Capitol Fax.com - Your Illinois News Radar
SUBSCRIBE to Capitol Fax      Advertise Here      About     Exclusive Subscriber Content     Updated Posts    Contact Rich Miller
CapitolFax.com
To subscribe to Capitol Fax, click here.
Question of the day

Tuesday, Mar 15, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller

* IDOL…

Due to the improving economy in Illinois and the statewide unemployment rate falling to 5%, the Employment of Illinois Workers on Public Works Act is no longer in effect as of March 14th. The law, which requires employees on all public works projects to be comprised of a minimum of 90% Illinois residents, took effect on July 1, 2020, when the jobless rate was above five percent for two consecutive months.

On March 14th, the U.S. Department of Labor announced the state’s jobless rate was five percent, triggering the suspension of enforcement of the Employment of Illinois Workers on Public Works Act.

“Following two challenging years due to the COVID-19 pandemic, Illinois’ economy is improving thanks to policies implemented by the Pritzker Administration,” said Illinois Department of Labor Acting Director Jane Flanagan. “The Illinois Department of Labor will continue enforcing the Illinois Prevailing Wage Act to ensure public tax dollars are granted to local contractors and workers.”

The Illinois Department of Labor (IDOL) administers the Employment of Illinois Workers on Public Works Act, which was enacted to alleviate unemployment in Illinois by ensuring that most workers on public works projects are residents of the state.

More information about the Employment of Illinois Workers on Public Works Act can be found here.


* The Question:
Should the Employment of Illinois Workers on Public Works Act be altered to mandate that employees on all public works projects be comprised of a minimum of 90 percent Illinois residents at all times? Explain your answer.

  35 Comments      


Illinois/Ukraine roundup

Tuesday, Mar 15, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Senate President Don Harmon…

Dear friends,

The past couple of weeks have been tough when it comes to the cause of freedom.

Forty-four million people in Ukraine face the threat of an autocratic tyrant after Vladimir Putin started an illegal invasion of their sovereign country. Millions of Ukrainians have fled their homes and left everything behind to protect their families from brutal repression.

But many more have stayed to repel this assault on their democracy. They’ve inspired people around the world to join them in defense of their homeland and one example happens to be a member of our own Democratic Party of Oak Park. Her story is worth your time.

Maria (her last name is being withheld for her safety) has called Oak Park home for the past decade. She was born in Kyiv and has many family members facing grave danger today in this conflict.

A week ago Saturday, Maria was married in Oak Park. Soon she and her husband will cross the border between Poland and Ukraine to join President Volodymyr Zelensky’s newly formed International Legion of Territorial Defense. You can read more about Maria and her husband here:

https://www.oakpark.com/2022/03/08/married-in-oak-park-newlyweds-to-take-fight-to-ukraine/

I could not be prouder that a member of our community and volunteer in our own Democratic Party family has chosen to defend her homeland at such great personal risk.

Maria’s bravery and the spirit of the Ukrainian people compel us to renew our effort in our own democracy. It is easy to fall prey to the pessimism and hopelessness we all feel when times get tough.

But we don’t give up. We move forward, do the work necessary, and remember that the stakes in every opportunity to renew our democratic values are as high as they ever have been.

I pray for the safety of Maria, her husband, her entire family, and the people of Ukraine. Their example is an inspiration to us all.

Slava Ukraini,

Don Harmon

* Russell Lissau at the Daily Herald

A Chicago-area Republican congressional candidate on Monday said a now-fired staffer was responsible for a tweet on his account that called Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy a “corrupt thug” while Zelenskyy and his people defend their country against Russia’s invasion.

The tweet, which has since been deleted, appeared on 14th District candidate Jack Lombardi’s Twitter page about midnight Sunday.

It read, in part: “The Ukrainian people are in my heart and prayers. However, President Zelensky is a corrupt thug who leads a corrupt government.”

Lombardi said he didn’t write the tweet and that a campaign worker who had been assisting with tweets did. Lombardi said he learned about the tweet Monday morning after being contacted by the Daily Herald and someone else.

* Rep. Marty Moylan (D-Des Plaines) is doing his bit by distributing this yard sign…

Moylan said he’s sending out 2,000 postcards at a time to his constituents, regardless of party, asking if they want a sign. He’s usually getting about 500-600 responses per round and then he and his crew delivers the signs and puts them into yards. “The first batch was gone in a week,” Moylan said.

* Lots more…

* Southern Ill. University to host Ukraine symposium

* ‘Teachable moments’: How history teachers are bringing war in Ukraine into suburban classrooms

* Ukrainian-born Walter Polovchak — the Cold War’s ‘littlest defector’ — lives happily in a Chicago suburb but is devastated by events in his homeland

* Illinoisan’s viewpoint inside Ukraine

* Family of ISU student fleeing war in Ukraine

* McHenry Police Department donate dozens of extra bulletproof vests to Ukraine

* Retired Soccer Player Struggles to Get Family From Ukraine to Chicago

* Army vet turned Chicago cop quits department to volunteer in Ukraine

* 70 Chicago Chefs Unite Wednesday for Ukrainian Fundraiser at Navy Pier

* Chicago businesses show support for Ukraine

* St. Nicholas Cathedral School Needs Supplies, Donations To Support Students Arriving From Ukraine

* Brent Renaud, journalist killed in Ukraine, won Peabody for Chicago docuseries

* Chicago Businesses With Fundraisers For Ukraine

* Chicagoans collect supplies to benefit Ukrainians

* Riot Fest founder holding fundraiser for Ukraine to honor grandparents

  31 Comments      


Cleaning out my Irvin-related inbox

Tuesday, Mar 15, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Richard Irvin’s campaign has the most active press shop of anyone right now. He’s also taking more fire from the Democrats. So, I’m just gonna corral everything I have in this post, although I did put his statement on the LaSalle Veterans’ Home lawsuits on that post.

Let’s start with Madigan and Pritzker…

It’s been a game of stop and go for JB Pritzker on the fallout in state funding to Mike Madigan’s pet projects after he pleaded not-guilty Wednesday to 22-counts of federal charges. Everything Mike Madigan touched is coming into question, including the over $10 million in campaign funding JB Pritzker designated to the criminal enterprise.

Last week, Democratic lawmakers pleaded for Pritzker to freeze the millions of dollars in state funding that was designated towards projects Madigan backed in the Illinois House. After agreeing to freeze them, following an internal caucus fiasco, the funding will again be released. But the larger question looms: if everything tied to Madigan deserves scrutiny, are campaign funds held to the same standard?

To date, it was reported that Madigan has spent nearly $5 million in campaign funds to pay for his ongoing legal fees as the federal investigation rages on. But just a few years prior, JB Pritzker gave $10 million to pad Madigan’s campaign coffers, which he used to enable his criminal enterprise, and now defend it in court.

“The money JB Pritzker gave to Mike Madigan enabled him to keep his power and channel that money to expand the scope of his criminal enterprise that has been under investigation for over two years,” said Irvin for Illinois Campaign spokesperson Eleni Demertzis. “There is no clearer sign that JB Pritzker has let the culture of corruption live on in Springfield.”

* Road trip report, with one of the originally attached photos…

Gubernatorial candidate and Aurora Mayor Richard Irvin and his running mate, State Representative Avery Bourne, traveled throughout more than 20 counties over the last week on their #TakeItBack tour where they talked to voters throughout the state about how they will take Illinois back from out-of-control crime, skyrocketing taxes and public corruption.

Counties visited: Adams, Christian, Cook, DuPage, Fayette, Jefferson, Jersey, Kane, Lee, Macon, Madison, McDonough, McHenry, Montgomery, Morgan, Ogle, Peoria, Rock Island, St. Clair, Saline, Sangamon, Tazewell, Williamson and Winnebago.

* Blue Cross Blue Shield…

The JB Pritzker administration is facing scrutiny for failing to act after a recent investigative report into Blue Cross Blue Shield of Illinois uncovered a dire situation where thousands of Central Illinois residents are facing higher health care costs and difficulty accessing healthcare. Blue Cross Blue Shield’s decision to remove Springfield clinic and its over 600 doctors from its provider network has resulted in countless Central Illinois patients being forced to choose between joining ever-longer waiting lists at other healthcare providers, or paying inflated out of network charges to continue being treated by their current doctors.

But while Blue Cross Blue Shield was refusing to cover visits to Springfield Clinic, it continued to list Springfield Clinic doctors and specialists on its provider network directory, creating what experts term a “ghost network.” The Blue Cross Blue Shield incident is just one example of what the President of the Illinois State Medical Association calls a statewide problem.

In light of this startling news that has left Illinoisans without proper care under the state’s watch, the Irvin for Illinois campaign is calling on the Pritzker Administration to take the following steps:

    • Swiftly investigate Blue Cross Blue Shield’s compliance with the state’s network adequacy requirements, and impose fines for every day it is in violation.
    • Order Blue Cross Blue Shield to provide true continuity of care coverage as required by state law and re-adjudicate previous claims that should have been considered in-network.
    • Consider capping Blue Cross Blue Shield’s enrollment if the company does not swiftly come into compliance with provider network adequacy requirements.

“This unfortunately isn’t the first time the health and wellbeing of Illinois residents was threatened under JB Pritzker’s watch,” said Irvin for Illinois Spokesperson Eleni Demertzis. “Mismanagement of state agencies is becoming a recurring theme of this administration and it’s clear that Illinois residents can’t afford to rely on this kind of leadership.”

* OK, let’s switch gears to some Dem oppo…

Hi Rich,

Thought you’d find this interesting: Irvin signed onto a letter with Mayor Lori Lightfoot urging stricter background checks in the US.

Signing on to this letter again puts him at odds with his running mate on gun control. You’ll remember Irvin called it a “distinct honor” to host the signing ceremony for HB 562 and thanked Governor Pritzker and “bold legislators” who “crossed the aisle to make House Bill 562 reality.”

Bourne voted against HB 562 and said we need to “reform or repeal our FOID System.” Bourne attacked Democrats for rejecting her repeal of the FOID card, saying “What’s worse is that the Democratic majority is doubling down on this failed process by rejecting Republican calls to repeal the FOID…”

Irvin said he wanted to “ensure we get less guns in criminals’ hands” which the Gun Dealer’s Licensing Act that Bourne voted against in 2018 would have also done.

And the other day, Irvin said he wanted to strengthen FOID requirements when asked if he favored getting rid of it altogether.

* DGA…

After two months of hiding from Illinoisans, Richard Irvin continues to dodge and refuse to answer questions. An updated website is now tracking the key issues Irvin’s remained radio silent on.

The DGA updated GriffinSlate.com with a new scorecard today. View the site here.

So far, Irvin has dodged or flip-flopped on abortion, supporting Trump, denouncing the January 6th insurrection, being funded by megadonor Ken Griffin’s gun manufacturing money, and more.

“Radio Silent Richard continues to hide where he stands in a desperate attempt to hide his flip-flopping and unpopular views,” said DGA Senior Communications Advisor Christina Amestoy. “Keep your eyes peeled for updates to the scorecard as Irvin continues to duck and dodge questions from his opponents, reporters, and Illinoisans.”

* While we’re on that topic, Benjamin Cox on WOYM interviewed Irvin the other day and the transcript came in over the transom…

Cox: Mr. Irvin, thanks for coming to Jacksonville. Appreciate it.

Irvin: Hey, it’s good to be here in Jacksonville.

Cox: So obviously, there’s going to be all kinds of questions that you have probably answered 100 times and I really, I don’t want to rehash any…

Irvin: No, no problem at all. I don’t mind answering again.

Cox: The question that I want to ask is, obviously, the litmus test for Republicans in this election is the Donald Trump question. What is your answer to the Donald Trump, January 6 Question?

Richard Irvin: Listen, you know, I think we have to look forward to the future. You know, this election is about who the next governor of Illinois is going to be. And everything that we need to do to compare, you know, myself, and all the other candidates, you know, running on Republican ticket to JB Pritzker. Now, I’m a former prosecutor. So I’m always gonna, you know, focus. And I believe in the Constitution. So, I believe people have the right to peacefully protest. When people break the law, as a former prosecutor, I think they’ve got to be prosecuted. But you know, I don’t know that we should be focusing on the past. We’ve got to focus on the future. We’ve got to focus on the failures that JB Pritzker has had here in the state of Illinois, and what we need to do to get Illinois back on top.

  32 Comments      


Alvarez out at Tollway

Tuesday, Mar 15, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Illinois Tollway press release…

Executive Director José Alvarez submitted a letter of resignation effective today and Chairwoman Dorothy Abreu accepted his resignation and thanked him for his service. Since joining the Tollway in 2019, Alvarez helped the Tollway continue to deliver on its $14 billion Move Illinois capital program, including during the COVID-19 pandemic. Alvarez informed the Board of his decision to step aside to prioritize his family’s needs and to afford the new chairwoman the opportunity to establish new leadership.

* Marni Pyke at the Daily Herald

The Illinois tollway’s executive director resigned Tuesday, a few weeks after the board chairman departed following a tumultuous 2021 when state senators scrutinized a power struggle at the agency. […]

Alvarez and former Chairman Will Evans were placed on the tollway by incoming Gov. J.B. Pritzker in early 2019 as part of a reform team following the mass exodus of an administration appointed by former Gov. Bruce Rauner.

Concerns about a power struggle between Alvarez and Evans surfaced in 2021 and the state Senate’s Transportation Committee held a hearing on the issue in December.

Evans retired from the tollway on Feb. 18. Alvarez’s last day was Monday, sources said.

Maybe now things can calm the heck down over there.

  18 Comments      


Campaign notebook

Tuesday, Mar 15, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Mark Maxwell

A Republican businessman running for governor says taxes are too high in Illinois. If he wins, Gary Rabine would take over a state agency that has unsuccessfully tried to collect more than $10,000 in delinquent taxes from one of his dissolved companies.

“My accounting firm is a great accounting firm, and we’re very seldom actually delinquent,” Rabine said in an interview.

Tax records show the Illinois Department of Employment Security filed a tax lien for $10,262 against Rabine Utility Pavements, LLC, in 2017. Rabine dissolved that company in 2019, according to records filed with the Illinois Secretary of State, but the bill remains unpaid.

When we asked Rabine to explain the delinquency, he said he was unaware of the outstanding debt until we asked him about it. His campaign aides claimed it never showed up in a rigorous financial background check.

“You found the needle in the haystack,” Rabine said in an emailed statement, before blaming the state for failing to properly notify him of his company’s debts.

* Politico on the Democratic state central committee races

Pritzker doesn’t have a slate of candidates, per se, but he is expected to support Rep. Margaret Croke in the 5th District and lobbyist and political insider Liz Brown-Reeves in the 15th.

There are state reps running for central committee seats, too, including Rep. Delia Ramirez, who’s separately running for Congress in the new 3rd Congressional District.

In the central committee, Ramirez is challenging Cook County Clerk of the Court Iris Martinez, a longtime committee member who also has served on the Democratic National Committee’s Hispanic Caucus.

“I’m very disappointed that Delia would challenge me. It shows some disrespect for people like me who have opened doors for women,” Martinez told Playbook. “I’m ready for the fight. And it’s going to be a fight that spills into the 3rd Congressional District race.”

Ramirez countered in a separate interview, saying, “It’s sad that a woman in this seat for almost two decades is upset that another woman dares to run for that seat. We should be celebrating. We need more women to run.”

Other contested central committee seats: Senate President Don Harmon is challenging Rep. Danny Davis. And Rep. Bobby Rush, who is retiring from Congress but wants to keep his central committee seat, is being challenged by state Sen. Elgie Sims, state Reps. Marcus Evans and Lamont Robinson; and Anthony Hargrove.

* Sullivan looked silly trying to dodge these questions, but governors cannot “outlaw” cannabis or reverse minimum wage laws on their own…


Sullivan’s campaign subsequently walked back the minimum wage remarks.

* Speaking of Sullivan

Sullivan, who was joined by his running mate, Kathleen Murphy, said the move to file on the last day was “strategic.”

“We had more than enough signatures at the beginning of this whole week,” the Petersburg resident told reporters outside the board’s headquarters, apparently meaning the beginning of the filing period.

“We decided that for strategic purposes, we wanted to hold off,” Sullivan said before entering the building. “We kept collecting signatures all the way to the end.”

Sure, Jan.

* Brenden Moore

Two candidates, Terry Martin, a Republican, and Ellis Taylor, a Democrat, filed to run in the 13th Congressional District. Democrats Nikki Budzinski and David Palmer, and Republicans Regan Deering, Matt Hausman and Jesse Reising filed last week.

State Rep. Sandy Hamilton, R-Springfield, and businessman Bill Eddington filed to run as Republicans in the 48th Illinois Senate District. State Sen. Doris Turner, D-Springfield, is running unopposed in the Democratic primary.

Springfield attorney Kent Gray, who was Illinois state director for former President Donald Trump’s 2016 presidential campaign, filed to run against state Rep. Tim Butler, R-Springfield, in the 95th Illinois House District Republican primary. […]

Democrat Sharon Chung, a member of the McLean County Board, filed Monday to run for the 91st Illinois House District. She will face Karla Bailey-Smith in the Democratic primary. Republicans Scott Preston, a member of the Normal Town Council, and James Fisher will face off in a primary.

Attorney Thomas DeVore, who has been at the center of several COVID-related lawsuits against the Pritzker administration, filed petitions to run for Illinois Attorney General. He will face Steve Kim and David Shestokas in the Republican primary. Incumbent Democrat Kwame Raoul is unopposed in the primary.

DeVore has been in Florida since last week. Sen. Jason Plummer filed his petitions for him.

* Press release…

Today, the Democratic Party of Illinois (DPI) and Illinois Democratic County Chairs’ Association (IDCCA) announced that applications are open for the inaugural Illinois Local Candidate Training Cohort. The Training Cohort is an intensive 12-week program run in partnership with the National Democratic Training Committee (NDTC) for Democratic candidates running at the countywide level or below to learn the skills necessary to win local elections and lead in their communities.

“Local elected leaders are the backbone of the Democratic Party, and the DPI is committed to supporting Democratic candidates at every level,” said Rep. Robin Kelly, Chair of the Democratic Party of Illinois. “Local candidates are often running for office for the first time and do not have the resources or capacity of state or federal campaigns. This Local Candidate Training Cohort is a way for us to build the bench in a sustainable, real-time way for candidates who are running for office right now. The DPI is proud to lead this critical effort along with our Democratic partners in Illinois.”

“The IDCCA recruits, trains, and elects Democratic candidates at every level throughout the state, but we know more can be done building the bench and ensuring good people who share our values are governing. This partner program dovetails with our efforts already underway to support local candidates, which includes our annual Boot Camp.” said Kristina Zahorik, President of the Illinois Democratic County Chairs’ Association. “This expanded work with DPI will ensure our candidates get the best possible preparation to win in November. I am excited to partner with DPI because together, we are laying the foundation for the next generation of Democratic leaders in Illinois.”

“We’ve seen it time and time again: a strong investment in training local candidates yields big electoral dividends down the road,” said Kelly Dietrich, founder and CEO of the National Democratic Training Committee. “It is encouraging to see Illinois Democrats continue to invest in their local candidates, and we’re excited to bring this program to the Land of Lincoln.”

Candidates included in the training cohort must be actively running for office in the 2022 midterm elections and cannot be running in a primary against another Democrat. The free training program will cover all basic campaign strategies and tactics. It will take place online weekly in the evenings to give cohort members real-time feedback on the challenges and opportunities faced on the campaign trail. Candidates will continue to receive support after the cohort concludes through their victory in November.

More information about the program, including application information, is available at www.ildems.com/cohort. The application period closes April 1.

* More…

* As Candidate Filing Closes in Illinois, Some Want System Reformed: A candidate would approach a voter and ask if they’re a registered voter within that district. If the voter agrees to “do democracy a solid,” as Cassidy puts it, and agrees to sign the petition, “I hand you my tablet instead of my clipboard. I’ve just pulled you up in the voter file. You verify that that’s you, you check a box, you sign, it verifies that your signature is relatively the same — because we all know what we do on those electronic things too … and bada-bing, bada-boom.” Cassidy says it would mean elections attorneys would lose some business, and incumbents like her would see more competition.

* More Senate, congressional candidates file petitions on last day

* As race for Republican gubernatorial nominee begins in earnest, will endorsements matter?

* Jesse Sullivan rounds out governor’s candidates as filing ends

* DPI: QAnon Followers, Big Lie Believers, Trump Acolytes, January 6 Truthers Highlight 2022 ILGOP Line Up

* NARAL Endorses Nikki Budzinski in IL13: Today, NARAL announced their endorsement of Nikki Budzinski in Illinois’ 13th Congressional District. NARAL is a national organization that works to organize their 2.5 million members nationwide for a pro-choice, pro-reproductive freedom agenda. NARAL has 19,364 members in Illinois.

* DuPage County Board incumbents gearing up for primary competition: Contested Republican primary races are expected in three of the six county board districts. Democrats will have two competitive races on the spring ballot.

* Kane County Clerk, some board members face challengers in primary: Former Kane County Board Chairman Chris Lauzen, an Aurora Republican who also served in the state senate for 20 years, is running for county treasurer.

* Big field in Democratic primary for Lake County Board with eight races: With the weeklong filing period now closed, the primary race for sheriff will feature Democrat William C. King challenging incumbent John Idleburg. On the Republican side, Mark A. Vice II, John K. Van Dien II and Jonathan “Jon” Harlow will square off to represent the party in the November election. Only the race for Lake County sheriff will have primaries. The offices of Lake County treasurer, clerk and regional superintendent of schools also are up for contest this year, but none will have a primary race. One wrinkle in the Lake County clerk’s race is that incumbent Robin O’Connor switched parties and is running as a Republican. In November, she’ll face Democratic nominee Anthony Vega, Idleburg’s chief of staff.

…Adding… Press release…

State Representative Sam Yingling’s campaign for Illinois State Senate continues to gain momentum as the Illinois State Conference of the Transport Workers Union of America joins the Associated Fire Fighters of Illinois with their endorsement.

“Ilinois’ Labor Unions built the middle class. The Transport Workers Union and the Associated Fire Fighters of Illinois give their members a voice in their workplace, protects their rights, and make our communities stronger. I will continue to be a strong voice for Illinois Labor in the State Senate. I am honored to have their support,” said Yingling.

“On behalf of the thousands of Transport Workers Union members in the great state of Illinois, we officially endorse Sam Yingling’s candidacy for the Illinois State Senate. We believe he is the right choice for working men and women because of his continued efforts to protect working families in Illinois. We proudly endorse his candidacy and recognize his advocacy for working families.”

“Our members and their families are under increasing pressure to make ends meet in the face of worsening economic pressures. Having elected officials who understand these challenges and will fight to ease the burden on workers is central to our success. We are confident that Sam Yingling will continue to work for our members and their families, as he has previously done in the past working with our Transport Workers Union Locals in Illinois,” said Terry Daniels, Illinois State Conference Director Transport Workers Union.

“Sam Yingling’s support of issues affecting professional firefighters in Illinois has earned our endorsement. The Associated Fire Fighters of Illinois (AFFI) represents more than 15,000 professional firefighters in 224 affiliates across the State. We wish him the best in his campaign and look forward to working with him in the months and years ahead,” said Chuck Sullivan, President of the Associated Fire Fighters of Illinois.

…Adding… Press release…

Norma Hernandez submits the most signatures in the 77th House District

Melrose Park, IL - Norma Hernandez released the following statement after filing the most signatures for Illinois’ 77th House District. Her campaign submitted over 1,200 signatures in the first day of filing; three times the amount required.

“After yesterday’s close to the filing period, we confirmed that we have the greatest momentum in the field. We went door-to-door and connected with the most voters, and collected the most signatures of any other campaign in the 77th. I am ready to become the first Latina to represent Illinois’ 77th House District! With Latinos making up almost 60% of the population in the district, it is important they have the opportunity to elect someone who understands them, speaks their language and shares their experience. We are looking forward to the next phase of the campaign.”

Hernandez was amongst the first in line at the board of elections on the first day of filing. Also submitting on the first day, incumbent Representative, Kathleen Willis (D-Addison) who turned in 936 signatures. The two will have their names drawn next week to decide ballot position in the Democratic ticket. Later in the week, perennial Republican candidate Anthony Airdo submitted 1,000 signatures.

  28 Comments      


Rate Jesse Sullivan’s anti-corruption agenda

Tuesday, Mar 15, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Press release…

Republican gubernatorial candidate Jesse Sullivan today announced his “Clean Up Illinois” anti-corruption agenda. The roadmap follows on the heels of arraignment of Illinois Democrat House Speaker Michael Madigan on federal racketeering charges.

“We have long known that corruption runs deep in Illinois politics. And that corruption transcends party lines. For decades, Democrats and Republicans have used their positions to curry favor and enrich themselves, and everyday Illinoisans suffer,” Sullivan said.

“We cannot trust political insiders to rid our state of patronage hiring and pay-to-play politics. Only a political outsider – who doesn’t see politics as a career pathway, but as a form of service, can deliver the type of governance, oversight, and accountability that our state so desperately needs.”

The 10-point anti-corruption agenda is the strongest ethics plan released by any gubernatorial candidate, and follows the endorsement of Sullivan’s campaign by former Legislative Inspector General Carol Pope.

Agenda:

    1. Implement strict term limits for elected officials. Public service is an act of love for our neighbor, but it is also an act of trust. We cannot allow politicians to use their positions to enrich themselves and their friends. There is no better safeguard than a limit on how long they can hold power.
    2. Support fair maps. Fight for a constitutional amendment for a fair legislative redistricting process, which would put redistricting in the hands of an independent commission rather than partisan lawmakers.
    3. Pass the harshest public corruption penalties in the country. Support penalty enhancements laid out in 2018’s House Bill 5878, including increasing the fine for bribery from $25,000 to $1 million; doubling the fine for receiving contributions on state property from $5,000 to $10,000; and increasing the maximum fines for engaging in prohibited political activities and improperly serving on state boards and commissions to $10,000 and $35,000 respectively.
    4. Make the legislative inspector general a watchdog, not a lapdog. Illinoisans deserve the strongest legislative watchdog in the nation. The LIG should have publishing power, subpoena power, the power to proactively pursue a case rather than simply respond to filed complaints, and the jurisdiction to hold legislators accountable for any egregious actions inside or outside of their official capacity. At minimum, the LIG should have as much power as Chicago’s Office of the Inspector General.
    5. End the “honor system” for conflicts of interest in Springfield. Illinois law requires lawmakers to file financial disclosure statements, but not to declare when they face a conflict of interest before taking a vote. Most states require all members of the legislature to disclose conflicts of interest for each measure, and ban lawmakers from voting at all in the case of a conflict. Illinois should require the same.
    6. Reform the Legislative Ethics Commission. Add a seat to the Legislative Ethics Commission for a non-legislator citizen, so that the commission cannot kill investigations into their political allies with 4-4 split votes along party lines.
    7. Drop J.B. Pritzker’s fight to fire the federally appointed hiring monitor. The people of Illinois should be able to trust that we have their best interests at heart, not the interests of a special few. Our administration will end Pritzker’s fight to fire the patronage hiring monitor and ban paying any gubernatorial staff members with private money, as Pritzker does.
    8. Ban sitting lawmakers from coming before the Property Tax Appeals Board as property tax attorneys. Lawmakers should not be able to enrich themselves through an insider appeals process that only exists because of their political malfeasance.
    9. Amend conflict of interest laws. We must ensure no lawmaker’s firm can represent client interests before any government agency or legislative body. This ban on self-dealing would function similar to Chicago’s “cross-lobbying ban,” which bars state lawmakers from lobbying City Council.
    10. Put an end to the revolving door between legislators and lobbyists. The last “ethics reform” legislation was insufficient. Currently, a loophole allows a legislator to retire a day before the end of their term and begin lobbying their colleagues the next day. Florida has a six-year ban on legislators moving into lobbying positions. We propose a seven-year ban for Illinois, which would be the strongest in the nation. Becoming a legislator should be a form of temporary public service, not a pathway to a lucrative lobbying career.

Agree with it or not, Sullivan is the only Republican candidate who is producing actual ideas. The campaign released its anti-crime agenda not long ago.

  26 Comments      


*** UPDATED x1 *** Two incumbent Senators hand over seats to favored replacements without an appointment

Tuesday, Mar 15, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller

* I told subscribers about this yesterday. Politico

Two incumbent state senators appear ready to retire, conveniently leaving their seats open for close friends and family members who turned in petition signatures on the last filing day yesterday.

State Sens. Antonio Muñoz and Steve Landek are listed as candidates for the 1st and the 11th districts, respectively, but so are two of their buddies.

Muñoz’s son-in-law and former campaign manager Javier Loera Cervantes, filed at the last minute to run for the 1st District seat that his father-in-law has held since 1999.

Political insiders call it a shrewd move that would see Muñoz drop out of the race, allowing Cervantes to get on the ballot with no competition for the June 28 primary.

Cervantes, who was taken aback that Playbook would point out the icky optics of him sliding into Muñoz’s seat, said: “Everybody has their opinion. I’m just looking forward to serving if that comes my way.”

Similarly, Landek is expected to step aside to allow his chief of staff, Mike Porfirio, who also filed signatures on the last day, to win the seat. Neither Landek nor Muñoz returned Playbook’s calls or texts for comment.

Political insiders expect the veteran lawmakers want out of politics after seeing their associates operate close to the legal edge.

Bill Lipinski dropped out after the primary and had his kid appointed to the ballot. I don’t recall yesterday’s maneuver being used in the past, but maybe some of y’all have seen this before. As long as no other candidate files, it’s kinda foolproof. And the reformers are gonna absolutely hate this, but I’m not sure you can create a rule to stop this from happening.

Your thoughts?

*** UPDATE *** This has happened at least once before. Sen. Chuck Weaver (R-Peoria) filed to run for reelection on November 25, 2019, the same day that his Republican friend Win Stoller filed his petitions. No other Republican filed in the district before petition filing season closed on December 2, 2019. In January, Sen. Weaver announced his retirement and the local media never batted a single eyelash

State Sen. Chuck Weaver (R-Peoria) announced Thursday he’s retiring at the end of his term.

In his place, Widmer Fabrics CEO Win Stoller will fill the Republican nomination for the district, which stretches from Peoria to Galesburg.

“With Central Illinois at a turning point, everyone must serve where they can cause positive change,” Weaver said in a statement. “I believe I can now make the most positive impact closer to home by serving my community in a different position of service.”

Weaver then maxed out to Stoller with a $53,700 contribution.

  36 Comments      


*** UPDATED - Pritzker’s office responds *** Families of 27 residents at LaSalle Veterans’ Home file lawsuits

Tuesday, Mar 15, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Tribune

Richard Cieski for years received care at the veterans home in downstate LaSalle that his family recalled as “amazing.” The 89-year-old decorated Korean War Army veteran schmoozed with friends, participated in an array of activities and excelled in an environment even as he coped with escalating dementia and Alzheimer’s disease.

“They had church. They had animals that came in. They had coffee and conversation. They had haircuts. Physical therapy. Everything. He was clean. His hair was combed. He had his room and it was clean,” a granddaughter, Lindsay Lamb of Lockport, said. “He was thriving in there until it happened.”

That was in November 2020, when the COVID-19 coronavirus began to sweep through the state-run, long-term-care facility for veterans. As the coronavirus ran its deadly course through the LaSalle veterans home, the outbreak led to the deaths of Cieski and 35 other veterans.

“Six of the men ate lunch with my dad and his whole table died. There’s no one left that ate lunch with my dad. They all died within a week of each other,” said one of his daughters, Leslie Lamb of Seneca. “It could have been prevented if protocol was followed.”

The deaths have prompted a series of individual lawsuits against the state on behalf of the families of 26 veterans who died of COVID-19 or coronavirus-related illnesses. The lawsuits, which began being filed last week in LaSalle County, allege negligence and wrongful death and could cost the state millions of dollars.

* Press release…

Levin & Perconti filed lawsuits for the families of 27 veterans who contracted COVID-19 due to a preventable outbreak at LaSalle Veterans’ Home in late 2020. Twenty-six of those veterans needlessly died and suffered painful deaths isolated from their families according to the lawsuits. The families filed lawsuits against the state of Illinois, the Illinois Department of Veterans’ Affairs, LaSalle Veterans’ Home and several senior administrative, medical and nursing staff members at the long-term care facility. The lawsuits allege although COVID-19 safety protocols were well known by the time of the outbreak, LaSalle Veterans’ Home did not have a comprehensive COVID-19 plan nor did staff members abide by even the most basic safety protocols.

The outbreak began November 1, 2020, when two residents and two employees tested positive for COVID-19. By the end of the month, more than 200 people had tested positive. In all, 36 veterans died. According to the lawsuits, various LaSalle employees — including nurses, nursing assistants and nurses’ aides — attended an off-site party on October 31, 2020. As residents and staff tested positive for COVID-19 in the following days, nursing staff continued to report to work and care for residents and veterans who tested positive were not isolated from other residents. Staff members were not following safety protocols, such as wearing masks, temperature checks, or washing their hands. The facility did not even have effective hand sanitizer according to the complaints.

“It’s not like they did something and did it wrong. It’s not like they took action that turned out to be wrong in light of greater knowledge. They did little to nothing. That is what is so shocking,” said Levin & Perconti founder and senior partner, Steven Levin. “Many of these veterans died alone, suffering from air
hunger and respiratory failure. It is true human suffering to be unable to breathe, alone and frightened, without any comfort or support.”

In a scathing report, by the Illinois Inspector General, state investigators called staff’s handling of the outbreak “inefficient, reactive and chaotic” and found a lack of preparation “contributed to the scope of the outbreak.” According to the report, LaSalle leadership failed to effectively communicate, train and educate employees. Many staffers acted like they were unaware of basic infection control protocols.

“The state investigated itself and found itself guilty. The state of Illinois now must take accountability and do the right thing for the families of the victims,” said Levin & Perconti managing partner Michael Bonamarte. “When families learned about the extent of the negligence at LaSalle, it was particularly shocking and devastating and made the loss of their loved ones so much more painful. These men chose to spend their final years at LaSalle Veterans’ Home because they trusted they would be safe. The state betrayed that trust.”

Ironically, the families of the victims were following established COVID-19 protocols. They were not allowed inside the veterans’ home to see their loved ones in an effort to keep them safe from the virus. By late 2020, many of the veterans’ families thought there was light at the end of the tunnel. They had kept safe distances, communicating through windows. Vaccines were about to become widely available.

Plaintiff David Liesse’s father. Jerome Liesse, tested positive for COVID-19 on a Friday in November 2020, and died the following Tuesday. Liesse was a World War II veteran who earned three medals for his service.

“My dad died before he should have. Someone had to bring COVID into his room and it was not the families. It didn’t jump through the window,” said David Liesse. “How can you have an administration that allows people to run a veterans home with such lax security and scrutiny over what’s happening? Someone needs to be responsible for what was done, what wasn’t done and what was supposed to be done.”

Plaintiff Mary Beth Schomas said no one from the VA notified her that her father died after contracting COVID-19 during the LaSalle outbreak. She learned about his death from the hospital where he passed. Her father, U.S. Army veteran Bernard Schomas, served as a medic in World War II under General George S. Patton. Schomas was at the Battle of the Bulge and earned numerous medals.

“When I went to LaSalle to pick up his stuff, they just acted like it was no big deal. Here it is. Go. He was one of the healthiest old guys there. There was no reason for him to die had they taken care of him,” said Mary Beth Schomas.

“We gave them our trust to take care of him and that was betrayed,” said Lindsay Lamb. Her grandfather, Richard Cieski served during the Korean War. He earned three service medals and entered LaSalle Veterans’ Home in 2017 due to dementia and Alzheimer’s disease. He suffered without morphine for some of the final hours of his life as he struggled to breath because the home ran out of it.

“These men served our country and protected us and probably experienced things that we could never understand. And they weren’t treated correctly. They weren’t given the same type of respect that they gave us, and it’s not fair. To be left alone to die is even worse,” said Lamb.

Making matters more frustrating for the families is that, starting in 2015, a series of similarly mishandled outbreaks of Legionnaires’ disease occurred at Quincy Veterans’ Home in downstate Illinois. At least 14 deaths were linked to the preventable, water-borne illness. The state was sued by multiple families and paid out millions in settlements.

Governor JB Pritzker referred to the outbreaks as “fatal mismanagement,” at the time when he was running against incumbent Governor Bruce Rauner for governor. In the aftermath of the Legionnaires’ outbreak at the Quincy Veterans’ Home, a third-party audit in 2019 made recommendations for improvement of the infection control policies at the LaSalle Veterans’ Home. “These recommendations were ignored and disregarded. Neither the state nor the Illinois Department of Veterans’ Affairs learned from their previous mistakes,” Bonamarte said.

“The families’ hope in bringing these lawsuits is to effectuate change and garner the attention of the people in power to prevent a tragedy like this from happening again,” Levin said.
“It is time for the state of Illinois to finally be accountable and make our veterans homes a model for the nation rather than a poster child for how not to treat those who have given our nation so much.”

There’s a press conference this morning to discuss the case further.

* Gary Rabine…

Over the last several days, multiple lawsuits have been filed on behalf of the veterans who died from COVID at the LaSalle Veterans’ Home. They describe in detail the gross negligence and utter neglect by the Pritzker Administration in caring for these veterans. As JB continues to do his victory lap on his handling of the COVID pandemic, the truth is now revealed; while he was ordering businesses to shut their doors and issuing mask mandates, he was also ignoring veterans dying on his watch. JB can’t pass the buck to the former Illinois Director of Veterans Affairs any longer. He needs to be brought before the legislature and explain how and why he ignored our veterans and let them die horrific deaths on his watch. JB needs to be held accountable.

…Adding… Jesse Sullivan…

“Today’s lawsuit confirms the tragic reality of what we already knew: The Pritzker administration’s incompetence and abdication of duty cost Illinois veterans their lives. These families deserve justice in court. If state government cannot guarantee the safety of our heroes, it needs to get out of the business of managing these facilities altogether.”

…Adding… ILGOP…

“Our nation’s heroes deserve nothing but the best care,” said ILGOP Executive Director Shaun McCabe. “But under Pritzker, they got our worst. And sadly, many succumbed to preventable deaths. These families deserve to be heard and the Governor must be held accountable.”

…Adding… Richard Irvin…

“These veterans put our freedom first when they proudly and selflessly served our country. Extreme negligence and incompetence by the Pritzker Administration led to their tragic deaths. Their families deserve swift justice, and we must ensure this travesty never happens again.”

*** UPDATE *** From the governor’s office…

Every life lost to coronavirus weighs heavily on the hearts of the Governor and all members of his administration. That’s why Gov. Pritzker implemented public health strategies like mandatory mask use and indoor gathering limits to prevent the spread of COVID and protect the state’s most vulnerable residents. The Governor appealed to members of various communities who fought against proven mitigation strategies to think of their family, neighbors and friends that were more susceptible to the worst outcomes of COVID, urging everyone to comply. While IDVA was working to address the COVID outbreak at the LaSalle Veterans Home, the state conducted a thorough transparent review of the response to identify shortcomings, immediately take corrective actions and hold those who fell short of expectations accountable. The Governor has appointed a new director of IDVA who has a medical background with years of experience running veterans homes and has worked to implement new policies and procedures to keep residents healthy and safe.

  32 Comments      


Open thread

Tuesday, Mar 15, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Covered 33 legislative primaries in this morning’s subscriber edition. My fingers need a rest. Have at it.

  21 Comments      


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

Tuesday, Mar 15, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller

This post is password protected. To view it please enter your password below:

  Comments Off      


*** LIVE COVERAGE ***

Tuesday, Mar 15, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Follow along with ScribbleLive


  Comments Off      


« NEWER POSTS PREVIOUS POSTS »
* It’s just a bill
* Showcasing the Retailers Who Make Illinois Work
* Pritzker hasn’t received VP vetting materials from Harris, but doesn’t shut down speculations that he’s interested
* Open thread
* Isabel’s morning briefing
* Selected press releases (Live updates)
* Yesterday's stories

Support CapitolFax.com
Visit our advertisers...

...............

...............

...............

...............


Loading


Main Menu
Home
Illinois
YouTube
Pundit rankings
Obama
Subscriber Content
Durbin
Burris
Blagojevich Trial
Advertising
Updated Posts
Polls

Archives
July 2024
June 2024
May 2024
April 2024
March 2024
February 2024
January 2024
December 2023
November 2023
October 2023
September 2023
August 2023
July 2023
June 2023
May 2023
April 2023
March 2023
February 2023
January 2023
December 2022
November 2022
October 2022
September 2022
August 2022
July 2022
June 2022
May 2022
April 2022
March 2022
February 2022
January 2022
December 2021
November 2021
October 2021
September 2021
August 2021
July 2021
June 2021
May 2021
April 2021
March 2021
February 2021
January 2021
December 2020
November 2020
October 2020
September 2020
August 2020
July 2020
June 2020
May 2020
April 2020
March 2020
February 2020
January 2020
December 2019
November 2019
October 2019
September 2019
August 2019
July 2019
June 2019
May 2019
April 2019
March 2019
February 2019
January 2019
December 2018
November 2018
October 2018
September 2018
August 2018
July 2018
June 2018
May 2018
April 2018
March 2018
February 2018
January 2018
December 2017
November 2017
October 2017
September 2017
August 2017
July 2017
June 2017
May 2017
April 2017
March 2017
February 2017
January 2017
December 2016
November 2016
October 2016
September 2016
August 2016
July 2016
June 2016
May 2016
April 2016
March 2016
February 2016
January 2016
December 2015
November 2015
October 2015
September 2015
August 2015
July 2015
June 2015
May 2015
April 2015
March 2015
February 2015
January 2015
December 2014
November 2014
October 2014
September 2014
August 2014
July 2014
June 2014
May 2014
April 2014
March 2014
February 2014
January 2014
December 2013
November 2013
October 2013
September 2013
August 2013
July 2013
June 2013
May 2013
April 2013
March 2013
February 2013
January 2013
December 2012
November 2012
October 2012
September 2012
August 2012
July 2012
June 2012
May 2012
April 2012
March 2012
February 2012
January 2012
December 2011
November 2011
October 2011
September 2011
August 2011
July 2011
June 2011
May 2011
April 2011
March 2011
February 2011
January 2011
December 2010
November 2010
October 2010
September 2010
August 2010
July 2010
June 2010
May 2010
April 2010
March 2010
February 2010
January 2010
December 2009
November 2009
October 2009
September 2009
August 2009
July 2009
June 2009
May 2009
April 2009
March 2009
February 2009
January 2009
December 2008
November 2008
October 2008
September 2008
August 2008
July 2008
June 2008
May 2008
April 2008
March 2008
February 2008
January 2008
December 2007
November 2007
October 2007
September 2007
August 2007
July 2007
June 2007
May 2007
April 2007
March 2007
February 2007
January 2007
December 2006
November 2006
October 2006
September 2006
August 2006
July 2006
June 2006
May 2006
April 2006
March 2006
February 2006
January 2006
December 2005
April 2005
March 2005
February 2005
January 2005
December 2004
November 2004
October 2004

Blog*Spot Archives
November 2005
October 2005
September 2005
August 2005
July 2005
June 2005
May 2005

Syndication

RSS Feed 2.0
Comments RSS 2.0




Hosted by MCS SUBSCRIBE to Capitol Fax Advertise Here Mobile Version Contact Rich Miller