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Caption contest!

Wednesday, Nov 7, 2012 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Some friends of mine are at the Field Museum today and suggested this pic for a post…

Seems appropriate for the internal GOP bloodletting that’s almost surely headed our way.

  63 Comments      


Fun with numbers

Wednesday, Nov 7, 2012 - Posted by Rich Miller

* From 12:45 this morning…

Dr. David Gill’s campaign manager Sherry Greenberg issued the following statement on the current status of the congressional race in Illinois 13th District:

“Rodney Davis jumped the gun and gave a premature victory speech in Taylorville less than an hour ago. In a campaign marred by lies and distortions, Mr. Davis continued his strategy of misleading the voters.

From what we now know from our discussions with county clerks’ offices, there are a significant number of ballots still outstanding in Macon County. We believe we need to keep counting ballots.

Dr. Gill intends to speak to supporters when the results from these remaining 9 precincts have been reported by election officials. The voters of the 13th Congressional District deserve nothing less. “

* From about 11:30 this morning…

IL 13 Outcome Still Uncertain
Central Illinois Congressional Race Is One of the Closest in the Nation

Gill for Congress campaign manager Sherry Greenberg issued the following statement this morning after Macon County tallies for all precincts were reported by the County Clerk’s office.

“The results from Macon County prove this is one of the tightest congressional races in the nation. Rodney Davis currently leads David Gill by less than half a percentage point districtwide. Dr. Gill is getting some much-needed rest and spending time with his family today while we explore all the legal options available to the campaign to ensure there was a full and fair count of every ballot cast. Today, we will be looking at the impact of provisional ballots on the totals and working to ensure that no one who tried to vote in this election was left out.”

The AP shows Davis leading Gill by 1,287 votes.

* Now, let’s go back a few months, to the day after the March, 2012 primary

Though Bloomington physician David Gill has claimed victory in the Democratic 13th Congressional District primary, opponent Matt Goetten said he is waiting for all the absentee votes to be counted.

Unofficial totals have Gill with 15,507 votes to Goetten’s 15,364 votes.

Macoupin County made up the last 61 precincts to come in after 4 a.m. Wednesday. Goetten, who is Greene County state’s attorney, won the county handily with 2,144 votes to Gill’s 1,262.

It apparently wasn’t enough to overcome Gill’s margin, but absentee ballots mailed on time can be counted up to 14 days after the election.

The victor will face U.S. Rep. Tim Johnson, an Urbana Republican, who easily won the Republican primary Tuesday.

Gill said Wednesday morning that he wasn’t sure how many absentee ballots were out there. “In talking with a couple of people who have been through this stuff before; 143 (votes) is a lot to make up,” he said. [Emphasis added]

So, 143 votes is “a lot to make up,” but 1,287 votes isn’t?

It’s probably time to concede.

  24 Comments      


Pension amendment fails

Wednesday, Nov 7, 2012 - Posted by Rich Miller

* For a constitutional amendment to succeed in Illinois, it has to get at least 60 percent of the votes or support from 50 percent of all the people who vote. About 5 million people voted in Illinois, so the proposed pension reform amendment failed on both fronts

Yes 2,213,269 votes 55.9%
No 1,748,601 votes 44.1%
92% of precincts reporting

The amendment would’ve required a three-fifths super-majority in both chambers of the General Assembly before a pension increase could be approved.

* More

Some voters seemed confused by the wording of the ballot measure Tuesday, uncertain whether a “yes” vote represented support for public employees or support for fiscal restraint.

But other voters said they felt well informed on the issue.

In Springfield, Lynn McClanahan, 42, a retail grocery manager, said she voted yes because she doesn’t believe public workers should be entitled to more benefits than other workers.

“We all work hard and we should all share the burden together,” McClanahan said.

But 67-year-old John Taylor of Chicago voted against the amendment because his wife is a retired teacher. He said he doesn’t understand why a “supermajority” should be needed to increase benefits.

* This story is from October 30th. I didn’t see any of these ads. Did you?

State and national labor unions are cranking up the fundraising in an attempt to kill a proposed change to the Illinois Constitution.

Members of the We Are One coalition, originally formed to stop legislative efforts to overhaul the state’s massively underfunded employee retirement systems, created a special campaign committee last week and raised more than $500,000 in just a matter of days.

The money is fueling an advertising campaign aimed at convincing Illinoisans to vote “no” on the constitutional amendment question that leads off the Nov. 6 ballot.

  23 Comments      


Question of the day

Wednesday, Nov 7, 2012 - Posted by Rich Miller

* From your own perspective, which of yesterday’s electoral outcomes was the biggest surprise? Explain, please.

  52 Comments      


The stain on the Democrats’ big night

Wednesday, Nov 7, 2012 - Posted by Rich Miller

* The Democrats won more races yesterday than they thought they would, many by a larger amount than they ever dreamed possible. Yet, there was this

Former state Democratic Rep. Derrick Smith, booted from his House seat in August because of a federal bribery charge, won back his post with 62 percent of the vote over a candidate the Democrats wanted to replace him.

The Illinois Constitution precludes kicking Smith out more than once for the same offense.

Smith has pleaded not guilty to an allegation that he accepted a $7,000 bribe in exchange for political support in favor of a grant application. Although expelled from the House, he refused to leave the ballot and easily defeated the Democrats’ pick, 10th District Unity candidate Lance Tyson, who has worked for former Chicago Mayor Richard Daley and former Cook County Board President Todd Stroger.

“No one’s really talking about it, and they’re just saying, ‘You’re innocent until proven guilty,’” Smith said during a visit to a west-side Chicago polling place. “I’ve been talking to my lawyer continually to try to expedite it so I can clear my name.”

The Illinois Constitution prohibits the House from kicking Smith out again for the same reason. So, they can either come up with another reason or just let him sit there until he’s either convicted or acquitted.

And then there’s Secretary of State Jesse White, who had Smith appointed to the House and then failed to implement any sort of early plan to defeat Smith at the polls. The Lance Tyson campaign simply didn’t get off the ground early enough. Maybe it would’ve never worked. It’s very possible, even probable, that Tyson was doomed from the start. But the slapdash, late-entry nature of his campaign didn’t do him any favors. White is a ward guy. He should’ve known that this would take time to put together.

And there’s Speaker Madigan, who didn’t do much, if anything, to help Tyson.

* The biggest culprit here is Smith, of course. Nobody else can be blamed for his arrest and indictment for allegedly accepting a cash bribe. White didn’t know that Smith would go on the take. Neither did Madigan.

Smith becomes the second House member in a century to be kicked out of the chamber, only to win the seat back in an election. When Rod Blagojevich was impeached and then convicted and removed, the Constitution forbade him from ever running again for state office. I’d hate to change a Constitution just because of one bad guy, and the last person to reclaim his seat was booted for purely political reasons, so there’s that.

So, I guess I’m wondering what your thoughts are today.

  26 Comments      


It ain’t just the map and it ain’t just Obama

Wednesday, Nov 7, 2012 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Tribune editorial board

Two years ago, when voters nationwide delivered a stinging rebuke to a Democratic president and his party, the state of Illinois was a deep blue outlier: Not even the lingering scent of the Rod Blagojevich scandal could cost Democrats the governorship or either chamber in the General Assembly.

That left House Speaker Michael Madigan and Senate President John Cullerton to parlay their clout into new district maps intended to solidify their majorities.

* Sun-Times

Tuesday’s election results represented what one GOP strategist late Tuesday soberly called “a bloodbath for Illinois Republicans” at the Statehouse.

With the defeat of four House Republican incumbents and a net gain of seven seats, House Speaker Michael Madigan (D-Chicago) secured a 71-47 veto-proof majority in the Illinois House.

The results were similar — and more historic — in the Senate for Senate President John Cullerton (D-Chicago), who picked up a net gain of five seats, giving him a 40-19 veto-proof majority.

Those stunning gains also figure to weaken Democratic Gov. Pat Quinn, who no longer will have the capability of singlehandedly blocking legislation with his veto pen.

“The map the Democrats drew performed as they designed,” said Patty Schuh, a spokeswoman for Senate Minority Leader Christine Radogno (R-Lemont).

The effect of the Democratic-friendly legislative maps coupled with President Barack Obama’s huge numbers mean DuPage County will be represented by a Democrat in the state Senate for the first time in Illinois history.

As I told subscribers this morning, it wasn’t just the map.

I mean, c’mon, Bill Foster defeated Judy Biggert by 15 points. She lost DuPage County. Mitt Romney lost DuPage County. Skip Saviano lost DuPage County. Tammy Duckworth won DuPage.

This goes well beyond the map. Bobby Schilling was beaten by almost 7 points. Brad Schneider edged by Bob Dold. And David Gill hasn’t yet conceded because the race is still pretty close.

The map definitely put those districts into play. But Schilling did just about everything right for the past two years. Dold fit his district’s profile. Gill was considered unelectable just a few months ago.

And it wasn’t all about Obama, either. Yes, he most certainly helped in these districts, particularly with Cheri Bustos. But Obama received a lower percentage this time than he’s ever received running statewide.

On top of the map, on top of Obama, there’s a real Republican brand problem here this year. The party constantly foams at the mouth and eagerly parrots the Tribune’s more inane goofiness, but doesn’t offer solutions. Their leaders stand by in mute silence while high-profile candidates like Joe Walsh spew utter nonsense about women. And they continually nominate unelectable and very unattractive candidates in their primaries.

But, even then, even with all that, this is still an historic and incredibly unusual across-the-board drubbing.

What do you think happened?

  109 Comments      


No class

Wednesday, Nov 7, 2012 - Posted by Rich Miller

* The last time anybody heard from Jason Plummer was late last night

As of 11:20 p.m. Plummer had not conceded the race, but the Associated Press called Enyart the winner.

Plummer told his crowd of supporters about 10:20 p.m. that he was down four points and about 27 of the precincts still unaccounted for.

I checked with the Enyart campaign this morning. Plummer still hasn’t conceded.

Dude, you lost by 9 points. Be a man, already. Sheesh.

  55 Comments      


Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today’s edition of Capitol Fax

Wednesday, Nov 7, 2012 - Posted by Rich Miller

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The day after

Wednesday, Nov 7, 2012 - Posted by Rich Miller

* I’m running late this morning, so discuss yesterday’s results amongst yourselves.

  87 Comments      


*** LIVE *** STATE LEGISLATIVE ELECTION RESULTS, NEWS AND DISCUSSION THREAD

Tuesday, Nov 6, 2012 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Blackberry users click here. Everybody else can sit back and comment…

  49 Comments      


*** LIVE *** CONGRESSIONAL ELECTION RESULTS, NEWS AND DISCUSSION THREAD

Tuesday, Nov 6, 2012 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Blackberry users click here, everybody else can just watch and discuss…

  34 Comments      


***LIVE *** Google, Capitol Fax Election Night Party

Tuesday, Nov 6, 2012 - Posted by Rich Miller

* This NBC5 feed goes live at 6:30 pm

  16 Comments      


Afternoon voting reports

Tuesday, Nov 6, 2012 - Posted by Rich Miller

* What’s going on?

  49 Comments      


Question of the day

Tuesday, Nov 6, 2012 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Your final election predictions, please.

  69 Comments      


NY Mag takes a look at J3

Tuesday, Nov 6, 2012 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Perhaps the most interesting, and new, revelations in a NY Magazine piece about Congressman Jesse Jackson, Jr

Jesse Jr. had in fact been struggling for some time. He had long suffered occasional but violent mood swings—laughing one moment, sobbing the next—so much so that nearly a decade ago members of his staff half-jokingly diagnosed their boss as bipolar. His condition worsened dramatically after the disappointment of not getting the Senate seat and the stress of the subsequent investigation and revelation of his adultery. The congressman who prided himself on never missing a vote became an absentee legislator. “He did absolutely nothing,” says former Illinois congresswoman Debbie Halvorson, who served in the House with Jackson in 2009 and 2010.

Earlier this year, however, Jackson was reenergized. Halvorson, who’d lost her reelection bid in 2010, ran against Jackson in the Democratic primary for his redrawn district—the stiffest electoral test he had faced since 1995. Jackson rose to the challenge, pouring himself into the campaign and, in March, he thumped Halvorson by taking more than 70 percent of the vote.

But soon after his victory, he plunged into a deep funk. This may have been brought about by the fact that the FBI had opened an investigation into whether he’d used campaign money to decorate his home. But it seems just as likely that Jackson, having worked so hard to hold onto his seat, now had to confront the crushing reality that all of his effort had merely resulted in his remaining in the same place.

According to a friend, Jackson began “drinking heavily, self-medicating, and going days without sleep. He was out of control. He was on a path that was self-destructive. Something had to change.” Indeed, although Sandi portrayed her husband’s hospitalization that night in June as a spur-of-the-moment decision, others close to Jackson suspect it was the result of a planned intervention—something the congressman’s friends and family had been discussing for weeks.

Go read the whole thing.

  19 Comments      


*** LIVE *** ELECTION DAY COVERAGE

Tuesday, Nov 6, 2012 - Posted by Rich Miller

* This is the first of several ScribbleLive posts I’ll be doing today. Blackberry users click here. Everybody else can just follow along…

…Adding… NBC5 is an election night partner, so here is its Storify thingy…

  4 Comments      


Kirk does robocall with Plummer, Clinton does one for Enyart

Tuesday, Nov 6, 2012 - Posted by Rich Miller

* US Sen. Mark Kirk recorded a robocall with Jason Plummer. Kirk emphasizes that Plummer is a “fellow Naval Reserve” officer. Listen

* And a very hoarse former President Bill Clinton did one for Bill Enyart in the race…

Click to listen

* Related…

* Sen. Mark Kirk, recovering from stroke, records campaign robocall

* Bill Clinton to call 12th U.S. House District voters for Enyart, the Democratic nominee

* Race To Succeed Costello’s Seat A Toss Up

* Southern Illinois candidates make last minute push

  10 Comments      


Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition and a campaign roundup

Tuesday, Nov 6, 2012 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today’s edition of Capitol Fax

Tuesday, Nov 6, 2012 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Morning polling place updates

Tuesday, Nov 6, 2012 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Tell us what you’re seeing out there this morning. Long lines? Any problems? Weather reports, etc. are also appreciated. Thanks!

  58 Comments      


*** UPDATED x1 - Board refutes GOP claim *** Fun with numbers

Monday, Nov 5, 2012 - Posted by Rich Miller

* From the Chicago Board of Election Commissioners…

Chicago led the state again in Saturday’s daily total and overall total for Early Voting. On Saturday, Chicago voters cast 30,600 ballots on the final day of Early Voting, moving the total to more than 243,000 Early Voting for the 13 days of the program.
This set a new record for percentage of registered voters using Early Voting (18% this year compared to 17% in 2008). […]

This set a new record for daily average of ballots in Early Voting (18,700 per day this year compared to 14,500 per day in 2008).

Although we didn’t surpass the 2008 total of 260,000, we had nearly the same total in spite of having five fewer days of Early Voting this year compared to 2008.

* But the Illinois Republican Party makes the case that the city is fudging the early voting numbers

According to the numbers, at this point in 2008, there were 260,376 early voters and 304,290 absentee voters. Now, the party maintains, there are 195,064 early voters and 46,232 absentee voters. That’s a loss of 57 percent of voters, since the last election. […]

“We believe the Chicago Board of Elections is misrepresenting their numbers in making comparisons to 2008,” a spokesman for the Illinois Republican party explains. “According to the numbers we see in the State Board of Elections database, there is a significant fall off in reported absentee voting in city of Chicago. The Chicago Board of Elections is reporting 240k in early voting and claiming it’s on track to surpass 2008 - but they’re actually combining 2012 Early Voting and absentee voting, and then comparing that sum to 2008’s early voting numbers (excluding absentee). There is a significant 57% drop in voter participation in the City of Chicago from 2008 - in the President’s hometown. I’d also point out that despite the Chicago Board’s point that early voting is four days shorter this year than in 2008, Illinois recently instituted “vote-by-mail” without an excuse needed, i.e. early voting by mail. This did not exist in 2008 and should have vastly expanded the numbers.”

I asked the board for a response hours ago and haven’t heard back. I’ll let you know if I do.

*** UPDATE *** I figured a post might smoke out the city board. Here’s the response…

There were never 300,000 absentee ballots cast in Chicago. In fact, there were never, ever that many absentee ballots cast in the entire state of Illinois! The election when we get that many absentee ballots is the one where we have to move our mail room to the warehouse.

The attached shows where we are - 2008 vs 2012 - as of Saturday night.

We’re up in absentee (with 16 more days for those to arrive), and we doubled Grace Period registration, and we came close to matching our Early Voting numbers from 2008, in spite of having five fewer days and 130,000 fewer registered voters.

We’re slightly under 2008 in raw numbers, slightly higher if measured as a percentage of registered voters. Either way, turnout has been and will be strong.

The attached document is here.

[ *** End Of Update *** ]

* In other numbers news, the Senate Democrats say the person reporting a huge contribution received by Sen. Mike Jacobs mistakenly entered the check number into the State Board of Election’s program instead of the amount, which was actually $3,000. I’m assuming the $11 million contribution from Bobby Rush’s chief of staff was also an error

* Meanwhile, Illinois Review notes that 36 of 64 House Democratic races are unopposed in 2012, and 29 of 54 House Republicans face no opponents Tuesday.

Not mentioned, though, is that a whole lot of those legislators faced opposition in the March primary.

Look, some of this state is solidly Democratic. Some of it is solidly Republican. There is no way - barring a return to 3-member districts - that people challenging incumbents in those areas have a snowball’s chance in heck of winning.

Yes, there is plenty of gerrymandering. No doubt. A large handful of Democrats (and Republicans) are safe because of that simple fact. But the fight is and has always been about the middle-ground. And there are lots of high-intensity legislative races this year.

* Also, a friend looked at a 1999 House roll call and made note of those who still remain. Click the pick for a larger view

  19 Comments      


Question of the day

Monday, Nov 5, 2012 - Posted by Rich Miller

* From Joe Walsh’s Twitter feed

* The Question: Caption?

Best comment wins a ticket to my election night party, co-sponsored by Google.

  126 Comments      


Too little, too late?

Monday, Nov 5, 2012 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Sun-Times

Could Bubba make the difference in the deadlocked west-suburban congressional race between Democrat Bill Foster and U.S. Rep. Judy Biggert, the GOP incumbent?

Foster’s campaign Sunday announced that ex-President Bill Clinton, the Democratic icon who starred at September’s Democratic National Convention, has recorded a phone message on Foster’s behalf that will urge voters beginning Monday to side with him over Biggert. […]

“At the end of the recording he made for us, I have to stand up there and say, ‘I’m Bill Foster, and I approve this message.’ I was thinking I should just record it and say, ‘I’m Bill Foster and I’d be crazy not to approve this,’ ” Foster joked to reporters outside a Joliet church.

* Biggert followed the GOP’s 2012 formula by praising Clinton while attacking Foster…

“I think President Clinton did a great job, but I don’t know how that’s going to make any difference with what’s going on now,” said Biggert in between having bar patrons approach her to have their pictures taken with her.

The strike against Foster, she said, is that the one-term congressman lost his re-election bid in 2010.

Voters regard him as a poor communicator and have stayed away from his campaign events, she said.

Except for 1994, Bill Clinton was a very popular guy in this state.

But there are so many robocalls being made right now that this one will have a very tough time breaking through the clutter. Voters aren’t even answering their phones these days.

Also, you gotta wonder why Clinton wasn’t brought in earlier for Foster, or Cheri Bustos, or Bill Enyart, or any other Democrat, for that matter. An early visit, or some direct mail, or TV ads or even robocalls done weeks ago might’ve made a real difference in those races. Now? Not so much.

* And much the same can be said of this

With days to go in the 2012 Election, President Barack Obama on Friday endorsed congressional candidates Tammy Duckworth, Brad Schneider and Bill Foster.

“America’s middle class needs these great leaders like Tammy Duckworth, Brad Schneider, and Bill Foster in Congress to stand up and fight for them,” the president said in a statement backing his move. “They will create jobs here at home by building from the middle out, not the top down. They will protect Medicare for our seniors and education for our next generation.”

Those three couldn’t get a photo op when Obama was in town to early vote last month? Why not? This endorsement basically means almost nothing now.

  26 Comments      


Today’s number: $43,192,728.65

Monday, Nov 5, 2012 - Posted by Rich Miller

* According to the Sunlight Foundation, that’s how much money has been spent on Illinois congressional races via independent expenditures in this campaign.

To put that into perspective, that’s about what Rod Blagojevich - the biggest campaign spender in Illinois history - spent on both of his statewide races combined.

It’s also just shy of the cut the General Assembly made to the Department of Children and Family Services’ proposed appropriation.

* By the numbers…

* IL 17: $8,832,099.38

    * Independent expenditures made supporting Bobby Schilling: $182,140.18
    * Independent expenditures made opposing Bobby Schilling: $4,042,360.60

    * Independent expenditures made supporting Cheri Bustos: $246,771.69
    * Independent expenditures made opposing Cheri Bustos: $4,360,826.91

* IL 12: $7,365,356.15

    * Independent expenditures made supporting Jason Plummer: $194,757.83
    * Independent expenditures made opposing Jason Plummer: $2,826,125.87

    * Independent expenditures made supporting Bill Enyart: $335,657.38
    * Independent expenditures made opposing Bill Enyart: $3,978,703.11

* IL 11: $7,227,183.30

    * Independent expenditures made supporting Bill Foster: $12,179.80
    * Independent expenditures made opposing Bill Foster: $3,341,721.12

    * Independent expenditures made supporting Judy Biggert: $1,352,125.49
    * Independent expenditures made opposing Judy Biggert: $2,521,156.89

* IL 13: $6,825,064.48

    * Independent expenditures made supporting Rodney Davis: $108,422.36
    * Independent expenditures made opposing Rodney Davis: $3,001,059.28

    * Independent expenditures made supporting David Gill: $58,348.11
    * Independent expenditures made opposing David Gill: $3,657,234.73

* IL 8: $6,611,600.74

    * Independent expenditures made supporting Tammy Duckworth: $35,478.90
    * Independent expenditures made opposing Tammy Duckworth: $4,740,657.61

    * Independent expenditures made supporting Joe Walsh: $1,356,535.42
    * Independent expenditures made opposing Joe Walsh: $453,618.81

* IL 10: $6,331,424.60

    * Independent expenditures made supporting Brad Schneider: $6,122.25
    * Independent expenditures made opposing Brad Schneider: $3,270,135.79

    * Independent expenditures made supporting Bob Dold: $1,558,947.28
    * Independent expenditures made opposing Bob Dold: $1,489,149.94

Discuss.

  30 Comments      


Tammy Duckworth’s closer

Monday, Nov 5, 2012 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Rate it

  22 Comments      


Kirk climbs Willis Tower, speaks in Biggert endorsement video

Monday, Nov 5, 2012 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Good news

Gripping a handrail and wearing a brace on his left leg, Republican U.S. Sen. Mark Kirk climbed 37 floors inside Chicago’s Willis Tower on Sunday in his first public appearance since suffering a major stroke.

Kirk, taking part in a popular charity fundraiser called “SkyRise Chicago,” started walking from the 66th floor and climbed up to the finish line at the 103rd floor.

He was met with hugs and cheers from family and friends at the end. The senator paced slowly through the crowd with the help of a cane, smiling but saying little to the media.

* Heh

“I’m here. Where’s the beer?” he said from the top floor, where he was embraced and applauded by onlookers.

* Kirk also cut a new endorsement video for Judy Biggert. Unlike his video for Bob Dold, he speaks in this one

  17 Comments      


Things get weird in Saviano race

Monday, Nov 5, 2012 - Posted by Rich Miller

* My weekly syndicated newspaper column

There’s nothing quite like the spectacle of Illinois House Speaker Michael Madigan when he’s out to get somebody.

Just ask state Rep. Skip Saviano (R-Elmwood Park).

The two men used to be allies, even friends. Saviano supported Madigan’s daughter when Lisa ran for state attorney general. But then Lisa turned against Saviano’s political mentor, the late Rosemont Mayor Don Stephens, blocking his dream of building a local casino because, she claimed, he was tied to the Mob. Saviano vowed revenge.

Even so, things eventually died down. Saviano kept the powerful committee chairmanship given to him by Madigan - one of only two Republicans bestowed with that privilege in the Illinois House, the other being one of Skip’s best friends.

But when Madigan cranked up his total war against then Gov. Rod Blagojevich, he eventually came to believe that Saviano, an old Blagojevich pal, had sided with the governor against him. That was the last straw. Before long, Saviano had lost his chairmanship. Then the Republican Saviano was given a new House district in the remap which was solidly Democratic. And then Madigan moved Heaven and Earth to find an opponent for the locally popular Saviano, finally convincing an almost totally unknown local Republican to switch parties and challenge the incumbent.

Madigan dumped hundreds of thousands of dollars into the campaign, forcing Saviano to work harder on his reelection than he ever has.

Saviano is a clever tactician himself, however. When Madigan lieutenant state Sen. Martin Sandoval (D-Chicago) crashed and disrupted a Latino candidates’ forum in Saviano’s district, Saviano finally got the Chicago media to pay some attention to his battle. Sen. Sandoval stood on a chair and then sat on the floor, all the while shouting that Latinos should never vote Republican. Sandoval was eventually escorted out of the church building by local police and, instead of apologizing the next day, called Saviano a racist. The Chicago media generally disdains covering local state legislative races, but that story was just too good to pass up.

Saviano ginned up the attention further by claiming that Sandoval’s actions had prompted the state’s lone Latino congressman Luis Gutierrez, a Democrat, to endorse the Republican Saviano. Never mind that Saviano had already ordered that the Gutierrez endorsement direct mail pieces be printed before Sen. Sandoval crashed the forum. But, hey, it made for a good story.

Not to be outdone, Madigan ordered up the printing of a flier featuring photos of his candidate, Kathleen Willis, and Congressman Gutierrez. “Luis Gutierrez and Kathleen Willis, Fighting for our families and our concerns!” the text underneath the photo read.

But the wildest move of the entire campaign came when a political action committee with obvious ties to Madigan popped up out of nowhere and sent direct mailers to Republicans blasting Saviano for being Speaker Madigan’s puppet.

“A vote for Skip Saviano is a vote for Mike Madigan!” blared one of the PAC’s mailers. The piece informed voters that Madigan had appointed Saviano to a committee chairmanship, claimed Saviano had contributed money to Madigan’s campaign committee and “voted 6 times to make Madigan Speaker of the House!”

“Democrat Speaker Mike Madigan calls the shots for Skip Saviano,” screamed the other mailer, which featured a photo of the two men with their arms around each other.

The political action committee was formed October 15th. Its treasurer appears to work at a law firm run by the Melrose Park Village Attorney, who was once recommended for the Justice Village Attorney position by none other than Speaker Madigan. One of the PAC’s top contributors gave $5,000 to the new group on October 19th - less than two weeks after the company contributed $10,000 to Speaker Madigan. Another company gave three contributions to Madigan’s committees totaling over $6,000 just ten days before it gave the new PAC $1,500.

I’ve seen some crazy stuff in my day, but this one pretty much took the cake.

Madigan’s people have insisted for years that Republican attempts to sully his name have not worked. But then they got behind what appeared to be a pro-Madigan group that attacked Madigan in order to help defeat a Republican state Representative. To put it another way, the Democrats took the Republican Party’s ubiquitous “Fire Madigan” mantra and turned it against a Republican legislator.

This was either a brilliant payback to the GOP or a foolish confirmation that Madigan’s name truly is toxic. Heck, it could turn out to be both.

* Related…

* Group twists U.S. Rep. Luis Gutierrez surprise Saviano endorsement in the 77th House District

* Speaker Madigan declares war on ex-ally Skip Saviano

  27 Comments      


Quinn sends “bus loads” of workers to Wisconsin

Monday, Nov 5, 2012 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Buried in this piece about Gov. Pat Quinn’s absence from the campaign trail the past several weeks was this nugget

“Over the past two weeks, the governor sent bus loads of Quinn volunteers to Wisconsin…” [Quinn spokeswoman Brooke Anderson] said.

With all the competitive races here at home, the governor sent “bus loads” of people to Wisconsin?

He’s not the only one, of course. A bunch of city Democrats have platooned to Iowa and Wisconsin and other parts unknown for the president. But maybe Quinn could’ve sent “bus loads” of volunteers to help Lance Tyson defeat former Rep. Derrick Smith. Quinn lives on the city’s West Side, so it’s not that far of a drive.

Quinn has endorsed Tyson, and he showed up at a recent Tyson rally, but the guy could probably use some more precinct help.

* By the way, check out Smith’s blitz piece

Apparently, indicted and expelled House members can’t afford grammar and spelling checkers.

  42 Comments      


Today’s most over the top political screed

Monday, Nov 5, 2012 - Posted by Rich Miller

* From the Illinois State Rifle Association…

Whether you would like to believe it or not, the next several days will be very perilous ones for our Constitution and our very way of life. Never in recent history have we been faced with the choice of either re-electing or firing a president who holds such contempt for what this nation is all about. Sure, during our lifetimes we have seen liberal presidents elected and re-elected. However, those men had a vision for American greatness – just a different path to that greatness. The current president has a vision of American mediocrity, and his efforts the past four years have put us on the path to that end. Sadly, Obama’s vision of a second-class America is shared by half the population. The only way for us to preserve at least some remnants of the nation we came to love is to ensure that the nation’s patriots come out to vote. At the same time, we will be forced to rely on the hallmark laziness of the left – and hope Obama’s socialist constituency chooses the easy chair over the voting booth on November 6th.

Barack Obama and his cabinet are a pack of very dangerous animals and, no matter what the outcome is November 6th, you can rest assured that Obama and his pals will attempt to exact swift and severe retaliation against those who have opposed them. Of course, gun owners are at the top of the list of people that Obama hates most. Thus, it would come as no surprise to see Eric Holder employ the “sporting arms” test to ban every handgun and rifle you own. It would also come as no surprise if Holder took such action the first thing next Wednesday morning.

Even if the electorate fires Barack Obama on Tuesday, his administration can do a lot of damage to the American way of life in the final months of his regime. That is why it is so important for gun owners, and other patriots to vote real Americans into office at every level of government – not only to prevent Obama’s pals from destroying the country, but to undo the damage he has done already.

  62 Comments      


Credit Union (noun) – an essential financial cooperative

Monday, Nov 5, 2012 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Cooperatives can be formed to support producers such as farmers, purchasers such as independent business owners, and consumers such as electric coops and credit unions. Their primary purpose is to meet members’ needs through affordable goods and services of high quality.

Cooperatives such as credit unions may look like other businesses in their operations and, like other businesses, can range in size. However, the cooperative structure is distinctively different regardless of size. As not-for-profit financial cooperatives, credit unions serve individuals with a common goal or interest.

They are owned and democratically controlled by the people who use their services. Their board of directors consists of unpaid volunteers, elected by and from the membership. Members are owners who pool funds to help other members. After expenses and reserve requirements are met, net revenue is returned to members via lower loan and higher savings rates, lower costs and fees for services.

It is the structure of credit unions, not their size or range of services that is the reason for their tax exempt status - and the reason why almost three million Illinois residents are among 95 million Americans who count on their local credit union everyday to reach their financial goals.

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition and a campaign roundup

Monday, Nov 5, 2012 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today’s edition of Capitol Fax

Monday, Nov 5, 2012 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Reader coments closed for the weekend

Friday, Nov 2, 2012 - Posted by Rich Miller

* For all those folks who will be knocking on doors for the next few days

Throw me down the keys

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY: Kathy Hartke services

Friday, Nov 2, 2012 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Report: Shock met with RGA about gubernatorial bid

Friday, Nov 2, 2012 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Didn’t Congressman Schock say people should wait until after the election before making plans for the next election? Well, most of us figured he probably wasn’t serious about those words of caution, and now we can be certain

When he first won election to Congress in 2008, Rep. Aaron Schock became the youngest member of the House of Representatives. Now, Schock has his eye on becoming the youngest governor in Illinois history.

On Wednesday, less than a week before he’s favored to win a third term in Congress, Schock met with top officials at the Republican Governors Association in Washington, to discuss the possibility of running for Illinois’s top job in 2014. Four sources in Illinois and Washington with knowledge of Schock’s meeting with the RGA said his interest in the race is an open secret, and that he’s told donors he is seriously considering the contest.

“He’s made it pretty clear to a lot of donors,” one well-connected Illinois Republican told us. “That’s common knowledge around here.”

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition and a Saviano update

Friday, Nov 2, 2012 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY: This just in…

Friday, Nov 2, 2012 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY: Party time

Friday, Nov 2, 2012 - Posted by Rich Miller

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The spending never stops

Friday, Nov 2, 2012 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Another sucker fleeced

A super PAC is again pumping in money to support tea party-backed U.S. Rep. Joe Walsh a week after saying it would re-direct its resources to other races.

The Republican from Chicago’s northern suburbs has struggled against his well-financed Democratic opponent, Iraq War veteran Tammy Duckworth. It’s one of the most closely watched and volatile U.S. House campaigns in Illinois.

The Now or Never super PAC said last week that it believed Walsh was well on his way to victory, allowing it to put its money elsewhere.

The PAC is pumping another million dollars into the race on Walsh’s behalf

“Duckworth wants the voters to ignore her own legal problems and mismanagement while she attempts to paint Congressman Walsh as a man he is not,” said Tyler Harber, spokesman for Now or Never PAC.

* More

“This is a resource and opportunity-based reversal,” Now or Never spokesman Tyler Harber emailed me. Recent negative reports about Ms. Duckworth “presented us with an opportunity to deliver an effective closing message.”

But Mr. Harber didn’t respond when I asked him who paid for the late blitz. That’s pertinent because earlier this year, Now or Never had been getting the vast bulk of its funding from another group, Americans for Limited Government, which does not disclose its funding. And the Duckworth campaign says ALG Chairman Howard Rich and his wife both have donated to Mr. Walsh’s personal campaign committee in the last year, raising questions of whether the ALG/Now or Never spending truly is uncoordinated, as the law requires.

Mr. Walsh’s spokesman replies that ALG and Mr. Rich may just agree with Mr. Walsh on term limits, and that, in any event, there has been no coordination. The same question could be posed about the House Majority PAC, which has bought anti-Walsh ads yet received large donations from Illinois folks who are backers of Ms. Duckworth, like Chicago media mogul Fred Eychaner, the spokesman said.

I really missed the boat this year. I should’ve reached out to these super PACs and had them spend some of their largesse on advertising for my website.

Heck, I could’ve retired.

  30 Comments      


Unclear on the concept

Friday, Nov 2, 2012 - Posted by Rich Miller

* From an e-mail…

The attached video, taken Thursday, shows State Rep. Lou Lang electioneering at the early voting polling place at Skokie Village Hall.

The law requires that no contact is made within 100 feet of the entrance door to a polling location. The Election Judges typically mark the 100 foot mark with tape. In this video Lang aggressively contacts the elderly woman in the video within the 100 foot mark.

Will Attorney General Lisa Madigan enforce this law? Her father, Mike Madigan, has appointed Lang as his right hand man/ Deputy Majority Leader and Floor Manager for much of the Democrat agenda in Springfield.

Lang “aggressively contacts the elderly woman”? This, I had to see. Wow! What a story!

I immediately downloaded the video and had a look

Sheesh.

So disappointing.

I mean, Lang calls the woman “ma’am,” introduces himself politely, and the lady appears to say “thank you” after he hands her his lit.

That was aggressive?

I don’t get it.

Also, the person with the camera is obviously holding a piece of campaign lit and standing pretty much the same distance from the entrance. And I don’t see any 100-foot markers, either.

Again, I don’t get it.

Maybe y’all can enlighten me about what I missed here?

  37 Comments      


Kirk appears in Dold video, doesn’t speak, but the tune rocks

Friday, Nov 2, 2012 - Posted by Rich Miller

* The Daily Herald appeared to have been the first media outlet to see the new Bob Dold campaign video. Its take was decidedly polite

U.S. Sen. Mark Kirk, for the first time since his stroke in late January, has hit the campaign trail.

The Highland Park Republican — clad in a bomber jacket, his gray hair blowing in the wind — is shown in his North Shore neighborhood with his 10th Congressional District successor, Republican Rep. Bob Dold, of Kenilworth. The video, put to music, is depicted as one stop in Dold’s “working together” John McCain-style bus tour.

Kirk and Dold are pictured talking and laughing throughout the minute-long spot, though just what they’re saying is unclear.

The sentence “Though just what they’re saying is unclear” isn’t explained in the article. The Sun-Times explains

There’s music playing over the video, so you can’t hear what the two men are discussing.

* The video

Great tune. But it would’ve been nice to actually hear Sen. Kirk’s voice.

  32 Comments      


Question of the day

Friday, Nov 2, 2012 - Posted by Rich Miller

* What do you think will be the biggest surprise on election day? Explain.

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

Friday, Nov 2, 2012 - Posted by Rich Miller

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« NEWER POSTS PREVIOUS POSTS »
* Hexaware: Your Globally Local IT Services Partner
* SB 328: Separating Lies From Truth
* When RETAIL Succeeds, Illinois Succeeds
* SB 328 Puts Illinois’s Economy At Risk
* SB 328: Separating Lies From Truth
* Hexaware: Your Globally Local IT Services Partner
* SB 328 Puts Illinois’s Economy At Risk
* When RETAIL Succeeds, Illinois Succeeds
* Reader comments closed for the next week
* Isabel’s afternoon roundup
* SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Campaign updates
* Three-quarters of OEIG investigations into Paycheck Protection Program abuses resulted in misconduct findings
* SB 328 Puts Illinois’s Economy At Risk
* Sen. Dale Fowler honors term limit pledge, won’t seek reelection; Rep. Paul Jacobs launches bid for 59th Senate seat
* Hexaware: Your Globally Local IT Services Partner
* Pritzker to meet with Texas Dems as Trump urges GOP remaps (Updated)
* SB 328: Separating Lies From Truth
* Open thread
* Isabel’s morning briefing
* SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today's edition
* SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today's edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)
* Selected press releases (Live updates)
* Yesterday's stories

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