Reverse Robin Hood
Wednesday, Aug 14, 2013 - Posted by Rich Miller
* As the Tribune reported not long ago, some of Chicago’s greatest cultural institutions are struggling now because the wealthy people who run their boards of directors botched their finances…
The turn of the millennium was a heady time for many Chicago cultural institutions. Cheap loans, high investment returns and swelling endowments spawned a slew of new attractions along the lakefront and around downtown.
The Art Institute built its Modern Wing. The Adler Planetarium expanded. The Goodman Theatre constructed a new home in the recently re-energized theater district. New exhibits sprang up at the Field Museum and the Museum of Science and Industry. The Chicago History Museum underwent a gut rehab.
Cultural institutions were joining in the economic bonanza sweeping the country and, as with for-profit companies and individual homeowners, some would pay dearly for taking financial risks.
Encouraged by boards that included some of Chicago’s most influential corporate leaders, many museums and arts organizations decided to leverage their gains by borrowing tens of millions of dollars to fund expansions, renovations and other big-ticket projects. […]
“The recession blew a lot of people’s projections and plans,” said Carroll Joynes, co-founder of the University of Chicago’s Cultural Policy Center. “But the plans would have been unrealistic in many cases and freighted with not very good risk assessment, even if the economy had kept humming.”
* The Field Museum was especially hard hit…
The museum’s financial problems stem from a decision over a decade ago to issue $90 million in bonds for construction projects that included a subterranean storage center for much of its collection. The museum’s board assumed it could raise enough money through a capital campaign to keep the museum on solid footing.
But when that didn’t happen, it had to begin dipping into its endowment. Finally, in December, the museum announced that it would cut $5 million from its budget — $3 million of that from the science program — and would try to raise its endowment by $100 million.
* So, partly in reaction to this, the General Assembly passed a bill that would allow museums and aquariums to reduce the number of required free admission days by half, from 52 down to 26.
The bill passed with strong majorities in both chambers, but Gov. Pat Quinn vetoed it yesterday…
“Many Illinois families can only visit these museums on the 52 days that they are currently open to residents free of charge,” the governor wrote in a letter to lawmakers that explains his veto.
“Limiting the number of days our aquariums and museums are available free of cost would disproportionately limit access to our lower-income families,” he said. “I cannot support any legislation that seeks to reduce exposure to the vast educational resources on display at our museums, particularly for those in our state that are most vulnerable.”
While the problems at the museums and other cultural institutions are certainly severe, cutting free days to make up for the financing mistakes of society’s elite is just plain wrong. It is the sort of template that has been used ever since the great crash. Rich people screw up, poor people gotta give up.
The veto is vintage Pat Quinn. And he makes some solid points.
The veto has a political advantage as well. Sen. Kwame Raoul, a potential Quinn primary challenger, was a co-sponsor of the legislation.
Heh.
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Blackburn drops out, endorses Simon
Wednesday, Aug 14, 2013 - Posted by Rich Miller
* Democrat Duffy Blackburn used his speech today at the Democratic County Chairman’s event to announce that he is “suspending” his comptroller campaign. “I wholeheartedly endorse Sheila Simon,” he told the attendees.
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* Natasha Korecki is live-Tweeting the Jesse Jackson, Jr. sentencing hearing. She’s doing a great job and this is a must-watch…
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Caption contest!
Wednesday, Aug 14, 2013 - Posted by Rich Miller
* From a friend who is at this morning’s Democratic County Chairmen’s brunch. If you can’t read the t-shirts, they say “Kwame Raoul, Democrat for Illinois”…
Our previous caption contest winners should expect to gather at the Miller tent at about 2:30 today. Send me an e-mail for confirmation.
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Zuke nuked
Wednesday, Aug 14, 2013 - Posted by Rich Miller
* An inspector general’s hiring investigation, downgraded university credit ratings, and a possible new challenger emerging. Not a great day for Gov. Pat Quinn.
Oh, and this…
The widening mess that has enveloped the Chicago area’s public transit operators claimed another victim today, with the resignation of embattled Chicago Transit Authority board member Frank Zuccarelli.
In a letter to Gov. Pat Quinn, Mr. Zuccarelli said he’d agreed to be appointed to the board “with a singular purpose in mind — to be a strong advocate for meeting the mass transit needs of the residents of the south suburbs.”
But Mr. Zuccarelli’s decision to continue to bepaid $128,000 a year as the Thornton Township supervisor and to accept the $25,000-a-year CTA post became an immediate lightning rod after Metra and the Regional Transportation Authority officials resigned amid ethical controversies.
State law generally bans such double-dipping, but Mr. Zuccarelli profited from a loophole that exempts township posts.
* More…
Zuccarelli resigned in time to avoid attending Wednesday’s monthly CTA meeting.
Reacting to the resignation, William Daley delivered a blunt, two-sentence reply that, in its brevity, appeared designed not to add to the perception that he was engaging in any “political grandstanding” with his earlier call for Zuccarelli’s departure.
“Frank Zuccarelli had little choice but to do the honorable thing by resigning today,” Daley said. “It’s unfortunate that Gov. Quinn put him in this position in the first place.”
* Quinn’s response…
“I felt he would have brought an important perspective to the CTA Board, which has all too often left this region behind when it came to important transportation access issues. I accept Frank’s decision and will soon announce his replacement.”
…Adding… Commenter 47th Ward probably has this exactly right…
Zuccarelli is no dummy and easily saw the writing on the wall. He isn’t going to fault Quinn for this case of horrible timing. If anything, he’ll be aiming for a bigger plum if Quinn gets re-elected, so there is still plenty of motivation to go all out.
Yep.
* This story has given me a sense of déjà vu. Remember when Rod Blagojevich tried to appoint Sheila Simon to the Illinois Gaming Board back in 2005? Simon said she was surprised at the offer, but also said she wanted the job.
The problem was, Simon sat on the Carbondale city council at the time and state law prohibited a local official from being on the board. So, Blagojevich tried to change the law, but that failed.
In the end, Blagojevich ended up appointing Simon to the Illinois Arts Council.
Simon is no Zuccarelli for many reasons. But this isn’t the first time that a governor has tried to get around a law with an appointment.
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Zorn encourages Raoul to run
Wednesday, Aug 14, 2013 - Posted by Rich Miller
* Eric Zorn agrees with me that state Sen. Kwame Raoul has a legitimate path to victory if he seeks the Democratic gubernatorial nomination…
Raoul’s profile, record of accomplishment and available seed money make him a plausible foe for two candidates who aren’t generating much enthusiasm among Democratic base voters.
Labor, which is sorely disenchanted with Quinn and Daley, would likely form a core of support for Raoul, as would African-American voters and the same of bloc of white liberals who backed Obama — perhaps enough, all told, that he would win a three-way primary.
Working against him, if he chooses to run, will be his lack of experience as an executive — by day, he’s a partner at a LaSalle Street law firm — and as a big-time candidate — he’s never contended on the statewide stage.
His role in attempting to resolve the pension crisis could also backfire on his ambitions. The Tribune has editorialized against Raoul’s “exasperating … slow walk” of the process so far this summer, and if too little gets done in the end, he’ll end up lumped in with Quinn and the legislative leaders labeled as part of the problem, not part of the solution.
Raoul has been demurely declining to reveal his plans and saying that his sole focus right now is coming up with a pension reform bill. It’s exactly what he should be saying under the circumstances, and offers no clue as to what he might do after Labor Day, when the political season begins in earnest.
It’s his time, though. And the Caucus of Meh! is growing impatient.
Raoul’s State Fair event last night was packed. He’s not there yet, but he is seriously considering this thing.
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The sky is very dark, but it’s not falling
Wednesday, Aug 14, 2013 - Posted by Rich Miller
* Joe Cahill at Crain’s warns his readers that Illinois and Chicago are about to become Detroit. He concludes…
One of these days, Illinois or Chicago will float a bond offering and find no takers. That’s when we become Detroit.
This is a common fantasy among a large group of folks. We’ve seen it expressed before just about every major state bond offering. The Associated Press fell for it the last time and was completely embarrassed (or should’ve been) after the sale turned out fine. Even Ty Fahner subscribes to this notion, saying in his March address to the Union League Club: “Nobody wants our paper.”
Yet, time after time, Illinois bond sales are way oversubscribed.
* The truth is, Illinois has incredibly strong laws dictating that bond payments are made first - before pension payments, before school payments, before anything. Bond buyers know this.
They also know that they’ll get a better return on their Illinois bond investments, partially because of the hysterical nonsense spewed by people like Fahner.
And if they’re paying attention they also know that the state has no invoices sitting in the hopper that are over 30 days old. They also know that our economy, which has big problems, is still far more diverse and vital than Detroit’s ever was. Yeah, it was a major boom town 50 years ago, but its over-reliance on automobile production doomed it.
* Look, we’ve got problems here. Big, huge, gut-wrenching problems. But comparing Illinois to Detroit is no more valid than the dire and widespread predictions a couple of years ago that we were the next Greece.
* Even so…
Moody’s Investors Service downgraded debt ratings on seven public Illinois universities, and warns more decreases could take place in the future.
The bond rating agency took the actions Friday, about two months after it warned it was reviewing all public universities in Illinois because of the state’s precarious financial situation. The state of Illinois’ debt was downgraded in early June.
In Friday’s downgrades, only Northern Illinois University maintained its debt rating.
The downgrades affect a combined $2.24 billion in debt, but most of that belongs to the University of Illinois.
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Report: IG probing IDOT hiring
Wednesday, Aug 14, 2013 - Posted by Rich Miller
* From a Better Government Association report…
* The state’s executive inspector general is investigating hiring irregularities, and has interviewed a number of former state government employees.
* Since 2003, IDOT officials routinely manipulated job descriptions as a means to get around court-ordered hiring rules.
* In many cases, once political hires were made, they did not fulfill the responsibilities in their job descriptions.
* The number of political hires at IDOT jumped by 63 percent in the last decade, while the number of highway road maintainers plummeted by nearly 800 posts.
More on the IG stuff…
The BGA learned that the state’s executive inspector general — the in-house government watchdog — has been investigating possible hiring abuses in the Quinn administration since at least last year, although it’s unclear whether wrongdoing has been confirmed. The inspector general’s office refused to comment. IDOT officials would say little because, they indicated, the investigation is ongoing. […]
Documents obtained by the BGA show some of those hired into political positions had little or no work history, including a bartender, a truck driver and a community college student.
All told, IDOT has hired more than 200 “staff assistants” since 2003, under the watch of both Blagojevich and Quinn. Records show that practice stopped late last year, apparently after the inspector general launched its investigation. [Emphasis added.]
Hmm.
* The governor does love his patronage, and he always has. From an invaluable 1980 Illinois Issues profile…
“[Qunn’s] only problem was that he loved power and was vicious in doling out patronage and taking it away. He is not politically naive. The stuff he says now doesn’t jive with the stuff he said then. He’s a guy you’d love to have a beer with and in charge of your own patronage, but he would not get the most Christian guy of the year award, by any means.”
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* Watch live video of today’s Illinois Democratic County Chairmen’s Association Governors Day Brunch via BlueRoomStream.com by clicking here. The show starts at 8:30. I’ll post a ScribbleLive feed soon.
Featured speakers include U.S. Senator Dick Durbin, Governor Pat Quinn, Bill Daley, Attorney General Lisa Madigan and Secretary of State Jesse White. The keynote speaker is US Sen. Tim Kaine.
Daley’s speech is probably the one to pay the most attention to.
…Adding… Here’s the ScribbleLive feed…
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*** UPDATED x1 - Video *** State Fair report
Tuesday, Aug 13, 2013 - Posted by Rich Miller
* Well, here’s some good news. My iPhone’s AT&T service actually worked at the State Fair last night, probably because there wasn’t a big concert and crowds were kinda thin (Monday’s don’t seem to draw large crowds). I doubt it’ll be the same the rest of the week, though.
* I stopped by the Commodities Pavillion to check out the table I sponsored this year at the Pork Producers’ booth. The graphic is based on this painting by my niece Reagan…
But it didn’t show up too well…
Oh, well. Live and learn, I suppose.
* I also tried this while I was at the pavillion…
Not so great, I’m afraid.
* I tried a different corn dog than my usual Miller’s and it wasn’t good. Never again. The emcee at the draft horse competition thought he was a comedian, so that was a little tedious. The pierogies I bought at Ethnic Village were on the bland side. It rained for a while.
But I did see some cool exotic animals, had a great pork chop sandwich, had a nice Sky Tram ride, and thoroughly enjoyed a long walk around the fairgrounds on a beautiful evening.
Even when things go a little wrong, the Illinois State Fair just can’t be beat.
* Blogging will likely be light to non-existent the rest of the day because I have to leave soon for the “celebrity” harness horse race, which I’m in, as usual, and will start at about 1 o’clock. Be there or be square!
*** UPDATE *** I finished in the money. HDems won, SGOPs placed, Governor’s office was out of the money…
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Question of the day
Tuesday, Aug 13, 2013 - Posted by Rich Miller
* Sun-Times…
When a federal judge ruled New York City’s “stop-and-frisk” procedures unconstitutional yesterday, its defenders fought back aggressively. One, former New York governor George Pataki, even name-checked Chicago as a city that should implement the controversial crime-fighting strategy. While its supporters have heralded the strategy’s success, the judge, Shira Scheindlin, said it amounted to a “policy of indirect racial profiling.” But Pataki was among those heralding its success while also taking the opportunity to go after President Obama, Attorney General Eric Holder, and Obama’s adopted hometown of Chicago on MSNBC’s “Morning Joe” show:
“If Holder and Obama want to investigate a police department, why don’t they look at Chicago, where the civil rights of young African-Americans are being not only taken away, but they’re being murdered in record rates in the South Side of Chicago? The policing there leaves something to be desired when it comes to protecting the constitutional rights of young African-Americans to walk the streets with life, liberty and in the pursuit of happiness.”
A bit over the top.
* New York Times…
A federal judge ruled on Monday that the stop-and-frisk tactics of the New York Police Department violated the constitutional rights of minorities in the city, repudiating a major element in the Bloomberg administration’s crime-fighting legacy.
The use of police stops has been widely cited by city officials as a linchpin of New York’s success story in seeing murders and major crimes fall to historic lows. The police say the practice has saved the lives of thousands of young black and Hispanic men by removing thousands of guns from the streets.
But the judge, Shira A. Scheindlin, found that the Police Department resorted to a “policy of indirect racial profiling” as it increased the number of stops in minority communities. That has led to officers’ routinely stopping “blacks and Hispanics who would not have been stopped if they were white.”
* From ABC News…
In 2012, New Yorkers were stopped by police 532,911 times. In 55 percent of the cases, the suspect was black and in 10 percent of the cases, the suspect was white. In 89 percent of the cases, “the suspect was innocent,” said the NYCLU.
Similarly in 2011, 53 percent of New Yorkers who were stopped and frisked by police were black, and 9 percent were white. In 2010, 54 percent of New Yorkers who were stopped and frisked were black, and 9 percent were white.
Approximately 90 percent of New Yorkers who were stopped and frisked between 2010 and 2012 were “totally innocent,” according to the NYCLU’s analysis.
A spokesman for the NYPD reviewed the numbers the NYCLU used in its analysis and verified them against raw data the NYPD collected from every police precinct in New York City.
* The Question: Your thoughts on “stop and frisk”?
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Mell aide replaces Mell who replaced Mell
Tuesday, Aug 13, 2013 - Posted by Rich Miller
* This photo pretty much says it all…
The cutline, for those of you who don’t know who these folks are…
Michael Kasper, left, swears in Jaime Andrade as the new State Representative for the seat left vacant by Deb Mell.
“You’re in the Army now.”
Have fun with your captions.
* AP…
A onetime aide to former Chicago Alderman Dick Mell will replace his daughter in the Illinois Legislature.
Jaime Andrade Jr. will take the seat held by Deborah Mell. She left the Illinois House to replace her father on Chicago’s city council when he retired after nearly 40 years representing the ward on the northwest side.
Andrade was selected by ward committeemen to represent the 40th District. Dick Mell is still the powerful Democratic committeeman for his ward.
* Tribune…
The appointment of Jaime Andrade to the House seat vacated by Deb Mell completes a chain of succession the elder Mell first laid out shortly after announcing his plans to retire the seat he held for almost 40 years.
Andrade, 40, was Mell’s top aldermanic assistant for more than 15 years. He also works as assistant sergeant of arms for the City Council, earning more than $89,900 a year. Andrade said he will resign that post in order to fully focus on his new job. […]
Picking a Latino for the seat was viewed as an important decision for the district which, based on the 2010 federal census, is 49 percent Hispanic, 37 percent white, 9 percent Asian and 4 percent African-American.
Andrade said his heritage will help him connect with non-English-speaking members of the community but said voters in the district are highly informed and will support a candidate based on qualifications, not race.
So, the House loses an out gay legislator in Deb Mell, but it gains a Latino who favors gay marriage. Kasper’s involvement means the House is probably also gaining what will likely be a more, um, “regular” soldier than Ms. Mell was.
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Al the Pal returns to Springfield
Tuesday, Aug 13, 2013 - Posted by Rich Miller
* Sneed…
Former U.S. Sen. Alan Dixon, once a household name in Illinois, has just penned an autobiography, “The Gentleman from Illinois.”
Dixon, who lost re-election in 1992, served 43 consecutive years in elected office. He was a . . .
◆ State representative? Check.
◆ State senator? Check.
◆ State treasurer? Check.
◆ Secretary of state? Check.
◆ U.S. senator? Check.
◆ Ink spot: Dixon, who won election 30 times and suffered one defeat, will be signing books at Boone’s Saloon in Springfield on Tuesday night.
Should be an interesting crowd. I’ll be there. The Boone’s event starts at 5 o’clock this afternoon.
* From the Amazon book description…
In 1993, Alan J. Dixon’s political career came to an end with a defeat—the first one in his forty-three years of elected service. Beginning his legislative career in 1950 as a Democrat in the Illinois House of Representatives, Dixon also served in the Illinois State Senate, worked as state treasurer and secretary of state, and concluded his political career as a U.S. senator. The Gentleman from Illinois is an insider’s account of Illinois politics in the second half of the twentieth century, providing readers with fascinating stories about the people he encountered and events he participated in and witnessed during his four decades of service.
With a degree of candor often unheard of in political memoirs, The Gentleman from Illinois reveals Dixon’s abilities as a storyteller. At times chatty and self-effacing, Dixon pulls no punches when it comes to detailing the personalities of major political figures—such as Mayor Richard J. Daley, Adlai Stevenson, Paul Simon, and presidents of the United States. Indeed, he uses this same honest approach when examining himself, fully describing the setbacks and embarrassing moments that peppered his own life.
As a moderate Democrat who regularly crossed party lines in his voting and his views, Dixon also shares his thoughts on the proper way to run a government, the difficulties of passing legislation, the balancing act required to be a statewide official, and other valuable observations on local, state, and national politics. Full of behind-the-scenes insights presented in 121 short vignettes, The Gentleman from Illinois entertains as much as it informs, making it a necessary book for everyone interested in Illinois politics.
* The book has its own Facebook page as well.
* Bernie…
Back in May, Dixon talked about the book when he was in Springfield for a fundraiser hosted by Sangamon County Young Democrats to benefit a summer food program run by the Illinois Coalition for Community Services. The book’s cover picture, he noted, shows him speaking to ward committeemen in Chicago as then-Mayor Daley “sits there stroking his chin.” Dixon also made it clear that he’s really anxious for people to enjoy his stories.
On the subject of food, Dixon told the gathering one of the stories in the book: how he worked to keep $100 million for a food program in the federal budget that was on the chopping block under President RONALD REAGAN. He said he got a letter from then-Chicago Mayor HAROLD WASHINGTON asking for help. He called Washington and said, “I would be his instrument and return that money to the budget.”
In those days, he said, “one of my great friends” was then-Rep. DAN ROSTENKOWSKI, D-Chicago, chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee.
“And Rosty’s best pal was the Speaker of the House, TIP O’NEILL, and I used to go out and have an occasional drink with those guys,” Dixon said. “So I got together with them and introduced the bill to put the $100 million back in the budget. … We kicked out the money for covert assistance to the contras in Nicaragua and put in the money for food for people.”
* Check out the blurbs…
“Alan Dixon served more than forty years in elected office, and never wavered from his characteristic civility and kindness. His career is proof that a strong leader can treat even his greatest adversaries with the greatest respect.” —Richard M. Daley, former mayor of Chicago
“Here’s the good one—the book we waited 20 years for. The Gentleman from Illinois chronicles Alan Dixon’s four decades in Illinois and Washington politics, and gives us a ring side seat to the passion, intrigue, and excitement that seeking and holding public office in a state like Illinois can command. One of the state’s most revered public servants has told it all without fear or favor and we are right there with him”—Governor James R .Thompson
“Like Alan, The Gentleman from Illinois is entertaining, enlightening, and informative, and I highly recommend it.”—Sam Nunn, former U.S. senator from Georgia
Discuss.
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Today’s numbers
Tuesday, Aug 13, 2013 - Posted by Rich Miller
* From a Sun-Times editorial…
One promising proposal that will be brought to the Legislature when it reconvenes would offer prisoners at least 50 years old who have served at least 25 years an opportunity to go before the Illinois Prisoner Review Board and request parole. By no means should all these inmates be freed, but those who are ill or who have changed their behavior should be considered.
Older prisoners cost the state roughly $75,000 a year, prison reform advocates estimate, compared with the average of about $22,000.
Wow.
* The Tribune gets a bit snippy over some numbers…
The leaders of Chicago Public Schools thrilled the crowd last week with the announcement that the system will drop a raft of standardized tests beginning this school year.
Teachers have complained that standardized tests drain valuable class time and constrict what they can teach. Some parents have joined the chorus, arguing that their children spend too little time on instruction and too much time drilling for test prep. At a Chicago Tribune forum this year, schools CEO Barbara Byrd-Bennett got lots of applause when she emphatically stated that kids take too many tests.
The new move means CPS will administer 10 tests this year across all grade levels, down from 25. […]
We suppose there has been test creep, but pardon us if we don’t join the hallelujah chorus.
Test creep? It looks more like test takeover.
* SJ-R...
Gov. Pat Quinn has signed into law a bill that allows gambling winnings to be seized to pay past-due child support. The bill is effective immediately.
Under the bill, larger winnings that are required to be reported to the Internal Revenue Service on form W-2G can be seized to pay overdue child support owed by the gambler. Those winnings include things like $1,200 or more from a slot machine or $600 on a $2 bet on the horses.
* From a press release…
Thanks to a bill signed into law last week, victims of child sex abuse will now be able to obtain justice.
“As we have seen time and again, people are often well into their adult lives before they are psychologically capable of coming forward about abuse inflicted on them as children,” said State Senator John Mulroe (D-10th), the bill’s co-sponsor. “By then, the timetable may have run out, making it impossible to seek justice from abusers.”
Senate Bill 1399 removes the statute of limitations for civil actions based on childhood sexual abuse. Under former law, the statute of limitations to report childhood sexual abuse was 20 years from the date the victim recalls the abuse. The new law, which will go into effect January 1, 2014, removes the statute of limitations altogether, allowing a person to bring a civil action based on childhood sexual abuse at any time.
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Just an ordinary average guy
Tuesday, Aug 13, 2013 - Posted by Rich Miller
* Illinois Review…
GOP gubernatorial candidate Bruce Rauner will be hosting a hot dog and chips luncheon at the IL GOP”s State Fair celebration Thursday. Monday, in an email to supporters, Rauner announced he was planning to take his Harley down to the capital - something kind of unexpected by most, unless you’ve noticed Rauner arriving at a pig roast in McHenry County in late June or at a recent parade where he participated on board his Harley.
Yep. He’s just exactly like you and me, except he grew up in privilege and is now worth megabucks.
* IR also wonders whether Rauner supports ABATE by not wearing a helmet. Actually, ABATE is pro-choice on helmets. Todd Vandermyde, the group’s longtime lobster, usually wears a helmet.
Rauner with helmet…
Sans…
Captions?
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Sen. Kirk begins to reemerge
Tuesday, Aug 13, 2013 - Posted by Rich Miller
* This is good news…
U.S. Sen. Mark Kirk is making his first trip to central Illinois since his January 2012 stroke.
Kirk’s keynote appearance at Republican Day at the Illinois State Fair on Thursday will be his first major political event since he revealed his intention to run for re-election in 2016.
The Highland Park Republican was first elected to President Barack Obama’s former Senate seat in 2010 and has been influential in reshaping the party’s political strategy.
Kirk’s spokesman says the senator will not endorse anyone in the 2014 Republican primary.
…Adding… Kirk won’t be endorsing in the gubernatorial primary. Apparently, he’s keeping his options open on the other races.
Kirk is also the special guest at Comptroller Judy Baar Topinka’s annual State Fair reception.
* More…
Kirk, the Illinois GOP’s top officeholder, was first elected to President Barack Obama’s former Senate seat in 2010. Before being sidelined for nearly a year by an ischemic stroke in Jan. 2012, he played an instrumental role in reshaping the party’s political strategy, both in revamping fundraising efforts and in working with the Illinois delegation to avoid costly primary matchups, which he refers to as “red on red” warfare.
Kirk’s renewed efforts, many of which will likely be behind the scenes, come at a pivotal time as Republicans work to reclaim the governor’s mansion and win several top-tier congressional races in 2014.
“I think it’s incredibly important to our viability,” said Jack Dorgan, chairman of the Illinois Republican Party. “Any time a U.S. senator gets involved in something, people stand up and take note.”
* Kirk is also hosting a veterans’ jobs fair with Aaron Schock…
It’s billed as one of the biggest veterans events the area has seen, and the two federal lawmakers sponsoring it hope they can help hundreds throughout the region.
On Wednesday, U.S. Sen. Mark Kirk, R-Ill., and U.S. Rep. Aaron Schock, R-Peoria, are pooling their efforts for the Central Illinois Veterans Employment and Resources Fair, which they say is unlike anything. More than 150 vendors, organizations and employers will be at Bradley University’s Renaissance Coliseum.
Veterans can get free health screenings from Veterans Administration medical staff, attend breakout sessions on how to prepare a resume, how to obtain a union card and how to navigate the VA claims system.
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Where do government workers live?
Tuesday, Aug 13, 2013 - Posted by Rich Miller
* Via Greg Hinz, we have a new study of where government workers live in Illinois. A few dot points…
* Four of the ten House districts with the highest amount of public workers have Republican Representatives. Two of the ten Senate districts with the highest number of public workers have a Republican Senator.
* In the House, of the 782,212 public employees, 58 percent of are in Democratic districts and 42 percent are in Republican districts.
* In the Senate, 66% of public employees are in Democratic districts.
Keep in mind that we’re talking about all government workers, including state, federal, local, school and university. The study, which used data from the 2007-11 American Community Survey, also includes part time and temp workers.
* A full list of government workers by state legislative districts is here. Go check it out.
* An interactive state district map…
* Greg…
Some of his findings help explain why government pension reform is such a tough sell in supposedly conservative areas outside of Chicago. Others pose new questions, such as why North Side liberals tend to elect politicians who back spending that employs residents of other neighborhoods, not theirs. […]
Of the 15 Illinois House Districts that ranked highest in terms of share of the civilian workforce that was employed by government, 10 were in Downstate areas that were home to institutions such as the University of Illinois, Southern Illinois University and the like, or which had a large prison in or near the district. The other five were in black areas in southern Cook County. […]
Another question: What is the impact in black neighborhoods that already are behind the economic curve in some ways when one of the more stable sources of good jobs — government — pulls back.
* That’s a good question. Bloomberg had a story about this the other day…
Public-sector workers are [nationally] disproportionately black. In 2011, about 19 percent of black workers were employed by the government, compared with 14 percent of whites and 10 percent of Hispanics. That figure used to be even higher (21 percent in 2008-2010), but the recession and its aftermath have been hard on public-sector workers. Berkeley economist Steven Pitts has called government jobs a “pillar” of middle-class African-American life. […]
The upshot is pretty clear: Reducing the value of public pensions and other benefits wouldn’t just hurt blacks disproportionately; it would do so at a time when other economic trends have already hurt them more than most.
Discuss.
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The State Fair race is Tuesday
Monday, Aug 12, 2013 - Posted by Rich Miller
* The annual Illinois State Fair “celebrity” horse race has been moved to Tuesday this year.
The race, featuring myself and flacks from the legislative caucuses and the governor’s office will be held after tomorrow’s third official race. So, figure somewhere around one o’clock.
* It’s a whole lot of fun. The horses come so close to each other during the race that it can be a little scary at times, and they kick up a lot of mud/dirt, but I love it. The animals are so beautiful and powerful and it’s such a special treat to watch them so close up.
Here’s some video I took last year…
* Also, I’m thinking Wednesday afternoon at a beer tent for our caption contest winners. They should all contact me soon. Friday’s winner was Oswego Willy.
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Question of the day
Monday, Aug 12, 2013 - Posted by Rich Miller
* Taken as a whole, video gaming at taverns and truck stops now ranks as the second largest casino in Illinois…
As of June, there were 1,863 licensed video game establishments, but there are also at least 2,000 more applicants waiting in line.
And through the first six months of the year, the people playing the video machines across the state lost $106 million, according to Illinois Gaming Board data.
The latest list of businesses looking to get dealt in fills 170 pages on the Illinois Gaming Board’s web site.
That list of license hopefuls will surely grow if Gov. Pat Quinn allows a recently passed bill to become law. The bill adds social clubs to the list of those eligible for licenses.
* Not everybody is happy, of course…
The Illinois Church Action on Alcohol & Addiction Problems is continuing its fight against video gaming expansion, contacting local officials and communities and providing them with information about the impacts of video gambling.
“It’s because of all the harm, the increase in addiction, bankruptcy and crime,” executive director Anita Bedell said. “When you make gambling more available and accessible, then more people will be gambling, and there will be more problems.”
* The Question: Do you play video gaming machines at your local, non-casino establishments? Take the poll and then explain your answer in comments, please.
survey hosting
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* If you or your organization are sponsoring a politically related event this week at the Illinois State Fair, please e-mail me the details right away.
I’ll be publishing the list first thing tomorrow morning for subscribers, so please hurry.
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How about some answers?
Monday, Aug 12, 2013 - Posted by Rich Miller
* My weekly syndicated newspaper column…
“Ask her,” Illinois House Speaker Michael Madigan told a Sun-Times reporter last week. The journalist wanted to know why Madigan’s daughter Lisa would consider running for governor knowing that the father had no plans to step down as Speaker.
So I tried to ask her. But I didn’t get very far.
Attorney General Lisa Madigan, I was told, is still refusing to discuss in any way the “personal” conversations she had with her father leading up to her decision not to run for governor.
As you’ll recall, AG Madigan had this to say when she decided to run for reelection instead of the state’s highest office: “I feel strongly that the state would not be well served by having a governor and Speaker of the House from the same family and have never planned to run for governor if that would be the case. With Speaker Madigan planning to continue in office, I will not run for governor.”
But last week, Speaker Madigan said he had told his daughter on “several occasions” that he had no plans to step down. “She knew very well that I did not plan to retire,” he said. “She knew what my position was. She knew.”
People close to the Madigans say the polling and focus grouping always showed that the issue of her father would be a problem, but that it wasn’t an actual “deciding” issue for voters. Yes, they didn’t like the idea of a governor and a House Speaker from the same family, but they didn’t appear to be saying they would make their choice for governor based on that one thing. She would’ve won, the insiders say, regardless of what her father decided to do.
The speculation by some reporters about how the unfolding Metra scandal played a role in her decision not to run appear to be false. Her decision not to run had been made several days before the Chicago media went wall to wall freak-out over the revelation that her father was involved with a minor and aborted political patronage attempt at a mass transit agency. As if all those political hacks who sit on those mass transit agencies somehow wasn’t a tip-off that maybe politics have always been part of their operations.
Anyway, Speaker Madigan got whacked in the media for trying to influence Metra personnel decisions. Lisa Madigan announced her decision not to run for governor after her dad had been zinged for three solid days.
The timing of her decision is still quite curious, however. Why throw him under the bus on a Monday after three solid days of hugely negative press about Metra? Was she angry at his refusal to step down, or did she just not think things through? Who came up with that bright idea?
Also, did she give no thought at all to how her statement could be thrown back in her face about her current job? If being governor would be a conflict of interest as long as her father was House Speaker, then why isn’t serving as attorney general a conflict as well? If she’s really that unprepared for prime time, then maybe she made the right decision after all.
Those are just some of the questions I would’ve asked, had I been given a chance.
My main question, however, would’ve been whether Lisa Madigan really did think she could convince her father to step down. Was she that delusional? The guy ain’t going anywhere any time soon and pretty much everybody knows it.
And if she didn’t ever expect her father to retire, then did she all but lie to a whole lot of people who contributed to her campaign fund this year with the full expectation that she’d challenge Pat Quinn in a primary? I mean, it’s doubtful that many of those union leaders and prominent Democrats would’ve ponied up so much cash if they had known about her “strong” belief that her father would have to go away as a condition of her running because almost nobody would ever believe that she could pry the gavel out of his hands.
Ms. Madigan needs to stop hiding behind flimsy excuses and give this state a full explanation. The public ought to know if their attorney general all but lied to them for months.
Thoughts?
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* From a press release…
Leaders of the African American Clergy Coalition (AACC) are expressing disappointment in the LGBT’s attempted 2 million Dollar Purchase of the black community and black legislators in return for a “yes” vote on SB 10. This comes after years of racism and the lack of diversity within the Gay and Lesbian community against Black Gays and Lesbians. However with the recent setbacks on the attempted passage of SB 10 in the Illinois General Assembly, the LGBT now wants to “forget the racist past” and engage in “purchasing” the black community.
“It is mind blowing that the LGBT community has a poor track record of embracing its own Black Gay and Lesbian brothers and sisters, but now wants to purchase every African American they come across,” says Bishop Lance L. Davis, Co Chairman of the AACC.
Just two months ago, the vast majority of black legislators in the Illinois House of Representatives refused to vote” yes” on the pending Same Sex Marriage legislation(SB10). Now a renewed effort by the LGBT community is targeting the Black community in an attempt to have SB10 approved in the near future.
Davis adds “I appeal to the Illinois Legislative Black Caucus to be mindful of the LGBT’s tactics to get them to ignore the voices of their community that are strongly against SB10. This attempt to buy the black community is disrespectful and speaks to a louder issue concerning racism and the lack of respect for those minorities within the LGBT community.”
Recently, Illinois State Representative Monique Davis was quoted saying that by a ratio of 15 to 1, voters were voicing their opposition to SB10. Other African American legislators have expressed the same opposition within their respective districts.
The LGBT needs to be reminded that it cannot “buy” marriage in Illinois. They cannot “buy” the African American community and any effort to do so will work against them. They should be reminded that any effort to purchase votes of legislators in the African American community will be carefully scrutinized and any apparent violation of Illinois’s bribery laws will be reported to the appropriate law enforcement authorities for investigation.
The LGBT community continues to remain tight lipped on Trayvon Martin…..but wants to purchase the black community in the most disrespectful manner.
Um, wow.
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* Greg Hinz wondered if the gubernatorial candidates would support extending the temporary income tax hike and a graduated income tax. So he asked.
Bruce Rauner’s campaign wouldn’t clarify whether it would support extending part of the tax, but did say…
“The entire tax system needs to be reformed and the overall tax burden needs to go down to make Illinois more economically competitive and help spur job creation. Illinois needs a better-run state government, not one that continues to spend more.”
Sen. Kirk Dillard said he’d veto any tax hike and insisted on a flat tax. Sen. Bill Brady said he’d veto any income tax extension, including a partial extension.
Treasurer Dan Rutherford was somewhat more nuanced…
“I, like everyone else in Illinois, don’t want the increase to be extended or made permanent,” he says. “But if they haven’t fixed the financial problems the state has by (2015), it may need to be on the table.” […]
“I’m the only guy who’s being realistic,” he says. What I don’t know is whether Republican primary voters will buy it.
Gov. Quinn completely dodged the questions, and Bill Daley said he was against making the tax hike permanent, but favored a graduated tax…
Mr. Daley clearly would support graduating the state’s individual income tax. His spokesman says that move would “cut taxes for at least 90 percent of regular Illinoisans while asking those at the top who have done well to pay more.” He adds, “Gov. Quinn made the mistake of raising taxes (taxes that hit middle-class families hard) before they solved the pension mess. Bill says that’s like pouring water into a leaky bathtub.”
* In other news, Rutherford recently talked up some of his past success…
“Historically you can not win a state-wide race in the state of Illinois without getting 20 percent of the city of Chicago,” Rutherford said. “If you don’t get 20 you are not playing.”
During his election for treasurer in 2010, Rutherford said he received 22 percent of votes in the city of Chicago, while the Republican candidate for governor only received 18 percent.
Rutherford also stressed to his supporters that Republicans need to start embracing communities of diversity, and start making their presence known in those communities.
“The majority reason why we as Republicans faulted and faltered is because we just didn’t show up,” he said. “I think part of success is showing up.”
Keep in mind that Bill Brady was heavily attacked in the Chicago media market for being out of step with the area’s values, while Rutherford’s opponent barely laid a glove on him. However, Rutherford’s opponent was a black female, so that’s something.
* Sen. Dillard also talked up his past…
Dillard, who is Assistant Senate Republican Leader, said he is a conservative reformer in the General Assembly who never voted for a tax increase.
“I am tested, I am proven,” Dillard said. “I also once ran [the office] of the last clean competent governor of Illinois, Jim Edgar … I care about the future of this state greatly … We inherited a $1 billion deficit and left a $1.5 billion surplus when I was there, running the Edgar administration. We paid our bills in 17 days and we had an unemployment rate below the national average … Wall Street increased our credit rating during that administration for the first time in state history.”
Dillard said he has a track record of being able to make a Democratic-led legislature do things not in its DNA, ” to live within its means.”
Dillar said during the Edgar administration, “We made Michael Madigan the minority leader and we can do it again.” Madigan is the state’s majority leader.
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Simon officiating at “mock gay marriages”
Monday, Aug 12, 2013 - Posted by Rich Miller
* AP…
Lt. Gov. Sheila Simon and Congressman Mike Quigley are officiating mock same-sex weddings during a festival in one of Chicago’s gay neighborhoods. […]
Simon attended Northalsted Market Days Sunday. She says the idea is to illustrate the commitment of same-sex couples. Quigley performed about one dozen ceremonies Saturday. He says it’s to draw attention to the fact that Illinois doesn’t have same-sex marriage.
The Lesbian and Gay Bar Association of Chicago also participated.
* Simon posted a photo of one of the mock marriages on her campaign’s Facebook page…
One of the more interesting things about this comptroller’s race is that if Sheila Simon wins the Democratic primary, her Republican opponent Judy Baar Topinka also strongly favors gay marriage. It doesn’t really impact the way state checks are cut, but an important electoral constituency will have an interesting choice to make.
* And it’s becoming clear that the incumbent doesn’t much care for her new opponent…
Illinois Comptroller Judy Baar Topinka said her opponent in the upcoming race for comptroller does not understand the role of the office.
“According to her, we’re supposed to go out there and ferret out crime, and we sound like junior G-Men,” Topinka said.”Well, I’ll give her a junior G-Man badge and she can run around with that. But that’s not what we do, and that’s not what the law says we do. SO I suggest she reads what the law is so she knows what the office does. We really put a lot of time and effort, and she wants to make it into Attorney General Lite.”
Topinka said Attorney General was Simon’s original goal, but she has turned to the office of Comptroller when those plans fell through.
“She wanted to be Attorney General, she told everybody that,” Topinka said. “She said that if Lisa Madigan ran for Governor, she was going to run for Attorney General because she is a lawyer and she wanted to be Attorney General. But when Lisa wouldn’t run and held up that position, she’s now looking at comptroller as a consolation prize. We’ll I’ve got to tell you, we hold this place together, this is not a consolation prize.”
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Hey, AT&T! What is this? 1997?
Monday, Aug 12, 2013 - Posted by Rich Miller
* I spent several hours at the Illinois State Fair over the weekend. The grounds looked great and we had a fantastic time, except for one problem.
Both days, after 5 o’clock in the afternoon, AT&T’s mobile phone service wouldn’t work. Calls in or out were sporadic at best, and texts took numerous attempts to work, if ever. Internet? Fugetaboutit. And when the nightly concert started, everything completely shut down. No calls, no texts, no nothing.
The AT&T system was obviously totally overloaded.
* My friends who use other carriers said they had no problems at all. It was just AT&T, so there’s no excuse for the giant corporation’s lousy service.
* I missed a chance to meet up with some folks. While a serious bummer and extremely frustrating at the time, it wasn’t a huge deal, I suppose.
But what about the kids who needed to reach their parents, or parents who needed to arrange a time and place to pick up their children? Pay phones? Yeah, right. This is 2013. There are no pay phones. We’re supposed to have cellular service now.
* I’ve been meaning to download the SJ-R’s State Fair iPhone app. It looks pretty good. But I’m glad I didn’t get it because I would’ve been even more frustrated.
Yes, people talk and text on their mobile phones way too much, but, whatever. They pay good money for the service and they have a right to expect that they can use their expensive communications devices at large annual events, where people get separated all the time.
Fix this, please.
Thanks.
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Don’t underestimate Rauner
Monday, Aug 12, 2013 - Posted by Rich Miller
* I’ve spoken with Bruce Rauner in a smallish, private setting, and he was pretty good one-on-one, but he may have improved his skills. Our frequent commenter OneMan was at a fundraiser over the weekend and watched Rauner in action…
I have to say he really seemed to know what he was doing when it came to working a crowd at a lower priced ticket event.
I don’t know if it was the listening tour, his consultants or whatever, but even when he talked to the dude with a serious skin condition wearing a Joe Walsh t-shirt, he seemed to be able to speak with an ease that, to be blunt, I have never seen from a rich guy candidate before (even better than Jack Ryan). He seemed more comfortable (or at least more relaxed) than Dillard.
Still don’t think I will vote for him, but I am starting to think he shouldn’t be underestimated.
I don’t disagree at all.
* Speaking of Rauner…
According to the Illinois State Board of Elections, Rauner has the top two largest expenditures thus far in 2013. All told, he spent $749,205 on two ad buys in June alone.
By comparison, Gov. Pat Quinn spent the second biggest chunk of change among the six gubernatorial candidates — $15,599 for a poll.
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Bobby or Pamela? You decide
Monday, Aug 12, 2013 - Posted by Rich Miller
* My Sun-Times column has been moved to Sundays…
Last March, the president of the influential and heavily corporate CEO-populated Civic Committee of the Commercial Club of Chicago told a long and involved story.
The tale was about how he and some members of his group had tried to browbeat the New York credit ratings agencies into lowering Illinois’ bond ratings. The ratings hadn’t yet plummeted to where they are now, so the idea was to use ratings cuts to put pressure on Illinois to enact a tough pension-reform law that drastically reduced benefits for current and future public employee retirees.
There were a “couple” of interactions on the phone, he told his Union League Club audience, and “in one case it was in person.”
“How in the hell can you guys do this?” Ty Fahner summed up the gist of the argument made to the ratings agencies. “You’re an enabler to let the state continue.”
Fahner said he believed the calls had stopped because, he said, he and the Civic Committee members “don’t want to be the straw that breaks the back.”
He also appeared to take some credit for the ratings downgrades. “But if you watch what happened over the last few years, it’s been steadily down. Before that, it’s been the blind eye.”
But then, after I’d written about his speech in the Sun-Times and on my CapitolFax.com website, Fahner wrote me to say he made it all up.
“You gotta be kidding me,” was my initial reaction after I read his e-mail to me last week. That was a pretty darned complicated story to just invent on the fly.
“I misspoke,” Fahner wrote. “I didn’t call the ratings agencies, nor did any of our Civic Committee staff.” He later clarified that he knew of nobody at the Civic Committee who had ever “contacted the rating agencies to urge Illinois be downgraded or for any other reason.”
Yep. It was all just a fantasy, kinda like that time on “Dallas” when Patrick Duffy’s character Bobby Ewing was killed off and then Duffy decided a few months later that he wanted to return to the show, so the producers announced that the entire season had just been a bad dream by Pamela Ewing, Bobby’s wife, played by Victoria Principal.
I’m not sure if Fahner is Bobby Ewing or Pamela, but Fahner’s comments had definitely become a nightmare.
Fahner’s law firm currently has a contract worth as much as $2 million to — irony of all ironies — handle the state of Illinois’ bond work. So, if Fahner was telling the truth back in March, he was boasting about advocating against one of his firm’s big clients. Also, the current chairman of Fahner’s law firm is a Civic Committee member. Not to mention that many of the big financial CEOs who are Civic Committee members run companies that do lots of Illinois bond business.
Fahner is no average Joe. He is a former Illinois attorney general. The Civic Committee he runs is loaded with corporate titans. The guy has clout.
A pension-reform bill that Fahner wholeheartedly supported could’ve passed months ago, but Fahner refused to agree to a compromise. Senate President John Cullerton offered to construct a bill that would allow Fahner’s more draconian pension reforms to take effect, but if the courts struck the language down as unconstitutional, then Cullerton’s rival proposal would kick in.
In perhaps the most frustrating moment during the three long years of agonizing pension-reform battles, Fahner’s opposition pulled Senate Republicans off the bill, which doomed it to failure.
And here we sit today with nothing. No pension reform. Nothing.
Thanks, Ty.
Pleasant dreams.
Discuss.
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Oscar needs a job title
Friday, Aug 9, 2013 - Posted by Rich Miller
* So I thought about zipping over to the State Fair this afternoon to get my media credentials and maybe have a lemon shakeup, but then I saw this…
NO PETS ALLOWED
Pets are not allowed in public areas of the fairgrounds during the State Fair. Animals used for assistance to disabled persons, authorized competitive exhibits, shows or demonstrations at the State Fair or other approved purposes will be allowed.
Oscar the Puppy was in a kennel for a couple days this week so I just can’t stand to leave him behind today.
I was thinking maybe I should “hire” him as a special State Fair Capitol Fax intern or something. Any ideas for his official title?
* I haven’t posted a picture of Oscar in a while. He was so tuckered out after his stay at the kennel that he slept most of yesterday. Here he is in his favorite outdoor spot, under a chair at the table where I do laptop blogging.,..
* His friend Katie came over last night with her daddy Grant. Here are Oscar and Katie taking a break from running around…
* And here he is this afternoon. The little guy really needs a haircut…
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Question of the day
Friday, Aug 9, 2013 - Posted by Rich Miller
* Michael Sneed…
Sneed hears Mayor Rahm Emanuel is in a twist over who he wants to be the next governor of Illinois.
Sneed is told:
◆ Rahm is indebted to Dem gubernatorial hopeful Bill Daley, who helped convince his brother, Mayor Richie Daley, to retire, and helped engineer Rahm’s transition into the office.
◆ Rahm is not a big booster of Gov. Pat Quinn winning re-election.
◆ Rahm is this/close to GOP gubernatorial hopeful Bruce Rauner, and their families have been known to spend holiday time together.
◆ Translation: A top source inside the Dem party tells Sneed: “Rahm’s candidate is really Rauner. He’ll never publicly back him. . . he’s a party guy. But, in his heart. . .”
I believe she’s probably right.
* The Question: Do you think Mayor Emanuel will ever endorse either one of those two? Take the poll and then explain your answer in comments, please.
survey tool
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Bad move
Friday, Aug 9, 2013 - Posted by Rich Miller
* I’ve never met Treasurer Dan Rutherford’s press aide, but this is definitely a case study in how not to handle the Statehouse press corps…
Don’t do that again. Seriously. Maybe you can get away with that when you’re dealing with local yokels, but not here. Deal with it.
Luckily for him, Rutherford decided to ignore his aide and agreed to answer the question, basically repeating what he recently told the Windy City Times.
* Meanwhile, Comptroller Judy Baar Topinka was her usually colorful self yesterday, gleefully blasting away at her Democratic opponent Sheila Simon and, um, over-answering some questions. Make sure to watch…
Heh.
Both videos courtesy of our good friends at BlueRoomStream.com.
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* Watchdog.org is run by the Franklin Center for Government and Public Integrity. The Franklin Center is not happy these days with Sen. Durbin…
U.S. Sen. Richard “Dick” Durbin has some questions for Watchdog’s parent organization, asking who we know, what we know, and when we knew it.
In a letter to the Franklin Center for Government and Public Integrity, Durbin asks the nonprofit news organization whether it has given money to or ever been affiliated with the American Legislative Exchange Council, the model legislation think tank that liberals — and journalism experts like Durbin — love to hate.
“What is it he thinks he’s doing here?” asks Jason Stverak, president of the Franklin Center. “Does he think he has the authority to oversee state legislatures? Is it his job to tell citizens and groups what sort of policies they may advocate? What about tracking down all the members of that group?
“Why not just ask it: are we now or have we ever been members of the American Legislative Exchange Council?” […]
Watchdog intends to ask some questions of its own – specifically whether his letter was inspired by anti-ALEC activists meeting with the senator or his staff, and whether his staff coordinated the release of the letter with ALEC opponents.
* In a somewhat “straight” news story, the same Watchdog.org reporter actually asked about financial ties…
A Franklin Center board member does sit on ALEC’s board of directors, a fact noted on Franklin’s website. But to Durbin’s inquiries, Stverak otherwise responds: “It’s none of his business.”
* And then Illinois Watchdog.org ran a story about a big Chicago protest at yesterday’s ALEC opener…
The same old protestors showed up, but this time they were protesting a new boogeyman. And many among the Illinois demonstrators weren’t sure what it was.
A large crowd of union members and the professionally outraged (kids and older people bussed to the rally) marched to oppose The American Legislative Exchange Council, a group meeting this week at the Hilton Palmer House hotel.
ALEC brings local officials and business leaders together to discuss smaller government and freer markets. But to hear protestors on the street tell it, ALEC is responsible for not only conservative legislation, but all manner of evils.
It’s a free country, they can say what they want and payback can be brutal. Also, I agree with the Tribune that Durbin has crossed a line here. But, wow, that stuff sure is blatant for a supposedly “independent” news outlet. From Watchdog.org’s “About” page…
Our established investigative journalists and capitol news reporters across the country are doing what legacy journalism outlets prove unable to do: share information, dive deep into investigations, and provide the fourth estate that has begun to fade in recent decades. By enhancing communication between reporters and providing a forum for published journalism, Watchdog.org promotes a vibrant, well-informed electorate and a more transparent government. […]
Franklin Center is not responsible for the information that appears on the Watchdog.org sites.
* Anyway, from the AP coverage…
As meeting participants handed out awards and dined at a meal sponsored by the Texas Oil and Gas Association, picketers denouncing “corporate greed” paced the sidewalks and
The conservative organization’s 40th annual meeting comes as it is experiencing increased influence due to a growth in Republican-led legislatures and enhanced opposition from liberal-leaning groups that have successfully persuaded some corporations to drop their support of the council. Businesses provide the bulk of the financing for the association, and industry officials serve with lawmakers on closed-door, issue-oriented task forces that develop model legislation for states.
The organization has more than 600 current model bills spanning a full range of issues, from accountability in government to zoning regulations.
“ALEC is about helping public policymakers look at issues from all different sides — to gather information, to gather research,” said Republican Oklahoma Gov. Mary Fallin, a former lawmaker who delivered the group’s keynote address Thursday after being honored with its Thomas Jefferson Freedom Award.
* Common Cause Illinois executive director Rey López-Calderón talked about ALEC in Illinois…
ALEC doesn’t publicly disclose its members, but López-Calderón named two Illinois legislators as key members of ALEC. One of them is Republican Sen. Kirk Dillard, who López-Calderón called one of the most active legislators in ALEC in the state. Another is Republican Rep. Renee Kosel, said López-Calderón.
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Caption contest!
Friday, Aug 9, 2013 - Posted by Rich Miller
* Dave Dahl with the Illinois Radio Network is by far one of my favorite Statehouse characters. I love his pithy questions, which often make politicians uncomfortable in a very funny way. And check out Dave’s State Fair style, displayed yesterday during the parade as reporters questioned Treasurer Dan Rutherford…
Gotta love the beard.
Try to be gentle on my buddy, but the funniest commenter wins a free State Fair beverage with yours truly.
* Yesterday’s winner was 47th Ward…
Governor Quinn shares a moment with White Sox great Carlton Fisk shortly before naming the Hall of Fame catcher to the CTA board.
Aides were too frightened to explain the mistaken identity to the Governor. “Carlton is one of the Governor’s heros,” said a Quinn aide who asked to remain anonymous. “We didn’t have the heart to break it to him, so we all kind of went with it. None of us saw the Metra mess coming.”
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*** UPDATED x1 *** Paranoia will destroy ‘ya
Friday, Aug 9, 2013 - Posted by Rich Miller
* The “American Thinker” ran a piece this week entitled “Destroying Football: The Left’s Endgame”…
It is in this current climate of pacifism (and that is the purpose of the campaign: to turn football into a more pacific game, thus removing another layer of America’s masculinity) that Illinois Governor Pat Quinn has signed a law mandating insurance for student-athletes. […]
Even more distressing to the left is that sports started as a means of training for soldiers. That is why football is so appealing to America; it is a he-man sport, a vestige of the old America, where an association of free men stand together in battle. Yes, team effort is required, but there is also plenty of room for heroics, and the individual may make a huge difference.
But at football’s core is a physicality bordering on violence, and to the left, that is anathema — an atavistic impulse that must be squeezed out of our children.
So instead of a healthy game of tackle football at recess, liberals substitute Ritalin and maybe a good heated game of tag. […]
In the end, liberals want a world under their control — one where impulses are channeled in the direction they choose, not where nature or free will directs. Sports are an expression of values, and those values must comport with the utopian vision of the left. There can be nothing outside the collective.
This piece is an object lesson in never, ever letting ideology get in the way of the facts.
* The legislation in question was sponsored by state Sen. Napoleon Harris, a former National Football League star. Harris is a moderate to conservative Democrat on social issues and was able to get other NFL players involved in passing the bill…
Harris, a former Thornton Township High School football player who went on to play in the National Football League, recalled his own playing days.
“Rocky Clark’s story could have been me,” Harris said. “I waked down this trail. I played on this field. I know what it’s like to sacrifice yourself on a Friday night or a Saturday morning.”
Also praising the law were former Chicago Bears tight end Emery Moorehead and offensive lineman Dan Jiggetts.
“This situation should not exist where you send your child out to participate and he gets tragically injured and you’ve got to fight the battle all by yourself,” Jiggetts said. “This certainly helps a great deal to … make this right within this state.”
Why did Sen. Harris sponsor the bill? This is why…
The law was inspired by the late Rasul “Rocky” Clark, who played football for Eisenhower High School in the Chicago suburb Blue Island until he was paralyzed from the neck down when he was tackled in 2000 during a game. His care was provided through a $5 million insurance policy held by the school district. When that policy hit its limit, he relied on Medicaid, his mother and donations.
And then he died.
More…
In a September 2000 game against Oak Forest High School, the junior was grabbed by the shoulders and tackled, and his head hit the ground. Doctors said his neck was broken in two places. Clark was hospitalized for several months and the injuries left him a quadriplegic. Despite his injuries, he later graduated from Eisenhower.
Those last two excerpts were in a story that the “American Thinker” writer actually linked to in his post, but the facts were never cited.
* A summary of the new law…
Known as “Rocky’s Law,” it requires all high school districts in Illinois to purchase catastrophic injury insurance up to $3 million for each of its student-athletes by Jan. 1, 2014. Families are eligible for the money up to five years after paying the first $50,000 in medical expenses. According to the law, insurance cannot cost more than $5 per student and it is up to the school districts to pay for the insurance.
*** UPDATE *** A commenter below is absolutely right that I should’ve also pointed out the bipartisan support for Sen. Harris’ bill. Republican gubernatorial candidate Bill Brady - who is hardly involved in an international liberal conspiracy - was a co-sponsor, as was GOP state Rep. David Harris.
The bill received a strongly bipartisan 47 votes in the Senate and 71 in the House.
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No Democratic rally likely at State Fair
Friday, Aug 9, 2013 - Posted by Rich Miller
* I told subscribers about this several days ago…
The state fair got its start Thursday night with the Twilight parade through the north end of the capital city. It’s an annual tradition. But indications are that another tradition, a Democratic party rally, will not continue this year. […]
[Gov. Pat Quinn’s] big day at the ten-day state fair is Wednesday - Governor’s Day.
Traditionally, it’s a time for lawmakers and candidates from the Governor’s party to rally - so in this case, the Democrats.
But not this year.
“Going to the fair in the afternoon should be about kids and family and fun.” [Quinn told reporters.]
Quinn denies that the change is because Illinois Democrats are so fractured.
“Fractured” is definitely a word for it. Quinn has a serious primary challenger in Bill Daley, who obviously can’t be allowed on stage. Quinn’s own lt. governor won’t endorse his reelection bid. US Sen. Dick Durbin, who is up for reelection next year and would usually be expected to speak at the annual rally, says he’s not endorsing anyone in the governor’s race, either.
Then there’s the lawsuit filed against Quinn by the state’s two Democratic legislative leaders.
Fractured, indeed.
* I never hide the fact that I love the State Fair. Back when I was a 4-H kid in Iroquois County’s Milks Grove Township, we looked at the State Fair as the “big show.” You do well in your county competition then move up. I made it to the big show once, as an emcee for the “Share the Fun” contest, which was basically skits, often musical, performed by local clubs. I missed out on a ticket to the State Fair another time when - my granddad was convinced - somebody cheated by entering an ineligible steer. It might sound funny now, but, trust me, it wasn’t so funny back then.
* The governor loves the State Fair as well…
* From a Quinn press release…
New features at this year’s fair include the Budweiser Clydesdales, who will parade through the fairgrounds every day at 4 p.m. and stay in the Gate 2 area the rest of the day; the Happy Hollow “Concert on the Hill” series, live at 5:30 p.m. daily; the Conservation World “Puddle Duck” races August 17 that challenge kids to make and race their own toy boats; a CrossFit team competition August 10; and the return of the popular Cheer Classic cheerleading competition August 17.
This year’s Grandstand concert lineup includes Billy Currington, REO Speedwagon, Styx, John Mayer, The Band Perry, Toby Keith, Ke$ha, and Journey. The Grandstand will feature two free concerts as well, one by New Odyssey and the Illinois Army National Guard 144th Army Band August 12 and another by local high school show choirs August 15. The fair also offers a wide variety of free entertainment – from magic shows to musical acts – on 14 stages throughout the fairgrounds.
I’m hoping to see The Band Perry, Toby Keith, Billy Currington and John Mayer. All good.
You?
* I’ll also be checking this out…
For the third year in a row the [Rolling Meadows Brewery], based on a family farm just outside of Springfield, will have their flagship beers available including: Springfield Wheat, Lincoln’s Lager and their award-winning Abe’s Ale.
You can buy 22 oz bombers of each, to-go, for $8 apiece, get a full pour on tap for $4 or get a sample of one — or all three — for $1 each.
Rolling Meadows is on Central Avenue, across from the Miller Tent and Food-A-Rama, at the Illinois Wine Experience tent.
Lincoln’s Lager is excellent stuff.
* Of course, no State Fair visit would be complete without the butter cow, which is still under construction and will be finished during the fair…
* Last night was the Twilight Parade, the annual event which opens the Fair. Treasurer Dan Rutherford was there…
* As always, state Sen. Andy Manar had a big crew…
* From a photo posted by Sen. Kirk Dillard…
Dude, please do something about that sign. “Lard” may not be the message you intend to send, but it’s becoming the received message.
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* Kate Grossman is a member of the Sun-Times editorial board. Her blog post about Ty Fahner is spot on and looks like it was written as an actual editorial. Obviously, I wish it had made it into the paper…
“Regarding my comments at the Union League Club in March, I misspoke,” Fahner wrote to Miller. “First, while I may have said so, I didn’t call the ratings agencies, nor did any of our Civic Committee staff. My response to the questions was very confusing and inarticulate.”
I reached out to Fahner on Thursday but didn’t hear back.
Perhaps Fahner was exaggerating before the Union League Club. Perhaps he did make the calls and now he realizes how that looks in the light of day.
Here’s what really matters: Fahner clearly thought this was a good idea — and on that we strongly disagree.
We get the impulse. We’re as frustrated as anyone with state lawmaker’s inaction on pension reform and are always looking for a way to light a spark.
But deliberately putting your own state at risk — even if it’s a means to a more positive end — borders on traitorous.
If the Civic Committee did reach out to credit agencies, it was behind closed doors, with no public say or input. Even more importantly, the public pays for those downgrades with its tax dollars.
In his Union League comments, Fahner made clear he was trying to be responsible. Fahner said he and his colleagues backed off their push with the rating agencies because they didn’t want “to be the straw that breaks the back….We’d done all we could on that that is responsible…it would be irresponsible for the biggest employers in the state – which is who the civic committee is … - to go and basically inflict that on the people that work for them. So we’re trying to work the political process.”
We’re glad to hear they struggled with this — whatever it is they did or didn’t do.
But the bottom line remains the same: these means do not justify the ends.
Exactly right.
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So, he’s a reformer now?
Friday, Aug 9, 2013 - Posted by Rich Miller
* Buried deep in Rick Pearson’s must-read story about Bill Daley attacking Gov. Pat Quinn over, of all things, political patronage, is this nugget…
…the first Mayor Daley hired a firm to inspect parking meters for the city, which quickly decided to buy its insurance from a brokerage newly formed by Bill and John Daley.
* Dan Mihalopoulos has more…
Court testimony in one of the federal corruption cases that effectively dismantled Richard M. Daley’s political machine indicated that Bill Daley did not merely know what was being done for his brother’s sake. In the 2009 trial of the top Streets and San man Al Sanchez, the feds put a witness on the stand who said he saw Bill Daley take a hands-on role in helping his brother rebuild their father’s machine.
Under a grant of immunity, former city employee Roberto Medina told jurors he was at a meeting in the early 1990s in which Bill Daley and others directed him to form the North Side branch of the Hispanic Democratic Organization, whose best campaign workers got a leg up in the City Hall hiring process.
At the time, Bill Daley told me he had “no memory” of the witness, but added, “I’m not saying I didn’t meet him. Everybody meets a lot of people in politics.”
He also denied knowing how clout influenced hiring before throwing out another little caveat: “Times were different. You’re talking about 20 years ago. Even if it happened — and I’m not saying it did — things were different. There was nothing illegal about that stuff.”
* Daley, though, insists he’s a changed man. Back to Pearson’s piece…
“I’m standing here as my own person. You can make judgments about past administrations or relatives or whatever you want, but I’m telling you what I believe and how I’ll be as a leader,” said Daley, who called on the Illinois Senate to vote down the appointment if Quinn refuses to pull Zuccarelli’s name from consideration.
“This is the 21st century. This is not the 1950s. This is not 50, 40 years ago. This is the time when leaders have to step forward and do things differently,” he added. […]
“Some people may say, ‘Well, this is different for a Daley to do.’ But maybe people learn that I’m not what they think I am or what they think I would be,” Daley said. In another twist, Daley indicated that he might not seek the endorsement of Democratic county slate-makers, a ritual that his father once controlled with an iron fist.
He “might not seek” the county party’s endorsement probably because he’s either trying to convince the party to not slate or to delay a slating vote or because he figures Quinn will win it anyway.
* This is not the first time the tables have been turned on Pat Quinn the outsider reformer. Here’s a March, 1996 Tom Hardy piece from that year’s US Senate Democratic primary race which pitted Quinn against Dick Durbin…
During Democrat Pat Quinn’s 20 years in politics and throughout his numerous campaigns for public office, his calling card has been that of an outsider, a populist who speaks for the average citizen and doesn’t kowtow to special interests.
Pat Quinn puts the pop back into populism, he often says of himself.
Yet the sound we’ve heard from Pat the Populist this year is more of a fizzle.
To gauge just how far this unconventional, once-promising politician has fallen, look beyond the startling poll data that shows Quinn trailing U.S. Rep. Richard Durbin by a virtually insurmountable 22 percentage points in their U.S. Senate primary race.
You find that not only has Durbin’s heavy TV advertising erased the enormous advantage that Quinn, a former state treasurer, enjoyed in name recognition, but that it also usurped Quinn’s greatest political asset.
It is Durbin, not Quinn, who is considered to be more of a political outsider and more in touch with average people, according to the results of a new Tribune poll. This must have Durbin’s image mavens and the Democratic regulars who despise Quinn for his sanctimony doubled over with laughter.
* Meanwhile, Mark Brown talked to Frank Zuccarelli yesterday…
Zuccarelli said the CTA appointment grew out of him telling Quinn “I was looking for another position because I was leaving the [Cook County] Employee Appeals Board.”
Asked why he wanted a second government job, Zuccarelli said: “Because I’ve always been interested in working simultaneously. Since I was fifteen years old, I’ve had more than one position.”
“And I think my position at the township adds some, not only credibility, but my ability to understand the needs of the transportation requirements of the people who live out here in the south suburbs,” he added.
Zucccarelli said he was unaware of the law prohibiting most state and local elected officials and employees from serving on the transit board when he sought a position through the governor’s office. That law does not specifically address township officials.
He said he had mentioned his interest in transportation to the governor’s office, but it was the governor’s staff that suggested the spot on the CTA Board. The part-time position pays $25,000 annually. The Thornton Township website reports Zuccarelli’s total compensation as supervisor at $186,418. He also is the unpaid chairman of South Suburban College.
Asked if he would consider foregoing the CTA salary, Zuccarelli said: “At this point, I’m taking the money. I’ve been in public service for 35 years, and I’ve got about four or five more years left and I’m looking to retire. And I don’t have anything in savings. So at this point I’m not interested in really thinking about giving back the salary.”
Discuss.
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