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Caption contest!

Wednesday, Aug 15, 2018 - Posted by Rich Miller

* I picked this up at the Governor’s Day rally today…

  73 Comments      


Harold mocks Raoul for not agreeing to debates

Wednesday, Aug 15, 2018 - Posted by Rich Miller

* From Erika Harold’s Governors Day speech…

When Lisa Madigan withdrew from the race, my opponent State Sen. Kwame Raoul entered the race. And he immediately dismissed me as a mere Miss America, and said he knew Lisa Madigan did not leave the race because she was afraid of facing me. Well, Lisa Madigan may not have been afraid to face me, but Sen. Raoul apparently is, because he’s been trying to duck debates and avoid joint forums. Our state deserves an attorney general who is tough enough to stand on any stage, with any person, even if that person is just a mere Miss America.

The governor also used his speech to demand that Raoul debate Harold, asking why the Senator was hiding.

* Meanwhile…

Today, Kwame Raoul’s campaign for Attorney General released a new television ad, “Safe Home,” highlighting Republican Erika Harold’s shocking views on the safety of children and same-sex couples who wish to care for them. The ad is running statewide on television and digital platforms.

“As both a father and a public servant, it’s unconscionable to me that the safety of a child would ever be up for debate,” said Kwame Raoul. “When I was a prosecutor, I took children out of abusive homes so that they could live with loving families. Whether from neighborhood violence, online predators or even within their own home, our kids are at risk. As attorney general, I will make our children’s safety my top priority.”

Video transcript:

    [GRAPHIC]

    You won’t believe what Erika Harold believes.

    [REPORTER VOICEOVER]

    Republican Erika Harold, views on gay adoption are surfacing.

    Harold was asked…‘If you had to place a child in foster care, and the choices were either a loving gay couple or a heterosexual couple who were known child abusers, who would you choose?’

    Harold chose the child abusers.

    [KWAME RAOUL]

    Your personal views influence what you pursue. We can’t allow that type of extremism into the Attorney General’s office. I prosecuted child abuse and neglect.

    This is the work of my life, and I’m just getting started.

Harold has repeatedly supported policies that discriminate against LGBTQ individuals. During her 2014 congressional campaign, Harold supported a constitutional amendment to ban same-sex marriage and protection for employers who fire employees based on their sexual orientation or gender identity.

Kwame Raoul is endorsed by a host of organizations whose members are deeply committed to the safety and welfare of children, including the National Association of Social Workers, Illinois Federation of Teachers, Illinois Education Association, Illinois Nurses Association, and more.

* Ad

  30 Comments      


State Fair open thread

Wednesday, Aug 15, 2018 - Posted by Rich Miller

* I have to head to the fairgrounds. I’ll be bringing my laptop with me, but I just don’t know how much I’ll be posting today. In the meantime, keep an eye on the live coverage post for constant updates (click here).

Please, be nice to each other in comments, and try your very best to keep the discussion Illinois-centric. Thanks.

  42 Comments      


GOP national committeeman calls Pritzker a “billionaire ass-kisser”

Wednesday, Aug 15, 2018 - Posted by Rich Miller

* From Illinois Republican National Committeeman Richard Porter’s speech this morning to the party faithful

This [JB Pritzker] is the guy who tried to buy his office. He tried to get into the game, he was sucking up to Blagojevich. Now he’s sucking up to Mike Madigan.

What’s one of the great things about being a billionaire? You don’t have to suck up to anybody. Right? I mean, that’s Donald Trump. The great thing about being a billionaire is you don’t have to suck up.

This guy is a billionaire ass-kisser. He is a billionaire ass-kisser. That’s who he is.

He kissed Blagojevich’s ass. Now he’s kissing Mike Madigan’s ass. We can’t lose to this guy. Right? He’s a tax cheat. He’s a suck-up. And what’s he want to do? He wants to raise your taxes and hand the government over to Mike Madigan.

He also said Pritzker is “making the Bahamas great again,” because the Democrat has almost all of his money there and he’s using some of it to build a $100 million house. It was quite the barn-burner. “He wants to raise your taxes and he’s hiding his income in South Dakota and the Bahamas” where they have no income tax, Porter said. His conclusion

Please pardon my language. I got a little worked up. But, I don’t know about you guys, I’m going to do whatever I can, I’m going to do whatever I can to make sure we win this race. I’m gonna make sure that a normal guy is going to be in the mansion, the guy that actually pays his taxes and reports his taxes. He pays his taxes to help fund things in Illinois. He gives away money in Illinois to try to build schools and to make life in Illinois better. He’s not making life better in Nassau in the Bahamas.

  72 Comments      


Question of the day

Wednesday, Aug 15, 2018 - Posted by Rich Miller

* The governor’s $1 million donation to the state fair’s foundation yesterday was actually a purchase of the Coliseum’s naming rights

Asked if the name picked for the Coliseum would be permanent or only last for a set time period, Elizabeth Tomev, spokeswoman for the governor, said “The details of the program will be announced soon.”

Past discussions about naming rights have included the idea that they could be purchased for a period of years. Slayton said in 2017 that preliminary discussions at the time for naming rights for the Coliseum, Grandstand and Exposition Building were in the range of $200,000 to $250,000 a year for five years.

Slayton said Tuesday that there had been discussions with an agriculture association to get to name the building for $1 million for five years, and the offer was sweetened to $1 million for 10 years, but it was passed over.

As for how long the naming rights purchased by the Rauners will last, Slayton said that will be up to the foundation board, which will meet after the State Fair. It would also be up to the board if the name would last forever. He noted the possibility that the name will come from an Illinois school child.

Some legal background is here.

* The Question: Your suggested name for the Coliseum?

  57 Comments      


What would a day be without yet another Illinois State Fair #facepalm?

Wednesday, Aug 15, 2018 - Posted by Rich Miller

* From the Illinois State Fair’s official map

AFUCIO? I won’t even try to guess the hidden meaning of that typo, especially considering the governor’s antipathy toward organized labor (and please don’t “go there” in comments, either).

But, hey, at least they spelled “pavilion” right.

Also, if you look at the map, the Secretary of State’s tent is listed, but the location is not marked on the map itself.

  18 Comments      


Today’s quotable

Wednesday, Aug 15, 2018 - Posted by Rich Miller

* I’m pretty sure he said “barrow,” which is a castrated pig…



The context was his admission that JB Pritzker is outspending him three-to-one on TV ads, but that it won’t do Pritzker much good because he’s not an attractive candidate. “Once you’ve spent that for saturation, the rest of it’s wasted,” Rauner told the gathered Republicans. “We just gotta make sure we’ve got enough to get our message out.”

  27 Comments      


County commissioner says Rauner camp threatened him with a smear campaign

Wednesday, Aug 15, 2018 - Posted by Rich Miller

* The Southern

A Williamson County commissioner says the push for a gun control advisory question on November’s ballot has nothing to do with letting the voters speak and everything to do with heavy-handed Springfield politics.

Commissioner Ron Ellis said when the Williamson County Board first started talking in June about letting the voters decide if the board should oppose specific gun control bills that were being debated in Springfield, he was all for it. In fact, the three-person board voted unanimously to put the question on the ballot, they just had to finalize the language. […]

Ellis said that board meeting put the political machine in top gear, and the pressure was on him particularly. He said he got a call from Joe Hackler, the Southern Illinois director for Citizens for Rauner Inc., about his support of the measure.

“I was literally told that if I didn’t put this on the ballot that there would be repercussions,” Ellis said. He said he later heard from a local Republican official that if he wasn’t careful, it was possible there could be a smear campaign launched against him for standing up to Springfield, making his political life very difficult in the future.

“I was told later … that they would put press releases out against me, make me out to be anti gun, that I was NOT a true Republican and make sure that someone ran against me in the primary in two years,” Ellis said in a text message to The Southern on Monday.

The GOP didn’t exactly deny the claims of intimidation. Go read the whole thing.

As I told you before, I expect to see several of these local referendums in order to help gin up GOP turnout.

  23 Comments      


Rate Rauner’s new online ad

Wednesday, Aug 15, 2018 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Press release…

Ahead of Governor Rauner’s speech at the State Fair for Governor’s Day, the Rauner campaign is launching a new paid digital ad.

The ad echoes the themes that Governor Rauner will touch on during his remarks: taking on corruption and fighting for the future of our state.

Governor Rauner has fought since day one to end decades of insider politics, grow the economy, and make Illinois the best state in America to build a business and raise a family.

* The spot

* Script

They said it couldn’t be done. The Madigan Machine is just too strong, they say. It will never go away. Never fail to fail us. In spite of the odds, millions of us believe in the future our kids deserve and the possibilities of this great place we still call home. Now, we have a choice. We could leave our future to the same corrupt career politicians, or we can fight. I choose to fight.

  48 Comments      


*** LIVE COVERAGE ***

Wednesday, Aug 15, 2018 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Today is Governor’s Day at the Illinois State Fair. Follow along with ScribbleLive


  4 Comments      


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

Wednesday, Aug 15, 2018 - Posted by Rich Miller

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*** UPDATED x1 *** Joe Biden cancels State Fair event

Wednesday, Aug 15, 2018 - Posted by Rich Miller

[Bumped up to Wednesday for visibility.]

* More to come in a bit. Official explanation is an illness.

…Adding… Press release..

The following statement has been released by Doug House, President of the Illinois Democratic County Chairs’ Association:

“Everyone who knows Vice President Biden knows that he gives our party and our country his all, but unfortunately he is sick and is under doctor’s orders not to travel.

The cancellation is of course disappointing, but it is clear that the circumstances are simply unavoidable. We all hope he gets well soon and I’m sure he’ll be back campaigning for Democrats in Illinois and across the country in no time.

While Biden’s trip to Springfield is cancelled, our event will continue. We remain excited for what will be the largest brunch in our history and look forward to hearing from our incredible slate of Democratic leaders who are ready to energize our party and lead us to victory up and down the ticket this November.”

*** UPDATE *** Press release…

Mayor dubbed by Obama as ‘Future of Democratic Party’ will headline IDCCA brunch in light of Biden cancelation

SPRINGFIELD, Illinois – Thousands of excited Democrats attending the IDCCA’s largest-ever annual brunch on Thursday will meet rising star South Bend, Indiana Mayor Pete Buttigieg (boot-edge-edge) who replaces Vice President Joe Biden after an unavoidable, late cancelation due to illness.

“Mayor Pete Buttigieg is a shining example of what can happen when Democrats take their message to every community,” said Doug House, president of the IDCCA. “That’s IDCCA’s primary mission – to fight and win in places where we’ve been told we can’t succeed. Mayor Pete’s dynamic message is one Illinois needs to hear as we work to turn races up and down the ticket from red to blue.”

“South Bend Mayor Pete Buttigieg is a rising star in the Democratic Party who jumped at the chance of filling in for Joe Biden,” U.S. Senator Dick Durbin said. “We welcome our Hoosier Democratic friend to Springfield.”

About Mayor Pete Buttigieg
Buttigieg - a Harvard graduate, Rhodes Scholar and U.S. Navy Reserve Lieutenant – was first elected mayor of South Bend in 2011 at only 29 years old, and in 2015 he won re-election with 80 percent of the vote. Known fondly as ‘Mayor Pete,’ in Buttigieg’s seven years as mayor, South Bend went from being called one of America’s 10 dying communities by Newsweek to experiencing a period of rapid population and investment growth.

As Mayor, Buttigieg took an unpaid seven-month leave for a deployment to Afghanistan. For his counterterrorism work, he earned the Joint Service Commendation Medal.

President Barack Obama named him one of four Democrats who represented the future of the Democratic Party. He’s received national hype in The Washington Post, which called him “the most interesting Mayor you’ve never heard of,” and in The New York Times, which ran a column saying that he could be the nation’s “first gay President.”

In 2017, Buttigieg ran for Democratic National Committee chair, earning national praise for his clear message and emphasis on rebuilding the Democratic Party from the ground up in every community. House said that message will play well Thursday.

Mayor Pete studied Philosophy, Politics, and Economics at Oxford and holds a bachelor’s degree in History and Literature from Harvard. The son of educators, he was born in South Bend and grew up in the Northwest Side and North Shore Triangle. He graduated from St. Joseph High School in South Bend.

An active musician, Mayor Pete plays piano and guitar, and has performed with the South Bend Symphony Orchestra. He lives with his husband Chasten in the same South Bend neighborhood where he grew up and is restoring a once-vacant home there.

He currently serves on the advisory board of the United States Conference of Mayors, and is chair of the Mayors’ Task Force on Automation, which addresses the impact of automation on American communities.

  29 Comments      


You’re a sham and a charlatan! No, you’re a sham and a charlatan!

Tuesday, Aug 14, 2018 - Posted by Rich Miller

* ABC 7

On Monday, Rauner found a new target in Republican third-party gubernatorial candidate State Senator Sam McCann.

“Every election is a battle, this guy McCann is a total plant, he’s a sham, he’s a charlatan, he was put on there by Madigan and Pritzker to try siphon votes away from me,” Rauner said. […]

“There is only one ’sham’ candidate in the race for governor, and that is Rauner himself. He is a charlatan. He has bought the Republican Party and hijacked state government,” McCann said. “His four years of lies and failure are the only proof needed to back up the statement.”

And it’s only August.

  41 Comments      


Protected: *** UPDATED x1 *** SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Update to this morning’s Capitol Fax

Tuesday, Aug 14, 2018 - Posted by Rich Miller

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In a state full of trivial campaign issues, this is one of the trivialest

Tuesday, Aug 14, 2018 - Posted by Rich Miller

* David Giuliani in the Kankakee Daily Journal

One of the state Republican Party’s latest mailers says Democratic state representative candidate Lisa Dugan “had her property taxes lowered four times.”

Although the flyer contains a number of allegations against Dugan, the property tax claim is particularly mystifying. It suggests she did something wrong by seeking lower taxes.

In Illinois — and the rest of the country, for that matter — property taxpayers have the right to appeal their property assessments. […]

“Lisa Dugan is a career insider, more concerned with herself than the people she used to represent,” Travis Sterling, the Republican Party’s executive director, said in an email. “The fact is, she worked the system and saved herself thousands of dollars, all the while voting repeatedly with and for Mike Madigan in Springfield. Together, their policies resulted in skyrocketing property taxes for the hard working people in the 79th district.”

* Maybe the state GOP ought to have a chat with Rep. Breen…

Citizens residing in Illinois’ 48th Legislative House District are invited to join State Representative Peter Breen (R-Lombard) and local tax assessment experts on Tuesday, August 28 for a free seminar on understanding the property tax assessment process and learning how to appeal tax assessments. The 1 ½-hour event will be held from 7:00 – 8:30 PM in the Glen Ellyn Police Department’s meeting room at 65 S. Park Boulevard in Glen Ellyn.

Joining Breen at the informational session will be Milton Township Assessor Chris E. LeVan and York Township Assessor Deanna Wilkins. A brief presentation will be followed by a Question and Answer session. “This event brings taxpayers together with their township tax assessors, so people can learn how their tax bill is created and what remedies are available to those who believe their assessment is too high,” said Breen.

Due to space constraints, RSVPs are requested.

I don’t mean to pick on Rep. Breen here. I get these property tax appeals workshop press releases all the time from legislators in both parties.

But the Giuliani column noted that while former Rep. Dugan’s assessed valuation declined a bit over four years, her tax bill actually rose by 8 percent during that same time period. And her local county board of review is controlled by Republicans.

So, how is that worse than a legislator setting up a meeting with two township assessors to help the few people who are savvy enough to quickly RSVP figure out how to lower their bills?

  18 Comments      


Sorry, it just doesn’t work that way

Tuesday, Aug 14, 2018 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Mark Brown writes about how Republican Cook County Commissioners Tim Schneider, Sean Morrison and Gregg Goslin are in for a rough electoral ride this fall

Democrats are hoping to take advantage of widespread opposition here to President Donald Trump to drive suburban turnout, in part by calling attention to the Republican leadership roles of Schneider and Morrison, the county GOP chairman.

The Republicans argue their elections should be decided on their performance as fiscally responsible stewards of county government, not where they stand on Trump. […]

Democrat Hillary Clinton carried all three suburban districts in question over Trump in 2016, although Republican Gov. Bruce Rauner handily won the same areas in 2014 — an indication of the independent nature of the electorate.

“I’m perfectly aware that Donald Trump is not popular in my district,” said Schneider. “I think this election should be a referendum on Tim Schneider, not a referendum on Trump.”

As chairman of the state party, Schneider announced the state delegate vote for Trump at the Republican National Convention in 2016 and led some cheerleading on his behalf — a moment that Democrats are hoping to use in their favor.

As mentioned in the piece, Schneider chairs the Illinois Republican Party and Morrison is the Cook County GOP Chairman. So, they both know how this works. You tie yourself to popular politicians and run away from unpopular ones. And right now there’s a severe shortage of widely known, popular Republicans in this state. That’s not a value judgement, it’s just a fact of life. The situation can change because stuff always changes in politics. But today is not that day.

Not to mention that the two GOP leaders have tried to tie just about every Democrat under the sun to Speaker Madigan, and if past is prologue they’ll do that to their own opponents this fall. Again, they know how this works.

Also, as I told subscribers not long ago, a Democratic poll in Morrison’s Republican district found Gov. Rauner had a higher net unfavorability than President Trump (the two men were underwater by 20 points or more), so they’ll probably get hit with both of those barrels.

  20 Comments      


New Pritzker online ad gently apologizes for the interruption

Tuesday, Aug 14, 2018 - Posted by Rich Miller

* According to Facebook, this ad started running on August 10th. I don’t think I’ve ever seen one quite like it

* Script

Sorry to interrupt you watching your friends’ stories. I’m JB Pritzker. I’m running for governor and I’ll fight to bring jobs to Illinois and grow our economy.

  44 Comments      


Yet another State Fair #facepalm

Tuesday, Aug 14, 2018 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Background is here. A sign at an entrance to the Illinois State Fair on Sunday. Emphasis added by me…

Also, notice how they spell it as “Veteran’s Day” and “Veterans’ Day.” The State Fair website has it as “Veterans Day.”

Sheesh.

  44 Comments      


It’s just a bill

Tuesday, Aug 14, 2018 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Ugh

Illinois Gov. Bruce Rauner’s recent signing of bills to reduce the backlog of patients waiting for Medicaid approval won’t save a small-town nursing home from closing next month.

Pleasant Hill Village Administrator Maryann Walker told the State Journal-Register that she’s happy Rauner signed the two Senate bills earlier this month, but that they won’t keep her Macoupin County skilled-care facility open.

Pleasant Hill Healthcare is planning to close Sept. 1, mostly driven by the backlog in Medicaid payments related to the state’s delayed decisions on eligibility. The nonprofit facility is still waiting on about $2.3 million in Medicaid payments for more than a dozen patients, most of whom have either left for other nursing homes or died.

* This was a major initiative of the attorney general’s office

All sexual assault victims who enter an Illinois emergency room will soon be treated by a nurse trained to care for them.

Gov. Bruce Rauner signed legislation Friday night that will require hospitals to train enough medical providers in how to treat sexual assault patients that when a victim arrives, a trained provider is present within 90 minutes. Hospitals will have until Jan. 1, 2022, to comply.

An earlier Tribune investigation found that although experts recommend that rape victims be treated by providers trained in that specialty, few nurses undergo the training. The care a patient receives can depend on which emergency room he or she goes to and when; one hospital may have multiple sexual assault nurse examiners on staff while another has none.

The Illinois attorney general’s office has for years provided free training for Illinois nurses, but many say they have not been able to attend or complete it because of a lack of time or money. Nurses often spend their own time to attend training programs and their own money to travel to them.

* Sounds like a couple of decent bills

A bill intended to make it easier for college students to transfer credits within Illinois was signed into law Monday by Gov. Bruce Rauner during a visit to Harper College in Palatine.

The changes outlined in Senate Bill 2354 also encourage colleges to advise students on how best to apply credits toward degrees, with the intention of keeping students from spending money on unneeded credits.

Rauner also signed House Bill 5020, which gives priority to returning students for MAP grants. The grants, which do not need to be repaid, are awarded to Illinois residents who attend approved Illinois colleges and demonstrate financial need. Nearly 130,000 students received MAP grants last year.

* Other bills…

* Rent control is an emerging issue in the governor’s race: It hasn’t received much attention yet, but the question of whether to allow local units of government to impose rent control is beginning to emerge as an issue in the race for governor.

* Yes we cannabis: Bureau County woman champions industrial hemp in her home state: Industrial hemp is poised to make a comeback in Illinois – a bill that lifts prohibitions on its production has been on the governor’s desk a month, and word is he’ll sign it this month, during the Illinois State Fair.

* Pharmacist’s Order: Birth Control Without The Doctor: Five states — including California and Oregon — allow their pharmacists to prescribe birth control, cutting out the need for a physician’s visit. Four other states — Hawaii, Maryland, Ohio, and Tennessee — recently passed legislation, while several other states are currently considering similar initiatives. But in Illinois, not everyone is convinced about the approach. A proposal allowing pharmacists to dispense birth control through a standing order — similar to what pharmacists use to give vaccines — did not get sufficient votes during the spring legislative session. Some lawmakers had personal concerns about morality and birth control use; other groups said they worried with giving pharmacists too much power. Others said they were worried about the overall safety of contraceptives without a physician’s direct involvement.

* Rauner-signed legislation undoes more frequent audits required for smaller banks: Gov. Bruce Rauner recently signed House Bill 4589 into law, changing the auditing period for small banks from every 12 months to every 18 months. State Rep. Tony McCombie, R-Savanna, sponsored the bill. She says it began with a call from the president of a small bank in her hometown saying Illinois regulated larger banks less than smaller ones.

* Rauner signs anti-sexual harassment bills into law: One new law bans members of the General Assembly from using any public funds, including their member office allowances, as “hush money” to keep someone silent as part of a settlement or regarding an allegation or investigation into sexual harassment that they allegedly committed. … A second new law requires at least one hour of sexual harassment prevention training for professions licensed by the state that require continuing education. … Also signed into law on Friday by Rauner is a measure requiring the state Department of Public Health to develop, publish and disseminate a brochure through schools to educate the public on the effects of concussion in children and discuss how to look for concussion warning signs.

* Illinois brewers to expand as a result of new legislation on beer: According to a release from Governor Rauner’s office, the legislation allows brewers “to sell their own beer to other Illinois breweries, which will then be able to sell the purchased beer directly to customers in their taprooms, and to purchase cider for selling in their taprooms.”

* Car seat changes increase child safety: The law goes into effect in January. It’s for children 2-and-under, but also those who weigh less than 40-lbs or aren’t at least 40 inches tall . It’s definitely a law to be aware of. Violators face fines up to $75.

* Dyslexia pamphlet coming to schools: The law directs the Illinois State Board of Education to create an online handbook that will provide information about childhood dyslexia for teachers, parents and guardians. The handbook will include guidelines to help adults to recognize the symptoms of dyslexia in children; a description of educational strategies shown to improve the academic performance of students with dyslexia; and a description of resources and services available to students, parents or guardians.

* Fed looks to crack down on blue-state tax workaround before many are implemented: From what Treasury and Internal Revenue Service officials have said, it appears that they are going to crack down on efforts by many high-tax states to get around the $10,000 deduction cap on how much in state and local taxes (SALT) can be written off of a federal return. This new SALT cap became active this year after President Donald Trump signed tax reform into law last December that reduced a number of income tax rates.

* Rauner signs bill easing private takeover of water utilities, stirring outcry: Gov. Bruce Rauner on Friday signed an amendment to a state water bill that makes it easier for private water companies to buy large water systems, a move critics say will lead to higher water bills for consumers. Originally signed into law in 2013, the Illinois Water Systems Viability Act allows private water companies to buy out water utilities and spread the costs across its existing ratepayers. The bill renews the act’s amendments for another 10 years and removes a limit on the size of water systems that private companies can buy.

* CUB Reaction To Gov. Rauner’s Signing Of HB 4508, Bad Water Bill: CUB fought vigorously to improve this bill, arguing that customers of Illinois American Water and Aqua Illinois should not be forced to finance 100 percent of the companies’ purchase of a community’s water system. We also fought to require a local referendum before communities could sell their water system to a private operator. Instead, the legislation signed into law today is a giveaway to the state’s biggest private water companies. An expensive future awaits Illinois water customers whose towns move forward with privatization deals, under this legislation.

  16 Comments      


Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - The theme spreads to the Senate Dems

Tuesday, Aug 14, 2018 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Protected: *** UPDATED *** SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Illinois State Fair Event List

Tuesday, Aug 14, 2018 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Rauner announces $1 million donation to repair Coliseum

Tuesday, Aug 14, 2018 - Posted by Rich Miller

* This would dwarf all other contributions…



The money would go to the state fair’s foundation. The governor said there was a “good chance” that he would donate more and said they were “talking to many folks” about contributing and things were “going well.” He said school kids would choose a new name for the building.

  41 Comments      


Madigan lawyers slammed for wanting to depose a host of Republicans, including Rauner

Tuesday, Aug 14, 2018 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Tina Sfondeles

Gov. Bruce Rauner on Monday said he doesn’t know the man suing Illinois House Speaker Mike Madigan in federal court for allegedly helping to put “sham” candidates on ballots.

But the plaintiff, Jason Gonzales, is now coming to the Republican governor’s defense, arguing against requiring depositions of Rauner and many of the governor’s GOP allies and former staffers.

Gonzales’ attorneys contend the depositions Madigan’s team are seeking concern a documentary that was highly critical of the speaker titled “Madigan: Power, Privilege, Politics,” which was released in October 2016.

A motion filed Monday by one of Gonzales’ attorneys accuses the powerful speaker of engaging in “political intelligence” in order to tarnish Rauner in the November election.

“It appears that Speaker Madigan is not interested in what the witnesses know about this case but seeks instead to engage in political intelligence about the film’s origin, perhaps even to obtain evidence for the ongoing Illinois general election campaign of November 2018 or even a future suit,” attorney Stephen Boulton wrote in the motion filed in U.S. District Court. “Defendants’ subpoenas are an improper use of this Court’s subpoena power of this Court to engage in political intelligence.” […]

Madigan’s attorneys in June told U.S. District Judge Matthew Kennelly one of the defense strategies is to try to prove that Gonzales was a “closet Republican.” Gonzales has denied being a “plant of Gov. Rauner.”

According to the story, Madigan’s lawyers are also seeking to depose Illinois Policy Institute CEO John Tillman, Rauner’s former chief legal counsel Dennis Murashko, House GOP Leader Jim Durkin, former Rauner campaign adviser Nick Ayers (who is now VP Pence’s chief of staff), Blair Hull and Kristina Rasmussen,who served as Rauner’s chief of staff after a stint running the Illinois Policy Institute.

  40 Comments      


Question of the day

Tuesday, Aug 14, 2018 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Press release…

MEDIA ADVISORY: Governor Rauner to Deliver Remarks on Governor’s Day at the State Fair

Tomorrow, at Governor’s Day at the State Fair, Governor Rauner will deliver remarks on the Director’s Lawn as part of the Illinois GOP’s election year rally. He is scheduled to speak at 1:00 PM following remarks from Lt. Gov. Sanguinetti, Leader Bill Brady, Leader Jim Durkin, Illinois members of Congress, and statewide candidates. Before his remarks, Governor Rauner will also hold a media availability (approx. 11:45 AM).

* The Question: Your best questions for the governor?

  88 Comments      


McCann lays out his path

Tuesday, Aug 14, 2018 - Posted by Rich Miller

* From Sen. Sam McCann’s Facebook page

For the first time in a century, Downstate will control the outcome of this gubernatorial election.

How?

Because this is NOT a two-way race. Since both the R and the D nominees are both white male billionaires from Chicago who are uber-liberal on the social issues, they will split the Chicago vote - and effectively cancel each other out.

I believe that the three of us will split the Collar Counties equally, or thereabouts.

What that means: If Downstate will stick together; if Downstate will give us the opportunity to lead and to serve by giving us their vote, WE WIN!

If we are not successful in this mission, it will be because Downstate fumbles the ball. In a two-way race, it is impossible for a Downstate conservative to win. But in the paradigm that now exists, we CAN win and we WILL win if we stick together and if People vote their consciences and belief system instead of their party.

If we are not successful, no one can ever again claim that “Chicago controls everything”. If we are not successful, it will be because Downstaters voted for one of the two Chicago candidates. Downstaters, conservatives, moderates and good-government types, here’s the opportunity you’ve been asking for for generations. This is your moment.

Downstate Illinois, and center-right voters in every ZIP code across the state, are being given an amazing opportunity. The opportunity to take the control of Illinois state government away from the politicians who steered us into this ditch (both political parties). The opportunity to wrest that control from those politicians who are only concerned about the next election instead of the next generation.

As I told subscribers on Friday, McCann’s own internal polling has him at 11 percent, with 10 percent undecided. Gov. Rauner was at 29, Pritzker was at 42 and Kash Jackson was polling at 6, with “other” at 1 (800 likely voters polled July 25-29 with MoE of +/-3.5 percent).

In other words, McCann has a long way to go before he even gets onto that path. And Rauner and Pritzker won’t “cancel each other out” in the city. Also, considering how well the Democrats are doing in suburban special elections these days, I’m not sure an equal suburban split between the three is in the cards.

* And if Rauner does run any TV ads about McCann, he’ll undoubtedly do his best to tie him to Speaker Madigan the way he tied Jeanne Ives to the guy. Here’s what the governor told reporters yesterday about Madigan and McCann

Rauner: But, for example, he recruited McCann. He and, uh, Pritzker and their cronies recruited McCann to run.

Bernie: You don’t know that.

Rauner: Yes. [Laughs]

Bernie: How do you know that?

Rauner: I, I know well who’s, who talked to who and who recruited what.

But, hey, a guy can dream and it’s still a free country.

  65 Comments      


*** LIVE COVERAGE ***

Tuesday, Aug 14, 2018 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Follow along with ScribbleLive


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Tuesday, Aug 14, 2018 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Rauner vetoes bill to extend anti-discrimination laws to small employers

Monday, Aug 13, 2018 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Totally expected veto message…

To the Honorable Members of
The Illinois House of Representatives,
100th General Assembly:

Today I veto House Bill 4572 from the 100th General Assembly, which expands the definition of “employer” for certain types of employment discrimination to impose further liability on Illinois small businesses.

The Illinois Human Rights Act prohibits unlawful discrimination in employment in Illinois, and, in most instances, applies to employers with 15 or more employees. This 15-employee threshold mirrors the federal definition of employer in Title VII of the Civil Rights Act, the Americans with Disabilities Act, and other anti-discrimination statutes enforced by the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission. This longstanding and well-reasoned threshold balances the need to foster fair, equitable and harassment-free workplaces across the State with the lopsided burden that discrimination claims impose upon small businesses and startups, in comparison to large organizations with in-house compliance, human resources, risk management, and litigation defense functions.

Additionally, for claims of disability, pregnancy, or sexual harassment, the Illinois Human Rights Act already covers employers who employ only one or more individuals. This administration has worked diligently to enhance awareness of sexual harassment and gender bias and to reform the investigation and adjudication of violations in this area. I signed Senate Bill 402, which declares that sexual harassment is unethical in Illinois for State officials and employees. It also required that registered lobbyists undertake sexual harassment prevention training. Executive Order 2018-02 mandated expedited sexual harassment investigations within State agencies and recognized the uniquely cultural and diverse issues that underscore our understanding of sexual harassment. And Executive Order 2018-08 requires a comprehensive reform of the adjudication of all anti-discrimination cases before the Illinois Department of Human Rights and Illinois Human Rights Commission to generate better and faster decisions for parties.

Moving away from federal best practices and Illinois’ own current practices will discourage business creation, while maintaining greater consistency with this standard provides small businesses with predictability in their compliance efforts, and recognizes the distinct challenges that liability may pose for them.

Therefore, pursuant to Section 9(b) of Article IV of the Illinois Constitution of 1970, I hereby return House Bill 4572, entitled “AN ACT concerning human rights,” with the foregoing objections, vetoed in its entirety.

Sincerely,

Bruce Rauner
GOVERNOR

* LIUNA…



* Equality Illinois

“At a time when anti-equality forces are working overtime to establish licenses to discriminate and the next U.S. Supreme Court could begin to turn back the clock on civil rights laws, Gov. Rauner failed Illinoisans today. He could have sent a powerful and unmistakable message that Illinois is best and strongest when state law protects all workers from discrimination,” said Michael Ziri, Director of Public Policy at Equality Illinois. “Instead, Gov. Rauner effectively said it is okay to discriminate in the workforce at thousands of Illinois businesses on the basis of someone’s race, sex, national origin, sexual orientation, or gender identity. Shame on him.”

  21 Comments      


Today’s quotable

Monday, Aug 13, 2018 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Gov. Rauner held a media availability at the Illinois State Fair this afternoon and Bernie Schoenburg tried to follow up on Rauner’s comment earlier today about Speaker Madigan: “I hope he’s been doing something illegal, and I hope he gets prosecuted.” The two went back and forth for a bit, with the governor pointing to unethical things he claims Madigan has done

Rauner: All that behavior is il… is unethical. I hope they work hard to determine if it’s illegal or not. We should find out if it’s illegal and it should be prosecuted if it’s illegal.

Bernie: Was it ethical for you to entice Ken Dunkin to stay out of town for a vote, then appoint him after he loses a primary, then appoint him to a board where he’s paid, whatever, $70 thousand a year?

Rauner: Ken Dunkin is a very passionate person who’s made tough votes on behalf of taxpayers. Um, he’s a hard worker. He’s from the South Side. And very appropriate for that board.

Bernie: Yeah? But then why did you ask him to leave that board?

Rauner: [Pause] Well… after I appointed him it all became out that he did some things that were very inappropriate in his behavior with, um, sexual harassment. That’s wrong. And I said, ‘If that’s true, get out.’

Background is here.

  38 Comments      


*** UPDATED x1 *** Question of the day

Monday, Aug 13, 2018 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Republican attorney general Erika Harold has a new TV ad. I’m told this is a significant buy

I think one of the goals here is to make it as tough as possible to portray her as a crazy right-wing extremist. Also, look closely and you’ll catch a glimpse of the building that houses Madigan & Getzendanner. Nice touch.

* Transcript

In Illinois, politicians have turned corruption into an art form. I’m Erika Harold, and this scheme is one of the worst.

Mike Madigan and Kwame Raoul team up to raise property taxes. In Chicago, Madigan’s business does property tax appeals for the powerful - higher taxes, higher profits. And Kwame Raoul, his top donor gets massive tax breaks from the county while you get higher taxes.

I’m Erika Harold. As Attorney General, I’ll make the politicians pay for their corruption, not you.

I know a lot of you are tired of the MJM stuff, but get used to it because the Republicans are convinced it works, particularly against people who aren’t very well known (as in Sen. Raoul). And because the Madigan issue is being used - and will continue to be - up and down the ticket throughout the campaign, the message will be amplified. So, try to look at this as an average voter.

* The accompanying press release lays out the strategy…

For fourteen years, Kwame Raoul has done Mike Madigan’s bidding in Springfield, serving as his partner in the Illinois Senate. Whether it’s gerrymandering legislative districts, blocking term limits, pushing unbalanced budgets, skipping pension payments, or hiking income, sales, and property taxes, Raoul has been with Madigan and his agenda every step of the way.

One of Kwame Raoul’s biggest offenses is our state’s broken property tax system. Rather than reforming the system to protect homeowners, Raoul literally teamed up with Madigan and attempted to push property tax hikes on homeowners in Chicago.

Meanwhile, Madigan’s law firm continued to rake in millions by appealing property taxes for the wealthy, and one of Raoul’s top donors received million-dollar reductions in property taxes, leaving Illinois families with the bill. It’s a broken system the Chicago Tribune said “pits rich against poor” and rewards politically-connected lawyers like Madigan, but Kwame Raoul has done nothing but make the problem worse.

Erika Harold will fight to reform our state’s broken property tax system and unlike Kwame Raoul, Erika won’t cozy up to politicians like Mike Madigan who profit off the system - she will hold them accountable.

Now, with all that in mind…

* The Question: Your rating of this ad?

*** UPDATE *** Raoul campaign…

“Erika Harold doesn’t want voters to know what she believes in, so she’s lashing out to distract from her extreme record in her first, negative television ad,” said Raoul communications director Aviva Bowen. “She doesn’t want voters to know that she would make abortion illegal, even in cases of rape and incest. Or that she would take health care away from thousands of Illinois families and children born with preexisting conditions. Erika Harold even said she would put a foster child with known child abusers instead of loving gay parents. At a time when the Trump administration is attacking our most fundamental rights with unrelenting force, the role of attorney general has never been more important. Voters won’t believe what Erika Harold believes, but they deserve to know it.”

  35 Comments      


An odd combination

Monday, Aug 13, 2018 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Press release…

Lt. Gov. to offer naloxone training, free Asian Carp tasting in her tent at the State Fair Tuesday

Lt. Governor Evelyn Sanguinetti, who chairs the Governor’s Opioid Overdose Prevention and Intervention Task Force, will join Sangamon County Health Department officials at a naloxone training demonstration. The health department will be training the public on the life-saving overdose reversal drug on Tuesday and Thursday in her tent.

Also on Tuesday, Lt. Governor Sanguinetti will showcase an Asian carp tasting, also known as silverfin, in collaboration with the Illinois Department of Natural Resources and the University Housing, Dining Services at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. Chefs will be highlighting the nutritional value of the fish and the variety of ways to prepare it. Portion dishes will include silverfin slider with kohlrabi slaw, smoked silverfin crostini, and sesame silverfin salad. These items focus on the sustainability of our food supply, affordable and high-quality foods, protection of Illinois Lakes and Rivers including the Great Lakes, supporting Illinois products and workers.

    What: Naloxone training demonstration
    Where: Lt. Governor Sanguinetti’s tent on the northeast corner of Main Street and Brian Raney Avenue, directly across from the expo building and next to the Emmerson Building
    Date: Tuesday and Thursday
    Time: 10:30 am

    What: Silverfin tasting
    Where: Lt. Governor Sanguinetti’s tent
    Date: Tuesday
    Time: 11 am

  27 Comments      


Three quarters of Illinois kids may not be ready for school

Monday, Aug 13, 2018 - Posted by Rich Miller

* WBEZ

New numbers released by the Illinois State Board of Education Monday suggest that a mere 24 percent of kindergartners in Illinois are actually ready for school, a startlingly low number, advocates say.

The numbers give the first-ever statewide picture of how prepared Illinois five-year-olds are for the routines and rigors of school. State officials and early childhood education advocates, including many who pushed for the readiness measure to be developed and made public, say the low numbers underscore the importance of early childhood education.

“The data shows that we have a lot of work to do,” said Illinois State Board of Education spokeswoman Jackie Matthews. “The state is really talking about how we can increase investments in early learning because this is such a critical time for children.” […]

The data also show that a well-documented achievement gap between rich and poor kids exists before kindergarten. On average, kids who qualify for free or reduced-price lunches were 14 percentage points behind their higher-income peers on school readiness.

The ISBE report can be found here.

* Mrs. Rauner was interviewed on this topic not long ago and she had some insights about how important early childhood education is

This is the most important human capital and social justice issue for our nation. We are increasingly a society that requires everyone to have both social-emotional self-regulation skills and the flexibility to continue to learn throughout your life. We know that, as Warren Buffett says, all men are created equal and that lasts for the first 15 seconds. Something we know now that we didn’t know a generation ago, or even 10 years ago, is the importance of the prenatal period to long-term health and health outcomes. And so, actually it’s not even true that all people are born equal.

We really have to ensure that we’re giving all families the kinds of supports they need in order to help their children develop to their highest potential. It’s a moral issue, but it’s also an economic and civic issue as well. […]

The Early Childhood Block Grant (which is the Illinois State Board of Education’s early childhood education program) was cut several years in a row starting in 2010. We lost $80 million over a number of years. The block grant didn’t begin to grow again until 2016, so because of that, enrollment did drop during that time. It has rebounded. We are not sure that the numbers are not back up and over, but the (latest publicly available counts) aren’t current. We just aren’t sure.

* So, this Pritzker campaign press release blaming everything on Gov. Rauner may not hold up to scrutiny…

A new survey released by the Illinois State Board of Education details Bruce Rauner’s staggering failure to ensure Illinois’ children are ready for kindergarten.

The report finds only 24% of students enter kindergarten demonstrating readiness, with 42% not reaching readiness in any of the three core developmental areas and low-income students being disproportionately left behind. The report comes after Rauner’s two-year budget crisis that saw pre-k education and childcare funding slashed throughout the state.

“There is nothing more critical to ensuring children succeed than early childhood education, but Bruce Rauner is entirely failing to give Illinois children the opportunities they deserve,” said Pritzker campaign spokeswoman Jordan Abudayyeh. “The fact that just a quarter of children in this state are prepared for kindergarten is entirely unacceptable and a testament to the magnitude of this governor’s failures.”

  20 Comments      


The gruesome toll on Chicago paramedics

Monday, Aug 13, 2018 - Posted by Rich Miller

* I’m coming late to this August 7th Phil Kadner column, but it’s still most definitely worth a read today

Twelve people were killed and 71 shot in Chicago over the weekend. More than 1,700 people have been shot so far this year. And almost every time, Chicago paramedics are on the scene trying to save lives.

When a man used a knife to nearly decapitate the head of his 2-year-old son, Chicago paramedics responded.

At every horrific traffic accident, each time a teenager overdoses on heroin, when a baby is physically abused, or someone’s flesh is burned in a fire, the paramedics are there trying to save a life.

Yet, to my amazement, nobody has ever done a study of the toll taken by the stress on their lives.

There is no medically trained mental health expert (psychiatrist or psychologist) employed full-time by the Chicago Fire Department to monitor their well-being.

As one field supervisor told me, there is no mandatory class, no significant training, to help paramedics identify the symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder or help supervisors deal with people suffering from such symptoms.

“I tell them to take the day off and go home,” said Patrick Fitzmaurice, a Chicago paramedic field chief who supervises nine ambulances and 18 people.

“I need some training in not only how to identify people who may be suffering from PTSD, but what to say to them,” he said. “We need to have a plan to deal with this and there is absolutely no plan.”

As Frank Crossin, coordinator of the fire department union assistance program, told me, “We were all required to take a four-hour class on how to put out a pallet fire when I was in the department, but there were no mandatory classes like that on PTSD.”

Go read the whole thing.

  6 Comments      


Former Rep. Kay slammed six ways from Sunday in new cable TV ad

Monday, Aug 13, 2018 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Check out this new cable ad from freshman Rep. Katie Stuart (D-Edwardsville) attacking former GOP Rep. Dwight Kay, whom she defeated two years ago. Lotta stuff packed into this ad, but yikes

* Transcript

Voiceover: Republicans don’t want Dwight Kay and neither does anyone else. Dwight Kay shames women who use birth control as immoral.

Dwight Kay speaking on House floor: “How much promiscuity should an insurance company pay?

Voiceover: Kay opposed funding to process rape kits, and that allows predators to avoid jail. Kay opposes choice, even for victims of rape and incest. Kay, caught on tape as he bullies and intimidates a woman in Springfield. Dwight Kay, bad votes, bad video, shameful to women.

* The opening sentence is based on this September, 2017 BND story

Former Republican state Rep. Dwight Kay wants his old seat back in the 112th District. But the state Republican Party wants to move on.

The “promiscuity” quote is based on this bill

The bill guarantees coverage for all FDA approved contraception. It would also require insurance companies to cover prescriptions for up to 12 months.

The “opposed funding for rape kits” claim is based on SB2048, which was an appropriations bill. Kay voted against it, as did all Republicans. It’s been a standard Democratic line for years whenever somebody votes against a budget bill.

That incident on the House floor with Speaker Madigan’s former chief legal counsel Heather Weir Vaught was quite something and hurt Kay badly in the 2016 campaign when Stuart’s campaign used it in targeted and tough online ads.

* Related fundraising letter from Personal PAC (which is how I learned of the new ad) …

Just when you think Governor Rauner, Diana Rauner and Republican leader Jim Durkin can go no lower in funding the most right-wing misogynist candidates, they double down yet again by fully supporting a candidate for State Representative who not only wants to outlaw abortion with no exceptions for rape and incest, but voted against testing rape kits, calls women who use birth control “promiscuous,” and in a new video is seen bullying and threatening a woman in Springfield.

Bruce, Diana and Jim—Have you no decency?

Please sign our petition today so we can let Governor Rauner, Diana Rauner and Jim Durkin know that you agree with us that there is no room in Illinois politics for such vile candidates as Dwight Kay.

Personal PAC will make sure our collective voices will be heard loud and clear!

  17 Comments      


Today’s time sink

Monday, Aug 13, 2018 - Posted by Rich Miller

* For some reason, I thought of WKRP’s Les Nessman when I saw this tweet…



The pronunciation guide is here. Rio, by the way, is pronounced “REYE-oh.” They also got Chicago right. It’s pronounced “shi-KAW-go,” not “shi-KAH-go.”

  29 Comments      


What could possibly go wrong?

Monday, Aug 13, 2018 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Lynne Marek in Crain’s

Illinois Teachers’ Retirement System, the state’s biggest pension fund, is relying heavily on risky, expensive investments as it tries to claw its way out of a quicksand of unfunded pension liabilities.

The pension fund, which has only enough money to cover 40 percent of its future obligations, has steadily increased allocations to private-equity funds and only recently reversed course on investing with hedge funds despite lackluster results for both.

That TRS investment strategy poses a threat to pensioners’ retirement income and stands to exacerbate the burden for taxpayers already on the hook for $138 billion in unfunded liabilities across all Illinois pensions. The state’s pension crisis is the second-worst in the country, behind New Jersey, due mainly to a lack of state government contributions in past decades. The TRS reliance on private-equity and hedge funds doesn’t appear to have helped matters—and might worsen them if the investments backfire.

“The allocations are huge, the returns are terrible, and the costs are enormous,” says former TRS board member Marc Levine regarding hedge fund investments. […]

As of June, TRS had nearly a quarter of its money invested in private-equity and hedge funds, which generally charge fees of between 1 and 2 percent of assets, in addition to a portion of gains. That compares with less than 1 percent in more standard stock and bond strategies.

  28 Comments      


*** UPDATED x1 - IEC responds *** Erika Harold criticizes AG Madigan for “targeting” the coal industry

Monday, Aug 13, 2018 - Posted by Rich Miller

* The Southern

This year’s Coal & Mining Expo opened Wednesday at the Marion Cultural and Civic Center.

A meeting of the minds was highlighted by the presence of four CEOs from the nation’s top coal companies — Alliance Coal, Knight Hawk Coal, Peabody Energy and Prairie State Energy — and was bookended by political stumping from the state’s top coal supporters and political hopefuls this fall.

Rep. Mike Bost, R-Murphysboro, was the first to take the stage and said unlike others in Washington, “we love coal,” he said of the other Republicans on stage with him. […]

Speaking next was Erika Harold, the Republican nominee for Illinois attorney general. She told those in attendance that the last thing Illinois needed was another attorney general who capitulates to environmentalist groups.

Yikes.

* I was able to get some audio of the event and this is Harold’s quote

With all of the challenges that Illinois faces, the last thing that Illinois needs is another attorney general who will do the bidding of the environmentalist activist groups.

* Some of Harold’s speech so we can put that into context

For the first time in 16 years, the Attorney General’s seat will be an open seat, and that’s because Lisa Madigan, who severed as Attorney General for the past four terms, dropped out of the race a month after I announced my candidacy. This provides the state with a much-needed opportunity to move the Attorney General’s office in a new direction.

Lisa Madigan often used this office in activist political ways, targeting industries such as the coal industry, on the basis of her own personal views as opposed to simply following the law. Whether it was joining with other states attorneys general in lawsuits that targeted the coal industry, or working to enact rules that unduly burdened the coal industry, Attorney General Madigan has used her office to pick winners and losers in the energy industry as opposed to advocating for a balanced and fair playing field for everyone.

My opponent, state Sen. Kwame Raoul, would be more of the same. He’s from Chicago, was appointed to President Obama’s former state senate seat, and is strongly backed by Mike Madigan and the Cook County Democratic machine. And as a state Senator, he’s championed legislation that would hurt the coal industry.

A specific example is Senate Bill 3005, which he sponsored this past legislative session. SB3005 would have given legal standing to any person, regardless of whether or not they lived in Illinois, to use Illinois courts to challenge the decisions of Illinois state agencies. So if a mining company followed the procedures to obtain a permit, and state agencies found that the permit should be granted, SB3005 would have allowed a political activist from California or New York to have legal standing to come into an Illinois court to challenge the state agency’s decision and to try to block the permit from being granted.

This unfettered expansion of standing would exacerbate Illinois’ already overly litigious environment. It would hurt job creation by driving up the cost of business in Illinois. And it would harm industries like the coal industry that simply want a predictable and consistent and fair playing field.

Unsurprisingly, environmental activist groups strongly backed Sen. Raoul’s bill. In fact, the Illinois Environmental Council took credit for it as being their initiative in the first place.

With all of the challenges that Illinois faces, the last thing that Illinois needs is another attorney general who will do the bidding of the environmentalist activist groups. As attorney general I will follow the law, I will enforce the law, I will refrain from picking winners and losers. And I will advocate for a fair playing field. I will also listen more and be willing to constructively engage with groups to be able to understand their industry and to see how Illinois’ regulatory environment may be inhibiting economic growth. […]

The coal industry is an extremely important one in Illinois, and you deserve an Attorney General who understands that. And you deserve an attorney general who will not use the office’s vast powers to try to destroy coal as an industry. And I will be that attorney general.

Thank you for what you do to support jobs in Illinois, to create energy options for consumers and to sustain a way of life for generations of mining families now and the years to come. Thanks so much for having me.

…Adding… A clever comment…

This is a rich vein that I expect Raoul to mine to great effect. I’d start with a map of Chicago overlaid with rates of childhood asthma and simply take it from there.

Except, Raoul has raised $13,000 from Foresight Energy during his career, including a February contribution. Harold has not yet taken any coal money.

…Adding… Sen. Raoul tweets about his record here.

*** UPDATE *** From Jen Walling, the executive director of the Illinois Environmental Council…

Erika Harold’s misreading of SB3005 is concerning.

Far from allowing out of state plaintiffs to challenge permits, SB3005 would allow only those adversely affected by a project to challenge a permit. As I hope any candidate for attorney general would understand after researching the issue, “adversely affected” is a term well-established by case law to refer only to those who can demonstrate injury in fact caused by a project. Constrained by this precedence, standing could not possibly be extended to a resident living in California or New York, as Harold mistakenly claims.

The standing provisions contemplated by SB3005 are already available under federal and Illinois law on permits related to coal mining or coal power plants, meaning SB3005 would have literally no impact on the coal industry, despite what industry talking points may say.

  37 Comments      


Rauner on Madigan: “I hope he’s been doing something illegal, and I hope he gets prosecuted”

Monday, Aug 13, 2018 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Wait. He hopes?…



Also reported by Amanda Vinicky.

…Adding… Raw audio is here

…Adding… Tina’s story

He’s called him corrupt for years, but Gov. Bruce Rauner on Monday said he “hopes” Illinois House Speaker Mike Madigan has been “doing something illegal” and he “hopes he gets prosecuted.” […]

“I do know that Speaker Madigan has a pattern of putting up sham candidates in many elections, not just this one,” Rauner said. “So I hope they get to the truth of it. And frankly, I hope if the speaker, clearly he’s been doing unethical things. I hope he’s been doing something illegal and I hope he gets prosecuted.” […]

Madigan spokesman Steve Brown called the comments “another day of rambling” by Rauner.

“It’s the exit interview Bruce Rauner is conducting as he prepares to leave office after four years of failure,” Brown added. “There’s no unethical conduct. There’s nothing there.”

  82 Comments      


Using major-dealer laws to prosecute small-time junkies for homicide

Monday, Aug 13, 2018 - Posted by Rich Miller

* This state statute needs to be revisited

John Galloway and Jake Czipo were friends and drug users — that much is clear. Each had been through treatment, but when they met at Czipo’s Crystal Lake house on a spring night in 2017, neither appeared to be devoted to sobriety.

But that’s where the clarity ends. Czipo used heroin and died that night. Galloway is being held criminally responsible.

That’s because, according to McHenry County prosecutors, Galloway provided the drugs that claimed Czipo’s life. It doesn’t matter that Galloway allegedly got some for himself, too. It doesn’t even matter that he called 911 when he saw that Czipo had stopped breathing.

Such is the paradox of Illinois’ drug-induced homicide law. It’s a measure that was created during the 1980s crack epidemic to go after major dealers, but critics say it’s increasingly being wielded against those at the bottom of the distribution chain: addicts who simply share drugs with friends or intimate partners. […]

“Even if you’re an addict, once you cross that line and give it or sell it to someone, you become a dealer,” said DuPage County State’s Attorney Robert Berlin, whose office investigates every overdose for possible criminal charges. “In my opinion, the law treats you differently.”

This won’t create any unintended consequences at all. Nope.

  14 Comments      


Here’s something you don’t see every day (although you probably should)

Monday, Aug 13, 2018 - Posted by Rich Miller

* This is a first for Illinois

Along with over-the-top spending, the Illinois gubernatorial race may be setting another record, too. Women are leading the campaigns of the two front-runners. […]

Betsy Ankney is campaign manager for Gov. Bruce Rauner and Anne Caprara is campaign manager for J.B. Pritzker. The two women come to the top statewide race after honing their skills on some of the most notable political campaigns in the country. […]

Caprara, whose name has popped up as a player in the next presidential cycle, is a 38-year-old Philadelphia native with a degree from American University. She previously worked at Emily’s List, “so I had the best entry because women were being uplifted,” she told me. Having women behind the scenes of a campaign is just as important as being a candidate, Caprara said. “Female senior staffers can make critical decisions, they can talk to the candidate and affect policy. You want to be in the room when decisions are being made.” Before Emily’s List, Caprara worked for the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee, helping oversee U.S. Senate races in 33 states. In 2008, she was campaign manager for first-time candidate Betsy Markey, a D challenging a three-term R for Congress in Colorado. After Markey’s victory, Caprara became chief of staff.

Ankney, a 31-year-old Toledo native and Vanderbilt University grad, ran Republican Sen. Ron Johnson’s campaign in 2016 when he pulled off an upset against Wisconsin’s Russ Feingold. She also ran field offices for Scott Brown’s winning 2010 U.S. Senate campaign in Massachusetts and Chris Christie’s first run as New Jersey governor. Ankney also worked at the Republican National Committee in 2012 and at the NRSC as a regional political director overseeing U.S. Senate races in the Midwest. She also got her start working for women in key positions behind the scenes, including Maria Cino and Mel Raines at the Republican National Convention in 2008 and Jessica Ennis at the Republican National Committee in 2010.

Politics isn’t the man’s world it was when Ankney and Caprara started. “You’re seeing more women are getting involved, taking on leadership roles and getting out of their wheelhouse (usually fundraising),” said Ankney, who for the past two years has taught at the Women’s Campaign School at Yale — a bipartisan education effort for women who want to run for office and run campaigns.

  7 Comments      


*** UPDATED x1 *** Federal judge says Madigan will be deposed in Gonzales suit

Monday, Aug 13, 2018 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Tina Sfondeles

What do Gov. Bruce Rauner, Illinois House Speaker Mike Madigan and Cicero Town President Larry Dominick all have in common?

They all have been tentatively scheduled for depositions in a federal lawsuit that accuses Mike Madigan of winning elections by recruiting “sham” candidates.

Jason Gonzales claims in the suit that Madigan put up two “sham” candidates with Hispanic names to try to split the Hispanic vote in the March 2016 Democratic primary. Madigan beat Gonzales 65.2 percent to 27.1 percent. The other two primary candidates received a combined 7.8 percent. […]

Madigan’s deposition was scheduled for July 18, but Madigan spokesman Steve Brown on Thursday said the deposition was canceled by Gonzales’ attorney. Brown said it hasn’t yet been re-scheduled.

During a July 5 status hearing, [US District Judge Matthew Kennelly] told lawyers, “I don’t care whether it ends up being 10 depositions or 10,000. The first named defendant in the case [Madigan] is getting his deposition taken.”

Lots more in that story, so go read the whole thing.

* Meanwhile

The governor, speaking with The State Journal-Register after an event honoring veterans, said the November election “is for all the marbles,” saying his opponent, Pritzker, is “totally aligned under Madigan,” while he and statewide Republican candidates stand for lower taxes, jobs and term limits. […]

When asked to be more specific about the alleged corruption Madigan and Pritzker have partaken in, Rauner pointed to Pritzker’s potential offshore holdings and the much-lampooned $230,000 property tax break he received after the removal of toilets from a mansion he owns in Chicago.

“What sort of a person — who inherited billions of dollars and wants to raise the income tax on working families in Illinois — would say, ‘Let’s raise the income tax, but I’m going to keep hiding my billions of inheritance in the Bahamas so I don’t pay my income taxes?’” Rauner said. “What kind of person does that? That’s despicable.”

Rauner continued, “What kind of person inherits billions, buys a mansion in the city of Chicago that’s worth millions of dollars, disconnects the water lines to the toilet so he can claim it as uninhabitable to cut his property tax bill by $230,000? That’s despicable. That’s tax fraud. That puts more tax burden on the working families in Chicago and takes money away from the Chicago schools.”

Not to defend the weird toilet decision, but the house was obviously uninhabited. Pritzker made it legally uninhabitable for tax purposes. I don’t see the “fraud” there. If he was living in the house while paying taxes as if he wasn’t, that, to me, would be fraud. As it stands, it’s just a rich man’s ploy to lower his taxes. Also, lowering one person’s property taxes takes no money away from schools because others have to pick up the slack.

*** UPDATE *** I’m told that Blair Hull, a longtime Democratic Madigan foe and a Rauner contributor, is also being deposed. And…



  68 Comments      


*** UPDATED x1 *** More Illinois State Fair #facepalms

Monday, Aug 13, 2018 - Posted by Rich Miller

* I’m sensing a pattern here…


*** UPDATE *** This is really getting ridiculous…



  24 Comments      


Can we please do something that actually works?

Monday, Aug 13, 2018 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Clarence Page avoids the easy route of angrily venting hyperbolic vitriol about crime and gun violence in his latest column

But I did find some good news from Gary Slutkin, the University of Illinois at Chicago epidemiologist who founded Cure Violence, formerly known as CeaseFire, an anti-violence program that has been adopted by more than 20 other cities, including New York and Los Angeles.

Last year I wrote about how Slutkin had predicted a rise in violence when the program lost its state funding amid prolonged political gridlock. Unfortunately Slutkin turned out to be right. The only districts that didn’t experience a surge were two that found funding elsewhere.

Hmm.

* Now, let’s take a look at one of Page’s older columns from late December of 2016

More than 750 people were killed in Chicago in 2016, the highest total since 1997, and more than 4,300 were wounded by firearms.

Dr. Gary Slutkin, the University of Illinois at Chicago epidemiologist who founded the CeaseFire Illinois violence-reduction program also known as Cure Violence, warned Gov. Bruce Rauner in a March 2015 letter of a probable surge in Chicago shootings if the program’s funding was not restored. […]

After a 2007 interruption in funding by Democratic Gov. Rod Blagojevich, for example, the program shut down 15 sites and shootings spiked. Funding was restored a year later — and violence returned to its previous level.

So, the governor was warned in 2015 and for good reason. Shootings spiked the last time the program’s funding was slashed. And then, just as predicted, they spiked again. This stuff can be measured. (Rahm Emanuel also cut its funding, by the way.)

* Let’s go back to Page’s most recent column

But after funding was restored this year, Slutkin told me in a telephone interview, gun-related violence in the affected districts “dropped by 30 percent in the first six months of this year.”

Unlike more traditional programs, Cure Violence doesn’t focus on root causes of violence or saving one child at a time. Its “violence interrupters,” some of whom are ex-offenders themselves, focus on individuals who have a beef that can lead to the sort of retaliatory attacks that boil up behind most of the city’s homicide statistics.

Slutkin came up with the idea while working with the World Health Organization to fight AIDS, cholera and tuberculosis epidemics in Africa. Treat violence as if it were a virus? That’s the idea and it works, according to a 2008 Justice Department evaluation and various university studies.

All emphasis added.

* Policing, racism, morality, economic development, lead in water and guns are all issues that we can (and probably should) debate ad infinitum. But there is something in front of our very eyes which is proven to work right now and desperately needs more support. Is it the be-all, end-all? Nope. Don’t be silly. There is no such thing.

But violence interruption programs measurably and consistently work, and yet they are constantly short-changed or even cut altogether. That makes zero sense to me.

Look, if giving the police a cool new weapon was shown to lower violence then I’d bet every cop on the planet would have that weapon ASAP. So, if we absolutely must, then let’s start thinking of violence interruption as a weapon against violence. For the umpteenth time, it’s something we know that actually works to reduce violence. Get on with it, already.

…Adding… The JB Pritzker campaign reached out to point me to a Tribune story that we discussed last week

He encouraged an injection of funding for on-the-street violence interruption groups in the short term.

“I’m just reminding you that it is that massive defunding that occurred and the unwillingness and, you know, lack of responsibility that this governor has taken for the defunding of our human services that has led to this problem,” Pritzker said.

“This is not a one-day. It’s not like it happened only one time. It’s been happening consistently over the last few years and look at the timeline,” he said. “It’s true that our (increased) violence around the state of Illinois, not just the city of Chicago, has been almost concurrent with the defunding of those services that people rely upon. Those are their connection to civilized society and when they’re gone and they close down, you can’t snap your fingers and put ’em back.”

* Related…

* The Doctor Who Tries to Cure Gun Violence By Treating It Like a Contagious Disease: People act because of the way they were treated by others — i.e., they pick up these behaviors in subconscious ways — and the brain is hardwired to copy other behaviors. Contagion means that something is contagious if it produces more of itself. Flu begets more flu, for example. The same principle is also true for violence, though it’s not true for everything: High blood pressure, for example, doesn’t cause other people to have high blood pressure. With violence, it’s just what we empirically see in nature — the greatest predictor of violence is exposure to a preceding event of violence. We also know there’s an underlying process that causes this to happen: There are neurons on the brain that cause copying, which is the principle way people pick up all kinds of behavior. Violence is a very powerful type of behavior for copying because it’s so electric and emotional that it actually causes even more copying. These are predicable biological processes.

  27 Comments      


Weird times in Lake County

Monday, Aug 13, 2018 - Posted by Rich Miller

* My weekly syndicated newspaper column

Lake County politics has been rocked to the core this month by the abrupt resignation of state Rep. Nick Sauer (R-Lake Barrington) and the announcement by Lake County Board Chairman Aaron Lawlor that he is dropping out of his re-election campaign after earlier disclosing that he was suffering from drug addiction.

It’s really a mess up there.

The local state’s attorney has taken over the investigation of the allegations against Sauer that he used nude photos of an ex-girlfriend to “catfish” men on the Internet.

And Lawlor, once a rising political star, faced removal from the ballot by the State Board of Elections for unpaid fines leveled against his campaign committee. The county is also investigating whether he improperly used his government credit card.

Both men are Republicans, which means GOP leaders are scrambling to find last-minute ballot replacements and trying to deal with the huge fallout during a year that doesn’t look like it’s going to be great for their party anyway.

Lake County Republican Party Chairman Mark Shaw is being forced to navigate pressures on all sides while trying to choose replacements who won’t anger too many factions.

You may recall that Shaw challenged Gov. Bruce Rauner’s Illinois Republican Party Chairman Tim Schneider for his job after Rauner barely won the March primary. After a nasty selection process that resulted in threats of lawsuits, a last-minute deal was cut that made Shaw a state party “co-chairman.” Shaw was also given the helm of the Illinois Republican County Chairmen’s Association, which isn’t much of an organization (it raised almost no money in the second quarter and had just $62K in the bank).

Gov. Rauner is reportedly backing Barrington Village President Karen Darch to replace former Rep. Sauer. Darch was president of the Illinois Municipal League in 2017, so she has some state experience. She’s also done battle with her local unions, which is one reason I’m told why Rauner likes her so much.

But insurgent Republican Dan Proft tipped his hand in the House seat replacement sweepstakes by publishing a story in one of his 40 newspapers (the Lake County Gazette) about how Darch has “increased property taxes collected by the village by more than one-third since 2010.” Proft backed Rep. Jeanne Ives against Rauner in the primary and the two men are avowed enemies.

Sen. Dan McConchie (R-Hawthorn Woods) last week endorsed Ela Township Republican Party Chairman Chris Bos to replace Sauer. Sauer’s former House district is half of McConchie’s Senate district. So, McConchie carries some weight and Chairman Shaw has a delicate decision on his hands.

Some top House Republicans would like to see a woman named to the Sauer seat. Darch would fit that bill, but so would Helene Walsh, the wife of former GOP Congressman Joe Walsh, who, like Proft, hosts a conservative radio talk show.

Another drama is also playing out in the county. As I write this, Rep. Sam Yingling’s SB2544 is sitting on Rauner’s desk.

Yingling (D-Grayslake) made the unusual move of running cable TV ads supporting his legislation in late June. The bill would allow Lake County voters to decide whether to elect the county assessor. The position is currently appointed by the county board chairman, the soon to be departing Aaron Lawlor.

Julie Simpson, a Democrat who was running against Chairman Lawlor until he dropped out, also ran an ad touting the legislation, which passed both chambers with strong veto-proof majorities. And Yingling gathered 1,000 petition signatures favoring the legislation. Yingling represents a district that was once represented by a Republican, so he is a perennial target. The issue has helped him stay visible throughout the summer.

Sauer spoke against the bill on the House floor last May and Chairman Lawlor has been the bill’s most high-profile opponent, engineering a recent county board resolution urging the governor to use his amendatory veto powers to make the bill cover all counties with appointed assessors instead of just Lake. Such a move would kill a November referendum, of course, because the General Assembly won’t convene again until after the election.

The governor has until late August to act on the bill, but Yingling’s folks point out that if Rauner follows through with the request for an amendatory veto, he’ll be siding with the two most controversial political figures in Lake County. Rauner does, however, have the political cover given to him by the county board’s resolution, which passed 14-5.

The beauty of politics is how fast things can change. And nobody could’ve predicted that Lake County would be at the center of so many controversies a month ago.

* Meanwhile…



* And from a press release…

Today, the Illinois REALTORS, one of Illinois’ largest trade associations representing 47,000 members, joined Representative Yingling in calling on Governor Rauner to sign SB2544. The bill received strong bi-partisan support in both the House and the Senate and puts a binding question on the ballot in November to let the people decide whether the position of Lake County Chief County Assessment Office, the Lake County Assessor, should be popularly elected by the people.

“The Illinois REALTORS believe that the voters in Lake County should have the opportunity to make their voices heard on the issue of converting the Office of the Chief Assessment Officer of Lake County to an elected rather than appointed office,” said Gary Clayton, CEO, in a letter to Governor Rauner. “This legislation simply affords the voters in Lake County the right to weigh in on whether they believe this office, like other county officials, should be an elected one.”

  13 Comments      


*** LIVE COVERAGE ***

Monday, Aug 13, 2018 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Follow along with ScribbleLive


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