baby to suffocate and die shortly after birth.

Emily: We spoke to many, many doctors and decided that the best option for us was an abortion.

Darren Bailey thinks that should have been his decision, not mine — that I shouldn’t be trusted with that decision.

He doesn’t understand what we went through, he wasn’t the one who got the phone call saying that our daughter was dying. We were.

It’s like saying that a family doesn’t know what they’re doing. Whether it be in the case of fetal health, rape, or incest, women are perfectly capable of making their own decisions.

ON SCREEN: Daren Bailey wants to ban abortion even in cases of rape or incest.

Emily: Darren Bailey puts his beliefs before my health. And I fundamentally disagree with him on that.

ON SCREEN: Darren Bailey, too extreme for Illinois.

  40 Comments      


It’s a feature, not a bug

Wednesday, Sep 7, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller

* From Rick Pearson’s story on Darren Bailey’s faith-based campaign

But changing gears to attract the broader electorate needed to defeat Pritzker may be overthinking Bailey and his campaign, said Ryan Burge, an assistant professor of political science at Eastern Illinois University in Charleston and a nationally recognized expert on the intersection of religion and politics.

Burge — who was born and raised not far from Bailey’s farming operation and who once taught the candidate’s campaign manager, Jose Durbin, as an undergraduate student — also is a pastor of the First Baptist Church in Mt. Vernon.

“I think it’s very important to say that he is not putting on airs when he does this. He really believes this. And I think for him, it would be a betrayal of his principles to do anything but be who he was six months ago,” Burge said. “He is a charismatic, evangelical Christian and he was doing this long before he was running for governor, so I think for him, there’s no going back.”

Burge said Bailey would “rather lose by being 100% who he is and authentic to himself, as opposed to selling out and still probably losing and not be able to look himself in the eye six months from now.”

“If it wins, it wins,” Burge said, citing a political strategy that has advanced Bailey from a rural downstate member of the Illinois House to a statewide candidacy in four years. “If you lose, you become a martyr.”

The whole thing is definitely worth a read.

  28 Comments      


Bailey outlines public safety ideas

Wednesday, Sep 7, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller

* From a Darren Bailey press conference yesterday

When I’m Governor, this is how we will restore law and order across Illinois: For starters, we’ll stop trying to make the police the enemy and we’ll start working with them to keep innocent people safe. We will repeal the SAFE-T Act and we will reinstate cash bail everywhere all across the state. We will repeal limits on pretrial detention for violent criminals. We will surge police support and work with city leadership to find solutions. We will prioritize state funds to hire and retain officers. We will increase signing and retention bonuses for police statewide. We will support police and end anonymous sworn complaints against them. We will support local ordinances to provide scheduling and mental health release for law enforcement. And we will send a strong message to criminals by increasing penalties for individuals who assault law enforcement and reinstate the death penalty for convicted cop killers.

When told that the governor had announced a new ISP regional headquarters in East St. Louis that day and that $250 million in grants were being made available ofr anti-violence programs, Bailey said

That’s all we ever hear for solutions in Illinois, more money, more spending. And that more money and that more spending never comes with more accountability and more transparency. So all this man’s done is continuing to spend and waste taxpayers money, throwing it at the four winds. We don’t even have the infrastructure to fill a new state police office. We’ve got to start dealing with this.

* Pritzker press conference remarks in East St. Louis

I want to give special recognition to Director Brendan Kelly and his team at the Illinois State Police. They have demonstrated their dedication to safety here and across the entire state from day one that we the ISP in total by adding troopers modernizing the technology and tools necessary and upgrading equipment and facilities to support law enforcement. Today’s announcement is funded in large part by our Rebuild Illinois capital plan, which includes $120 million for ISP facilities, the largest investment of its kind in state history. Other historic investments at ISP include hiring substantial additional personnel for the Division of Forensic services and acquiring state of the art robotics and software to speed up drug and DNA evidence turnaround time. We are designing and building a new state of the art crime lab in Joliet, Illinois, and we are opening a new lab in Decatur, increasing even further our ability to handle cases. We’re filling those jobs with best in class experts starting at the newly established ISP Forensic Science Institute at the newly expanded Belleville educational campus, another really great development at the Illinois State Police. And this year, I’m directing the highest funding ever to supporting new ISP Cadet classes so that we add significant numbers to the ranks of state troopers. That’s vital to keeping all of our communities safe. Of course whatever policies and procedures we implement, are only as good as the folks who see it through. And the men and women of the Illinois State Police are the best in the nation.

Please excuse all transcription errors.

  20 Comments      


Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Fundraiser list and supplement to today’s edition

Wednesday, Sep 7, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Pritzker won’t rule out closing Choate

Wednesday, Sep 7, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller

* ProPublica Illinois story written by Beth Hundsdorfer of Capitol News Illinois, and Molly Parker and Brenden Moore of Lee Enterprises Midwest

Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker called patient abuses at the Choate Mental Health and Developmental Center in rural Anna “awful” and “deeply concerning,” and he said the future of the facility depends on correcting poor conditions.

Pritzker’s comments at a news conference on Tuesday came on the heels of articles published Friday by Capitol News Illinois, Lee Enterprises and ProPublica outlining a history of egregious patient abuses and other employee misconduct at Choate.

At least 26 employees over the past decade have been arrested on felony charges in relation to their work at the facility, and internal investigations have cited dozens of other employees for neglecting, exploiting or humiliating residents, lying to investigators, or failing to report allegations of mistreatment in a timely manner. In some cases, investigations have languished for years as accused employees have continued to receive their full pay while on administrative leave.

At least one advocacy organization called for the state to close Choate in the wake of the reports. Amie Lulinski, executive director of The Arc of Illinois, an advocacy organization for people with developmental disabilities, said the details of abuse and neglect are “appalling” and called on the state to move residents out of the facility and into smaller community-based living arrangements such as group homes.

Pritzker said the state isn’t currently planning to close Choate, but he didn’t rule it out if safety issues aren’t addressed.

“The question is, can we prevent that in the future? And if not, then obviously that’s not a facility that should remain open,” the governor said in response to a reporter’s questions at an unrelated event in downstate Decatur.

Meanwhile, he said, the “state has an obligation to the people that it serves at that facility right now” and is concentrating on upgrades to the facility and ensuring that appropriate services and personnel are in place. In a statement to reporters last week, Marisa Kollias, a spokesperson for the Illinois Department of Human Services, which runs Choate, said that the problems there are the result of “longstanding, entrenched issues” and that the department has taken “aggressive measures” to address them.

The push to close facilities like Choate is controversial, and some residents’ parents are advocating for less severe measures to address safety concerns.

There’s more, so go read the rest.

  8 Comments      


Rate the first pro-Bailey People Who Play By The Rules PAC ads of the fall campaign

Wednesday, Sep 7, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller

* This is the first Dan Proft ad that actually promotes Darren Bailey. His PAC appears to have spent about a million dollars on the spot…

The People Who Play By The Rules PAC has launched a new ad, “Darren Bailey: Practical Problem Solver.” An ad buy was placed in statewide media markets and the spot is available on YouTube and the PBR PAC Facebook page.

:30 https://youtu.be/noMHJzs5D60
TV Script:

VO: Darren Bailey isn’t popular with the political establishment of either party because he’s from the real world.

Bailey: “I’m proud to be a family farmer. We fix things that are broken, we solve problems, and we grow things.”

VO: Like you, Bailey knows what hasn’t worked.

Bailey: “Decade after decade of mismanagement in Springfield. Back-to-back billionaire governors – and where has that gotten us?”

VO: High taxes, high unemployment and high crime rates.

How much worse does it have to get before we give a practical problem solver a try?

* The TV ad

Check out this screen cap when the announcer says “Back-to-back billionaire governors”…

Heh.

* The 60-second radio ad


Script

VO: Darren Bailey isn’t popular with the political establishment of either party because he’s from the real world.

Bailey: “I’m proud to be a family farmer. We get up before the sun comes up and we work until after it goes down. We fix things that are broken, we solve problems, and we grow things. And I love to remind people what farmers do: they feed the world.”

VO: Like you, Bailey knows what hasn’t worked.

Bailey: “Decade after decade of mismanagement in Springfield. Back-to-back billionaire governors – and where has that gotten us?”

VO: Bailey got involved in state politics by opposing the income tax increase signed by the previous Republican governor, and then led the opposition to the income tax increase proposed by the current Democrat governor, because high taxes are driving families from Illinois. We’ve tried billionaires from both parties, and they left us with high taxes, high unemployment, and high crime rates. How much worse does it have to get before we give a practical problem solver a try?

Paid for by People Who Play By The Rules PAC.

  38 Comments      


Open thread

Wednesday, Sep 7, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller

* My uncle was in good spirits after his surgery yesterday. He’s looking at several weeks of recovery, but he’s one of the toughest people I know (along with having one of the biggest hearts of anyone I’ve ever met), so he should eventually be OK.

Anyway, how are you doing?

…Adding… My brother found these photos in my late grandfather’s wallet while he was visiting my uncle before I got there. My granddad was my uncle’s father…


Granddad was born in 1904.

  9 Comments      


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

Wednesday, Sep 7, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Live coverage

Wednesday, Sep 7, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Follow along with ScribbleLive


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