* Alexi Giannoulias can’t catch a break. Even when there’s no new news to report on the family bank, somebody just has to go and pop off at the mouth. This time, that “somebody” was House Speaker Michael Madigan…
Asked if the problems at the Giannoulias family-owned Broadway Bank would affect the candidate’s voter support in the Senate race, Madigan replied, “I’m glad I don’t have any deposits there.” […]
Despite the slight jab at the bank’s woes, Madigan noted he’s supporting Giannoulias in the November Senate election against Republican Mark Kirk, a five-term North Shore congressman.
“I’m supporting all the Democratic candidates. (Giannoulias) has been a successful candidate in the past. You’ll recall he won a contested primary when he was elected as the treasurer,” said Madigan, referring to the March 2006 primary election.
* Madigan spoke about Giannoulias to reporters after a hearing on the struggling McCormick Place. During that hearing, the Speaker more than hinted that big changes were on the way…
“We’re not satisfied with the current management at McCormick Place. We think it could be done better. We’re actually looking at a model which would provide that the whole place be privatized. So everything’s on the table.”
“My position is the legislature is not going to move forward with any extension of taxes, any restructuring of debt payments, until we put in place a good, workable business structure,” said Madigan, D-Chicago. […]
Other worthwhile ideas, Madigan said, include drafting a set of exhibitor rights and auditing show contractors to make sure they pass along any cost savings stemming from union concessions.
Contractors throw the blame of high exhibitor costs back on the Chicago unions, whose work rules, they say, can cost an organization $1.6 million in labor here compared to $552,000 in Orlando.
John Gates, chairman of the MPEA, the agency known as McPier that runs McCormick Place and Navy Pier, also called for an overhaul of union work rules, which, among other things, can dictate how many people are needed to complete a task at McCormick Place.
“We cannot allow archaic work rules for 100 to jeopardize jobs of 65,000 people,” Mr. Gates said.
Rosemont’s convention center (which is in the top ten in the nation) uses the same unions with the same work rules as McPier and they have no cost complaints. The difference between McCormick Place and Rosemont is that Rosemont doesn’t use those two big contractors to put on shows. Rosemont is its own contractor.
Also, McPier uses its own electric company to jack up rates for juice and services through the roof. The profits go to pay staff salaries. That pricing situation absolutely must be redesigned.
* Related and a roundup…
* Kirk raises $2.2 million this year in Senate bid
* Brady to independent GOP website: Remove my name and photo of naked woman: Since the photo was mentioned on Windycitizen.com and TheCapitolFaxBlog Wednesday afternoon, Swiss has been getting calls from Brady and others but he said he is leaving the photo up.
57% of Illinois voters express that sentiment to 24% who disagree and 19% who are unsure. Republicans are the most solid in that belief, holding it by an 82/9 margin. But a majority of independents (53/27) and a plurality of Democrats (43/32) do as well.
Perhaps the greatest indicator that Illinois is unusually corrupt is that fewer than half of voters in the state think Rod Blagojevich is the most corrupt Governor of the last half century. 42% of voters say he is followed by 29% for George Ryan, a total of 6% for older Governors Otto Kerner and Daniel Walker, and 22% who aren’t sure.
As you might expect opinions about who’s been most corrupt see a division along party lines- Democrats say it’s Ryan while Republicans say it’s Blagojevich.
Here’s the partisan breakdown…
* It’s no surprise that Attorney General Lisa Madigan is popular. It is a bit of a surprise that her favorables are under 50. However, as we’ve seen with other PPP polls, their favorable/approval ratings lag behind others…
Do you have a favorable or unfavorable opinion of Lisa Madigan?
49% Favorable
23% Unfavorable
28% Not Sure
64 percent of Democrats, 28 percent of Republicans and 49 percent of independents/others have a favorable opinion of the AG.
* The US Attorney’s office filed a motion yesterday to force Rod Blagojevich’s former general counsel to testify at the upcoming trial. You can read the motion by clicking here. Bill Quinlan has refused to fully cooperate so far, citing concerns over attorney-client privilege…
Prosecutors said the discussions are relevant to the charges against Blagojevich and want the judge to decide if they are fair game for the trial. In a court filing Wednesday, the government cited a 2002 decision in which the 7th Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals found that the attorney-client privilege does not apply in conversations between a public official and a taxpayer-provided attorney, as Quinlan was at the time.
Prosecutors contend Blagojevich may already have waived the attorney-client privilege when he allowed the government’s trial team access to the undercover tapes last fall. Before that, a “filter team” in the U.S. attorney’s office had kept the recordings at arm’s length from the prosecution team that will put the former governor on trial beginning June 3.
A lawyer for Blagojevich, Sheldon Sorosky, maintained Wednesday that the former governor did not fully waive the privilege and said the defense will argue in court Friday that talks between Quinlan and Blagojevich should remain private.
Quinlan’s attorney Jon King said the former counsel general is ready to cooperate with the government, but not until he gets a specific waiver of attorney-client privilege.
“Blagojevich’s counsel has told me repeatedly that there’s an applicable attorney-client issue here,” King said. He said Quinlan has no intention of hiding anything from the government but merely wants to make sure that he is in accord with fundamental legal ethics.
Quinlan was caught on federal wiretaps, including during a key conference call about the alleged selling of Barack Obama’s US Senate seat. A look back…
On Nov. 10, Blagojevich, his wife, Harris, the governor’s chief counsel William R. Quinlan and several Washington-based advisers conducted an extraordinary two-hour conference call.
Blagojevich conceded he probably wouldn’t get the HHS job or an ambassadorship because of so much negative publicity surrounding him.
Using several expletives, Blagojevich said he was reluctant to give Obama “his senator” without anything in return; he said he’d appoint a deputy governor before giving the job to Candidate 1. He also considered appointing himself to the job to avoid impeachment.
During the next 36 hours, the governor grew angry and suggested Obama’s camp was not interested in making a deal.
“They’re not willing to give me anything except appreciation. (Expletive) them,” Blagojevich told Harris in an intercepted call Nov. 11.
For years, Quinlan helped Blagojevich build a brick wall around his administration. They denied FOIA after FOIA under the slimmest of pretenses. Eventually, some of those denials were overturned, including a raft of requests for copies of federal subpoenas. There ain’t much sympathy for Quinlan around here.
* In somewhat related news, Congressman Jesse Jackson, Jr. said earlier this week he was “concerned” about what he wasn’t hearing from Gov. Pat Quinn and Democratic nominee for Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkle…
“I don’t see them speaking to the needs of taxpayers and fairness for taxpayers at all.”
The congressman made his criticisms during his endorsement of Forrest Claypool’s independent bid for assessor. Yesterday, he walked the comments back…
In a statement emailed from his government office, the congressman writes that he recognizes his “comments may have come across as being critical of the platform and message” of the Quinn and Preckwinkle campaigns. “Simply put,” Jackson writes. “I misspoke.”
The statement says both Democrats “have laid out visions and platforms that will restore the tax-payer’s trust in government, will root out corruption, and get our county and state governments working once again.” Jackson adds that he’s “stood alongside” Quinn and Preckwinkle his “entire career.”
Forget about the walk-back for a moment. Take notice, instead, that Jackson is once again using his federal government e-mail service to send out a campaign statement. You’d think he’d have learned a lesson by now, but nope.
* Another day, another bad news poll for Gov. Pat Quinn. Today’s result is from Rasmussen. Its early March results are in parentheses, preceded by yesterday’s Public Policy Polling results…
Bill Brady 45% (43%, 47%)
Pat Quinn 38% (33%, 37%)
Some Other Candidate 6% (N/A, 7%)
Not sure 9% (24%, 10%)
Both candidates barely eked out victories in hard-fought party nomination battles. But Brady can already claim support from 78% of his GOP base, while Quinn attracts only 64% of Democrats… Voters not affiliated with either of the parties prefer Brady to Quinn by better than three-to-one.
How would you rate the job Barack Obama has been doing as President… do you strongly approve, somewhat approve, somewhat disapprove, or strongly disapprove of the job he’s been doing?
How would you rate the job Pat Quinn has been doing as Governor… do you strongly approve, somewhat approve, somewhat disapprove, or strongly disapprove of the job he’s been doing?
That’s a much higher approval rating for Quinn than PPP’s 25 percent. The difference may be due to Rasmussen offering intensity choices, while PPP just offered straight up approve/disapprove choices.
Quinn is viewed very favorably by 13% of Illinois voters, while 28% view him very unfavorably. Just five percent (5%) have no opinion of the governor.
Nineteen percent (19%) have a very favorable view of Brady, and nearly as many (15%) regard him very unfavorably. But nearly one-out-of-five voters (18%) don’t know enough about him to have any kind of opinion.
At this point in a campaign, Rasmussen Reports considers the number of people with strong opinions more significant than the total favorable/unfavorable numbers.
Some people believe a federal law requiring every American to buy or obtain health insurance is unconstitutional. Some states have announced that they will sue the federal government to fight that requirement. Would you favor or oppose having your state sue the federal government to prevent it from becoming law?
40% Favor
47% Oppose
13% Not sure
Generally speaking, how would you rate the U.S. economy these days? Excellent, good, fair, or poor?
1% Excellent
8% Good
40% Fair
50% Poor
1% Not sure
Are economic conditions in the country getting better or worse?
36% Better
33% Worse
24% Staying the same
7% Not sure
Rasmussen puts the “should the state sue the federal government to overturn health care law” question into a national context…
Just 40% of Illinois voters think the state should sue the federal government, while 47% oppose the idea.
Nationally, 49% of voters favor their states suing the federal government over that requirement in the health care plan. Thirty-even percent (37%) oppose such a suit.
Methodology…
Illinois Survey of 500 Likely Voters Conducted April 5, 2010. Margin of Sampling Error, +/- 4.5 percentage points with a 95% level of confidence
* We usually focus on major party players here, but let’s pick on a couple of minor actors this afternoon - for equal time’s sake and because it could be fun.
* If you’re at work or are sensitive to images of half-naked persons, then you probably want to avoid the Chicago Republican Party’s Chicago GOP’s website [the site is not official, but is run by the political director for the city party] for a while. The top post on its home-page blog features a photo of an attractive woman, alluringly posed… with no top.
Hey, I’m no prude, but I do wonder what “family values” candidates like Bill Brady and others might be thinking at this moment because their campaign logos and photos are displayed right above that aforementioned softcore pic.
Perhaps the author thought more people would pay attention to the posted rant by displaying that photograph, but it’s pretty much incomprehensible.
There’ll be no link because, well, I have a policy against linking to porno here. Use teh Google if you dare: “Chicago GOP.” Also, let’s keep it clean in comments. Try not to lower yourselves to their level. Thanks.
* I read a particularly silly Green Party press release last week while visiting my dad in the hospital and then forgot about it until I saw it on Larry’s blog today…
Green Party leaders sharply criticized Governor Pat Quinn and the Democratic State Central Committee for bypassing State Rep. Art Turner and other more qualified candidates in nominating Sheila Simon for Lieutenant Governor.
“Pat Quinn’s message is that he can take the black vote for granted,” said Phil Huckelberry, Illinois Green Party Chair. “Our message is that those days are over. Many of our core issues – especially education funding reform and the lack of economic development in the most struggling areas – are at the top of the list across black communities throughout the state. It’s clearer than ever that those issues are not going to be meaningfully addressed by Pat Quinn and the Democrats. But they’re going to be addressed by the Green Party.”
Larry points out the basic flaw in the Green Party’s argument…
Simon, a former city council member in Carbondale, is from the same relatively small community as Green gubernatorial candidate Rich Whitney.
“Targeting Rich Whitney’s geographical base is a little short-sighted…” said Huckelberry.
Yeah. They went right after Whitney’s base by picking Simon. I’m sure that was the goal all along. Brilliant.
Whitney got 3,941 votes in Jackson County back in 2006 out of almost 16,000 votes cast. Yeah, that ain’t bad, but it’s Jackson County. Relatively small potatoes in the broader voting world.
* A few years ago, I was giving a speech at the Executive Mansion to an interest group. Before the speech, I walked out onto a balcony on the main floor. Unbeknownst to me, I set off a silent alarm and a flock of troopers swarmed on my position and ordered me off the balcony. Turns out, they had that door alarmed because the wooden balcony was so rotted they were worried somebody would fall through. The troopers may have saved my startled hide that day.
The mansion needs $12 million to fix heating, plumbing and structural problems. Bricks are displaced and the roof is warped.
About 50,000 tourists visit the mansion each year. And it hosts about 200 events each year. It’s been 40 years since the mechanical systems were rehabbed.
Governor Pat Quinn’s budget proposal allows for just $75,000 in repairs, which is far short of what’s needed to complete the job.
$75K probably wouldn’t even fix the rotted balconies. It’s almost a metaphor for how the leadership of this state has allowed everything to deteriorate.
* Kristen McQueary writes about the race between freshman Democratic congresscritter Debbie Halvorson and Republican Adam Kinzinger…
Kinzinger promises to be a less-partisan Republican. An Iraq war veteran, he recently secured the endorsement of Sarah Palin who will undoubtedly swing through the 11th District at some point to raise money.
Those two sentences don’t jibe, I’m afraid. Among other things, Palin recently described the GOP as the “the party of hell no!” You can’t, on the one hand, predict that a candidate will be less partisan and then immediately note that he has embraced somebody like Palin.
That said, I do believe Kinzinger is a heckuva candidate who has a good shot at this one.
Gov. Pat Quinn is keeping mum on whether he received one of dozens of foreboding letters sent to governors throughout the country threatening to remove them from office.
“As a matter of policy, this office declines to discuss security matters pertaining to the governor,” Quinn spokesman Bob Reed said.
The letters, sent by the right-wing extremist group Guardians of the free Republics, called on the top state officials across the country to leave office within three days or be removed.
The group’s website (no link from me) claims it is strictly non-violent, but some governors have increased security after receiving the letters.
* And if you actually need any further evidence that Rod Blagojevich is a sociopath, then look no further than this…
In 2008, Rod Blagojevich allegedly set out to shake down Children’s Memorial Hospital after getting a phone call from onetime Cubs manager Dusty Baker, according to court documents.
Baker, who supported the hospital, was asking for state help, according to the filing, which was based on allegations from Blagojevich friend-turned government cooperator John Wyma. Baker was not accused of anything improper.
“Dusty Baker called me. I’m going to do $8 million for them. I want to get [Children’s Memorial Hospital CEO Patrick] Magoon for 50,” Blagojevich allegedly said in a meeting, according to what Wyma told federal authorities.
“50″ allegedly meant a $50,000 campaign contribution. What a menace he was.
* Democratic Cook County Assessor nominee Joe Berrios was fuming yesterday about Forrest Claypool’s decision to run for assessor as an independent…
“[Claypool] seems pretty flip and destructive toward the Democratic Party,” Berrios replied in a tersely worded statement. “He is obviously willing to pull down the entire party for his own self-interest.”
Quoting the Better Government Association’s description of Berrios as “pay-to-play personified,” and accusing him of a cozy relationship with House Speaker Michael Madigan, the state party chairman whose law firm routinely argues cases before Berrios on the Board of Review, Claypool said, “He’s in the pocket of the special interests, and that’s affecting our pocketbooks.”
* There is another way to look at the Claypool race, however. Right now, there is really nothing on the ballot to bring out the Democrats who voted for David Hoffman in the US Senate primary. The Democratic problems will also likely tamp down much of the new Obama voters from two years ago. Claypool might be able to bring some of those people out. And when they’re at the voting booth, they might then cast their ballots for other Democratic candidates.
On the other hand, the Tribune and other media outlets will be hammering Berrios/Madigan non-stop to help Claypool, which will probably suppress Democratic turnout.
Cook County plays a huge role in the outcome of statewide races, so any significant impact on turnout and voter behavior needs to be examined. Claypool will undoubtedly have an impact if he gets on the ballot.
* The Question: Assuming he gets on the ballot, will the Claypool campaign be an overall net negative to the Democrats this fall or might it be a net positive? Explain.
* Yet another poll has state Sen. Bill Brady leading Gov. Pat Quinn by a ten-point margin. Public Policy Polling has posted its new numbers. Rasmussen’s results from early March are in parentheses…
Bill Brady 43 (47)
Pat Quinn 33 (37)
An incumbent Democrat in a Democratic state polling in the low thirties is absolutely horrific. There’s just no other way to say it. And setting aside Quinn’s own fate, he’s gotta somehow turn this around or he could take down a whole lot of Democrats this fall. Toplines and crosstabs are here.
Part of Quinn’s problem within his own party is the same as that of Alexi Giannoulias- many Democrats who aren’t too high on him aren’t choosing a side for now. 28% of Democrats are undecided while only 13% of Republicans are. But Quinn is in a deeper hole than his party’s Senate nominee because 19% of Democrats have already decided to support Brady for Governor compared to only 10% going for Mark Kirk against Giannoulias.
There were contentious primaries on both sides for Governor, but the numbers indicate that the Republicans have unified around Brady while Democrats are just as divided about Quinn as they were two months ago. Only 37% of voters in his party say they approve of the job the Governor is doing to 36% who disapprove, that 1 point net approval pretty much analogous to his one point victory in the primary. For Brady though 44% of Republicans now see him favorably, more than double the percentage of the vote he won in February, while only 11% have a negative opinion of him.
There’s virtually nothing positive that can be derived from Quinn’s poll numbers. Democrats only approve of him by the smallest of margins, 37/36. African Americans disapprove of him by a 24/37 spread, although they still plan to vote for him 51-17. Only 23% of independents and 10% of Republicans think he’s doing a good job.
“It’s very unusual for someone with Pat Quinn’s approval numbers to get reelected,” said Dean Debnam, President of Public Policy Polling. “Maybe voters won’t like what they see once they become more familiar with Bill Brady but for now Republicans are strongly favored to win this race.”
Quinn’s best hope is that the economy turns around a bit and that he can make Brady look like evil incarnate. But the governor doesn’t even have a campaign team in place yet, while Brady is busily putting together the infrastructure he’ll need in the fall.
* Methodology…
PPP surveyed 591 Illinois voters from April 1st to 5th. The survey’s margin of error is +/-4.0%.
Gov. Quinn met with Mayor Daley on Tuesday and came out determined to avoid State Police cutbacks so draconian they would require Chicago Police to assume primary responsibility for patrolling 53 miles of Chicago area expressways. […]
On Tuesday, Quinn emerged from an hour-long meeting in the mayor’s office predicting that the crisis would be resolved to the mayor’s satisfaction.
“It’s premature to have any alarm,” the governor said. “The state budget is in process. Once we get to the final days, I think we’ll have everybody singing out of the same hymn book, pretty happy. We’ll have a good conclusion for both the city and the state.”
Everybody will be happy? Is that money just gonna drop down from Heaven or something?
People really don’t seem to get it. There is no money and there won’t be for a very long time. Quinn’s tax hike proposal barely even makes a dent in the deficit. His proposed cuts also barely make a dent, yet everyone is screaming bloody murder about them. Daley wants Quinn to make cuts before the state raises taxes, yet hizzoner throws a gigantic hissy fit when a few cuts are eventually revealed.
Quinn, Daley and everyone else are simply living in a fantasy world, including the Republicans.
Area municipalities shouldn’t fear losing their local portion of the state’s income tax revenue, according to a top state official.
Senate President John Cullerton knocked Gov. Pat Quinn’s proposal to cut the share of income tax municipalities typically receive to 7 percent from the 10 percent.
“I told the governor I didn’t think it was a good idea to not give money to local governments. If we’re going to have to beg, borrow and steal, we can borrow another $300 million instead of not giving it to local government,” Cullerton told the Journal Star editorial board on Tuesday.
“I suggest in this year’s budget, we not underfund local government distributions.”
I get that the state shouldn’t be pushing its budget problems down the food chain, but if there are no other solutions, then that’s one of the few options it has.
State Rep. Keith Farnham faced the music for the state’s budget disaster Tuesday night during a town-hall meeting, vowing to fight future attempts to cut pensions of current teachers and pushing for the state to contract its spending instead of relying on tax increases to make ends meet.
Read that again and tell me it’s intellectually honest.
At a time when public officials should be championing greater openness in government, a bill is pending in Springfield that would do away with requirements that Illinois fire protection districts print public notices in general circulation newspapers.
Instead, appropriation and penalty ordinances could be posted on a Web site.
The state ought to just open a website for all public notices in Illinois and charge everyone a fraction of what newspapers do. But that would eat too much into their cash flow, so it’ll never happen.
The Illinois Department of Corrections was forced to make an emergency purchase of ammunition last month because of the state’s inability to pay its bills.
The purchase happened after one of the state’s ammunition vendors, Shore Galleries Inc., refused to ship bullets unless the company was paid up front. The state owes the Lincolnwood firm $6,000.
The department was able to quickly find a new vendor in Indiana and ordered 761,000 rounds for nearly $200,000.
Great. We stiffed an Illinois vendor so much that we have to go out of state to find a willing sucker. Indiana gets the business, Illinois gets the shaft. Wonderful news.
* Progress Illinois has a hugely long list of layoffs and budget cut announcements at local schools just in the past few days. Here is a very tiny taste…
- Peoria School District 150 laid off 290 employees and may terminate another 200-400 staff members before the fall. (Illinois Statehouse News, April 6) […]
- Sixty-one first-year teachers are scheduled to receive dismissal notices from the Oswego school district. (ABC 7, April 1)
- Triad schools pink slipped 34 non-tenured teachers, five part-time certified staff members, and two part-time support staff. (Belleville News-Democrat, April 1)
- Central Illinois districts are bleeding teachers and programs. To date, Danville cut 85 employees, the Urbana School District laid off 139 teachers and support staff in February, and the Champaign school board approved $2.3 million in cuts for next year, reducing or eliminating summer enrichment programs, new textbooks, special education programs, and more. (Champaign News-Gazzette, March 31).
* Danville displays lower, balanced budget: The city council unanimously approved a resolution urging Gov. Pat Quinn to reconsider the income tax funding cut to municipalities and appealing to the General Assembly to not support it. The city could lose about $850,000, which could account for 20-25 employee cuts.
* Republican Mark Kirk says he has raised $2.2 million in the first quarter of the year and had over $3 million in the bank. From a press release….
Five-term Congressman and Navy veteran Mark Kirk today reported his Illinois Senate campaign raised more than $2.2 million since January 1st and more than $6.6 million for the 2010 cycle with over $3 million in the bank at the close of the first quarter.
As of April 1st, the Kirk campaign received contributions from more than 9,000 individual contributors (80% from Illinois). More than 4,200 people (85% of all contributions) donated to the campaign in the last three months alone.
Kirk has been hit in the past for accepting lots of PAC money, so that’s why he’s stressing the number of contributors. Notice that he’s using total numbers of contributors, not dollars, in that second graf.
Giannoulias has not yet issued his fundraising report, but I was told yesterday he raised more in this last quarter than he has in previous quarters. Then again, Giannouolias had a hot primary and Kirk did not. The important number will be the amount he raised after February 2nd, when all heck has broken loose on the family bank. Kirk’s comment about “leading the effort” to repeal the health insurance law (which he has since walked back) reportedly helped Giannoulias’ fundraising.
* The Giannoulias campaign has also been talking up its recent focus group studies. Sen. Dick Durbin mentioned them to the Tribune editorial board yesterday…
Durbin said [yesterday] that campaign focus groups show that instead of expressing concern about Broadway Bank, voters are asking, “What about my job? What is going on in terms of the economy and moving forward?” in the contest against Kirk.
“I think at the end of the day, the overriding issue is going to be the state of the economy and whether it’s turned around — whether Mr. Kirk’s position on economic issues is better for the state or Mr. Giannoulias’,” Durbin said.
Rep. Mark Kirk insisted he needed to leave a Tuesday news conference in a hurry to get to another appointment, until he was asked about his Democratic opponent in the race for U.S. Senate and the questions swirling around his family’s bank.
“He has built up a record of reckless irresponsibility regarding other people’s money,” Kirk said of Democrat Alexi Giannoulias after speaking at the Shedd Aquarium about his opposition to closing a Coast Guard helicopter station in Waukegan. […]
Days after Democrats dismissed talk Giannoulias should bow out of the race in the light of the bank’s problems, Kirk sounded like someone clearly happy about who he’s running against.
“That’s not Illinois law,” he said, when asked if he thought the White House would try to get Giannoulias to drop out of the race. “Under Illinois law, once you become the elected nominee of your party you’re in it.”
It seems odd that a reporter would ask a Republican congressman what he thought a Democratic White House would do about a Democratic candidate except as a meaty soft ball designed to produce copy, but that’s the game, I suppose.
* In other campaign finance news, Democratic 10th Congressional District hopeful Dan Seals claims to have outraised Republican Bob Dold. From a press release…
In the April Reporting Period from January 14 to March 31, 2010, Seals received $634,076 in contributions. This figure surpasses the first quarter fundraising record of $632,144 set by Rep. Mark Kirk in the first quarter of 2008. Seals will also report nearly $460,000 cash-on-hand.
For the full quarter of January 1 to March 31, Seals raised $662,773, an advantage of more than 31% over opponent Bob Dold’s receipts of just $504,822 during the same period. Seals’ cash-on-hand figure of $460,000 also outstrips Dold’s holdings of just $377,672.
Regardless of that release, Dold is doing pretty well for a first timer.
Dude, your job rating numbers are quickly sinking into George Ryan territory. Public Policy Polling has teased tomorrow’s results. They have your approval rating at 25 percent, with your disapproval at 53. Yikes, man.
Releasing violent criminals from prison and then refusing to punish those responsible, and then pardoning a bunch of former criminals last week ain’t doing you much good, either. Just sayin’.
Also, two months since the primary and you still have no campaign manager? What are you smoking, man?
* Dear state Sen. Bill Brady,
There is not a single, up-to-date, reputable study that shows anything like the estimate you just gave for how much the new federal health care bill will cost Illinois government…
“Estimates range in an additional $2 (billion) to $6 billion in costs just to the public sector”
But this is not a bad argument at all…
“[Governor Quinn] criticizes my 10-percent reduction in spending, but yet he threatens to reduce classroom spending by 17 percent. He talks about eliminating 33 percent of the state troopers and putting the safety of the public at risk. He talks about eliminating 33 percent of funding for local and municipal governments, putting their public safety at risk.”
* Dear Forrest Claypool,
You showed today that you’re trying to piece back together the liberal/black coalition which so badly frayed during your 2006 primary race against Cook County Board President John Stroger. But having Congressman Jesse Jackson, Jr. at your side during today’s press conference won’t exactly help you burnish those reformer credentials. And while your message packed some real punches and was filled with lots of headline fodder, your delivery style needs more than a little work…
Question: Your only real elected experience was on the Carbondale City Council. Is that enough to be in the second-highest elected position in our state?
Answer: At a meeting, we were talking about democracy being the same at small towns, bigger towns and at the state level. We need more people participating. I learned many lessons working on the Carbondale City Council that can apply to the state of Illinois. We want to encourage people to pay attention and be part of the process. We encourage people to vote. Our history of corruption in the state shows more people need to be involved in the governing process.
Is Rod Blagojevich done with television? Don’t count on it.
In a conference call with members of the media on Tuesday, Blagojevich, who was ejected on Sunday from “The Celebrity Apprentice,” said he’s got another “potential” reality show in the works and he’s said he’s also participating in a documentary.
* Democratic US Senate candidate Alexi Giannoulias has had a horrible two months in the news media. His family bank’s troubles, replete with all the attendant weirdness of Outfit juice loans and whatnot, have prompted story after story wondering whether he might be pushed out of the race.
Up until today, the Real Clear Politics polling average had Giannoulias ahead of Republican Mark Kirk 43-37. But that’ll drop as soon as RCP plugs in the new Public Policy Polling survey…
Giannoulias 33
Kirk 37
TPM’s polltracker has the average now in favor of Kirk…
Notice that both candidate averages are trending downwards, but Giannoulias’ is far steeper. That’s partly a matter of how the polls were conducted. As the Hotline pointed out the other day, at least one of the earlier pollsters grossly undersampled senior citizens, which would result in giving the Democrat an edge. Kirk leads Giannoulias 39-31 among seniors in the new PPP poll.
* Even though he’s fallen quite a bit, Giannoulias is still hanging in there. And there is a way back, as PPP discusses today…
The main reason Giannoulias is behind is that he’s getting only 54% of the Democratic vote while Kirk is winning 77% of the Republican vote. It’s not that a lot of Democrats are planning to cross over and vote for Kirk, but 36% of them are undecided right now compared to just 16% of Republicans. That suggests Democratic voters don’t really know what to make of Giannoulias’ problems right now so they’re just taking a wait and see approach to the race.
“The undecided Democrats will decide this race,” said Dean Debnam, President of Public Policy Polling. “Will they come home and support Giannoulias in the end, will they stay at home, or will they cross party lines to vote for Kirk? We don’t know that answer yet.”
Kirk has been running TV and radio ads lately, but they haven’t done much to help him as of yet. This is all about Giannoulias right now, which is right where Kirk wants it to be. That won’t last if Giannoulias has the cash to burn in the message with those undecided Democrats and Democratic leaning independents that Kirk is just another Republican obstructionist…
Giannoulias wants to make the election a referendum on Illinois’ favorite son Obama, which has a much better shot at working here than anywhere else. Kirk has tried to portray himself as a moderate, but being against Obama right down the line will make him look like a run-of-the-mill Republican obstructionist come November. Kirk walked right into the trap on health care.
Whether Blagojevich was a bizarrely incompetent governor is beyond dispute. And if anybody needed a reminder of just how goofy Blago truly was, his failings were on display for the nation on NBC’s “Celebrity Apprentice.” […]
There was the political double- talk. The self-obsession. The disdain for details. The inability to admit mistakes.
Our First Jogger couldn’t type. He couldn’t text. He couldn’t e-mail.
On the radio on Monday, Blagojevich blamed his age — he’s an ancient 53. His generation, he said, didn’t grow up with “all that stuff.”
But Blago, as most of us in Illinois already knew, also couldn’t lead and couldn’t follow.
Exactly.
* Related…
* Prosecutors file new details of case against Blagojevich under wraps: Prosecutors revealed that the document contains details about the government’s evidence that have never been disclosed. The defense could argue the release of the details could taint the jury pool, even though the selection process is two months away.
* I just checked with the State Board of Elections about Forrest Claypool’s soon to be announced bid for Cook County Assessor as an independent candidate.
Claypool will need about 20,000 25,000 valid signatures. But nobody who circulated a petition in the recent partisan primary cycle can circulate for him. That’ll seriously cut down on his base of volunteers, but he could just end up using paid circulators (which haven’t always proved to be all that reliable in Chicago).
People who took partisan primary ballots in February can sign Claypool’s petitions, according to the Board.
* Claypool has apparently hired AKPD, the consulting firm once run by David Axelrod. Axe is gone, but they kept the “A” in the name. David Plouffe is also gone, but the “P” remains as well. Gov. Pat Quinn and failed US Senate candidate David Hoffman were both AKPD clients during the primary cycle.
* I’ve been saying for months that Speaker Madigan’s support of Board of Review Commissioner/Cook County Democratic Party Chairman Joe Berrios for Cook County assessor was gonna come back to haunt him but good, and the Claypool race is just one manifestation of that.
Last week, Assessor Jim Houlihan claimed Madigan and Berrios were in cahoots to delay property tax bills until after the November election, although the evidence seems to contradict that claim, as a Sun-Times editorial rightly pointed out.
For me, though, it was the fact that the two other Board of Review commisioners, Brendan Houlihan (no relation to the assessor) and Larry Rogers, both sided with Berrios and Madigan. Commissioner Houlihan was elected in 2006 over a Republican incumbent with big contributions from both Assessor Houlihan and Commissioner Rogers. Those two commissioners are not considered Berrios guys at all, so siding with him against the assessor was a telling moment for me. Instead, it looks suspiciously like a setup for Claypool’s announcement against Berrios, and the media ate it up.
* A Sun-Times editorial summed up the appearance of conflict of interest between Berrios and Madigan pretty well…
[Berrios] sits on the county’s Board of Review, where he shamelessly collects political contributions from the very same lawyers looking for tax assessment breaks from the board.
And who are these lawyers?
Many of the biggest tax attorneys in town work for Madigan & Getzendanner, the law firm of Illinois House Speaker Mike Madigan.
But wait. It gets worse.
When Berrios is not wearing his Board of Review hat, he’s wearing his paid lobbyist hat. He goes down to Springfield — or to some fancy restaurant in the Loop — and lobbies state legislators on behalf of such clients as the video poker industry.
And whom must Berrios lobby most?
He must lobby Madigan — the same man looking for help from him, Berrios, when the petitioner’s shoe is on the other foot.
We have no evidence Berrios and Madigan have ever swapped a single lucrative favor, but anybody can see this is far too cozy a relationship.
But wait. It gets even worse.
Madigan and Berrios are also a political tag team. Madigan is chairman of the Illinois Democratic Party and Berrios is chairman of the Cook County Democratic Party. Nobody gets slated for the party ticket — certainly nobody like Claypool — without going through them.
The G has looked at Madigan’s firm in the past and came up empty. The Tribune spent about a year looking at thousands of cases involving Madigan’s firm and came up with nothing earth shattering - and zippo on the Berrios/Madigan stuff.
But the appearance of impropriety is just far too much for the columnists and editorial writers and reporters to ignore. Madigan really screwed up and the big heat is coming.
* Related…
* Forrest Claypool announces independent bid for Cook County Assessor Tuesday
* While I was visiting my dad in the hospital last week, I noticed I was getting sicker and sicker by the day. Turns out I had a bad sinus infection that moved into my lungs. It got pretty darned bad. I was basically wiped out for days.
I’m better now, and I’m finally home, but I’m feeling pretty weak and need to see some local medical professionals today so I don’t end up sharing a hospital room with my father (and, as it turns out, my grandmother, who went into the hospital late last week). Blogging, therefore, will be light.
Illinois’ unemployment rate of 11.4 percent in February was the state’s highest since July 1983. It compared to 9.7 percent nationally.
* O’Hare to get $400 million from U.S. for new runways
What’s not immediately clear is whether the money is for completion of Phase I of the O’Hare Modernization Program’s proposed network of new and relocated runways, or the second phase, which includes a new runway at O’Hare’s southern end.
After a bad accident four years ago blamed on inspection lapses, the transit agency now brings in lasers and a sophisticated “brain box” once a year. The diagnostic equipment recently completed a check of the tracks to pinpoint any emerging problems that CTA inspectors might have missed.
While authorities won’t say exactly how many cameras are included, with 1,500 installed by emergency officials, 6,500 in city schools and many more at public and private facilities, nobody disputes an estimate of 10,000 and growing. Weis said he would like to add “covert” cameras, perhaps as small as matchboxes.
* University of Illinois interviews finalists for president
Five finalists are university provosts — typically the top academic officer of a university — according to trustee Pamela Strobel, chair of the presidential search committee. Eight candidates come from public universities, and some of them have ties to U. of I., officials said.
Rasmussen College - with 18 campuses offering online and on-campus education services - is eyeing a property in Central Peoria visible to motorists on War Memorial Drive and Interstate 74.
* Decatur council OKs budget nearly $17 million less than previous year
* Springfield School Board accepts Watson’s resignation
Watson two weeks ago admitted she had copied substantial portions of the Philadelphia School District’s strategic plan into the Springfield district’s new plan, “Believe 2020,” which she was in charge of producing.
* Belleville OKs budget: You get $20 wheel tax; mayor gets 2 assistants
City leaders estimate that Belleville could receive $1.8 million less in tax reimbursement from the state in the coming year, and they said the wheel tax is needed to help them keep from cutting staff and services.
* New East St. Louis police chief is supposed to be in place; where is he?
Jenne, when asked when he is scheduled to start, said: “I’m getting mixed signals. I signed the contract in March. Two weeks later, I got an addendum asking me to take a 7 percent pay cut and two furlough days per pay period. I told them I am an exempt employee and I couldn’t do that.”
* Emergency repair: $1.2 million project will fix levee problem — for now
* O’Fallon mayor on bare-bones budget: ‘If there is any fat left, we can’t find it’
* Cahokia trustees will decline to testify in trial that seeks to oust them
Trustees Kevin Johnson, Trevon Tompkin and Phyllis Pearson are named in a noncriminal petition filed under Illinois election law by three losing candidates, Gloria McCoy, Robert Eden and Dennis Phillips, in the April 2009 village election.
In the last fiscal year, Illinois sold a record $2.08 billion in tickets. The state’s profit was $625 million. And Illinois Lottery Acting Superintendent Jodie Winnett said so far this year, the lottery is on pace to increase ticket sales by more than 6 percent.
As officials with Gov. Pat Quinn’s administration envision it, the deal would allow a private manager to be paid a percent of lottery profits. The company could increase its earnings if it grows revenues by boosting marketing, adding new games such as keno or Internet lottery sales and finding so-called “efficiencies” in operating costs.
Hoping to avoid the corruption that brought down Illinois’ two previous governors, the Quinn administration has attempted to make sure companies involved in the potentially lucrative transaction won’t benefit from insider deals.
For example, the company selected to write the bidding documents for the $1 billion deal would be barred from any business relationship with whoever is chosen as the manager for a year after the management contract is awarded.
Companies wanting to serve as the state’s lottery consultant also were required to disclose all of their business relationships.
Illinois officials are confident their plans will satisfy the federal government. So their real interest in negotiating with them is over the idea of selling lottery tickets online.
The (pension) changes were approved, and within days two rating services issued reports critical of Illinois’ efforts. That’s not to say the pension changes were a wasted effort. They weren’t. In fact, Fitch Ratings mentioned the pension changes as a plus for Illinois.
* Steve Preckwinkle: Pension ‘solution’ didn’t fix anything
* What does spring break really mean in Springfield?
Perhaps they are filming a new spring break episode of “Budget Gone Wild,” in which inmates are released early from prison to find the state police force has been reduced by 30 percent because of budget problems. This film has not yet been rated.
* [Springfield] legislators’ scorecards show hits, misses
Fewer troopers also mean less money coming into the counties from traffic citations, as well as fines associated with misdemeanor and felony criminal cases.
According to the Sangamon County circuit clerk’s office, fines assessed by the Illinois State Police within the county increased from $368,700 in 2005 to $541,740 in 2008. Last year, the figure fell to $427,070.
* Sweeny: Andrzejewski says state audit would find ways to save
* Hillard’s security firm branching out to consult police departments, cities
Terry Hillard retired from the Chicago Police Department in 2003, and Arnette Heintze from the Secret Service the same year. Their Chicago-based firm now employs 85 people in offices across the country.
Fifth Ward Ald. Leslie Hairston isn’t ready to call in troops, but she says now is the time to implement ShotSpotter, which is a camera-based gunshot-location system that is designed to pinpoint a shooter’s location within seconds.
* Community colleges serve more students with less cash
Illinois’ two-year colleges have seen average spring enrollment jump nearly 8 percent over last year, and enrollment was up 3 percent in 2009. Several campuses have seen double-digit gains, including Highland Community College in Freeport, where enrollment is up 21 percent this spring.
Enforcement of the state smoking ban, which was instituted over two years ago, has been patchy. But if the proposal to allow administrative tickets to be administered for smoking violations is approved by the City Council, it would make it easier for local police to enforce the law.
What are the chances that the remaining $1.4 million will cover all of the ex-governor’s legal bills through his trial?
“Zero,” predicts Ron Safer, a former federal prosecutor who served as chief of the criminal division of the U.S. attorney’s office in Chicago and is now managing partner of the law firm Schiff Hardin LLP. “It won’t cover costs. They will go to public funds.”
Patti’s family — brother, Richard; sister, state Rep. Deborah Mell; and father, Chicago Ald. Dick Mell — is tight. They describe Patti as a loving mother, daughter, wife and sister. Loyal. And they are just as loyal to her, with plans to do whatever Patti needs from attending the trial to helping with the girls.